stale ■we,Voti 71 NÓ. 124 Copyright, State P ress, 1989 Arizona State Univarsity's Morning Daily Tem pe. Arizona W ednesday, April 12, 1989 Students to protest potential budget cute B y TY R O N E MEIGHAN State P ress Student leaders a t the state’s three universities will step up their fight against potential university budget cuts that could lead to a tuition increase by hosting rallies at ASU, NAU and UofA today. The rally at ASU will be held behind the Cady Mall fountain from noon to 1 p.m. The students will be protesting in hopes of reaching Arizona lawm akers who are in the process of determ ining the universities’ budget for 1989-90. “This is our big push,” said Brad Golich, executive director of Arizona Students’ Association, which represents Editorial, page 4. Marl* M ust/SU te P m the state’s 80,000 university students. He added that lawm akers will react if they see widespread discontent at the universities. A num ber of student leaders will speak, including Associated Students of ASU President John Fees, Student Regent P at McWhortor, ASASU President-elect Paul Larson and Golich. The student leaders are upset about an Arizona Senate subcom m ittee recommendation that calls for a 1.3 percent increase in general fund appropriations to the universities. The recommendation is about $80 million short of the $556 million appropriation request made by the Arizona Board of Regents. The subcom m ittee’s recommendation also calls for m ore than $12 million of the shortfall to be m ade up from university “collections” or tuition monies. At the sam e time, the universities are faced with a higher education inflation ra te of 5 percent and an enrollm ent growth of 4 percent. Sen. Doug Todd, R-Tempe, has said that he thinks it is too early for students to be too concerned. Larson said he disagrees with Todd. Students wait In line T uesday to sign petitions urging the A rizona Legislature not to cut university fun ding; T h e petitions are part o l a weektong lobbying effort that w lil culm inate In a rally today at noon outside the M U. : Turn to Rally, page 2. S u rv e y c a lls U n iv e rsity ta c k in g in re s e a rc h s p a c e By M ICH ELE M cD O N ALD ' State P ress The lack of research space a t ASU ' ham pers the University’s ability to win grants and expand program s and im pacts the efficiency and the completeness of studies, according to a survey released by th e ASU Departm ent of Research. .... m Neil Hadley, associate dean of the G raduate College, conducted the survey. H e said 68 University officials responded to the study released last week which emphasized the im portance of University research. Alipost 56 percent of the respondents said the space shortage stopped them from expanding their program s and 31 percent said the lack of space prevented them from applying for grants, the study said. “There would be places that grants would m iss because (there is) not adequate space and resources,” he said. Hadley said research findings enhance the status of a university. “Research is an integral p art of the U niversity,” Hadley said. “If they (the researchers) don’t have fine space available, success in their area w on't be forthcoming. It’s a question of doing a project as completely and efficiently as possible. “It’s a balance that is needed . . . being able to expand in an area, enlarge a project, take on m ore students.” According to the survey, inadequate staff availability is a m ajor com plaint of ASU researchers. More than 40 percent responded th at the space shortage m akes it difficult to hire graduate or undergraduate assistants: Hadley said ASU is responding to the lack of research space by constructing m ore facilities. “Even if these buildings are com pleted, they probably will become outdated because of space,” Hadley said. . Bill Rowe, assistant cam pus planner, said the B arry M. Goldwater Center for Science and Engineering, costing $25 million and scheduled to be completed by October 1990, will have research space. The .Life Sciences Building, which will be finished in M arch 1990, will cost $23.8 million and will also provide additional research space.~„i According to the study, the research .space available at ASU totals 255,090 square feet, including traditional chemical Students, staff brave parking decal line By JO IE ANN L A P O LLA ' . State P ress More than 500 ASU staff, faculty and students waited outside Monday in a line that wrapped around the Parking Services Building in order- to upgrade their University parking decals. “ I waited for six hours and 45 m inutes,” said first-year law student Janet Robbins, who missed two classes. “It was over 100 degrees out there and very frustrating.” ASU senior journalism m ajor John Taylor Coe said he waited for m ore than five hours but was not assigned the lot herequested. “I definitely think the system cpuM be improved,” Coe said. “They need to have m ore than four people working. I’m a senior and still waiting on lines, and now I even have a stinking sunburn.”. The decal sales office opened at 8:30 a.m ., but about 100 people were there much earlier, said sophomore liberal arts m ajor Donna Seton, a student worker a t Parking Services. “At 7 :30 a.m . people w ere clumped up in Bne,” Seton said. “ It was kind of like when you cam p out for concert tickets.” M arissa McMullin, supervisor of decal sales, said she spoke to a group of students in sleeping bags a t 6:30 a.m . “They were very excited that they would get their lot,” she said. _ j'ipSis Ron Kucera, ASU’s acting assistant director of Parking Services, said parking lot assignm ents were upgraded on a “first come, first served” basis. “This is the biggest crisis tim e (for parking),” Kucera sajd. But the assistant (hrector said the lines are shorter than they have been in two years because people with routine requests are avoiding the office. The decal office processed 530 upgrade requests Monday, which is about 66 applications processed per hour. He added th at if Parking Services could set up term inals in the MU, as it has ip the past, the line would not be a$ long. “One thing that would m ake it much shorter would be if we had access to a regfctratipn type, of arrangem ent with a num ber of term inal coiftectionS,” he said, “We did that one year but (it’s) not possible'this year because of the MU ' Turn to RwWng, page 3. 'If (researchers) don’t have the space available, success in their area won’t be forthcoming. ’ — Neil Hadley research labs and com puter labs. Also, the research space includes hum an subject testing areas, office space, anim al holding rooms and greenhouses. Wayne Dirks, space m anager of ASU Planning and Construction, said the Goldwater Building will have 77,500 square feet of lab space and 56,000 square feet of research office space. The Life Sciences Building will have 34,000 square feet of research lab space, he said. WEATHER Mostly sunny skies are expected today with a high reaching into the mid-90s. Overnight lows should be in the low 70s. INSIDE: President Ronald R eagan’s former press secretary Larry Speakes, who once admitted that he m ade up quotes from Reagan, is scheduled to appear on cam pus Thursday. Page 8. Classified..,. 21 , Com ics....,........................ ....,16 Entertainment..,....-.............. 11 O p in io n ............................ ...................i.......... ........ 4 Police Report............. ................................................ 8 Sports............................................. .17 Today.............A................................. ¡ B i t *4á..... 3 Pagg>2 S ite Press Wednesday, world/nation in brief reintegration” of the rebels into Nicaraguan political life, assum ing promised electoral and media reforms are made by the Sandinista government. H o u se p a n e ls g iv e a p p ro v a l o f $49.7 m illio n fo r C o n tra s WASHINGTON (AP) — Two House panels gave unusually routine approval Tuesday to a $49.7 million aid package for N icaragua’s Contra rebels designed to carry out an agreem ent between President Bush and the Democratic-controlled Congress. S e n a to r s a y s new regulations p o s s ib le fo r a g in g airlin ers WASHINGTON (AP) — The government may have to impose stricter repair and inspection requirements for aging airliners, beyond new maintenance standards expected to take effect soon, the chairm an of the Senate aviation subcommittee said Tuesday. Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky., commenting after his panel began hearings on the subject, told reporters he believed Congress should consider requiring the Federal Aviation Adm inistration to force an increase in the frequency of inspections of older aircraft, require replacing certain parts rath er than exam inations of them, and set training and experience standards for airline inspectors and mechanics. “Our prodding has caused them to do some things in the past,” Fix'd said of the FAA. H ie House Foreign Affairs Committee approved the aid package — always a source of virulent contention in the past — on a 32-to-6 vote, and the Appropriations foreign operations subcom m ittee gave voice-vote approval to the package, which is expected to come before the full House on Thursday. The money is to keep up the flow of food, clothing and m edicine to the roughly 11,000 rebel fighters encamped in Honduras along the N icaraguan border through February of next year, when the leftist Sandinista regim e has prom ised to hold national elections. It m ay be used, as well, to support “voluntary Fam ily o f Irish h o sta g e appeals fo r re le a se o n th ird an n iversary BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — The m other and sisters of Irish hostage Brian Keenan appealed for his release Tuesday on the third anniversary of his abduction in Moslem west Beirut. Keenan, 38, an English language teacher a t the American University of Beirut, was kidnapped April 11, 1986. No group has claimed responsibility for his abduction. “We, the family of Brian Keenan who is today held hostage for three years, want to appeal to those who are holding him for some news about his well-being,” Keenan’s family said in a statem ent. “We again appeal to those holding our dear son and brother Brian to release him and let him go in peace,” the statem ent said. It was signed by Keenan’s m other and his sisters Brenda Gilliam and Elaine Spence. Spence said Tuesday that Keenan cam e within 10 minutes of being released in January before something mysteriously went wrong. R a lly ConUniwd from p ag e 1. “That is a dangerous attitude to have,” Larson said. H ie phone banks .will be operating through today, Golich “We’ve got a big problem looming on the horizon. They said. (law m akers) are not going to be affected like we are.” Golich said the total number of signa­ In addition to the rally, student leaders will be seeking tu re s g ath ered from ASU w ill be signatures for a petition and have set up phone banks for announced a t the rally. students and faculty to call their legislators. Fees said Monday more than 2,000 Golich said some students and faculty have used the phone signatures had been gathered so far. banks, but added that he hopes many more will call “That’s really not good evidence that we lawm akers on their own. care yet,” he said. “But I don’t think ASU faculty and students can use phone banks that are set petitions are tremendously effective.” up in the Associated Students of ASU state relations office. Fees sent a letter to faculty members The petitions will be circulated among ASU students and and parents of ASU students last week, faculty until Friday. urging them to contact their legislators Golich and voice their concern about the budget cuts. In addition to petition signatures, students and faculty from NAU will send 18,000 post cards to the legislators, Golich said. Golich said faculty members should be as concerned as students about the budget issue. “If they are not involved« I can’t im agine why not,” he said. “This is their careers,” i The final budget is expected to be .determ ined by the Legislature by late April. Gome Get A Tan...As Fast A s You Can. é / M a u tU u s SFITNESS 'S SSYSTEMS B Uby CYBEX S -.mCOMPUTERIZED m m BICYCLES m i StairMaster ''" s p o r t s m e d ic a l in d u s t r ie s , in .c : TOUR BUNS THAT DARK I NOW!! Your F irs t V is it Is F re e NO CONTRACTS! NO SALESMEN! 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N o t valid with any other offer. M ust p resent coupon upon ordering. 5/12/89. Thank you. ? O nly at: 525 W. B ro ad w ay, Tampa State Preis Page 3 Wednesday, AprH 12,1989 today The Today section is a dtdly calendar-of events happening at ASU that Is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus chib or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. ail business and liberal arts majors from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in tpe M U Cochise Room 212. Buffet reception to follow. . •A.W .A.R.E. Scholarship ayvards and favorite professors will be discussed at 11:30 a.m. in the M U Yum a Room. Guest will be Dr. John Nelson, Special Educaton, A S U School of Education. Meetings •Jewish Students and HiHel "IsraeliCulture: A Mirror of Israel Society” by Dr. Shoshana W eitz at 10:40 a.m. in the Language and Literature Building, Room 602. •Chess Club meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the M U, Room 211. •Hispanic Business Students Association meeting at 3:30 p.m. in thé Business Administration Building, Room •Jewish Studies and Hillel “ Israeli Culture: A Mirror of the 218. V-v $ •Real Estate Association Bid G ray, Arizona School of Real Estate will speak at 6 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. •Esperanto - ASU If you are interested in teaming Esperanto, there will b e classes tonight from 7:15 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. in Noble Library, Room 304. Call Jay for more .information at 831-6759. Search for Jew ish Identity” at 12:40 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building, Room C33. •MUAB Special Events weekly meeting at 1:30 p.m. in the M U Yavapai Room 209, •S.H.P.E. meeting to discuss awards banquet, officer nominations and picnic at 3:30 p.m. in the Engineering Research Center, G-Wing 237. •National Association of Accountants “ Career Besides Big 8 Accounting” is the topic at 4:45 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room 222. •Native A m erican Student A sso cia tio n o ffice r nominations at 3 p.m. in the M U Pinal Room. •American Humantes Student Association Victor Jiminez from 4-H will be the guest speaker at 5:40 p m. in the MU Coconino Room. •Career Seminar Series Waddell and Reed, Baxter, . •Christian Students Fellowship will study Micah and discuss “ Sin and Pardon Among G o d ’s People” from 12:40 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the M U Coconino Room 217. •Education College Council everyone invited for input at 4 p.m. in the Student Lounge in Payne Hall. •information Systems Club Special guest speaker from Anderson Consultants at 3:3iT p.m. in the Business Administration Building, Room 365. Please bring any Certificate of Sales. •Career Healthcare, Hyatt Hotels and Coors will discuss careers for Services workshops • and Career mock Connection ’89 Various interviews throughout the day: “ Develop Effective R esum es” a n d “ Understanding Corporate Culture” from 8:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the M U . Contact Career Services for further information 965-2350. •Recreation Majors Student Association softball game, A P R A seminar and pie throwing fundraiser w ill be discussed at 11:40 a.m. meeting at W est Hall, Room 219., •PRSSA last meeting at 5:30 p.m. in Stauffer Hall, 2nd floor reading room. •Arizona Council of Black Engineers and Scientists (ACBES) meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the Technology Building, Room 317. •Tribute to Ethnic Women in Arts and Sciences American Indian Literary Diet and Medieval Contribution to the W orld” from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. with Dr. Elizabeth Parent. “ Women Against the O d d s” with Joy H aya:and Colien McElroy from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in the M U Mohave Room. , •Campus Alcoholics Anonymous a support group for those desiring to quit using alcohol or drags. Meeting at noon in the M U Gila Room. •ASU Undergraduate Association/School of Social Work “ Equal Rights Amendment - A Duel Perspective” from noon to 1 p.m. on Thursday at the School of Social Work courtyard W est Hail. All are welcome to hear A S U professor A. Coudroglou and Shirley Whitlock of Eagle Forum. •College of Law free seminar Thursday on Law Adm issions at 5:30 p.m. at the College of Law Armstrong Hall, Room 105. G uest speakers are Fausto Ram os a n d Charles Fimian. Parki ng_____ _ Mecham: Benson cartoon sacrilegious C ontinued from page 1. PHOENIX (AP) — Form er Gov. Evan Mecham is * Moron” as ra ts heralded his return on trum pets, cancelling his appearance a t a charily roast for Arizona Mecham and Benson both are Mormons, and Mecham Republic cartoonist Steve Benson because of what he calls said he did not mind the attack on him but did resent the cartoon’s satire of the Book of Mormon. a sacrilegious Benson cartoon last week. “They can work on m e all they w ant—I have never said “I don’t go in for people who desecrate religion, m ine or a word,” Mecham said. anybody else’s,” Mecham said Tuesday, adding that it Benson, meanwhile, Said he referred to religion in the was the cartoon’s religious overtimes, not its anticartoon because Mecham and Mecham supporters are Mecham m essage, that offended him. always wrapping them selves up in God and religion. Mecham announced last week that he would run for Mecham supporters have “compared him to prophets, governor again in 1990 and Benson responded with a to the Christ child Himself and have claim ed that Mecham cartoon portraying Mecham in the sky with a “Book of has been crucified,” Benson said. expansion, and the room is not available.” Kucera also said he is looking into the possibility of processing upgrades through the m ail, but the problems of identifying applicants and deciding who applied first would be difficult to solve. Meanwhile, ASU students, faculty and staff are not through waiting for parking privileges. The current system also requires they stand in line in the fall to pick, up their upgraded decals. However, Kucera said the process is easy and quick. “You just have to show your JD and pick up your decal,” he said. “That line will be very short.” M OTE GRAPEVINE T H I S W E E K ’S S U P E R S P E C I A L .,. 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BROADWAY HOURS: M0N-THURS 9-9 FRI 9 A M - 1 1 PM. SAT 8 AM-11PM SUN 12 N00N-7 PM AFTER TH E G O LD R U S H opinion Stei« Preti editorial Budget cut equals tuition hike What do you get when you mix a bunch of short-sighted state legislators with a rapidly expanding state university system ? M ed io crity . Or m ore sp e c ific a lly , m ediocre higher education. It’s budget tim e at the Arizona capitol, and law m akers are vainly trying to jam the financial equivalent of a square peg in a round hole. Like usual, the problem is sim ple — there are a lot of things that need state funding, and there isn’t enough money to go around. And as usual, legislators are prepared to exhibit all the backbone of a school of jellyfish in the face of the financial crisis. Our state representatives are practically shaking with fear a t the m ere thought of raising taxes to pay for any of the basic services — m ental/indigent health care or education, for exam ple — th at a civilized government provides for its citizens. The pohtical clim ate ju st isn’t right for the state to ¡Kit fingers in voters’ pockets. ValTrans went down to crushing defeat, Arizona’s economy is in decline and Mecham is back in the lim elight — and the lesson of w hat happens during election tim e to those who cross Mecham and his dieb e fo re -ta x e s le g io n s is so m eth in g legislators won’t soon forget. So instead of considering a tax hike to provide enough funding for the universities, so they in turn can m aintain a minimally decent standard of education, lawm akers are cutting university budgets. They seem to assum e th at those affected — 80,000 or so students—are less dangerous to offend than the general population. Today we have a chance to show them that is a serious m iscalculation. Student lead ers a t all th ree sta te u niversities a re hosting sim ultaneous rallies today a t noon to protest the u n iv e rs ity b u d g et c u rre n tly u n d e r consideration a t the Legislature — a budget which provides for only a 1.3 percent increase in university funding. A figure that, allowing for skyrocketing growth, wouldn’t even provide enough money for the universities to m aintain services at their current level. This m eans that not only will the urgent problem s of class overcrow ding and unavailability fail to improve, but that they will actually get worse. In addition, the current budget requires that $12 million in university funding be ra ise d by “ co llectio n s.” T ran slated , collections m eans tuition. Student money. In order to raise that $12 million, it is likely that the Arizona Board of Regents will be forced to once again hike tuition for next year — only a few months after raising in­ state fees by $84. In sum , the proposed budget would contribute to a declining quality of education a t state universities, and would put even that sub-par classroom experience beyond the financial reach of many students. Sadly, the proposed budget highlights a state awash in contradictions. While on one hand legislators want to promote excellence in Arizona and create an academ ic environment that can attract m ega-projects like the superconducting supercollider, recently lost to Texas, they lack the will to provide the most essential ingredient for creating such an environment — money. We want to be the best, but we don’t want to pay for it. Instead, we seem w illing to price education out of the grasp of normal Arizonans by hiking tuition. Student leaders have launched a petition campaign, set up phone banks where students can call legislators and established a mailing campaign to deluge the capitol with pro-university information — all to convince lawm akers that education m ust be a financial priority for the state, or we all will suffer. As was dem onstrated last fall, when students rallied against high tuition rates and successfully reduced the hike to a m anageable level, student pressure on state officials can work. And it will work again if enough students turn out to the rally today to voice support for a university budget that works for education and Arizona’s future, rather than against it. § M OSE FÒRSENM-AUTOMATICm tä tW fä m letters Shop owner ignorant about needs of handicapped Editor: I am writing, you in regards to an incident that occurred on March 10, around noon, at the Circus store on Mill Avenue. I am a wheelchair user and have a service dog who assists me. By state law he is allowed to accompany me into all places open to the public. Upon entering Circus with my service dog, I was immediately told by the owner, Ms. M arsha McGuire, that the dog was not allowed in the store. I smiled politely and tried to explain to Ms. McGuire that my dog “Moose” is not a pet but a service dog, professionally trained by Canine Companions for Independence to assist me with my physical needs (such as picking up dropped item s, opening doors, pushing elevator buttons, etc.). She :refused to listen and repeatedly asked that I “get that dog away from the candy counter.” Customers stood and stared ; the cashier looked away in em barrassm ent. I sm iled and calmly asked if it would help for her to see my service dog’s ID card which has. the state law printed on it. Ms. McGuire rudely told me that she wasn’t interested in seeing “any of the dog’s paperwork,” and that I could tie the dog up outside. I inform ed her that the dog is worth $6,000 and th at I was sorry, but I could not tie him up outside, and that regardless of w hat she said I was going to proceed to shop in her store. At that point she just ignored m e and walked away. While Ms. McGuire’s ignorance of the t e r m “ s e r v i c e d o g ’ ’ m a y be understandable, h er attitude and behavior is unacceptable and incomprehensible. I can’t tell you how em barrassed and hum iliated I felt in that store and in the presense of all those custom ers. “Moose” and I have shopped all along Mill Avenue for over two years, and we have never been asked to leave a shop or restaurant. It is my hope th at you will print this letter to help educate the public and ensure that handicapped ASU students with working dogs — whether they be service dogs, guide dogs or hearing ear dogs *r will not be treated rudely and will feel free and welcome to shop in Tempe. Peggy Thomas ASU Student 1Pro-abortion * crusader ‘ignorant* Editor: When the psychology m ajor Dean Trim m er wrote that “ignorance prevails” in his letter of April 3 ,1 couldn’t help but notice the irony — who in truth is really the ignorant one? Because I don’t doubt your veracity, Dean, I can only assum e you to be ignorant when you bravely wrote that “the modern Christian opposition to abortion . . . began in the (19th century) with the pope (hoping) to increase thé num ber of Catholics.” Are you for real, Dean? “The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles,” a classic Christian work composed before A.D. 100, clearly states: “You shall not procure abortion.” Hundreds of other ecclesiastical documents from the first century to our own day testify to the sam e m oral doctrine. It wasn’t until the 1930s that some P rotestant bodies changed their teaching and allowed for birth control and (much later) abortion under lim ited circum stances. These sam e bodies (notably the Presbyterians) a re now, once again, moving toward the pro-life position. Your statem ent speaks more of your own “ignorance” and anti-Catholicism than it does tor your pro-abortion crusade. In your search fori the facts on abortion, Dean, you claim to have interviewed 50 women — how exhausting! Is it possible that in your search you never came across a woman belonging to WEBA (Women Exploited by Abortion) or one <4 the hundreds of Valley women who, having aborted, joined the pro-life movement with relentless zeal? D e a n , y o u c l a i m t h a t a b o r t i o n is an economic/educational problem as opposed to a m oral/legal one, and you suggest th at pro-life concern for the baby ends a t birth. Once again, you display your persistant ignorance of the abortion struggle. Pro-lifers volunteer countless hours without pay a t seven Valley-area crisis pregnancy centers like the Aid to Women Center in Sunnyslope. They work long hours in education, and yes, pro-lifers often take ¡poor women and their babies into their own homes. Tell me, Dean, who operates m ore hospitals, orphanages, or social relief agencies world-wide than the Catholic Church which you so maligned? Not the United Nations, not the Red Cross and certainly not Planned Parenthood. When you speak of our “patriarchal” society and compare abortion to “passive cigarette smoke” all I can say is, “Dean, wake up! ” Abortion is a civil lim its issue — a human issue. A woman’s laudible right to selfdeterm ination does not include the right to kill her child. In the future, Dean, when writing letters, first check your sources. Don’t sim ply sit like a sponge absorbing the outdated orations of certain psychology professors. Instead, venture into the library, do a little reseach into the issue and join us. Dare to go against the established academ ic practice, as pro-lifers must often do, and speak out for those unable to speak for themselves. Daniel Shanahan Senior, History STATE PRESS M A R TY S A U E R Z O P F Editor DARRIN H O S T E T LE R M anaging Editor ....**'*% «■•*"*; ......... ................ ....... M IKE R ITTER W ire Editor v - v ...... ............... ...... TASSINARI Z w sSt a ilo. r'.,,,...,.,,.,....,........ ^ r r ........... ....».... aouiane hopkins iw . m PATRICIA rm ip t A rts E d ito r....i..:....,......... ...................... .............. LISA H O R BLIT Sports E dito r....9........................... ......... .......G A R Y JA C K S O N ^ P H O TO G R A P H E R S : Irwin Daugherty, Ja m ie Lytle. C O P Y ED ITO R S: T ro y B ausinger, S u sa n C leere, W endy 8 p o rt* € d to r , ...............r ; V ^ ' . . C H R I S O o i« V am*. V icto ria C ulver, Steve K ricu n , N ancy N ess, Lynn Se n ze k, Ja so n S ilver, E ric Zotcavage. t o V e n T 'S» K S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : V irg in ia B oas. Don Photo PHitrv........ ...... ........ ................. M ICH ELLE ALLM A N A sst Photo Editor *...... ... ........... ...... : ........ ...... JA C K B E A S tE Y Cardona, Bob C astle, Fran k C ulver, C had F ra za e , M ike Hayes. K» vin K elly, Shannon K elsey, P au l L e a , Shannon M cC ue, R E P O R T E R S : M ike B urgess. Stacy Havm aa nirhm -i S ___ Ing, J o te U F o lia , M I c h S L e ^ M i ^ e M ^ ^ r ^ * ' M eighan. Scott Seckel. M ichael Van DW » R w ^ iL T ) '? ne Zubaiik. v a n Dyke, Richard VlgU, Lori « M e p re ss la p ublished M onday through Frid ay during !? a acalitt? lc * ■ « •XC*P< holidays and axam periods, at “ ®tthewa Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tem pe, Arizona 85287. New sroom : (502) 965-2292. W e d o not answer AR TS R P p n D T ca c questions of a g eneral nature. Advertising and Production: S S i H#rb,an*°n ' * * L* " ‘ . « * • Pond, m n iu u K T c r w l u m n i s i s Carolyn Hofig, E d Schubert, I« * ) Th e State P ra ts is tho only new spaper ex clu sive ly published tor and circulated on the A S U cam pus. T h e new s and views S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Dean G vorov D m » „ . yorgy. u ave H odges, Kyle Put> (*»hed in this new spaper a te not n ecessa rily those of the A S U adm inistration, faculty, staff or student body. * • '. . f f c : r ; ; Gadgets - g , ; , i p p - e d f : ,>5^ ; w ■' \. r . .;; ; g S -■?1 ‘Fax Paper’: The latest toy for man who has everything J e f f G re e n fie ld Univeral Press Syndicate NEW YORK — Hey, all you high-powered, tim e-is-m oney types: H ere’s an offer guaranteed to m ake you feel incredibly significant. Thanks to the m iracle of modern technology, you can get an advance look a t your morning paper, and all it will cost you is $2,500 a year and your common sense. The Hartford Courant, an estim able C o nnecticut p u b licatio n , is o fferin g something called “Faxpaper.” It’s a onepage sum m ary of the paper’s news and editorials that will be distributed via fax machines a t 5 p.m. the night before the paper appears. While the poor folks m ust w ait until publication day and pay 30 cents for their daily papa:, your one-page sheet will cost $6.85. According to the paper’s editor and publisher, “We would be foolish not to be on the cutting edge of change.’’ That word “foolish” ought to com einvery handy when this sendee gets going. If | were an investor in a company whose top m anagem ent subscribed to such a service, I’d convene an emergency m eeting of shareholders to kick those people out of office before they sta rt spending company money on sim ilar high-tech breakthroughs — like 3-D picturephones. ‘The whole attraction o f a new spaper In this TV age is that it gives citizens a chance to learn in more depth about issues that can only be skim m ed on the tube/ The whole attraction of a newspaper in this TV age is that it gives citizens a chance to learn in m ore depth about issues that can only be skimmed on the tube. When a paper is covering its community well, it will offer series on everything from the tax base to the schools to the fight against drugs to the honesty of its government. W hat th e one-page sum m ary of a newspaper can offer is exactly: nothing. It’s the equivalent of those three-second news teasers we h ear every night during com m ercial breaks; “Lake endangered — film a t 11!” So what’s the attraction? I very much suspect it is bound up with the ego of a subscriber, someone who considers himself or herself so significant that it is worth paying $6.85 a day for a woefully inadequate sum m ary of what can be gleaned by the rest of us for 30 cents when the sun comes up the next day! There is also, of course, the fascination of technology: If news is coming over a fax machine, it m ight somehow be m ore worthy than if it is dropped on your doorstep by a 16-year-old kid who never m isses the rosebushes. In fact, the delivery of news via printed paper happens to be much m ore efficient th an th e b ells-an d -w istles ap p ro ach embodied in “FaxPaper.” We learned this a t the sta rt of the 1980s, when futurists were predicting the end of the newspaper as we know i t In the near future, we were told, papers would be delievered via facsim ile through cable TV wires, or else they’d be accessed via com puter screens. What the futurists forgot was that m ost of us wouldn’t feel much like paying 10 or 20 tim es the cost of a paper for a facsimile copy; and we’d rath er take our newspaper with us, on the bus, to the beach, into the bathroom, rath er than lugging around a computer. After all, a newspaper can be randomly accessed (in other words, you can turn to whatever section you want whenever you want to), and you can retrieve and store data at will (in other words, you can clip recipes or baseball schedules). I am no Luddite, no descendant of those British workers who sm ashed m achines in the hope of. forestalling the Industrial Revolution. It’s a lot easier to do the work I do thanks to com puters, modems, fax machines and cellular telephones. But necessity is not the m other of every invention. Ju st because we can figure out an expensive, razzle-dazzle- way to deliver inform ation doesn’t m ean it’s the sensible way to do it. And my own sense is that the corporate biggies who gratify them selves by spending 2,500 bucks a year for one sheet of paper probably buy their suits from the folks who designed the em peror’s new clothes. M AY 22 S U N DEVIL H O U S E B:00 p m TICKETSAVAILABLEXTAU. DILLARDSOUTLETS. T /* T T T J ’/ ' S TRAILS DEPARTMENT STORES AHD THE SUN K I K ( 1 DEVIL HOUSE.TICKETS SUBJECT TO SERVICE CHARGE. »L00 HIGHER DAYOF SHOW. ’ ,AV $15.00 4M NORTH SCOTTSDALE ROAD 21 ID REQUIRED Page 6 - .... ... Stott Pi«« W edn esday, A p ril 12, 1989 C o m m is s io n r u le s a g a in s t B a rfie ld in e le c t io n B y M ICHAEL VAN D YKE State P ress The Associated Students of ASU Elections Commission announced Tuesday that College of Law Sen. Allan Barfield will not return to office next fall despite receiving 59 write-in votes and winning a two-to-one m argin over senator-elect Michael Lane. H ie commission decided Barfield violated an election bylaw when he failed to register as a write-in candidate the Friday before the general election. The commission’s finding supported Elections Coordinator David Cavecche’s decision to disregard B arfield’s write-in votes. “ I’m surprised th at intelligent people decided to subordinate the will of students in the College of Law,’’ Barfield said upon hearing the decision. He added that he will appeal the decision to the ASASU Supreme Court. The commission’s decision was in response to a complaint filed by Barfield April 2 in which he charged that Cavecche denied students in the College of Law the fundamental right to choose their representative by' disregarding his write-in decision knowing that its verdict can be appealed. Barfield also asserted th at the commission failed to votes. Barfield, who originally decided not to run if more than two consider his argum ents and based its decision on a “trivial candidates were seeking the office, accused Cavecche of election code.” During the commission hearing Monday, Barfield argued telling him there w ere four candidates running when in fact that the code requiring registration for w rite-in candidates is there were only two. But Cavecche said the commission’s verdict vindicates no longer relevant because of changes in the election format. He insisted that the code exists only through legislative him of criticism s voiced about his work in office during the oversight. election. “ I was confident th at if I did the best I could in office, that I He also pointed out th at the ASASU Government would come out on top at the end,” Cavecche said. “I was Operations Committee last week, unanimously voted in favor pleased to have a non-partisan grouftrulein favor of the^ob-L of striking from the bylaws the registration requirem ent for have done.” H p write-in candidates. Barfield said the commission’s decision did not surprise “If the Elections Commission would have listened to the Una» r . >:*• { ' u ' “Deep down I feel the Elections Commission has taken the argumente, they would have realized that they are subordinating the will of m em bers of my college to a trivial easy way out,” he said. Barfield said th at because the commission is not the final code,” Barfield said. “I can prom ise that I will work next forum for appeal, it chose to avoid making a controversial year to make sure the election code is totally rew ritten.” E le c tio n C o m m is s io n : runoff ‘c o n d u c te d p ro p e rly ’ B y RICHARD A . VIGIL State P ress ^ j; r The Associated Students of »ASU Election Commission ruled Tuesday that the ASASU presidential runoff between Paul Larson and M ark Escobedo was conducted properly. The decision issued by the three-m em ber elections commission stated that the charges filed by the Take Charge Coalition, an election watchdog group, were “irrelevant.” The Take Charge Coalition had called for nullification of the runoff and asked for the removal of all “officers, officials, paid and/or volunteer staff or appointed members of ASASU who committed Election Code violations.” The coalition had charged that Election Coordinator David Cavecche compromised the validity of the runoff by using untrained workers to man the booths and by not receiving the approval of the elections com m ission to reduce the num ber of polling places from six to four. In addition, the coalition claim ed that Stacey Vogel, an ASASU Executive Committee m em ber, was involved in a conflict of interest because she served as a campaign volunteer for President-elect Larson. In its decision, the commission ruled that nullification of the election would be “absurd and unnecessary.” Rob Dhondrup, chairm an of the Take Charge Coalition, said the election bylaws are w ritten too vaguely, and that had ad effect on the fairness of the election. Dhondrup said the group probably will not appeal the decision to the ASASU Supreme Court, although he feels the elections commission “sidetracked the entire issue of procedural violations.” Cavecche Said he agrees with the commission’s decision, adding that some of the coalition’s complaints were “an attem pt to get Escobedo involved again.” “They changed their position in alm ost every meeting we had with them ,” Cavecche said. But Cavecche also said the coalition had some valid complaints which should be addressed. “We have extended an invitation to them to attend the m eetings of the Blue-Ribbon Commission,” Cavecche said. The Blue-Ribbon Commission is a group headed by ASASU C a m p u s A f f a i r s V icePresident Vince Micone. It was formed to investigate ways to improve the ASASU election bylaws. “We can use some of their ideas, and I hope they and other students will partici­ pate,” Cavecche said. Dhondrup said the group will be active in the BlueRibbon Commission, and that they have one im portant goal. “We want to take all the vagueness out of the election code,” Dhondrup said. “We w a n t to m a k e it enforceable.” David Cavecche state press: information, 985-7572 • news. 965-2292 • advertising. 995-9555 • classified. 995-9731 '' A S A S U LECTURE SERIES & POLITICA Chief Spokesm an for th e P resident of th e U nited S tates from 1981 to 1987. Served a s W hite House Spokesm an longer th a n a n y o th er person since th e Eisenhow er A dm inistration A u th o r of best-selling autobiography T h u r s d a y , A pril. 13, 1989 7:30 p.m . A rizona R o o m MU A rizona S t a t e U niversity Speaking Out. Recipient of Presidential Citizens’ Medal by M P resident Reagan. FREE a d m is s io n State Pues» Page? D e s p ite a lle g e d d iscrim in a tio n , m inorities ‘p ro u d ’ B y RICHARD LAM PING State P ress A panel of five students representing different minority groups on campus said Tuesday that discrim ination on campus com es in all form s, but they rem ain fiercely proud of their heritage. The panel, which was moderated by ASU p sy c h o lo g y p r o fe sso r A ndy. H o g g , rep resen ted m em bers of the black, Hispanic, Jew ish, 'N ative Am erican and homosexual groups in the student body. The panel discussion was presented by the ASU Honors College in an effort to increase awareness of minority problems and issues. Yousef Hashimi, an Associated Students of ASU senator from the college of business who represented the Jew ish community, sa id a lth o u g h he. h a s en co u n tered discrim ination, he refuses to assim ilate. “I go out of my way to let people know who I am ,” Hashimi said, adding that the yarmulke he wears as a symbol of his faith and Jew ish tradition is ‘‘me letting other people know I’m proud to be Jew ish.” “ Ignorance b reed s p reju d ice, and violence perpetuates prejudice. Sometimes (showing) strength and pride are ways of overcom ing prejudice.” Hashimi said the traditions of his religion have placed restrictions on his life as a student. “ I don’t ea t out in restaurants,” he said. “You can im agine the difficulty in not bring able to go out with your friends to have a hamburger at Flakey Jake’s .” Donna G., a 37-year-old re-entry student who represented the Lesbian Gay Academic Union, said she experiences discrim ination daily. She asked that her last nam e not be used because the woman she is rom antically involved with would lose her job if her boss knew she was a lesbian. Donna, who was m arried twice before she “cam e out of the closet” about five years ago, said, “I really, really enjoy being gay. I like being a lesbian. ” She said she wishes she had known all of her life that she is gay. ,-X ^- , She said that an estim ated one in every 10 people in society is gay. “ I don’t really consider us (homosexuals) a m inority,” she said. “I consider us a misunderstood community.” She said most members of the general public do not address gay issues, but because AIDS has become a national crisis, A panel o f five students d iscu ss m inority issu es gay pride is vital to the homosexual w orking to a lle v ia te d iscrim in atio n community. problems on campus. She added that the gay community has ‘T don’t feel different,” Carrillo said. “I become cohesive in dealing because of AIDS i feel we’re all equal.” and provides support for m any victim s of Joan McHenry, who represented the black the disease. community, said, “The black experience Anthony Carrillo^ who represented the out here (in the West) m akes you different. Hispanic community and is the current vice There’s no choice in the m atter. president of M.E.Ch.A., a Hispanic club on “ I, too, went to school with a lot of campus, said, “ I have encountered some w hites,” she said. “Basically this is a white problems in my education.” world.” He said he was raised in a predominantly McHenry printed to a rich and unique white environment, and that he felt he had cultural experience as the foundation to her “to become white” to fit in. (Hide. Carrillo said his wish would be that people “1 think I ’m twice as proud to m ake it in a see each other as equals, and said he is white arena,” she said. C e n te r % B a sem en t 0 Q 0 5 -7 5 7 '2 . 0 Irwin D augherty/State P re ss Tuesday afternoon in Farm er H all. Jack Begay, a Navajo student, said, “In my culture we have a strong traditional hold.” He noted that it was his strong bonds to his heritage th at helped him overcome the c u ltu ra l shock of m oving from the reservation in northern Arizona to ASU. “ H ere in th e c it y th e y ( N a t i v e Americans) have nowhere to go,” Begay said. He added that on the reservations there is no pressure to adjust to a different environment. He said moving away from the reservation has m ade him learn adaptation skills while allowing him to feel a stronger sense of heritage. O C O M P L E T E A U T O P A IN T • E x p e r t B 6 d v VVoitei • C u s to m J^ rip in g a n d 2 -T o n in g ^ «Quality 1-Year Guarantee u m w ith A p p o in tm e n t R O N ’S A U T O B O D Y ^ I fed & P A IN T IN G B f f 4025 E. University D r . j j j H Phoenix, AZ 85034 M fl 2 0 % -5 0 % O F F S A L E ! ALL ADUtT & YOUTH CLOTHING & SOUVENIRS 1 NFL T-SHIRTS “Thank God, in the next w orid tbere w ill be no coffee. For there is nothing more beittsb than w attin gfor coffee when it hasn’t arrived. Immanuel Kant (1724-1804% * 8 » ” Y o u n e e d n o t w a it a n o t h e r m o m e n t ! T H E C O F F E E P L A N T A T IO N . /d fra M L NOW OPEN C orner 6 th St. & M ill O pen 7 a m. w eekdays 8 a.m. w eek en d s ■ ftU rK k u »k COFFEE/» PLANTATION C offee Boasters & C offeehouse 8 2 9 -7 8 7 8 NFL JERSEYS NFL STA R TER & C H A LK LfN E JA C K E T S NFL M U G S & SH O T GLASSES.......... N FL SW EATSHIRTS A LL PHOENIX CARDINAL M E R C H A N D IS E . . . '. .v ; ... NFL T-SHIRTS ALL M LB CLO TH IN G & SOUVENIRS X . . NFL F O O T B A LL JER SEY S ALL NBA CLO TH IN G & SOUVENIRS (EXCEPT SUNS) NFL CAP S BEST . SELECTION AND PRICES EXTRA 10%OFF SALE ITEM S W ITH T H IS C O U PO N EXPIRES 4/18/89 STATE PRG Still a good selection of your favorite team! i S f i 920 E. UNIVERSITY S P O R T S W E A R T J .S .A . PR O T E A M C L O T H IN G & SO U V EN IR S (A T T H E C O R N E R S T O N E , R U R A L A U N IVER SITY) TEM PE H O U R S: M -F 10-S, S A T 10-9, S U N 12-6 Void with other coupons * Otter good while supplies lest • No rein chocks S Page 8 MMNMM h h h K r H m Bh í í State Press Wednesday, April 12,1989 B y RICHARD A . VIGIL State P ress Speakes said he made up the quotes during the ReaganGorbachev su m m it. in Geneva because he thought the president w as taking a beating from what he called the Soviet “ m edia juggernaut.” He also m ade up quotes following the Soviet downing of a Korean jetliner. R eagan said S peakes’ claim s were “ totally fictional.” T h ree days af te r the claim s were made public, Speakes stepped down from his position as senior vice p re s id e n t of c o rp o ra te communications for MerrillLynch. B efore his years with Reagan, Speakes was a staff assistant to then-president Richard Nixon and later served as a spokesman for the defense team in the W atergate hearings. Although Speakes said in the book th at his actions were wrong, he defended them by saying he “knew what the president was thinking” when he made up the quotes. H ie revelations caused an uproar among the White House press corps, w ith whom he had had a turbulent relationship. M arlin Fitzw ater, Speakes’ replacem ent, called Speakes’ actions a “dam n outrage,” and said it would be difficult for senior White House officials to regain their credibility. He served as assistant press secretary to Gerald Ford when Ford assumed the presidency following Nixon’s resignation. Jennifer Martin, director of the Associated Students of -« ASU Political Union, which is co-sponsoring the event with the ASASU Lecture Series, said the fee for Speakes’ appearance is $8,000. L arry Speakes, a longtim e spokesman for form er President Ronald Reagan, will speak a t 7:30 p.m . Thursday in the MU Arizona Room. Speakes served as Reagan’s chief spokesman from 1961-1987, longer than any press secretary since Jam es H a g g e rty , w ho se rv e d in D w ight E ise n h o w e r’s adm inistration. In 1988, Speakes surprised the nation when in his autobiography, “Speaking Out,” he revealed th a t he made up quotes for Reagan on a t least two occassions. Two men w ere arrested on drug charges Monday and their BMW was confiscated after Tempe police seized two bags containing rocks of “crack” cocaine from thé car, police said Tuesday. Police said Joe Nathan Boyles, 18, of California, and Dana L. Pierce, 19, of Phoenix, were arrested about 9:14 p.m. in a parking lot a t 615 S. Hardy Drive. They were booked into Tempe City Jail on charges of possession of narcotics for sale. The arrests w ere m ade after officers^ who were patrolling an area of the city with recent crim inal activity, spotted two men sitting in a car, police said.. When die officers went to talk with the men they reported seeing a bag containing two rocks of crack and that one of the m en d ied to get rid of another bag. One of the men tried to hide a rock of crack in his mouth, police said. In addition to die drugs and car, police also seized money and jewelry. , Tempe police also reported Tuesday: •A 23-year-old ASU student was arrested Monday after he allegedly tried to steal beer from a Tempe business a t 3115S. McClintock Drive. He was bodied into Tempe City Jail on a STATE PRESS | and CLASSIFIEDS * fl REAP 1! n THE BENEFITS 965-6731 - The • « L a rry S p e a k e s 2 men arrested on ‘crack’ drug charges B y M IKE B U R G E SS State P ress *1 with READ IT U n d e rg ra d u a te ii _ » . | L aw » . | C lu b J v presents O ne of A rizona's "6 Most F eared" A ttorneys Domestic Relations Attorney: S u sa n S w ic k * T h u r s d a y , A p ril 1 3 , 1 9 8 9 . jjjÉhV^ ; ? a t 5 p .m , in A rm s tro n g H a ll (L aw ), R o o m 1 1 9 Everyone Welcome! p o lic e re p o rt charge of misdemeanor theft. ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •An arsonist caused $125 in damages to carpet on the ninth floor at M anzanita Hall by setting fire to a sm all pile of papers. A police officer who responded to a fire alarm put out the blaze with water. •Mesa police recovered a $22,0001983 Porsche that had been stolen from campus. •A thief stole a $550 vacuum cleaner from a storage room at Sun Angel Stadium. •A thief stole $526 worth of property, including a telephone, from a desk in the Business Administration Building. •A thief stole a $450 bicycle from the Classroom Office Building. •A thief stole a pair of Pum a um pire cleats, valued at $70, from the officials’ locker room a t Packard Stadium. •A vandal caused $40 in dam ages to a student’s bicycle. •Ah ASU student was arrested Monday night for driving on a suspended driver’s license. REACH FOR THE STARS AmericanBartendenSchool TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 • F U L L O R P A R T -T IM E JOBS • F L E X IB L E H O U R S & P E R S O N A L IZ E D T R A IN IN O • S TA R T A N Y D A Y O R E V E N IN G •T e r m s — co ed co u r ses • SER V IN G A G E IN A R IZ O N A IS 19 v ID . receive! 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SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY. □ Y O U C A N B U Y TH IS PERSONAL COMPUTER PACKAGE for O N LY PACKAGE $995 IN C L U D E S : •Dual Floppy D isc *12 Month Warranty •Near Letter Quality Printer •High resolution monochrome monitor •Word processing with spellcheck, D O S. Basic and Spreadsheet software (Add $175 for Color Monitor) COM PUTER 9 6 6 -1 3 8 8 M U L T I-S Y S T E M S 225 W. University, Tefnpe Next to Buffalo Exchange FINANCING A VA ILA B LE A Perfect Cut Every Tim e N o a p p o in tm e n t n e c e s s a ry ever! B rin g th e w h o le fa m ily junenc D e iig n c r p . m 1 rnmiLT HdiR cutters University & Rural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 966-8008 Hours: Mon.-Fri W ’»-»is Fam), fj+ t C-,Me»s II fi Stale Press Page 9 JVedn«da^Apf1M i1%9 C e n t e r fo r S y s te m s R e s e a r c h to c r e a te s o la r c a r By RICHARD LAM PING State P ress ASU’s Center for Systems Research has been selected to create a student-engineered solar car that will race 1,800 miles in July 1990 from Lake Buena Vista, F la., to W arren, Mich. The GM Sunrayce USA, sponsored by General Motors, will feature cars from 32 universities which were chosen from 61 applicants by a panel comprised of GM, H ughes A irc ra ft, C hevrolet, AeroVironment, the U. S. Departm ent of Engergy and the Society of Automotive Engineers. The ASU team was accepted based on its proposal describing how the team would organize the project. The proposal included how the team would raise funds and create a durable and reliable vehicle that will withstand the rigors of the nine and one-half-day race. ASU estim ated the car’s cost a t $175,009. Through fund raisers, the University’s 30-member team [dans to collect $80,000 of the total cost. The remaining funds will come from sources including corporate and individual sponsors. Next week, the 32 team captains will travel to Detroit to collect a $5,000 stipend from GM and $2,000 from the DOE. The money will be used as seed money to allow team s to begin work on their vehicles and to initiate fund-raising efforts. GM will also sponsor the race’s first three finishers to participate in the November 1990 W orld Solar Challenge race in Australia. Mecham appearance canceled PHOENIX (AP) - Form er Gov. Evan Mecham said Tuesday he will not appear as scheduled a t a charity roast for Arizona Republic cartoonist Steve Benson because a Benson cartoon last week was sacrilegious. “ I don’t go in fo r people who desecrate religion m ine or anybody else’s ,” Mecham said, adding that it was the cartoon’s religious overtones, not. its antiMecham m essage, that offended him. Mecham announced last week that he would run for governor again in 1990 and Benson responded with a cartoon portraying Mecham in the sky with a “Book of M oron” * as rats heralded his return. Mecham and Benson both are Mormons, and Mecham said he did not mind the attack on him but did resent the cartoon’s satire of the Book of Mormon. “They can work on me all they want — I have never said a word,” Mecham said. Benson, meanwhile, said he referred to religion in the cartoon because Mecham and Mecham supporters are always wrapping ATTENTION ALLERGY SUFFERERS You know how nothing goes right when your allergies hit? them selves up in God and religion. Mecham supporters have “compared him to prophets, to the Christ child Him self and have claim ed that Mecham has been crucified,” Benson said. “The cartoon was done as a response to Mecham’s not-so-subtle injection of religion into politics,” he added. “I didn’t see the cartoon as criticism-of the church. I saw the cartoon as a response to his tendency to inject his Mormonism into the political debate."' Benson also notedthat proceeds from the roast will go to a facility for the elderly and said he reg retted th at Mecham was canceling out and that some Mecham supporters were talking about picketing. Mecham, meanwhile, said that he still wished the roast’s sponsors good luck and that he had no intention of organizing a protest. Mecham became governor in 1987 but was impeached and otisted by the Republicancontrolled Legislature in 1988. W ell, if you're feeling the effects of allergy season, com e get help at the ALLERGY CLINIC. W e specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of food, inhalant and pollen related allergies. Don't let allergies spoil your plans, call either of our two locations. MESA 1215 E. B row n R d. B row n & Stapley 844-8286 SCOTTSDALE Ask about our student rates. We accept insurance assignment. 3501 N . Scottsdale R d. S u ite 221 951-0312 S P R I N G E D I T I O N ’89 “An intimate evening of Music & Comedy” F R E E A D M IS S IO N REFRESHM ENTS U n iv e r s it y A pache M M a rip o sa R e sid e n ce H all 8:00 p.m ., A p ril 14,1989 P o o lsid e 13 fit 3 O A B enefit For: P h o en ix R ape & B atterin g H o tlin e Featuring: Steve Wiesman & Go. Matt Steinkamp Paul Holstine The Bay Club Rob* Gagne & Paul Pyrz SÜSSAM ANO Sponsored By: ELECTRONICS U.S., INC. 1?30 W est lOtrv P ia c e . S u ite M uaP 2 T e m p e , A riz o n a 8 5 2 8 1 (800) 327*2293 • (602) 068-3002 I 8 C O T T B L U E P R IN T 833*3912 963-0864 (002) 804-0875 -i P j ' Í I il 133 W. 1st Ave. Mesa. AZ 1260 N. Amona Ave. Chandler. AZ i «f 1 MESA 38 W. MAIN ST. SCOTTSDALE 10701 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. 834-6581 946-3431 Page 10 State Prest Wtón«d22j(^i1M ^J989 Tribal em ployees locked out Mass grave found in Mexico WINDOW ROCK (AP) — A Navajo police detachm ent spent Tuesday in the financial serv ices building, locking out trib a l employees and adm inistrators during an audit of unsigned checks, a police official said. The building might be opened Wednesday “to lim ited officers where the audit is not a factor,” said Capt. Wally Begay. He said such em ployees w ere in the cred it, personnel, insurance and risk-m anagem ent departm ents. The building was occupied under orders of tribal Police Chief Wilbur Kellogg, an adherent of suspended Chairman P eter MacDonald. Leonard Haskie, the Tribal Council’s choice for interim chairm an, has fired Kellogg and replaced him with Maj. George John. L a st m on th , C itib an k of A rizona recognized Haskie as the authorized signer of tribal checks, but MacDonald denies that the council had the authority to place him on adm inistrative leave. He and his staff c o n t i n u e t o o c c u p y t h e t r i b e ’s adm inistration building. Monday’s occupation of the financial building by police sparked an all-night vigil by supporters of the council m ajority to m ake sure no police officers left the building with checks, protesters said. “We’ve lost all confidence in the police departm ent,” said a Shiprock, N.M., man. About TiTsupporters of the council’s Feb. BROWNSVILLE, T exas (AP) Authorities found a m ass grave just south of the Mexican border Tuesday containing the bodies of a dozen people who were the victims of human sacrifice by a satanic cult of drug smugglers, officials said. “ It was horrible,” Cameron County S h e riff Alex P ere z told a new s conference in this border city. “It was like a human slaughterhouse.” Mexican federal police arrested four people, said sheriff’s Lt. George Gavito. Gavito said the suspects were U. S. and Mexican citizens, but did not identify them further. T h e d e a d i n c l u d e 2 1 -y e ar -o l d University of Texas student Mark Kilroy, who vanished'.during his spring break last month while in the Mexican city of Matamoros, Gavito said. 17 decision to place MacDonald on leave gathered outside the budding after demands by the MacDonald adm inistration for the signature stam p and blank checks. Their num bers dwindled in the face of cold winds until only a few diehards remained. Controller Bobby White, appointed about a week ago, attem pted earlier Monday to ship boxes of blank checks to the local Citibank office for safekeeping, but the police moved in at 6 p.m. M eanwhile, MacDonald spokeswoman Tazbah McCullah said MacDonald’s staff had filed a theft com plaint against Stanley M ilford, H askie’s chief o f , staff and MacDonald’s 1986 cam paigh manager. Milford, who left MacDonald after a U. S. Senate investigation produced allegations that the chairm an had taken kickbacks and shared in the $7.2 million profit of nonIndian businessmen on the tribe’s purchase of a ranch, allegedly took a blank check. Also Monday, U. S. Bureau of Indian Affairs area director Jam es Stevens said the police force could not function without $9 million — one-third of its annual funding A the BIA will deny the agency if Kellogg continues to exercise authority. On Friday, Stevens stripped Kellogg, M acDonald bodyguard P eterson Tsinnajinnie and th ree other Navajo Departm ent of Public Safety employees of th e ir com m issio n s a s fe d e ra l law enforcement officers. health briefs Health Center distributes cards for free, anonymous AIDS tests The Student Health Center is distributing cards to students that will allow them to receive free, anonymous AIDS testing a t the Maricopa County STD Clinic. Students can call 267-0568 for an appointment. Kilroy apparently w as chosen at random by drug sm ugglers who hoped human sacrifices would protect them from harm , Gavito said. He was taken after the cult m em bers ‘‘w ere told to pick one Anglo m ale that particular night,’’ the lieutenant said. The cult had been involved in human sacrifices for about nine m onths, he said, and prayed to the devil “ so the police would not arrest them , so bullets would not kill them and so they could make m ore money.” Authorities would not com m ent on the other victim s, and would not say whether any of them w ere U. S. citizens. The 12 bodies were found Tuesday morning in a field about 20 m iles west of M atamoros, along with evidence of voodoo or m agic, Gavito said. state press Adult center to host seminar on sexual assault awareness A sem inar on Sexual Assault Awareness will be held a t the Pyle Adult Center April 19 a t 7 p.m. The Las Noches Woman’s Club is staging the sem inar to increase aw areness of the complexity of sexual assault, the behavior of sexual offenders and to reduce the risk of Tem pe re sid e n ts becom ing v ictim s. F o r m ore inform ation call Sonja Oonk, a t 839-0764. Scottsdale Embassy Suites to host Lupus Foundation’s conference The Lupus Foundation of America’s W estern Regional Conference is April 28-30 a t Scottsdale Em bassy Suites. Virginia Ladd, president of the Lupus Foundation, will speak t j 19 89 Bicycling! fW"" IR f ^ Dynamic sport offers challenges, excitement for all By KEITH POND State Press Bicycling is a rapidly growing sport in the V alley. With approxim ately nine months of riding weather available, cycling is an obvious choice whether the objective is leisure or com petition. F or those who have moved from other areas, or those ju st starting, finding suitable areas to rid e is often a difficult proposition. One of the most popular areas to ride is the South Mountain park located a t the southern end of C entral Avenue. It offers excellent road riding as well as some of the best m ountain biking terrain in the country. It is best to take someone along who is fam iliar with the trails until you'know them, and it is always best to ride with someone in case an em ergency arises. Mountain biking areas are also available closer to cam pus, nam ely Papago Park, which is located north of the Sun Devil House and extends around the Phoenix Zoo and p ast the Galvin Parkw ay. Trails Up fit any level of riders are available. F or both com petitive and leisure riders,'it is often best to join one of the numerous clubs that- are available. These d u t« can cater eitiier to the leisure rid er or the com petitive rider, or a combination of the . two. your local bike shop can steer you in the right direction. If watching is m ore what you’re looking for (and when it’s 110 degrees outside, spectating is often a good alternative) a bicycle race is cheap entertainm ent. When the cheap entertainm ent happens to be .on campus, out of the ordinary and exciting to watch, well, what could be better? On, April 16, just such an opportunity will present itself. The Tempe Grand Prix bicycle race will be held on the north side of the Grady Gammage auditorium . The critérium races will have all United States Cycling Federation categories as well as public categories for those of you who don’t have licenses. .T u rn to B ic y c lin g , p a g e 13. Ja c k W . B aaaley Jr/ S ta te P ra tt Doug Rltter, ridlng for Phoenix Consum ere C yclin g C lub , taires a tum In preparatlon for Sunday’s Tem pe Grand Prix. D im lig h ts, a m b ia n c e m a k e s fo o d e a sie r to sw allow By JENNIFER Y EE c u is in e :• M arla M u a t/S ta te P ra ia Karen H llpel, w aitress, cashes-out at the Paradise Bar & G rill located a t 461 3 . MUI, Tem pe. 4 ^ State Press' m H H R Í There’s an old saying th at goes, “Things look better in the dark.” F or instance: Some people look better by candlelight, horror film s are m oreeffective when the room is pitch black, and glow-in-the-dark stickers glow better in the dark. A prim e example of how this can b e applied to restaurants is P aradise B ar & Grill. The indistinct lighting distracts you from seeing things as they really are. Upon entering Paradise, you are surrounded by historic artifacts. Even the building itself is historic, as it was built back in the 18th century. And the sim plistics of the decor are m atched by the food. The menu is very basic — sandwiches, salads, and burgers, House specialties include flank steak teriyaki (available in' two different sized portions), chicken teriyaki, fish & fries, and an À-Train sandwich. There were no surprises on the menu, so we proceeded to order. For an appetizer, our selection was shrim p wontons ($3.95), and then dinner salads ($2.65), followed by an “A-Train special ($5.25),” the teriyaki steak ($5.95), and a classic Reuben sandwich ($5.25). Twenty minutes passed before our salads and wontons arrived. Twenty m inutes is a long time to w ait for. salads, unless you’re eating in a restaraunt that costs $50 a head. Though the vinegarette dressing was the perfect combination of sweetness and tartness, it still shouldn’t take 20 m inutes to serve shredded lettuce. The shrim p wontons cam e out piping hot — the kind of hot where the outside is touchable, but once you bite into it, the tilling oozes out and burns your tongue so you can’t taste anything for hours. But a better nam e for these would be “deep fried cream cheese pockets,” because of the five pieces, only one of them had shrim p in it. Though there was nothing wrong with the tilling, it simply wasn’t what the menu said it was. Twenty minutes after that, we were served our m ain courses. You can’t get overly excitéd about sandwiches, and these were np exception. The Reuben was served on rye, as Reubens usually are, and all of the components were “fresh,” as my German companion put it. He seemed especially im pressed with the sauerkraut, and rem arked that it was some of the best he’s ever tasted. The flank steak teriyaki came served w ithfries, and while $5.95 is a reasonable price to pay for steak, the sauce-tasted like it came straight out of a bottle. Comprised of what seemed to be 80 percent soy sauce, 10 percent w ater and 5 percent ginger and 5 percent sugar, it left something to be desired. The beef was, “good for the price,” as m y second guest commented. *’ , * i P aradise’s “A-Train Special,” is a grilled chicken breast topped with bacon and served on a croissant. It’s the kind of chicken sandwich that at least arouses your senses, as chicken can be fairly generic. The best thing about any of these entrees were the fries. Light, crispy and sprinkled with seasoned salt, they were a pleasant change from fast food fries. Although our w aitress had already deposited our check on the table, we called her back to order dessert. “Aunt Irene’s C arrot Cake ($2.95),” and a brownie sundae ($2.25) were our choices to close the m eal. Supposedly the carrot cake was from San Fransisco (either that or Aunt Irene is from there, *Twenty m inutes is a long tim e to w ait fo r salads, unless you’re eating in a restaurant that costs $50 a head. ’ whoever she is), but it did nothing for the dessert itself. The semi-moist cake with cream cheese frosting was unexciting. And a huge brownie and an oversized scoop of ice «ream didn’t seem tasty, either. The point is simple; Dim lights really are an advantage at Paradise. You can’t see the dishes clearly, so they can seem m ore appealing than they actually are. The lighting also m akes the establishm ent cozier, whereas flourescent lighting is standard, and the food here is standard enough. Simple food, sim ple prices, and of course, sim ple am biance is whai P aradise has to offer. So next tim e you want to be adm ired in dim lighting, rem em ber that if nothing else, you’ll look better a t P aradise B ar & Grill. Stata Brest We^n«d£y(j^xjM 2(JK>89 P a sc 12 P r o d u c e r s m a k e ru ra l c o m e d y w ith o u t r u b e s LOS ANGELES (AP) — Paul Junger Witt and Tony Thomas, noted for their hip, urban comedies, have turned to the soil for their newest series, CBS’ “H eartland.” “H eartland” m ay be the first television comedy to milk laughs from farm folk without portraying them as “awshucks” hayseeds. “This is from an idea th at’s been percolating for a while,” said Witt. “We started a long tim e ago with the idea that the farm is the last of the fam ily businesses. And although the Am erican fam ily farm s are disappearing, the people running them are som e of the m ost clever and inventive people in business. People on farm s are now sophisticated and no longer culturally isolated. “R ather than the im ages we w ere raised with, we wanted to portray them as the last vestige of the Connecticut Yankee. Farm ing is a complex business that requires you to be a m echanic, veterinarian, agronomist and many other things ail a t once. In talking to farm ers we found it was laughter that helped them get through the hard tim es.” “H eartland,” which m ade its debut March 20, stars Brian Keith, R ichard Gilliland, Kathleen Layman, Jason Kristofer, Devin R atray and Daisy Keith as a fam ily living in Nebraska. It was created by Don Reo. The Fam ily Farm Coalition has urged its 42 organizations in 35 states to ask its members to watch the show. Other Witt-Thomas shows are “The Golden Girls,’’ “Em pty Nest” and “Beauty and the B east.” Keith, starring in his seventh series, portrays family patriarch B. L. McCutcheon. McCutcheon is outspoken and cantankerous, two characteristics Keith virtually holds a patent on. He’s lost his own farm and lives with his daughter and son-in-law. Daisy Keith, who plays McCutcheon’s granddaughter, is .Keith's, real-life daughter . “That allows us to play to a very prim al conflict,” said W itt. “Very few fathers ever believe that their son-in-law is worthy of their daughter. That’s a great source of comedy and conflict. There’s little that they agree on, from raising children to farm ing to politics.” Both Witt and Thomas agreed that it was hard to launch a show with only six episodes on a third-place network. “It’s tough to get sampling a t any time, and it’s especially tough to get the audience to sam ple a show with only six episodes,” said Witt. “The phrase we use is, ‘it’s tough to hit the green.” ’ , „^ ^ * • P artners since 1976, Witt and Thomas have produced such shows as “Soap,” “Benson,” “ It Takes Two " “Had To the Chief” and “I’m 'a Big Girl Now.” In thè past, both worked for Danny Thomas Productions and Spelling-Goldberg Productions. Thomas is thé son of entertainer Dahny Thomas. Witt is m arried to w riter-producer Susan H arris, who created “Soap” and “The Golden G irls.” ^‘Bureaucracy is the enemy of com edy,” said Thomas, who wants to keep the company sm all. “ Most m ajor studios haven’t been as successful as the independent producers with comedy.” -, The Witt-Thomas show “Beauty and the Beast” was a big risk for the producers. A one-hour show is a financial burden for an independent producer, because the network licensing fee does not cover all the costs. Witt said “Beauty and the B east” was hurt by the w riters’ strike, which delayed its fall prem iere to Nov. 19, and by its tem porary move from Friday to MoncUgunights. O ur Summer Rates Sizzle! Every Day 4:3Q-Oose • M P n iU M I : |; | | | | K p iz z a s O N LY • 'I $ 1 .0 0 EXTRA C O V ER S 1 ¡B O T H P IZ Z A S (PE R T O PPIN G )« I | 1 OFFER G O O D WITH AD ONLY I E ) W I « S J ; 3 0 : 8 9 ____________ 1 The Commons on Lemon offers Vbur own room fo r th e Summer S *$60 per person utility allowance 1600 UTILITIES H H H INCLUDED* H Single session rate $400 • Deposit $250 • $150 refundable Shared Room fo r the Summer *$40 per person utility allowance $500 UTILITIES INCLUDED* Single session rate $300 • Deposit $250 • $150 refundable N ew sroom Staff O p en in g s A p p lica tio n s fo r positions on the N ew s Staff o f the S T A T E P R E S S fo r the Fall Sem ester 1989 are now being a ccepted at room 15, Matthews Center, north basement. T h ere will be opening s at most levels: reporter1493, p h o to g ra p h e r-1 4 9 4 , c o p y editor-1 48 8, assistant sp orts editor-1491, assistant city editor1484H, arts & entertainment writer-1493, sports reporter-1493, city editor-1483H, news editor1481 H, m anaging editor-1479H, sports editor-1490, co p y chief-1487, photo editor-1489, opinion page editor-1482H and wire editor-1481H. A pp licants must p ic k up jo b referral form s from Student Em ploym ent (Student Services Building, 2nd floor) and an a pp lication from room 15, Mat­ thews Center, north basement. R e s e rv e Y o u r S p a c e T o d a y ! Deadline for applications: Thursday, April 18,1989 A pp licants must be full-time (at least seven hours) students at A S U ; but m ajor in any departm ent is acceptable, as is class standing of freshman through graduate. N ew spaper experience is desirable but not m anda­ tory. T h e se are part-time, salaried positions open t o any student in good standing. Applicants must be available for trial week 4/24-4/28/89. ü t f i i iniii'i iitpi’iwnriir' Stlt» P r e - Wednesday, April 12,1989 l i L J By JEN N IFER Y EE State Pres* Hot, heavy, and headed for Springiest ‘89 at Big Surf this weekend, are L.A. rockers, W arrant, who’s first single, “Down Boys,” is taking over airw aves everywhere. Their debut release, “D irty Rotten Filthy Stinkin’ Rich,” is 15th on Billboard’s Album Rock list, and features a fun (often sexual) attitude. “I hate politics in m usic,” said Jani Lane, vocalist, who's m ainly concerned with having a good time and giving audiences one as well, “Our show is a real party.” Besides Lane, guitarists Joey Allen and Erik Turner, bassist Jerry Dixon, and drum m er Steven ‘Stikee’ Sweet, collectively known as W arrant, successfully conquered the L.A. Club circuit. They went from opening for the likes of Poison and Stryper, to breaking house records of their own. When they bring their live show to Tempe on Friday, the audience can expect to see a quintet of energetic and charism atic rockers, give th eir high energy performance that’s helped them break out of the L.A. scene. Turner and Allen run wildy about the stage, picking up Dixon on the way to participate in some am using choreography. Lane knows how to work a crowd; he’s charm ing and personable, making each audience m em ber feel singled out. Warrant § e n te r ta in m e n t Ü A C on tin u ed tra m p a g e 11. Criterium races are m ulti-lap events on a short, closed course. They offer good views from alm ost every point on the course and it allows the spectators to experience the speed of racing up close. Whether or not you have ever seen a race or even own a bicycle, this will offer a great opportunity to be introduced to the sport. Ju st so you can im press your friends with your knowledge of the sport, here are some key phrases you can drop. When the announcer says th at the racers are contesting for a p rim e (pronounced ‘preem ’), that means that the winner of the next lap Will receiv eap rize. It is a way of spreading the wealth and also a way to. make sure that the race continues at a fast pace. The pack is the m ain group of riders, and a break away is one rid er or a group of riders who feel that they are strong enough to go faster than die pack. Therefore, you m ight say, “Wow, that guy off die back is sure going to have to chase hard to catch the pack and win the prim e.” Your friend will be quite im pressed by your knowledge. § n o R e v ie w s Sg* • a % a. g i f g» 2. ^ o> — g — o ~ 9 sH a x x a i Se o 3 § »" » w 3 " « S IS À 1 V N V o 11 2n. =' -• •£_ *- a ■rnTTTTTTTTTTTW • -------------COUPON SPECIAL------------- CHICKEN TERIYAKf FOR TWO! Includes Soup, Salad, & Rice. Reg. Price: i ' SC H O O N ERS SPORTS BAR & GRILL GREEK NIGHT W ED Arizona R ESTA U R A N T W A T C H F O R T H E JÄ G E R -M E IS T E R G IR LS & G IV EA W A Y S ■ I e a pu 64 oz. n a P IT C H E R S # M IL LE R LITE NIG HT O v LIVE M ILLER LITE Bring Your O w n M ug ENTERTAINMENT SATURDAY FR ID A Y ASU'. National Literary] JÄ G E R M E IS T E R AZZIZZ SHADES 9-Close 9 -C lo s e ATTITUDE CHANGE PARTY HAYDEN'S FERRY SUN All You Can Eat and Drink 5-8 p.m. • $ 5 A d m is s io n * SPRING 1989 MON HAYDEN’S featuring work by Raymond Carver, Dennis Schmitz Richard Ford, Bob Shaeodus, Anne Noggle, Mark Kleft & many others W A T C H Y O U R F A V O R IT E S P O R T IN G E V E N T O N 8 S C R E E N S $2.75 Pitchers TUES LITE G E N U IN E D R A F T 750 B O T T L E S N09?'® UPCOMING EVENT SCHOONERS BEACH PARTY B ik in i C o n t e s t - 1st P riz e $ 2 0 0 C a s h U. south S a te llite D is h - 8 S c re e n s , 4-7 p.m. BUFFET! 829-0790 1290 N. Scottsdale Road Tempe (1 block north of Curry) McKcUip» IcbtoMn ■ Burger King ■ Weber Curry Page 14 Slate Prass N (fedn«da^A g1IJ^lW B r o a d w a y a c to r h o p e s H o lly w o o d c a r e e r g ro w s NEW YORK CAP) — Philip BOsco m ay not be the busiest actor in the New York th e a te r^ It just seems th at way. In nearly 35 years as a perform er, Bosco has appeared in 99 plays, 61 of them in New York; according to his extensive Playbill biography. He usually shuttles between Broadway’s Circle in the Square and off-Broadway’s Roundabout Theater Company, som etimes playing both in one season. But his broad, beefy, Irish face is not well-known beyond the Hudson River. That m ay change with Bosco’s critically praised perform ance in Ken Ludwig’s farce, “Lend Me a Tenor,” and his growing movie career in such films as “Children of a Lesser God,” “Three Men and a Baby” and “Working G irl.” In “Lend Me a Tenor,” now on view a t Broadway’s Royale Theater, Bosco plays^n apoplectic opera company m anager. In it, he m anages to turn frenzy into high, hilarious art. Theater has always been Bosco’s m ajor focus, and he has had seven good reasons to keep working steadily in it. His children: Diane, Philip, Chris, Jenny, Lisa, Celia and John. “My wife, Nancy, has been a wonderful m anager,” the 58-year-old Bosco says. “I’ve never been interested in money. It has never m attered to me. Money was the cause of a g reat deal of difficulty in my fam ily when I w as a kid.” Bbsco’s fatherw as in the sm all carnival business in Jersey City, N .J. His fam ily would travel, mostly during the sum m ers, throughout the Northeast. “As a kid; I used to work mostly in penny pitch,” Bosco recalls. “Then I began to work ball games where you’d knock the bottles down, then wheel gam es and when I got older, even gambling joints; It was not your average, run-of-them ill childhood.” In Catholic gram m ar school, the nuns thought Bosco was a pretty good reader. It’s there he m ade his stage debut at the age of 12, playing Machevilli the cat in a little something called “The F airy Cobbler.” “ I was a big success because I played with my tail all through the show,” he says. Acting had m ade an impression on Bosco. In high school, be appeared in the w inter and spring plays,, entered elocutionary contests and was on the debating team . He ended up a t Catholic University in Washington and was a regular on the local Washington theater circuit, including stints a t a sum m er theater in Olney, Md., and a t fledgling Arenp Stage. In 1969, Bosco and his wife moved to the.New York area for good, settling in Teaheck, N .J., whore they still live. His New York career did not have an ausincious beginning. While rehearsing his first show — “ M easure for M easure” in Central P ark — his car was broken into and the belongings he was moving from Washington were stolen. But the play and Bosco got good notices. H ie actor landed an agent and his New York career w as launched. Much of his early days were spent a t Lincoln Center in its repertory company run by Jules Irving and H erbert Blau. “But when Irving left Lincoln Center in 1973,1 was out of work for about 18 m onths,” he recalls. “That’s the longest I’ve ever been out of a job. My wife went to work, and I took part-tim e jobs outside the theater. “When ybu are in a repertory theater like that, you kind of get insulated and you get removed from the. Broadway scene,” he says. “ You’re not thought of for shows. After a while, people stop calling.” ', Eventually, people, Joseph Papp in particular, did. Bosco went back to Lincoln Center, when Papp took over there, to appear with Ruth Gordon in George B ernard Shaw’s “Mrs.. W arren’s Profession” and then replaced Raul Julia in “The Threepenny Opera.” Since then, Bosco hasn’t stopped working. . :, ■ \ In “Lend Me a Tenor,” Bosco c»-star9Wi&. Victor Garber, an actor he has worked with before fiT“Yott Never Can Tell” 1301 E. University Class of Next to Beauvais’ and “The Devil’s Disciple” a t Circle in the Square. It was G arber who suggested Bosco for the role of the opera company m anager to the show’s producers and to director ■JeeigdSSta*/*?***• *"*• “Jerry ’s attention to detail is all-encompassing,” Bosco says. “Nothing escapes him. He will work on a thing until he is satisfied with it. You work very hard. P ace is the critical thing. You have to keep aheadof the audience a ll the tim e.” With farce, Bosco says, you som etim es can go too fast. “ I rem em ber coming off and being annoyed with m yself because I stumbled over three or four words in a scene,” lie says. “Usually it’s for lack of concentration but in this case it was because I was talking faster than I was thinking. “That’s why comedy is so difficult to play. W henyou inake a m istake, it’s so obvious, You- can. really screw up in a dram a, where there are pauses and stops, and no one would know that you’ve done it.” At the urging of his family and his agent, Bosco has made some 15 to 20 films in the last five years. The roles have been sm all, but the salaries were enormous. “ You can’t make any money in the theater,” he says. “If you are lucky enough to g et in a Broadway show, who knows how long it’s going to run.” “ When you work in the theater, they tend not to think of,you for m ovies,” Bosco say s. “ They’re ju st d ifferen t communities. And there aren ’t too many people whose careers are prim arily in toe theater, like m yself.” One side of show business Bosco has avoided is com m ercials, at least those ads: where he would have to appear on cam era. He even turned'down $75,000 for one set of com m ercials. :. ‘Tip, not the keeper of the artistic flam e, but I just think it’s antithetical to a proper evaluation, of actors as artists,” Bosco says. “If prominOht actors do S r why not prominent lawyers or churchmen? I ’j n not a salesm an; I’m an actor.” A NEW C O M IC S S O U R C E S pecial Financin g previous credit required down payment required SCOTT TOYOTA T O P A s k fo r M r. K e n t o r M r. Litt 6850 E. McDowell Rd. 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Architeeturew/Microsoft Windows/286, Word, Channel Architecture, Microsoft Windows/386, Software is loaded and ready to go! Ex cel a n d h D C W indow s E x press. W ord, Ex cel and h D C W indow s Ex press. Software is loaded and ready to go! Software is loaded and ready to go! List Price $4,437.00 Your Special Price* $2,399.00 $5,372.00 List Price Your S pecial Price* $2,799.00 List Price $8,412.00 Your Special Price* $4,449.00 IBM ON CAMPUS - APRIL 10 to 13 Come see these hits at COMPASS, Moeur Building, 9am to 4pm. For More Information, call CO M PA SS at 965-2379 or IBM at 224-2763 ’ M icrosoft W ord an d Excel a re A ca d em ic Versions. . T h i s offer is limited to qualified students, faculty and staff w ho order a n IBM P S/2 M o d el 85 3 0 -E 2 1 ,8 55 0-03 1, or 857Q -£6f o n or before Ju n e 3 0 ,1 9 8 9 . P rice s quoted d o not include s a le s lax handling and/or processin g charges. C h e c k with your sch o o l regarding th ese ch a rg e s. O rd e rs a re subject to availability; IB M m ay withdraw the promotion a t any time without writtenttotice ’ State P re s t Page 15 W e d n esd a y,, m w i $ s m yv $s&¿■&£L)lfajfân£ifâÆ ii If 4 Out* illiff m onti», one J=R£E cloççifiedad in tlieStote Pres*. ■ ■ •20 words or less •»Proof of Ixrtlidote required brrthdefcj iff 400 con WËÊSÊÊËmÊm ■ ?.■ Jÿf y ' *>-. ?v , --y .;:- place ¡ çR si ;■^ fv ilIliiÉlli 3 16 8 £ . I ndianS choolL4 0 8 -0 1 O O '■ A -M mm mm CAM PUS M I N I STO RAG E Wmik • V arious Storage Sizes • 24-H our M ail B oxes ★ 968-3133 -■ÆiMÈâ 1st St. w ÓJ • X A 1 University 1020 W. 1st Street, Tempe Julian Lennon J u lia n lo s e s style, im itates B o w ie records By MISH TELL State P ress Poor Julian Lennon. He woke dp the morning of recording his latest LP, “Mr. Jordan,” and m ust have thought he was David Bowie. At least, th at’s what the record sounds like. The fam iliar eerie vocal sensations that put Bowie on the map will disappoint Julian Lennon fans who are probably expecting this album to he another John Lennon replica with a Julian Lennon punch And it will be a m ere devastation to those fans who at least hope the album contains a m ixture of high pitch vocal stretches, m ixed with that silly Julian Lennon wit with the piano. But it doesn’t. 'T h e music on th is LP is prim arily that of influential compilations m ainly from the 1970s. And Lennon’s own style has somewhat disappeared. The first single from the record, “ Now You’re in Heaven" is rougher than any of Lennon’s previous attacks. But jione the less, it sounds like pure Bowie. “It’s about the notion th at if you can be totally in love with someone, then you can be in heaven no m atter what’s around you,” Lennon said of the song. “You can feel the best you can possibly feel. But th at’s just, a brief interpretation.” Perhaps this change in the use of Lennon’s dominating musical influences is partly due to Lennon’s collaboration [ with veteran guitarist John McCurry (whose works are best known for John Waite and Cindy Lauper) and also the help from vocalists Fiona, Marilyn M artin and P eter Fram pton. “I Get Up,” another track on the vinyl is a rockabilly sensation where Lennon’s wavy voice captures the sentim ent of the infamous distorted vocais of Elvis. “A bit of fun,” describes Lennon of this song, basically messing around with drum patterns and John (McCurry) started playing this riff, and I picked up from there. I wrote the chords and other sections. It’s not really a serious song. It’s obviously referring to some woman somewhere, and it’s pretty straight-fow ard.” Another song on the LP, “Second Time,” uses the fam ilar dram atic sense of Lennon’s voice. It starts off like a sweet­ sounding rock ballad and quickly changes to a serious rockand-roll extravaganza. P eter Fram pton cuts in about half-way through the song and wails ,two typical “Fram pton Comes Alive” solos. Unfortunately, the guitar m ay have come directly from Fram pton’s live LP, because it sounds exactly the sam e. And that’s a shame. It’s not that Fram pton’s sound isn’t a classic p art of rock evolution, but the talk-box Fram pton sound doesn’t belong on an LP recorded in 1989. Especially chi a Julian Lennon record. ' ; ~Other tracks on the LP, “Make It U pto You,” “Angillete,” and “Open Your Eyes” are all tender Lennon songs but none come close to ever reaching the emotional religious experience as did Lennon’s first attem pt in “Valotte.” Looking fo r a beat seller? ■ sta tepress PASSOVER SEDER AT H1LLEL Join the Hfltel family for an ASU tradition as w e sing, discuss, and eat a traditional Passover dinner. Wednesday, April 19 at 6:45 p.m. Reservations must be made by Friday, April 14 atHttlel, lO l^ g . Mill Avenue, Tempe Students: $8 .... , ff; Chevra and Faculty: $16 After the 14th: $ 1 0 and $ 2 0 Call 9 6 7 -7 5 6 3 for Information H S^mSSmJmmSSmmSSa IT’S YOUR M O VE d o n ’t settle, kss m an the best! . ' V . LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES; $& Mini blinds # Vertical blinds «¡donees 6& Brass ceiling fins European cabinetry ® Walk-in closets available * Private bafcMpjyljpatio ® Security alarm system in every « apartment! « ru -, c. , , -»While Sui|(ly Lasts . Jm r $ Free hot water I Free cahle TV - 30 stations! : ^ 3 pools, 2 therapy spas ; m Choice of 4 color interiors ' 7 barbecue area* $ Lighted, coveredjHtrking $ Laundry facilities & Large exercise room / with weight inarilines $ Whitewater fountains VILLAGE Am*i>* *G*. Enter the Trojan Horse, Carpenter w ill lead the Sun D evils into battle and no one w ill ever expect the results they will see.. .*,?.** Carpenter is best described by team m ate Colette as a perfectionist. Sun Devil M arika LeSieur agrees with Aiiderson about their team m ate’s priorities and composure. T u m te M o fly ,p a g « 20 . S co tt T royan oa/Stale S le w A S U gym nast Molly routine on the balance beam . who wlH be a factor In the Sun DevUs' chances of «tinning a national title this weekend, perform s a A S U g y m n a s t a n tic ip a te s A ll- A m e r ic a a c c o la d e s B y K E LLY P EA R C E State P ress . Licurgo Diaz-Sandi su in g down the snowy slopes of a steep mountain was what ASU gym nast Licurgo Diaz-Sandi orginally saw in his future until he experienced cartwheels and the thrill of gym nastic competition. The Mexican-born athlete, who had five sisters involved in gym nastics, was 9 years old when he finally realized he was a gym nast at heart. “ 1 was not into gym nastics a t first,” Diaz-Sandi said. “But where is there to ski in Mexico? So, I said ‘What about basketball?’ ” The little boy wandered into the world of gym nastics after a meeting with a basketball coach was canceled and he was coaxed into practicing with one of his sisters. “I wasn’t that bad,” Diaz-Sandi rem em bered about that first encounter. And the rest is history. Today, Diaz-Sandi and the rest of the Sun Devil men’s gymnastic team will travel to Lincoln, Neb., to compete in the NCAA Championships Thursday through Saturday. “This sem ester all we’ve worried about is getting to nationals,” Diaz-Sandi said. “Now we’re there.” But this will not be file first finie the sophomore gym nast will get a taste of national competition — he participated as an individual in the 1988 NCAAs during his freshm an season. Diaz-Sandi did not make it to the finals but he said he values his effort. “It was a very sad trip ,” he sai^, “After (ASU gym nast) Randy Scott blew out his knee, I got out there and performed the best I could. I wasn’t perform ing ju st for me, but for the team .” Only three Sun Devil gym nasts qualified for the 1988 championship, however this year will be different. “I think there is m ore confidence in the team this y ear,” the 19-year-old student-athlete said. “ I think everyone’s ready.” Diaz-Sandi said that because scores are pumped throughout the year, the championship will give the ASU team a chance to prove th at it is much better than the team s ranked higher than it. Although the gym nast recovered from a week’s bout with mononucleosis last week and only regained his strength in the last couple of days, he said he has high hopes for himself, and feels he has a swing at All-America honors. At the 1988 championship, Diaz-Sandi said he concentrated on learning from the experience. This year, his cum ulative score is one point higher than his freshm an season score and his routines are much harder, the gym nast said. Besides concentrating on reaching the top at NCAAs, DiazSandi has an eye on the future — file 1992 Olympics in Spain. But first he has to gain United States citizenship. “ I want citizenship to perform in the Olympics,” he said. Because the United States is usually among the top 12 team s in the world that qualifies for Olym piccom petition, Diaz-Sandi said he has a good chance of making the team . But if he maintains his Mexican citizenship, he will have to work just as hard a t placing in the top 100 of world gym nasts to qualify for the Olympics because Mexico will not participate as a country. T u n v te L ic u rg o , page 20. 4 Slate Press JWedn«d«^AgrjM^JW9 Page 18 B y K Y L E D . EN G State P ress Every city across the USA, big or sm all, has a hometown hero. In Poughkeepsie, N.Y., no fem ale athlete is praised higher than Karen O’Connor. In fact, many in the sm all upstate New York city would consider her the best ever. What m akes h er m ore im pressive is that the city also produced such professional athletes as pitcher Ricky Horton of the World-Champion Los Angeles Dodgers and longtime professional basketball player Wes Bialsiuna. The Poughkeepsie Journal-News recently published a survey of the best high school athletes to come out of the area. Horton finished first in the poll, followed by current Cincinnati Bengals running back B ill Johnson and long-time football star and San Francisco 49ers announcer Mounty Stickles who rounded out the top three. Fourth place in the Journal-News poll was a tie betw een O’Connor and form er B altim ore Bullets forward Rich Renaldi. The nam e of the sixth athlete in the poll is the biggest surprise. F or his accom plishm ents in the high school ranks, is none other than world heavyweight champion boxer Mike Tyson. O’Connor holds the Franklin D. Roosevelt High School record in every offensive category in basketball. Her 51 points in a gam e is one of the top in Roosevelt annals. Inside the trophy case a t the entrance to the Roosevelt High School gymnasium is O’Connor’s No. 23 jersey. It is the only basketball jersey ever retired. Underneath, the inscription reads “Karen L. O’Connor USA Today All-American.” “She is the only girl to have her number retired ,” O’Connor’s form er coach, Bob Holmes said. “In fact she’s the only person to have her jersey retired. “She was phenomenal — there are few words that can describe how good she really w as.” High school sp o rts cam e easy for O’Connor who earned 13 letters: five in holds theschool records in four events.” track, four in basketball, two in cross O’Connor holds the Roosevelt record in country and one each in tennis and the shot put, javelin, discus and heptathalon volleyball. events in track and field. In 1987, her senior season, O’Connor led “The great thing about her is if we needed Roosevelt’s basketball team to the Class A points here, some points there, we could State Championship. stick her in the hurdles, the high jump or the During the state tournam ent the point long jum p to gain some points.” guard averaged an astonishing 46 points a In her junior and senior seasons O’Connor gam e, while also capturing the state’s Class finished second in the state in the shotput,. A P layer of the Y ear award. while in the discus she finished sixth her “It’s a weird thing, since Karen only junior year ami fifth her senior campaign. graduated a few years ago some of my “She is definitely the best overall track younger players still talk about her in perform er I have ever seen,” said Dederer, practice,” Holmes said. “They say things who has been in track and field for 16 years. like, ‘Karen would’ve pulled up and drilled “ Nowadays she is looked a t as the norm to the 26-footer, or drove past the defender to com pare to. the hoop, Karen would’ve have stolen the “A lot of my girls still rem em ber Karen, ball,’ ” things like that. so a lot of comparisons still go on. “You know you’re good when people start •‘Things like ‘Karen would’ve thrown it to im itate you. Girls are always trying to this far, or this long.’ I guess it’s safe to say reach the level K aren was a t.” she is a legend in these parts as far as girls’ In four years O’Connor set the New York trade and field goes.” state career scoring record for points with That Was nearly two years ago. 2,655. O’Connor now stars as the point guard at Although she has since been passed by two ASU and is the leader in both the shotput girls for the record, it is worth noting that and discus throws on the Sun Devil track O’Connor established the record in four and field team s. years, while Tammy Reiss (now playing for The sophomore led this year’s Sun Devil Virginia) of E ldrige and K atrina Spencer of basketball team in six different categories. Albany (now playing for Louisiana Tech) Over the 28-game season O’Connor led the set scoring m arks in five seasons. Both Devils in scoring (19.5 a gam e), steals (86), played since eighth grade, which is allowed assists 155, free-throw percentage (78.3), in New York. field goal percentage (51.4) and minutes Holmes played down the fact th at played (1025). O’Connor’s scoring record has been broken. Her m ark in assists is the second-highest “We kind of had an unw ritten law that for a season in Devil history, while her 545 said when she scored her 27 or 28 points we points tu ts file ASU annuals as the fifth best would leave her in the gam e and just pass ever in a season. She led this year’s squad in the ball to the others girls,” Holmes said. scoring in 19 of the 24 games. “ If I would have let her score, then she could Her m ark in assists is the second highest have set a record that would never be for a season in ASU history, while her 545 broken. points hits the annuals as the fifth best ever “There’s no question she is the best in a season. basketball player that ever played here.” O’Connor chose to attend ASU at the The sam e rem arks are echoed by form er beginning of her senior season in high Roosevelt track and field coach Bob school. One of the m ain reasons for selecting Dederer. ASU over schools like M aryland and Texas “She was outstanding,” said Dederer. was the perm ission of the Sun Devil coaches “That goes without saying because she to allow her to compete in track and field. “Yeah, it was a big reason, maybe the main reason,” O’Connor said. “The other schools wouldn’t let me do two (sports) back-to-back. “But ASU allowed me the opportunity to do both.” i ASU basketball head coach M aura McHugh voices her approval for track and field. 'L'-Jk'M M M & L “Actually I think it’s good fo r K a r e n , ” McHugh said. “ We have no problem with it. In track you do some of the off-season conditioning we do anyway. T hey lift weights, we (basket­ ball) hit the weights; they do some running, we run as well. “Our m ain concern m is the conflict between the two. So far there hasn’t been a problem, but I think Karen realizes basketball is a priority.” ASU assistant track and field coach E d G o r m a n a c k n o w l e d g e d O’C o n n o r’s hierarchy. “There is no question th at basketball takes priority,” Gorman said. “Karen was recruited prim arily as a basketball player and secondarily aS a track and field athlete. “She receives her scholarship because of what she does on the court. We don’t have problem s, she has an obligation to basketball. “We have no problem with that on this end. I kind of wish that there was a conflict in the sense that the women m ake it to the NCAAs (basketball tournam ent). That would be a nice problem to have. “Karen is a great athlete. She’s the type that gets better as the season progresses. Unfortunately, this year we’re going to run out of m eets.” There hasn’t been a tim e when O’Connor T u rn to O ' C o n n o r, p ag o 19. ASU linksters lead H » FR E E S E M IN A R giS after two rounds of ON L A W S C H O O L A D M IS S IO N S the Lady Sun Devil "Howyou can get into the Law School of Your Choice," B y G A R Y JA C K S O N State P ress Home course advantage has helped the ASU women’s golf team to lead the Lady Sun Devil Tournam ent for the second day of competition. ASU holds a 10-stroke lead over second place Auburn, 608-618, going into the final day of competition. “We had real good team effort,” ASU coach Linda Volstedt said. “The course Was hard, the scores were higher, but the team hung in there.’’ Sun Devil Amy Fruhw irth is currently tied for first in the tournam ent after shooting a 74 Wednesday fora two-day total of 147. Team m ate Lynne Mikulas moved to seventh, bettering her previous score by si§ stokes to finish with 152. ASU’s P earl Sinn, who led the com petition wifi) a par 71 score Monday, suffered from heatstroke Tuesday and fell to 20th in the standings. Sinn shot an 85 to bring her total to 157. Volstedt said ASU had to count two scores in file 80s. In addition to the difficult course, she said the wind becam e an obstacle. “We were really shocked after our results today because we didn’t [day as well as we should have,” Volstedt said. The Sun Devils have had a m onth layoff from competition, but Volstedt said the team is not rusty. “We’ve been working a lo t on the short gam e, and it’s paid off,” Volstedt said. Volstedt said focusing on course m anagem ent also has helped the team to play each hole better. Practicing on the Stonecreek Golf Course, where the tournam ent is being held, has been a great advantage, she said. “It has been remodeled, so it’s like a whole new golf course,” she said. “We like it a lot better — the changes were really positive.” ". . A tournam ent victory would benefit the No. 9 Sun Devils going into post season action. Eight of ASU’s 16 opponents are rated in the to p 20. “We have one m ore day to get through,” Volstedt said. “We need to win this tournam ent. “We have to go out and play our best and do everything we’ve been doing because it’s been working.” . - 965-4200 . . . C a ll the Sun Devil Sports H otline for additional inform ation on Attoone Otal»UnfttawHy intorcollegiate athletics T he hotline features interviews with A S U co a ch e s and student-atadataak aa w e* a s scheduling and ticket inform ation on A S U events The hotline is changed d a ily and updated » U M i | -y / : . A S U C p lle g e o f L a w G U E ST SPEA K ER : AND FA U STO RA M O S, D ire c to r o f Adm issions C H A R L E S F IM IA N P r a -I a w A H v fc fir Thursday,.AprIL 13,1989 • 5 : 3 0 p.m. C o l l e g e o f L a w ; A r m s t r o n g H a ll, R o o m 1 0 5 IKAPLAN For more information 967-2967 STANLEYH.KAPLANEDUCATIONALCENTERLTD. n RURAL/APACHE W E D N ESD A Y S: • B U D W E IS E R « B U D L IG H T ► M ICHELOB • M K p H E LQ B L IG H T ¿T S a il 8 -1 Q P M $1125 -M m 10 P M) , • LITE •COORS - » M IC H E L O B «LITE G E N U IN E D R A F T » C O O R S L IG H T •WATERMELONS «QUAALUDES ■¡te -1S p »STIFF JOHNSONS *: reaBaEssfeI f'£;- COM PLIMENTARY BU FFET 4-7 pm MON-FRI $1J& M APPV HOUR EVERY DAY 11 otiMI P«n DRY w . state Prêts _ P a g e î9 Wjedn«dafcApfjMSM98^ Olson top candidate for Kentucky position LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Lute Olson appears to be ttie No. l candidate for Kentucky’s vacant basketball coaching job if the price is right. Olson, head coach a t Arizona, is expected to meet with Kentucky athletics director C. M Newton this week to discuss the details of the job. “Hopefully^ it’ll work into that;” Newton said of Olson becoming the school’s prim e candidate to .replace Eddie Sutton, who left under fire. “Obviously we’re interested and obviously he’s interested.” Olson and Newton were expected to m eet in Lexington on Thursday. Newton, however, said Monday night that he had not offered the post to Olson. “We’ve still get some m ore things to talk about,” Newton said. Cedric Dempsey, University of Arizona athletic director, said he gave Kentucky officials perm ission to talk with Olson but didn’t know of the coach’s intentions. Dempsey said he has talked with Olson “to see what he’s thinking and if there’s anything here that needs to be done.” He declined to detail the conversation. “I would hope we could bring all these rum ors to a head and resolve what needs to be resolved,” Dempsey said. _ Dempsey said that before the OlsonKentucky linkup, he had recommended that Olson’s contract be extended three years and his base salary be increased, and that the Board of Regents had approved the m easure. The current contract has two years to go, meaning Olson would have a five-year contract at Arizona. The Arizona Republic in Phoenix said Olson’s current base salary is believed to be between around $85,000 to $95,000 with a total package reported to be worth between $400,000 and $500,000. The Republic also reported that one Newton and Olson met during the Final Four in Seattle last week to discuss the vacancy. Olson, 54, was offered the Kentucky job in 1985 but turned it down. He said in an interview last week that he “ju st didn’t feel com fortable with the circum stances” at that time. He has compiled a 137-55 record in six seasons a t Arizona. Olson also has said the sanctions Kentucky could receive from the NCAA Committee on Infractions as a result of 18 alleged violations of NCAA rules could influence his decision. University officials are scheduled to m eet with the NCAA Committee on Infractions on April 22. Newton said there are other coaches who are viable candidates for the job. “I’m thinking of a lot of things at this point,” he said. unidentified source said the Kentucky package for Olson would be m ore than $600,000 per season. The newspaper said another unidentified source had said the package would be worth m ore than $750,000 each season. The Republic said the package would include a five-year contract, plus revenue from television and radio program s, a shoe contract, a cam p and other benefits. Newton, however, said last week that the university would control revenue from sources outside basketball and offer a coach a flat salary. In Tucson, the Arizona D aily Star reported that student assistant coach Craig McMillan said he was told Olson had informed players there was a 90 percent chance he would stay at Arizona. McMillan said other team m em bers told him Olson would talk with Newton because they were old friends. Student editorial tells Olson to change 'W ildcat’ jobs . TUCSON, (AP) — The University of Arizona’s campus newspaper called Tuesday for basketball coach Lute Olson to take the opening a t Kentucky. Olson is being wooed by new Kentucky athletic director C. M. Newton to fill the position vacated last month by Eddie Sutton, who resigned under fire. The basketball program has been investigated by the NCAA for alleged rules violations. Newton said Monday night that he would m eet with Olson in Lexington this week but that no offer has been made. The editorial in the Arizona Daily Wildcat said that despite budget restrictions, Arizona President Henry Koffler probably would try to keep Olson with a salary increase sufficient to enable him to resist what it called “that $700,000 job” a t Kentucky . No official figures have been released on what the Kentucky job is worth — including shoe endorsements, basketball camps and clinics, broadcasting rights, incentives and additional revenue sources. But the Wildcat said Olson has an $89,250 annual contract with the University of Arizona and “is picking up about $500,000in endorsements, incentives and television deals.” The newspaper said, “He doesn’t deserve to receive any more, not while student services are a t an all-tim e low a t this financially burdened institution.” Olson did not return a call Tuesday from The Associated Press. While calling Olson “a great coach” who “has done a rem arkable job rebuilding our program ,” the Wildcat said the university has “other needs. We m ust put our money O’ Connor C on tin u ed fro m p a g e f t . hasn’t played basketball. “My dad helped m e s ta rt to play when I was three,” O’Connor said, whose father, Joe, initiated a women’s basketball league in Hyde P ark. When O’Connor was in seventh grade attending school in Chicago she wanted to play on the boys’ team . A series of court orders and hearings on the m atter arose and the school prevailed, but O’Connor led the girls’ junior high team in every category. The following y ear found O’Connor attending eighth grade at Hughes Junior High School in Tustin, Calif. At Hughes, O’Connor played on the boys’ team and prevailed rath er well. During (he spring sem ester of that sam e year O’Connor’s family moved back to Poughkeepsie w here she enrolled at Roosevelt. . . O’Connor competed in track and field that STATE DRESS Classifieds. . .u n lo ck the doer to new an d excitinn avenues. 963-6731 or 963-6733 5 t o t e P r e s ? r i s e s w ith REG. $28 t h e sun. . * 1 3 .9 9 JC A IM ; — .— c o u p o n IN ^ EL POLLO SUPREMO 921-7713 1 /2 C h ic k e n D in n e r I o n ly AIRFARES BOOK NOW FOR SUMMER Lost? Get a Map! Includes 4 pieces of chicken, tornili salsa, beans and marinated onions STUDENT«, YOUTH 966-3713 I 221 W. University • 2 Blocks West o f Mill Aye. I 1 one coupon per custom er — expires $-31-419 RETURN FLIGHTS FH O M L O S A N Q S LS S LONDON ___ from$650 OSLO «to- $750 STOCKHOLM _ $750 COPENHAGEN *»$760 PAmS______ro». $690 FRANKFURT _ iron, $650 SYDNEY : ta» $745 BANGKOK__ ta» $626 TOKYO ___ _ ta» $585 COSTA RICA _ ta» $370 RIODE JANEIRO*». $850 • DESTINATIONS WORLDWIDE • EQUALLY LOW ONE WAY FARES • MULTI-STOP/ROUND THE WORLD FARES AVAILABLE • EURAH. PASSES AVAILABLE • TOURS— USSR, CHINA. EUROPE CALL O R WRITE FOR FR EE BROCHURE Rho Epsilon Real E state Association presents :; r i J f 1 Bill Gray § " f t President Arizona School of Real Estate f• THE STUDENT TRAVEL NETWORK . 1,800*777*0tl2 TO2 MELROSE AVE LOS ANDRES cam m e accomplished was a team effort.” O’Connor can look back to high school and com pare it to her experiences a t ASU. “Last year we were for the most p art just team m ates,” said O’Connor. “This year our friendship goes beyond the court. “I think the better a team gets to know each other off the court the better a team does on the court. The m ost im portant thing is winning. That’s what it really comes down to.” season and according to Dederer placed well within the top percentile of her age group. The following fall O’Connor started her high school basketball career. “I don’t think it’s anything big,” O’Connor said. “Records are m ade to be broken, the biggest thing is that we won the state championship. “The first couple of years weren’t as fun as the last two (in high school), but w hat we m o r n in g t h e SH O RTS toward education — not recreation; After all, basketball is only a gam e.” It said the university has given athletics priority over class sizes, qualified teaching assistants and affordable tuition, while not yet openly adm itting to it. “A decision by Olson to, stay would certainly change all of this,” the editorial said.' “Any raise in Olson’s salary would show that UofA officials care m ore about sports than students.” It added, “While this would em barrass university officials, it wouldn’t help anything. “And regardless of how much fun it would be, we cannot afford to lose thousands of dollars to watch adm inistrators squirm .” STA TRAVEL Wednesday, A pril 12 6 p.m., Pinal North, MU S p o n so red In pert by ASASU . ® . ! T P h is is a point in A your life w hen I th e choices you S ■J*P - v ...W* m ake are crucial, som etim es final. Y ou know all roads are not th e sam e. A nd if you can’t d ecide w hich road to follow , ask som e­ on e w ho has travel­ led that path b efore you. R esolve your doubts today by taking decisive ac­ tion . I f you don’t know the terrain ahead, g et a m ap from som eon e w ho does! A m ap w ill help ydu recognize im portant features, avoid hazards and obstacles, and reach your goals. ' ■ JMRHI i i i i t 1 ' i i 1 THINKING AND DESTINY, by n oted author H .W . Percival, brings you a clear, com prehensive m ap o fy o u rS elL th e on e you k eep hidden from view . B egin NOW to se e new parts o f th e hum an landscape and find w ider op tion s than you think possib le. R ep lace doubt and THE W ORD FO UNDATIO N, I N C ; fear w ith know ledge P.O. BOX 180340-z, Dallas, TX 75218 ; and understanding o f th e so-called Send m e _____ co p ies o f “M ysteries o f L ife.” TH IN K IN G AND DESTINY. O rder your copy o f I am enclosing $14.95 per copy TH IN K IN G AN D Name ________ ____ : D ESTIN Y a t a S p e­ Address _______ ■ ! cial P rice o f $ 1 4 9 5 _2. State__Z ip City postpaid (regularly N O T a religious organization S 1 8 .4 5 -E x p ire s 5/15/89) fe ll S ta te P rts s Page 20 Bama’s Humphrey opts for NFL Your Lucky N ùm bér about it when Bobby is ready to announce it.” He would neither confirm nor deny Humphrey is leaving. “ I’m afraid I’m going to have to play the gam e and w ait like everyone else,” he s a i d . “ T h is is announcement and I’m him to m ake i t ” Gene Stutts, a Birmingham attorney and Humphrey’s legal adviser, said he could not to respond to any questions.' “Bobby is his own m an,” Stutts said. “When he is ready to announce his decision I’m sure he’ll let everyone know.” Previous newspaper reports said Humphrey and cornerback Gene Jelks, who also was injured early last season, would both return to the Crimson Tide this fall. Although he was insured for $1 TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Bobby Humphrey, the all-tim e leading rusher million through Lloyd’s of London, he in Alabama football history, will give wanted to purchase a t least twice that up his last y ear of eligibility to make amount. h im se lf a v a i l a b l e for th e NFL “ It would be unprecedented to supplem ental draft, a published report increase his coverage in the $2 million said Tuesday. or m ore range at this Stage,” an The school’s d irecto r of m edia uni dent ifi ed L lo y d ’s of London re la tio n s , S tev e Tow nsend, said representative told the newspaper. “ It Humphrey will appear a t a news m ight have been possible to get perhaps co n feren ce W ednesday, but th a t another $500,000, but th at’s about it.” Humphrey, recovering from a. foot Humphrey had gained 3,240 career injury suffered early last season, had yards for a 5.6-yard average before not told him w hat he has decided. reinjuring his left foot last season. However, The Birmingham News The paper said Hunphrey told Coach Tuesday quoted sources as saying Bill Curry and some team m ates that he Humphrey, who would be a fifth-year senior, decided against returning for will enter either the July or September the 1989 season after learning he could supplemental drafts. Humphrey could not be reached for not get enough insurance coverage to m ake it worthwhile should he suffer a comment, and Curry said, “This is Bobby’s decision, and I ’ll be glad to talk career-ending injury. Licurgo________ C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 17 . Either w ay, Diaz-Sandi said he has a lot of hard work ahead of him . , “ It really doesn’t m atter who I represent,” the gymnast said. “ I’m not looking for the easy way out. The U.S. team is not easy to m ake.” Diaz-Sandi did represent Mexico during the 1987 Pan Am Games and placed 13th in the all-around. He said this experience was much different than NCAA competition. “During big competitions like this (P in Am), you’re on a platform ,” the gym nast said. “You don’t see the judges. I learned that it’s just you up there. “The crowd was wild. It was ju st like basketball games. You don’t see that in gym nastics. I love crowds.” Besides fan support, Diaz-Sandi said team m ate ‘high-fives’ and com plim ents are essential during competition where the tension electrifies die air. “Every tim e I get psyched up, I do well,” he said. “My team m ates do better, too. It helps us to relax.” One of the prim ary reasons Diaz-Sandi moved to Pennsylvania with his family at the age of 14 w as because the level of gym nastics is much higher in the states. “I wanted to be a better gym nast,” he said. “Plus the education is b etter here.” The chem ical engineering m ajor has a tough and regim ented schedule he follows each week in the gym and in the classroom. “ It’s a hard schedule,” Diaz-Sandi said. “You have to have determ ination and want to do it.” Each day he spends his mornings in class, eats luneh, practices in the gym for four hours and then spends his evenings in the library. But when F riday rolls around, it is tim e to put the chalk and books aside. “That’s kind of the rule — to get out on F ridays,” DiazSandi said. T ien when Monday morning awakens, the gym past said he is ready to get back into his planned life. Diaz-Sandi said his favorite events are the floor exercise because it relaxes him, the high bar because he has never m issed on it in competition and the vault because it is a challenge. But he will say farewell to the gym nastic equipment after the 1992 Olympics and watch the sport from afar. “ I want to stick with my degree, career,” Diaz-Sandi said. State Press Classifieds 965-6731 MOVEUPINNURSING.ANDM THEWORLD.BEANAVYOFFICER. If you want to m akethe most of your potential, look into a career as an officer in the Navy Nurse Corps. . You can move ahead fast because Navy promotions empha­ size merit. And the opportunities for specialization are ju st as diverse as in civilian nursing. Nurse anes­ thetist, operating room, and obstet­ rics are just a few of the excel lent assignments available. You also get the added responsi­ bility and leadership opportunity th at are yours os a Navy officer - advantages that will move yoiir career along even faster. But thatk not ail. You’ll be earn­ ing a top salarY with superb bene­ fits. And thereieworldwide travel should you choosesmi overseas assignment after yoh^Brst tour of duty. You’ll earn 30 day^paid vaca­ tion annually and enjoy in se c u rity that can't lie beat. To find out more ftlioul the Navy Nurse'Corps, call (800) 228-8961 at no obligation,and start your move up in the world today. A representative w ill be a t th e N ursing C ollege on April 11 from 9am to 3pm . NAVY NURSE. Y o u a re T ò m o rro w . ___ __________ Y o ü a r e t h e N a v y . Molly C o n tin u e d from p a g e 17. “Molly is so consistent in everything she does,” LeSieur said. “ She knows what she w ants.” What is it th at C arpenter wants? “I want to m ake the best of the last m eet,” Carpenter said. “I want to hit my routines and help the team and, if all perm itting, be an All-American.” This season Carpenter has surpassed all the career bests she set last year. She considers herself a slow starter but as the season draw s to a close, everything within h e r will be released. “Molly is a slow starter then once she gets going — no problem ,” Anderson said. As the Trojan Horse’s db&r slowly opens, a Sun Devil gym nast will come forth and prove her abilites while vying for a national title. m cP, Sr Swimwear 10% Off! .), k U N M * SPRING BLOW OUT SALE! Everything in the store! *19*9 O R LESS! CHINESE C UISINE D on't PANIC! Call us to Reserve your page in our May 89' issue. Then sit back and enjoy Your Graduation! P R U U o P tfm s G l 1 R L i I j PROFESSIONAL GRADUATEREVIEW (Swimwear not included) CH ICK EN F R IE D . RICE W HEN YOU BUY AN ENTREE W ITH .TH IS AD 580 S. College, Tempe 968-4940 M -F 10-7 p.m.; Thurs lO-Vp.n».; Sat 10-6 p.m.; Sun 12-4 p.m. (602)966-5006 "W e're th e only publication that prom otes you, the graduating 8 1 8 W . B ro a d w a y * T e m p e , A Z 8 5 2 8 2 student, to A m erica's 500 lead in g Com panies." 602-990-8441 (University Towers Center across from Sun Devil Stadium) Safe m erchandise excluded. N o t good w ith any o th e r o ffe r. Expires 4 - 30 - 89 , W ED N ESD AYS STARTING A T 7 PM taurrn Sc t alrrg DRAFTS at R ural & A p ach e TODAY - WEDNESDAY. APRIL 12 1^2:30 pm B ESTLU N CH ES IN TH E PAC 101 “American Indian Literary, Diet and Medicinal Contribution to the World" * M U Pim a R o o m -featuring lecturer, b r. Elizabeth Parent «8» C o - s p o n s o r s - D e p t , o f F a m ily R esources and Hum an-Development and Center fo r Indian Education “Women Against the Odds” M U M ohave Room featuring Jo y Harjo «9* and Coleen Me Elroy *10* R eadings an d Moderated D iscussion C o -sp o n so r - A S A S U Lecture Series state Pres» Page 21 Jj^dnwdayjApriMJ^ISW classifieds LINER RATES _____________________ 15 words o r less is $3.00 per day fo r ir4 days CLASSIFICATIONS: H RR 1. Announcements E - -A IM asterCard 3. Trucks 4. Motorcycles 5. Bicycles 6. Furniture 7 Tickets For Sale . 8. Miscellaneous For Sale 9. Real Estate For Sale 10. Apartment^ Fbr 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 -FOR CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES AND FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: $2.75 per day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 per day fo r lo days & up <15C each additional word) The first 2 w ords are capitalized, n o bold face o r centering. 965-6731 CLASSIFIED ATTRACTIONS an d ask fo r PEGGY MCGINN C lassifie d A d v e rtisin g M an ager OR STERLENE MORRIS C la ssifie d A d v ise r Free B irthday Ad*: lim it 20 words; m ust show proof o f birthday. Typing D irectory...Look fo r Itl April 5, 12, 19,26 and May 2. HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AP: HOW TO CORRECT OR CAN CEL YOUR AD : in Person-. C ancellations: C ash, C hec k (with guarantee card)). MC, or • VISA. ’ Matthews'.Center Basement (South End)' M—F, 8 a.iti.—5 p.m. By M ail: By Phone: 965-6731 Payment with ViSA/MC' only. $6 minimum on all phone orders. The State Press reserves the right to reject any a d ve rtisin g copy _________ submitted. RENTAL SHARING A S U A R E A . 3 bedroom , 1 bath apartm ent. 2 B ED R O O M , 1 bath house, A S U 5 m iles. R O O M M A TE W A N TED . M ale/fem ale to $395/month. 966-8838. La rg e share 2 bedroom , 2 bath. P o d , w eight m any new parts, $900/offer. C a ll even­ Ricardo, 230-5259.________, ings, Je ff, 839-4946. BIBLE S T U D Y W ednesday nights, 7-6:30 1985 H O N D A S p ree 50 scooter. Inexpen­ p.m. M aster's Touch Com m unity C h u rch , sive transportation. $225 o r best offer. C all H ER ITA G E BUILDINGS: Tapered I-Beam, 2655 W . G uadalupe, num ber 2, M esa. F o r B rian, 967-5109. bolt-up construction steel buildings, engi­ B EA U T IFU L N EW larg e 1 and 2 bedroom . neer stam ped construction prints, 3,000 W alk to A S U . P ool, laundry room . O ne 1987 H O N D A 250 E lite. Helm et, fairing, sta n d a rd sifees, block South of U niversity on 8th Street, $150/M ONTH p lus % utilities. Room for D EVILLUSIO N S IS Com ing! O rd e r your trunk, only 400 m iles. $1500/offer. Kevin, 40x60x12 $6,275; C ap e C od Apartm ents. Phone 968-5238 rent. M ay 13 to A ugust 20. Furnished, copy of the Sun D evil Spark Yearbook 263-5363. 6 0x100x14 b today before it's too late. C om e down to the basem ent of M atthew s C enter o r ca ll our offices at 985-6881 . D on’t be left out of E LITE 50. G reat transportation. G ood condition. h elm et. the tradition. O nly 1400 $600/best m ifesi o ffe r. C a ll Jim , 966-1730/820-4994.__________________ live as soul apart from the body? Fre e video/discussion; 4/14, 9 a.m .-10:20 a.m . E LIT E 80. Bright red, go es 45m ph. M ust s e ll, $600/offer. C a ll A l, 461-0788, evenings. BICYCLES R eservations by AprH 14. Students, $8; C hevra and other, $16. C a ll 967-7563 for m ore inform ation o r se e us by the fountain on C ady M all. LONDON S U M M E R studio art program . First 5 w eek se ssio n . Undergraduate, credit. P rofessor deM atties 258-3194. Prelim inary accepting applications now. Contact M iss M aricopa Scholarship Pageant 1 R E S E R V E Y O U R Yearbook now! D on 't be o u t. C a li 965-6881 fo r m o re inform ation;.. SIN G LES N EW S , organizations, personal since 1971. Sam ple $1, box 10159 D ept. B, Scottsdale, 85271. V O LU N TEE R JU L Y to G uatem ala with the W orld Student S e rvice C o rp s. C a ll Ja n e , 966-3877. excellent colleg e ca r. R eal ch eap , m ust sell. C a ll Adam , 89*41773. le ave m essage. O LD SM O B ILE 2 (next to Multi W EDDING D R E S S and veil, size 9-10, $110. 820-2694, leave m essage. SCHW INN ____________ C R U IS E R . G irls, red se ll, $120/offer. 730-6445.________ M O U N TAIN - bike. A S T E A L of a D eal!! 2 bedroom townhome everything, alt Shim ano, hand built. New located in private com er of com plex. paint, rim$, loaded. P aul, 784-0572. Convenient to A S U . S e lle r w ants out, only door, 56,500 C u tla ss Suprem e loaded, excellent m iles. 1985 C A B R IO LE T. Excellent condition, D an, 784-0977. bedroom only. 1 person m axim um . 42 unit, very quiet, w ell m anaged com plex bath (fum ished/unfum ished) 2 m iles from near Safew ay/Coco’s . $l00/deposit, $0 A S U . W asher/dryer, fenced yard, pool, cleaning fees. Lim ited offer. P lease caH ceiling fans, en clo se d patio. 345-7280 Landm ark Apartm ents, 967-6620. after 6. 1965 FIER O ,: loaded, one ow ner, 38,000 m iles, mint condition. O nly $4490. M ust sell by 4 -15 .6 2 0 -9411 evenings/m essage EN G IN EER IN G F re e Rental Info. ' $ 4 9 ,9 0 0 -5 7 3 ,9 0 0 . B O N JO V I tickets. R eserved section F. $50 each/offer. 628-7454 (in S t a r t in g C a ll to ll: fr e e 602-323-7779. (AZ-CAN ) ________ 1980 H O N D A Tw inatar m otorcycle, 2 00 cc, ; 12,000 mUes. V ery good condition. $375. 837-9142, Ja ck . 2 and 3 w asher/dryer, p o o l, sp a , w asher/dryer, utilities. M ichele, m icrow ave, ' quiet 1000 W O LFF Sunbeds. Toning tables- no p e ts .1 ________________ _ TO W N H O U S E FO R sa le , 3 bedroom , 2 square feet, è bedroom , 2 bath. $475 bath, 1300 square feet. FH A ’s fully assum - includes all utilities. 1/10 mite to A S U . B rickell, New K id s on the Block, Suns able 9V4 % 30 year fixed low down. Pool, Pool, laundry. CaH today, 986-8704. play-offs, and m ore. A ll national events. spa,' tehnis, sportcourt. 607 W , 14th S I., Ticket Exchange, 829-0196. Tem pe. P a l, 667-4908. _______ W A LK A S U sp écial $100 off first m onth’s rent. N ear new 2 bedroom , appliances, $395/month. R S V P Realty, 838-3896. BUY OF THE WEEK Q u e sts V M a .B M JM O 2 m aster su ites, upgraded m auve Ideal for Students carpet, firep la ces, 3 p a tios, breakfast p lu s bar, la rg e pantry, form al d in in g , BUILD IN G S 24x40x8. com pletely erected. O verhead and entrance doors included. $4596 post-fram e. $4999 steel-fram e. •Affordablestudios & 1 bedrooms from $295 •Great locationdose to ASU •Privacy-, w alk-in clo se ts, alt a p p lia n ces. B ob B u llo ck • R ealty E xecutives 966-2662 M any size s and options available. C a ll SELL drum s. ___________ G ood APARTMENTS 1-level apartments mature landscaping condition, NEED CASH OR CLOTHES? Clothing Resale Headquarters Some of our Hottest Brands include: isspwrl C.C.’S C lo set C la ssics FRYS 5HOPPINC CENTER NE Comer Southern/NcClintock 491-2029 10-6 non-Sat 12-9 Sunday at com er of FO R O N LY $100, you can p lace your classified advertising (up to 25 w ords; $4 utilities. CaH 829-0602 after 6. each additional word^ in 58 new spapers FU R N ISH ED room reaching nearly 650,000 readers around W AN TED to sh a re 3 Arizona. T o learn m ore about the A rizona p lease. $200/month. CaH Lou» , 921-9617, New spaper A ssociation, 1-602-277-3600. leave m essge. (AZ-CAN ) HELP WANTED HELP WANTED S T A Y C O O L this summer* Fre e! 1000 R od Stew art, P oison, Bobby Brown, Eddie MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 1-800-387-6836. (AZ-CAN ) C lassified Advertising Network, contact pool, PRIM E S E A T S : N eil Diam ond, Bon „Jovi, _____ m ills, bikes. CaH today. Free color catalog. your lo cal new spaper, o r caH A rizona backyard, R ES T A U R A N T AN D lounge in Holbrook. 524-3529. (AZ-CAN)_______ $249. B ody w raps, lam ps, lotions, tread­ CoHege/Alam eda. N onsm oker, no pets private 967-4789. each. facial toning. Sa ve to 50% . P rices from TV , G ood term s. $150,000. C a ll before 2 p.m ., $30 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES bedroom , 2 bath hom e South of A S U , and reserved , 893-6190 ------------------------------- O N E B ED R O O M , furnished. W atorbed. R O O S E V E L T A N D U niversity. 2 bedroom . Satu rd ay, T h e R oom m ate E x p re ss U niversity and Hardy. $220/month p lus % R O O M M A TE 2 bath. 1st m onth’s le n t free! $390/month. suucitch+ C ali Je nny, 968-4673. Mi LIVE-IN. 3 2nd-C am dback area. Private property, easy a cce ss to Interstate 40- Maxim a W O N 76,000 m iles. A rizona ca r. tip h . M ust se e. I m ust se ll it. $750/offer. p lus Utilities. 966-2360 or 9666111. Arizona operating business including real current records. $5700. 967-0992. dash, excellent condition. G o e s 6 0 p lus $250 A p lace to live? CaH neighborhood, near A S U . $250 p lu s % G R A T E F U L D E A D tickets. Irvine, Friday R ETIR ED S T A T E Em ployee. 1963 N issan E lite 250. G old , digital pod, Lease, $380 including utilities. 968-1309. Tucson) 921-1902. 11/85 H O N D A washer/ F E M A L E R O O M M A TE. Beautiful house, at A S U . $595, available early M ay. 966-8836 m o to r cy c les furnished, Lo s room with bath; B eautiful hom e, p o d . MARIANNA APARTMENTS -— .. r-. ■1214 E: O range «66-6597 AS" S c o tt, or needed! 966-1219.________________________ tennis, sportcourt. V* m ile A S U . 987-4808. PhM, 784-0906. Four p iece. C e ll any tim e. $2700/offer. bath. b e d ro o m s, clubhouse. m iles, fully carpeted, rear se a l. Excellent Orest, sport rim s, $350 stereo, new top, P rados townhom e- restaurant, 3 O R 4 bedroom , Ite bath. V w y d o se to ; To n n eau c o v e r, 921-2402. R O O M M A TE dryer, p o d , etc. Shared m aster bedroom/ P inetop's only full service resort. O n site C B 70 In tern ation ale , $120/best otter. C a ll C O N V E R T IB LE M G - R uns great, looks FEM ALE University Realty 808 S . Mill 968-9331 TO W N H O M ES, N E ED ED D o you need a room m ate? m essage); 829-7357 (evenings). 1,2, & 3 bedroom homes and apartments. Furnish­ ed and unfurnished. With and without pools. All price ranges. Pick up a free list at N EW condom inium s. 1968 J E E P W rangler. Pow er steering, low m atic, 66,000 m iles, $9500. 961-6819, (work, leave LU X U R Y M UST AM/FM cassette, pow er everything. Auto- 962-4545 P IN E C R E E K ____________ 82 BM W 526a. Leather interior, sun roof, R O O M M A TES som eone m ature, responsible, and fairly backyard. N ice neighborhood. 894-8348. ration. “ W ork done by licensed contrac- R ich ard C O M P A T IB L E tives, 996-9910 or 948-8871.___________ lo rs."(A Z-C A N ). C ad fbr couch, love se a t, and chair. Com e and see new air-conditioner, tires, battery, belts. $10,500. looking m ent with (M ay to Decem ber). Prefer quiet. Andrew , 600-326-1496anytim e. H igh P lains Corpo­ condition, STUD EN T and o ccasional child ca re . 955-9799. S e r v ic e . ROOMMATE SERVICES som eone (m ale/fem ale) to find an apart­ bath duplex apartm ent. Q uiet, fenced 1985 P O N TIA C Sunb ird. G reat condition, $3500. 9664072 alter 5 , ___________ _____________ Owner-agent. C a ll C hantal, Realty Execu­ R e n ta l TW O M A LE room m ates wanted to share 3 68th Street/Thom as. $231 p lus utilities. LIVING R O O M set for sa le. O verstuffed TICKETS per $260/month p lus Ur utilities. Ow n room/ Exchange for part-tim e house hold chores and P rados town hom es! $180 ties. E arly sum m er sp e cia l, $333/month, 1 G R E A T M OVE-IN sp e cia l. 2 bedroom , 1 shopping Los m onth p lu s utilities. CaH 967-7727) bedroom apartm ent in Sycam ore C reek, condo. 2 bedroom . 2 bath, upper unit. fully loaded, a ir, pow er-steering, AM /FM cassette. G rey, grey lo p , 56500.764-9166. in Share patio hom e. Fem ale grad preferred. N O Q U A LIFY, low dow n, Papago Park I $3800/offer. 9664742. R O O M M A TE N E E D E D to share bedroom F R E E AIR-CONDITIONING, and all utili­ 834-9131/924-9396.___________________ R ESO R T B eed, private bath, pool. 945-6225 o r 965-4287. $34,500. Caldw ell Banker- Linda Sim s, and m ake offer (Scottsdale). 948-7799. utilities. A B S O L U T E L Y W O N D E R FU L! M ust see! REAL ESTATE New FURNITURE % for sp ecial. with krypto lock. H ardly ridden. Flaw less, must RENTAL SHARING p lu s B u ffa lo P lease ca ll or leave m essage. M indy, 967-7783 and leave m essage. Iko.______ 1979 P O N TIA C Firebird. W hite with M o p s, Brougham . Com puter 829-8457. betw een 9-2 o r leave m essage._________ AUTOMOBILES condition, Tem pe 967-6041.___________________________ Exchange), 225 W . U niversity. 966-1388. ads, monthly in Sin gle S cen e New spaper, 1961 lator. Never used, com plete with instruc­ tions. $60/offer. 831-8865. C O M P U TER S ! room , tennis courts, clubhouse, near A S U . a y . T l P R O G R A M M A B LE 5 8C business calcu­ U SED ap p lian ces. $255/m onth ter M ulti System s, Tem pe (next to Buffalo director- Kay, 945-2838. le ft d all $260 and up. Pool, no dogs. 966-8838. M U R R A Y 10 Speed. O n e year old, $70. SP EC IA LIZED MISS AM ER IC A County t o w asher, A S U A R E A : Studios, 1 and 2 bedroom s, W E B U Y /SELL used com puters. Com pu­ 6:45 p.m ..Tradition P assover d ln n e r.D o n ’t graduate s free yard, $52S/month. 437-8994. Exchange), 225 W . U niversity. 966-1388. H ILLEL S E P E R W ednesday, A p ril 19th at out! re fo r 1-800-643-5555.(AZ-CAN). S y ste m s, MU209 (Yavapai). m iss r o c h u $9.186; C a ll Includes D R EAN S, T IM E L E S S m om ents, intuitive hunches, near-death experiences. D o we 50x75x12 $ 1 3 ,8 9 5 . Ads may run fo r any length o f tim e. Canceled ads will be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. HOMES FOR RENT 1982 YA M A H A 550 S e ca . Runs great, $ 3 ,4 8 5 ; Corrections must be made before noon. Compensation w ill n o t be g iv e n f o r customer error. APARTMENTS rods for beautiful, long, flow ing cu rls. 3 0x40 x10 C ustom er E rro rs: Classified display ads can begin 2 DAYS after they are placed (if placed before 10 a m i Classified liner ads can begin 1 DAY after they are placed (if placed before noon). 40% O F F Sp iral perm s given with sp iral further inform ation c a ll 839-2253. Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. Call 965-6731 with any corrections, before noon. The Sta te Press is only responsible fo r th e first day the ad runs incorrectly. Cor­ rected ads will be extended one day. Changes called in after, the first day will not qualify fo r a make-good State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Rm 15 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Please enclose payment with ad m o to r cy c les prices. " T S ” 894-8337. State Press E rrors: N ortlrM U information Desk M—P. 9 a m .-2:30 p.m. an n o u n cem en ts BUY/SELL/Trade photo equipm ent. Best Liner ads must be canceled before noon, 1 day prior to publication No refunds will be given. W HEN WILL YOUR A D RUN? Graduation G ift D irectory Thursday, April 27. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE , 2 Autos SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now For Fall! WALK TO ASU! Only V z block from cam ­ pus. Beautifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom , 2 bath apart­ ments. A ll bills paid. Cable TV, h eated p o o l, and spacio us laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by today! Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS_________ ■2 B ED R O O M plus d an, 2 bath patio hom e for rent or sate- H ear U niversity and D obson. $450/month. 998-1111. 2 B ED R O O M , 2 bath furnished condo, Papago II. Pool, jacu zzl. CaH evenings, 714-766-9575 o r714693-9376. P A P A G O P A R K . B uy or rent large 1 bedroom , w asher/dryer and refrigerator, pool. E R A Be* end A sso ciates, 835-6146. P A P A G O PA R K C ondo. 2 bedroom , 1' bath. W asher/dryer. en clo se d patio, com m unity pool. 461-9213 evenings or leave m essage. EARN WHILE YO U LEARN JOINING OUR PROGRAM MAY EARN YOU UP TO 600“ In a world where meeting living expenses just keeps getting tougher, put yo u r good health to work and let it pay fo r yo ul Jo in o u r program to evaluate the absorption rate of various pharm aceutical medi­ cations. T h e se m edications m ay be new or currently on the market. Som e you m ay have used in yo u r own home. W e are a rapidly grow ing co m pa n y With a highly so p h istica te d resea rch program . W e extend an invitation to you to join our volunteer gro u p and becom e a m em ber o f this proud team. □Each study requires a free physical □Each study la fully explained □Each study It medically supervised We have m any Research Program s to offer to M A L E S A G E S 19 to 55. E a ch Research Program requires a different length of stay. So m e just on weekends! Give us a call and check out your possibilities to earn an extra Income. CaH the Volunteer Recruiting Office, 437-0116 M onday through Friday 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. HARRIS LA B O R A T O R IE S , INC. Providing Q u a lity (Research S in ce 1933 P A P A G O P A R iy . Sum m er, winter rente), two bedroom . A vailab le M ay. Tom , collect, '714-840-2874. mani “In a World o f Questions, Harris Answers” USUI Page 22 * BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES n e ss you ow n. N ational com pany. N o se llin g , we secu re lo catio n s, com plete new snack or pop vendors. R equried investm ent secured by equipm ent. Phone free Ed M ichaels. 1-800-628-2828 ext 797. (AZCAN ). HELP WANTED IM M ED IATE O P EN IN G S in fun, part-time N E E D M O M M Y’S helper 15-20 hours per PAR T-TIM E C O C K T A IL w aitress needed. evening crew . $4-$l0/hour paid w eekly. w eek. CaH th# M oroccan R estaurant, 947-9590. Strong math aptitude to assist in the colleg e juniors, sen io rs and grads. W SI, C a ll for appointm ent, 921-5436. M cC lin tock developm ent of real time/multi-user/multi- ten n is, processor operating system s fo f Vax and canoe, athletics, aerob ics, archery, golf. 68000. Flexible hours. C a ll 279-2816 or G ym nastics, fitness/weight training, arts personnel, part or full-tim e. O pening trade N EW unofficial transcripts to Ticket M aster, and crafts, photography, silver jew elry, with 5 3 countries. G reen C a rd not neces- (M ass). M ah-Kee-Nac forboys/D anbeefor 3118 W . Clarendon, P hoenix, A Z 85017. theatre, piano, dance, stage/tech, com pu­ sary. 464-8047. g irls. C ounselor positions for program C O U N SE LO R S . P R E S TIG IO U S sailing,- w indsurfing, 10:15 a.m .-12:30 p .m . Sundays. C a ll 839-2253. ing and enjoyable sum m er. C a ll anytim e! C am p Ta co n ic, 800-762-2820. C LO SE TO tor qualified buyers, financing available. separate turquoise ch a lk . R elaxed envi­ in g s . 491-0117. A sk for M rs C arlson. A S U . M ale/fem ale to sort/ Fo r inform ation ca ll 247-4676. M ailing ronm ent, $4.50/hour to start. FuH/part- ad d ress: Tastee Fre ez, Inc., 6006 N . 83rd tim e, 9 Avenue, G len d ale, A rizo n a 85303. R esearch Corporation, 903 N . M iller Road to 5, C O U N T E R H E LP , light lunch and even­ C u rry, E ast to M iller, South P ro ce ssin g phone orders. P eo p le ca ll you. N o ex p erien ce necessary. C a ll (refundable) 1 -51 8 ^ 9-8 6 97 ext. K203, 7 days. tions V i m ile.) need personnel part-tim e S p rin g , full-tim e Sum m er. 264-7774. 10-6. ie n ce d cooks, part-tim e, with excellent starting w age. T .C . Eggington’s. Apply in p erson at 1660 S . A lm a S ch o o l R oad after C LEA V ER for lunch accepting w aitresses and lunch nient h o u rs.' Fun atm osphere. Concern ty are im portant. A pply in person, MondayFrid ay, 2-5 p.m . o r by appointm ent, 5101 N . 44th Street (44th and Cam elback). 2:30 d aily. a ro u n d c o u rse $4.50/hour. M ake application to Esther Berum en, Honeyw ell In c., 2626 W . Beryl, A MEDICAL office in S co ttsd a le needs FEM A LE P hoenix. A Z 85021. m anner desired. C a ll M rs. M athis for book, sew ing, im m ediately 8-10 enthusiastic individuals rollerskating, rocketry, ropes, cam p craft; for o iir new Tem pe office: $ 8 -$t0 /hour. No ail waterfront activities (swimm ing, skiing, phone sa le s. G reat tor students. CaH interview , 947-4137 d a ys, 945-1528 even­ person o n ly, 7701 E . Indian NEEDED W o rk fo r a S ch o o l R oad, Su ite E . A M E D IC A L o ffice in Sco ttsd ale needs part-tim e help- WUI train. M ust, type w ell, m ust b e available m ost m ornings. A pply in person only, 7701 E . Indian School R oad, S u ite E . A P P O IN T M EN T S E T T E R S . S e t appoint­ m ents for our sa le s departm ent. H ours 5 to 9. C a ll Jo d y, 921-2295.________________ A R IZ O N A 'S T O P em ployers are found in the A rizona K ey Corporation D irectory. Fre e at your lo cal library. (ÀZ-CAN ) ATTEN TIO N ! $7-$12/hour during 8 w eek training program . M ust be aggressive and p ro g re s s iv e c o m p a n y w ith p e r h o u r. F o r an in te r v ie w c a ll M r s .W e s tla k e a t self-m otivated. 968-7013 o r 894-2049. 4 9 3 -9 1 3 6 C H ILD C A R E . H elp m om ca re for children T A C IN C . full-tim e during sum m er. Ow n transporta­ tion. N ear P V M ali. 992-2846. firm needs m ale sa le s representatives to h elp m arket dryc le a n in g s e rv ic e s . W o rk $10-$30/hour. C a ll M ike, 962-0802 for introducing Sum m er new product for national m anufacturer. Salary and expenses. Send to 8618 E. C lyd esd ale Trail, Scottsdale, A Z 85258. S E A R C H . Now screening sary. In town lim ited tim e. C a ll m essage hours. Sum m er hours vary slightly. August line, 892-0077. opportunity. to represent lo cal b usinesses and greet new students at registration. W elcom e W agon trains you. C a r a m ust. CaH P hyllis, 951-6731. Saturday, April 15th. M ust be good with people and kids. $5/hour. 837-1454, leave m essage. Las Atlanta, V e g a s, travel, t o d d le r, $250/week; New Y ork, private apartm ent, $175/week; V irginia, infant, $20Q/week. M any positio n s a va ila b le . O ne necessary. year 1-8Q0-937-NAN1.____________ available. Telem arketing. N o seHing, sim p­ area, both skilled and unskilled. F o r list o f now and in the sum m er. $6-8/hour. CaH Lam b Fin an cial, 246-0116. P AR T-TIM E O F F IC E help. Tem pe area. jo b s . $3.55/hour. M ust type 50wpm , com puter C om plete d etails, $2. W rite: C anyon, Box entry, professional appearance, nonsm ok­ 30444R , er. B arbara, Century 21 A riz o n a in custom er service and retail. Sch o lar­ sh ip s available. CaH 10 to 3; Phoenix, 242-9677 or M esa, $44-2758. C a li Scott, 968-7735 after 6. P R E S S M A N : G O S S Com m unity. 9 units, job for you! G reat hours, 4-9 p.m . G reat 2 folders. Cam era/plate room . Experience pay, $5/hour plus bonuses. G rea t w orking hetful. Send resum e cto M ark Vincent. conditions: W eekends off. M ust be 17 or G allup Independent, G a llu p , New M exico N. 9th S t., older. C a ll now to se e if you qualify. M r 87301 or ca ll Forem an at 921-2897 betareeri 9 a.m .-5 500 p.m . 1-800-545-3817. S u p e rS h u ttle Airport Ground Transportation R e q u ire m e n ts : M u s t b e 21- y e a r s o ld ; v a lid A r iz - • o n a d r iv e r ’s lic e n s e ;? p ro o f o f c it iz e n s h ip ; M V R rep ort. P le a s e a p p ly in p e r s o n at: ext. P139. ______________________ T u cso n , 85751. A .M . R ealty, 831-1114. Adventuresom e!! „ S T U D E N T S T A R T at $9,25. 32 openings fle x ib le s c h e d u le s . T r a in in g c la s s e s to b e h e ld M a rc h 4 -2 4 . ' $250/week; N o experience required. Position available jo b s and application ca ll 1-615-383-2627 p .m . N E E D E X T R A m oney? Part-tim e position girt, $ 16 0 /w eek; ly m ake appointm ents for our consultants. Sum m er required. Scottsdale, 947-7351. sum m er gptf p asses. Jim , 838-9129 after 5 C a ll N A N N Y O P P O R TU N ITIE S. San D iego, one G O V E R N M E N T JO B S ! Now hiring in your CANYON service. Phone and typing experience L a d ie s / M e n , . J o in th e g r o w in g te a m o f c u s t o m e r s e r v ic e p r o ­ fe s s io n a ls p ro v id in g a irp o rt g r o u n d tra n s p o rt a ­ tio n th r o u g h o u t th e g re a te r m e tro p o lita n P h o e ­ n ix a re a . W e a re s e e k in g q u a lifie d in d iv id u a ls w h o a re a v a ila b le to w o rk F T & P T , w e e k e n d s , c o m m itm e n t FU N O U TG O IN G g irls needed for airshow , M anager and sa le s­ for free. $500-$600/month. 969-1144. W e are seeking enthusiastic self-starters SP O R TS-M IN D ED S T U D E N T S , H A V E w e got the school year M A JO R - job ca llin g on A rizona sm all businesses resum e 921-8282 people needed to h elp seH^and m arket 5 hours a week m inim um , work at hom e. b e tw e e n Search M agazine. N o experience neces­ GRAND (girls) 201-316-6660. M o n d a y- E a rn INDIVIDUALS- H iring Cam ping (girls), 263 M ain Road; M ontville, PAR T-TIM E T E L E M A R K E T E R S . $5/hour, a rra n g e d . P .O . Box 819, S ed on a, 86336. (AZ-CAN ) Avenue; G len R id g e, N J 07028; Action can be assignm ent p erson. S e n d resum es, c lip s, Inquire J& D C am ping (boys), 190 Linden Thursday, 6 p.m .-9 p .m . 3 d ay schedules M onday-Friday. Approxim ately 6 weekend fle x ib le h o u rs! S a l a r y : $ 7 * 0 .0 - canoeing/kayak). PAR T-TIM E D A Y S . Telephone answ ering L O C A L M A R K ETIN G m ales/fem ales for the next issue o f M odel E arning w indsurfing, sum m er job. M ake $5000. C a lf 222-8114. p o ssible. HOUR cooking, N J, 07045. Phone (boys) 201^429-8522; Training provided. 6-8 a.m ./2:30-6:30 p.m . FLE X IB LE photography, sa ilin g , LIB E R A L A R T S M ajors. WMd, off-the-wall M O D EL A p p ly in tw ice a w eek, needs cap ab le general SP O R TSM IN D ED light $1600/month depending on qualifications. Th e include perform ing arts, fine arts, year­ position beginning M ay 89. Chauffering, on sp e cia l equipm ent. S a la ry $1000 to PH O TO G R A PH ER . Sed ona R ed R ock N ew s is grow ing, going archery, riflery, and biking; other openings zational sk ills, typing, ch eerfu l personality live-in R EPO R TER * P rofessional appearance and energetic ad d itional M A R K ETIN G /SA LES A T T E N D A N T caregiver for 2 house-keeping, sports, especially train. C a ll Fit! 73Ó-0721. training- provided. h e lp fu l, handicapped teenage g irls,. Perm anent P A R T T IM E SECRETA RY Brother/Sister C am ps baseball, basketball, field hockey, so ccer, fuff-tim e front and back o ffice help- O rgani­ and general o ffice sk ills a m ust. WNI train E N G LA N D interview . ______ 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 _______ P E R S O N A L TR A IN ER . Mate/femate, part- and voHeyball; 25 tennis openings; also Som e part-tim e, $4.50 to start. 945-1015. Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tempe s c h e d u le , D ebbie, tim e, now increased hours- sum m er. WUI specialists: AN team w anted. rock m aterial. E xp erience helpful. F u ll or o r program m ing know ledge. 25-30 hours a n d ’ G u ad a lu p e . experience help Is nice, but you can help people, too: University Plasma Center transportation. sa le s L A N D S C A P E H E L P E R . Install plant and EN G IN EER IN G S T U D E N T with C A D and/ own LA D IES A P P A R E L . Y e a r round, part-tim e, ings. D esert Dw eller, 7149 5th Avenue, SAFER, FASTER PLASMA DONATION ONLY AT AB1 C E N T E R S D U E TO AUTOMATED PROCEDURE. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation with this ad. Ask about additional bonuses. (MondaySaturday). applica­ h ostesses. W ill train. Short shifts, conve­ w e e k ly ; Tem pe. have B R O KER S/m arketing ★ EXTRA MONEY* 952-0585. A C C E P T IN G A P P LIC A TIO N S tor exper­ -of E a rn $120 + a m o n th with appearance, personality and reliabili­ 3 SW IM stores, Phoenix/Scottsdale/M esa, R a in b o w M ust 897-6327. IN T ER N A TIO N A L Scottsdale. 894-0812. C O R K ’N D o u b le M onday-Frkfay at R .T. (North o f A S U over river on R ural and S350/D AY w aterski, w oodworking, new spaper. H ave a reward­ T A S T E E F R E E Z of A rizon a. $35,000 down HELP WANTED HELP WANTED co-ed Rapidly ter, scie n ce , rocketry, cam ping, video, up cost, high profits. C a ll Ja so n 491*3244. 1 B erkshire, M A sum m er cam p se eks skilled P R O G R A M M ER S. grow ing com pany se ek s C H R ISTIAN N U R S E R Y worker needed. O W N Y O U R own b u s in e s s.ljire .lb w , start HELP WANTED persons with A S SEM B LY service HELP WANTED HELP WANTED E A R N 2N D w eekly incom e in ca sh busi­ training, Stute Press W ednesda^prilJîjJTOÇ , 1915 E. Buchanan, Phoenix M o n .- T h u r ., 9 a .m ,-2 :3 0 p .m . EOE - r- m ■ ■ S P R I N G ’ 89 ■ I I ■ I 1 I I TYPING DIRECTORY 1 I WORD PROCESSINGTYPING Resum es, term papers. Pickup/delivery. Laser printer. Additional services available. 3 0 0 0 0 O ©O 0 O 0 000030000« 0 0 9 0 0,00 0 « WORD PROCESSING quick, experienced, quality guaranteed. Editing, Laser Printer, Dictaphone. E x te n d e d h o u rs an d | ' w eekends. Call 947-7796 WHEN IT HAS TO LOOK ITS BEST AND YOU NEEDED IT YESTERDAY . ; . CAN SAME THE DAY 1 e S' e I > ■ S’* I e Professional Phototypesetting Oyer 47S typefaces Computer Graphiqjjs and Laser Printing PMTs, Halftones, Negatives Commercial Photography B/W Processing and Printing I * - Sen,ice GfaPhic Studio I ■ | 345-2222 230 W. Baseline Rd. SuHw 104 in Tempe just one block west of Mill Ave. Q u a lit y , S1.50/Paga Professional Quality Guaranteed A c c u r a t e W o r d P r o c e s s in g P I N Term Papers — Free pick-up & delivery . .•$l/page h ig h - q u a t it y . Quick turnaround available. 9 6 6 -7 6 3 0 A p a c h e / R u ra l C A L L JACKIE ' 831-8635 /. E n glish teacher Laser printer Bob • C laudia S i 9 4 5 -5 7 4 4 w f if « Every writer need* an editor! Faculty, advanced student; papers. Professional, degreed Ph.D. 256-2830 96 4 -6 0 1 2 LASER PRINTING I can halpl Reasonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experience in academic. Call Jessie Editorial Services P rofessional word processor & form er Professional Quality SHORT OF TIME? f t S $1.50 AND UP Theses t y p in g ? fo r C all Paper Chase Secretarial Sendee W ORD PRO CESSIN G , IBM P C letter quality printing. Fast, low cost. G L o o k in g CALL TERRILL AT 345-7204 W O R D P R O C E S S IN G Y your 892-6105 921-1129 A-2-Z TYPtNG/WP 921-3553 O N E CA LL-D O ES IT A LL. TERM P A PE R S. THESIS. ETCIN CLUD ES D ISKETTE Jg STO R A G E -C LO S E TO ASU. ty p e F o x W o r d P r o c e s s in g 946-7880 can help you m ake that A p ro fe s s io n a l p a p e rs . 10% : s tu d e n t d isc o u n t. C e ll P ro fe s s io n a l Im a g e S p e llin g , g ram m ar, p u n ctu atio n , sentence structure, bibliography cor­ rected. Know A P A , M L A form ats. S p e cialize in nursing, research, group papers. C a ll 966-6217 T a L a s e r - p r in t e d re su m e s. 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FOR YOUR BEST IMAGE Quality work on laser, printer. Resumes-our speciality. Term papers/thesis/ dissertations. Tempe/Mesa D o n n a o r J o a n , 94 5 -6 3 0 2 . 844-2300 OmCSSYSTEMS J*_ 1 W ORD P R O C ES SIN G tor a ll your typing needs. Fast turnaround. O verflow w ork also. D isc storage available. C lo se to A S U . $1.25/page and up. Roxanne 966-2825 NEAR ASU W EST $2.00 PER P A G E for reports, term papers and manuscripts. Mary 978-8686. $ 1 15/PAGE AND U P 1 1BM PC, LETTER QUALITY PRINTER. Quality work and. fast. CAROL ö S !? W m t a f . y f r .. G O M fL E T E TEXT ^ PRO D U CTIO N - * Resum es • Term Papers » Manuscripts • Multi Column Texts P r o f e s s io n a lly L a s e r s e t Free 1 Year D isc F ile Speedy S ervice 168A W. University, Mesa CURRY PRINT & COPY (to minutes from ASU) Sm itfy’s Center Mill & Southern Avenues 844-1876 967-7102 (M -F 9 -6 & Sat 9 - 5) I I I J. MesaSecretarial Service Hours 10-4 and by appointment C a ll i state PK» Page sa Wedn«da£Apr¡MS>t989 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED INSTRUCTION PETS FE D E R A L T R U C K driving school. 30 day F R E E P U P P Y . G erm an Shepard-Golden d ot certified. Financial aid and placem ent R etriever m ix. 4 m onths o ld , all shots. C a ll SU M M ER ’S H E R E a n d the heal la on) G et out of the heat and work in ou r airconditioned office with a rock'n roll atm o­ sphere. S e ll construction su p p lies nation­ wide. N o experience necessary.: Earn while you learn. P a id training, guaranteed salary- fuWpart-tlm a. CaU 921-1851 S10/HOUR TO S T A R T S u m m e r W ork. P O h o X 1084, Tem pe, A Z 85281. a T 1 ~ SWIM IN S TR U C TO R for 2 boys (S e n d 5). C all 963-6926, ______________ _ TH E D EVIL H ouse is accepting applica­ tions for all positions: doorm en, barten­ ders, and patio cocktail w aitresses. M u d be at 21 o ro id er. C a sh ie rsa n d coo ks must NO EXP. NECESSARY F R E E P U PP Y/ B lack Lab/Retrtever. A ll H A N G GLIDEI Gently sloping man-made Pleqae ca ll C hristin e, leave trainer hill. S afe and exciting. Fly all day* 986-7621. Sell industrial tools and supplies for na­ tional firm. We will train. 2 shifts available. Walk to SERVICES for parties, graduation photos and photo A 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. discounts. Rem ove unw anted hair, perm a­ C A S H PAID. Jew elry o f a ll kinds, including sections Of the 1989-90 book. P ick up an applications in M atthew s C enter Basement room 50 or ca ll 0 6 5 -^ 8 1. ______ TH E S U N G LA S S Com pany is searching for fashion forw ard, outgoing, high achiev­ e rs to com plete their store sa le s team in Los A rcos M ali. Th e S u n g la ss Com pany is rapidly grow ing ch ain of sunglass specialty stores. Jo b o ffe rs flexible hours - -;' s! ings, w eekerids. Fun and lots o f attention. E LE C T R O LY S IS - FREE LOST/fOUNP licen se and neat appearance. Futt/part- FO U N D : CHRISTIAN public. Flexible hours. Salary averages g la sses in case. Can 921-1095. D ior prescription from $5 to $15/hour. G ood references R ESEAR CH library o f inform ation in U .S . Tod-free Services. Basem ent. CaU to identify. 965-7572. hotline: 800-351-0222. A S TR O N O M Y Tutor. FO U N D : T E X T B O O K Need In B A C 116 last and your key. Student sum m er sp ecials. B est Little W arehouse In Tem pe, 1905 E . We’re here for you, ASUI State Press Classifieds . Apache. 967-3900. P si 500 on Saturday night at 8 at our R anch Cam p, 516 .N . 5th p o su re A T 0 , PI Phi, P hi Sig- Th e D eeG ee’s are Saturday! Sun Splash 89! S e e ya there! Y O U R OW N B usiness- S e ll unique T- return. Mr. X. 16 0 0 N . S a b a C h a n d le r, A Z 85 22 5 N ana’s return. resum es, form letters, dictaphones, edit­ evenings, leave ADOPTION your happy hour O ils Thursday! Liv e it up) A ll expenses paid! C a ll S a ra and Ira collect at 1-718-4154. (A Z-CAN ) f with a M ac II and laser printer. C a ll Su san , 945-1500. Legal/confidential. CaH N ick and Georget­ te coHect anytim e, 718-256-5772. (AZ- FO R M E R A S U staffers: W ord Perfect, Xerox Mem orywritere. Experienced with A P A , M LA, graduate sch o o l, etc. GrffouC a ll D onna or Jo a n , 945-6302. (klN K O ’S a se cu re, loving fam ily. E xpenses paid. P AP ER S CAN ) H A P PILY M ARR IED with lots o f love to g ive, D aine and B o b wish to adopt new born. P lease caR ou r attorney collect at 406-288-7100 A-192.(AZ-CAN ). m ake the grade). Kktko’s typesets papers, resum es, fliers H A P PILY M ARR IED professional couple se ek s infant o r toddler to adopt and love. P lea se ca ll our attorney, 408-288-7100. A-167. (AZ-CAN) S E C R E T A R IA L Se rvice. Term papers, theses, dissertations, resum es. your newborn and g iv e ft a wonderful, secu re life. AH expenses-m edical/legal. Confidential. CaH co llect anytim e. M ichele im pression? P rofessional typing, typeset­ ting, proofreading, and editing o f your handwritten* typed, o r w ord p rocessed docum ents done by w riting consultants and M ichael 516-681-1437.(AZ-GAN ). f W E P R O M ISE to lo ve and cherish your b&by with all our heart. WHI be full-tim e m other. CaH S u e o f BHI collect anytim e, 215-872-5675. (A Z-CAN ) MISCELLANEOUS Q U A LITY TY P IN G - proof-reading- editing next d ay guaranteed. 897-1036. < RAPER S, A p ro fe ssio n a lly A A A D RIVEAW AY. Fre e ca rs to m ost D G H E A T H E R Shelton: O ur vacations are m ajor cities. G a s allow ances available. 21 over and l am g la d w e are both hom e! I or older. C a ll 279-2000. then 4530. Q U A L IT Y , 10% student la se r p rin ted discount. Professional Im age, 921-1129. S E C R E T A R IA L C a ll fa m ily ex p erien ce. school exchange students arriving in A u g u st Becom e a host fam ily for Am eri­ S E R V IC E S . 1-800-SiB U N G (A ZC AN ). Ad Phone N am e C ts Sort Start S to p d H S . W o fd - p ro cessin g ,laser type setting. R easonable w as beginning to m iss our late night talks, W O N D ER FU L Australian, European, Scandinavian high can Intercutturaf Student Exchange. C all R ESU M ES. resum es. W e love you! Love, the younger deegee’s. C allan, Letterm an, la zy days, apples, C R , to share our secure hom e and happiness. G IV E A baby a chance to b e adopted into FLY IN G FIN G E R S offers typeset quality you print that file ! 438-9202. TRANSPORTATION D E E G E E Seniors! H ave a great tim e at sw e e te s triy t, T .J . C A S H FO R care or tru cks nooding work. 497-0405. A L L S T A T E S Driveaw ay- C a rs available- ra te s. 21 o r older. 992-5200. 436-2066. N E E D D R IVER to drive ca r from Scotts­ S H O R T O F tim e? I can help. R easonable. Fa st d o sin g . D eal d irect. M ayflow er Capi- d ale to Fargo, North D akota en d o f A pril. P rofessional. G uaranteed. Experienced in tal 1-800-826-0080. (A Z-CAN ). ^ 945-5049. . f - academ ic. CaU Je ssie 945-5744. \ For in fo rm a tio n c a ll D o ttle , DID Y O U seH your house and carry back s note? W e wiH pay ca sh fo r your paym ents. L A K E P O W ELL houseboat tim eshare. Ski -<•. boat, jet ski included. 5 yea rs from $3500. " ■'!" W O R D P R O C E S S IN G — $1.50 per page. D O N 'T B E left out of the tradition. O rder R esum es, d esign, editing, & laser printing C h oice w eeks available available. evenings 645-9329 o r 6459545 in Page. . .I f r ' ' . I -----;■.1' TRAVEL your Yeerbook today. C a ll 965-8881 now w eekends. for m ore inform ation. C LU B E U R O P A Student Travel. W e’ re F O R S A LE : R ecently a cq u ira d C h i Om ega celebrating our 30th G rea t Y ear! M ore gold G reek letters. W atch fo r m ore infor­ than m ation. C .B . J.H . explored the w orld with C lu b Europa. F o r 125,000 colleg e students have your free Europe, Australia, and O rient G R EEK SIN G Team " B " - P h i Delta, travel brochure, call t o ll free, A G D 's , Delta S ig s, D T D 's, and D G V Next 800-331-1882, and ask for fo e Arizona year we’H get som e respect. W e had a State extentfon. great tim e! Sam m y's. C R U IS E S UN LIM ITED ! D iscounted rates H E Y SA S H A , you lovable tigress! H appy 3 oh fantastic cru ises worldwide! H ouse­ and 1 day m onth anniversary! W anna roll boats, ioveboats, riverafting! P lan early; in the g rass? Love ya, Sim ha. H EY STUD N uclear 1989 w ater vacations are P hysics going? Y our FLY FO R D isco unted tickets, tive quote can 491-0501. Saturday night. FR EE 1989 International Youth H ostel P a ss with purchase o f EuraH P a ss. Both PHI PStS: 500 couldn't h e better than last issued year, or could it? T h e Teq uila G irts. on the spot! Am erican Youth H ostels, Inc. A rizona C ou n cil, 1026 N . 9th Street, Phoenix. 254-9803, 9 a.m .-4 p.m . PI PHI’S , S A E 's, P hi D elts: Thanks lo r a M onday-Friday. great and soaking wet tim e at B ear wars) H are's to next year w hen our buhbly beer O N E W A Y ticket from Phoenix to Atlanta/ ware tradition continues) Love, the D ee - Le ss. dom estic: and international. Fo r com peti­ Looking forward-to m eeting you at the 500 _________ fast! 1-800-Go-To-Sea! Secret Adm irer. G eest filling R eservations and inform ation, 282-1170 o r Muffin: How is P H Y 462 PHI PSI D oug: I think you’re darting, Savannah Frid ay , 5/12, $150, regularly ________, $338. 203-621-6017 after ft p.m . E S T or w eekends. S A M M Y 'S : G R E A T jo b qn G rsek W eek. O u r present openings a re for a Mechanical Engineer, an Instrum en tatio n Engineer and a C om puter Appli­ cations Program m er. - . ' Failure Analysis Associates offers a compensation and benefits package which exceeds industry stand­ ards, including th re e w eeks vacation and companyfunded pension, medical, dental, and life insurance plans. A Failure Analysis Associates' representative will be on cam pus W ednesday, April 12. If interested, please contact C areer Services at 965-2350. anteed. Fa st, experienced. Term papers, done, $1 50/page. Phoenix location. Ja n e, fine. Thanks for the dedication. Y o u ’re the Failure Analysis Associates, Inc., a national engineering and scientific consulting firm th at specializes in the analysis and prevention, of engineering system and product failures, is seeking engineers and program ­ mers w ith outstanding academic a n d professional credentials for three openings in o u r Phoenix Test and Engineering C en ter. O u r center, o r TEC, is a 160 acre proving ground w ith extensive fabrication, vehi­ cle p rep aratio n ,' instrum entation, data acquisition, and data reduction capabilities. These facilities pro­ v ide th e capability for designing and conducting a broad, range of tests th a t support o u r engineering. •services.itsEll L a s ,; „ ** C a ll anytim e. C E R E U S W O R D P rocessing, quality guar­ R ESEAR CH D .J.- D O N 'T stress this week. You’d do Failure A n a ly sis A s so c ia te s, accurate. 249-3974^ ; $ . Fast, 897-7404 P rices com petitive, negotiable. 966-2188. with degrees in E n glish and APA/M LA Sorry, Anne. Ü A R E A . Typ ing , word p rocessing, editing. CaH m essage. m em berships. B ring your d isk to us before Box -1 0 3 regarding $2 Gum by’s m elted In the heat! Call 9 1 4 -3 8 1 -5 9 8 3 or w rite Cam p W inadu, 5 Glen L ane, M a m a ro n ec k , NY 10543 Good; salary, room & board, travet allowance, beautiful modern facility. Must love children & be able to teach one of the foHowing: Tennis, WSI; Sailing, Waterski, Softball, Basketball, Soccer,' LaCrosse, À & C, Photography, Horseback, Dance, Piano, Drama, Ropes,. C a m p Craft, Gymnastics. Call or write: Cam p Vega Box 1771 Duxbury, M ass. 02332 (617)934-6536 ASU paid ! W E N e e d you! W e w ill lo w and cherish re su m e s. worry. Look for m ore d u e s regarding the and running! I m issed you! Love, Leslie "=3 your L a z y L a b e ls due Good salary, room /board, travel allow ance and' b eau tifu l m odern fa c ilitie s . M ust lo v e kids and' have sk ills in one o f those activities: arts and crafts, nature, fencing, overnight 'hiking* ropes, archery, all w ater or land sports. C O U N S E LO R S Girls Camp in Maine to D A V E PIX LEY: Th e ape is safe do not D A V E PIX LEY: Midntte tonite look for vital COUNSELORSr BOYS CAMP W ESTERN M ASSACH USETTS B est offer. details. m a ilin g Send $ 1 9 .9 5 p lu s p o sta g e & h a n d lin g to: excited about our rasta exchange this free, 1-800-842-2338. C a ll E . U niversity, Tem pe. Cad 966-2035 for house. shirts. Must apply now for Fa ll ’89. C a ll toll for typing. recruiters a n d h ea dh u n ters. C o n ve n ie n t, in e x p e n s iv e ex ­ m anager and m aintenance staff. evening, lu ll and part-tim e. M ust be over A V A ILA B LE $$$N O O B JE C T ? ? ? N eed to m ake a good at 1-800-643-3331. (A Z-C AN ) be on cam pus for interview s April 12th. A LW A Y S Q uality work on laser printer. 844-1876. A S U G R E E K S . You’re invited to the Phi Avenue, Tucson, A Z 85705. D irectors will Shaw nle, Leavenw orth, K an sas 66048. Y O U R O LD baseball ca rd s w anted. C ash la b e ls for 9 9 o f th e le a d in g c o rp o ra te & p ro fe s sio n a l riflery, horseback riding, and swimming dants and traffic d irecto rs tar tem porary quick turnaround. Lind a, 838-6830. M ESA specialists; kitchen staff, nurses, business Triangle Y D erm is Vaughn, P lan ters num ber 200 P re -a d d re sse d Must be 23 or older. C a ll J .B . Hunt toll-free V A LE T A T T E N D A N T S . W e need atten­ show W A N TED - B O O K . W Hdflowere of Arizona. PERSONALS ca 's fastest grow ing trucking com pany. 1-844-0987 for inform ation or write Y M C A M eadow s 894-6074. and self-serve M d n to sh com puters. 933 EXPOSE YOURSELF! C all Irvine S t., num ber 23. 946-9962 after 4/11. CaU tate students and faculty work w elcom e. W H Y H A U L ft hom e? Store ft! Y our lock W ednesday, April 5. CaH 275-2508. le^ve m essage. lors; archery, arts and crafts, nature, , L a rg e st FO U N D . S E T of 3 keys, Matthews Center board. P ositions available are for counse­ ate consideration. A S S IS T A N C E . required. Phone 240-2000, Courtesy Valet qualify for rew arding ca ree r with Am eri­ Desert Valet, 941-0014 12-6 p.m . Im m edi­ h a ir _____________ * tion, 989-6954. sum m er staff. G ood salary plus room and 21, reliable, with clean driving record. C a ll PER M A N EN T Student discount. Cad for m ore inform a- w ill train. M ust be energetic and enjoy the im m ediately. P lea se ca ll Am y at 947-6297, S u n d a y 's 4/30/89. M ike, 827-0592. ing. 947-7796. rem oval. Rem ove unw anted hair forever. tim e, male/female. Experience helpful, but W AN TED : for Com m erce C enter, Tem pe. 1835 E . 6th C O U P L E W ITH lots of fove seeks newborn Univerefty/MHI. 966-1987. years old with good driving record, valid TR U CKIN G S C H O O L graduates: You may and perm anent assignm ents, day and Student C H ILD C A R E in m y hom e. D ays, even­ MHI A ve., Tem pe Center, 968-6074. Y M G A C A M P in O ra cle is looking for / E lectrolysis. C a l! 829-7829. V A L E T PAR KIN G Attendants- O ver 20 and hourly w age p lus com m issions. C a ll 994-0018. Touch gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. TH E SU N D evil Spark Yearbook is accept­ Life, R esidence L ife , G ree k Life , Sports, SO FT nently. 12 years ex p erien ce, near A S U . Lion, 921 990-7875, evenings. H E Y NOW , I need 2 G rateful D ead tickets A C C E N T S IN Typing- M oving to 6th Street S u sa n at 833-0373. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S . MHI, Suite R are Academ ics, O rganizations, and Student business card s. 834-7219. W e have Sun D evil w atches and S p a rkies. 254-TOOL 11-5, M onday-Fridey at 430 N . Scottsdale D obson in M esa. A C C U R A T E TY P IN G of research pàpere, A L E X A N D E R P H O T O G R A P H E R . Cad us C A S H FO R gold, diam onds, starling, etc. Call Dave Green S P O R T co llectib les. B aseball group projects, etc. Sp ellin g corrected, JEWELRY Road. ing applications fo r staffers on the Student m essage, m ore for half price! W indsports, 897-7,121. ASU . BU YIN G ca rd s, publications, and autographs. Phil, A-1 P R O FIC IEN T Typing IBM Setectric. Loraine, 833-8365, near U niversity and study.' 1-800*333-5195. norm ally $75. Students m groups o f 3 o f be atlekst 18 y e a rs old . A p p ly in- person a C h ris, 8 941278, o r Ja c k ie , 829-8913. ing. N o hom e (AZ-CAN) black m ale, 5 m onths old. H as shots. SU M M ER W O R K . R eceive colleg e credit and m a k e $407/week, W rite today to assistance. Hands-on p lus sim ulator train­ WANTED TYPING/WORD PROCESSING W e'll be on top next .year! P O R T LA N D , O R E G O N . Am erica W est, SIG M A CHI: Congratulations on winning P h o e n ix Philanthropic H ouse o f the Year. 5/26/89-6^2/89. C a ll Ham di, 267*9518, to P o r tla n d , ro u n d t r i p $150. S IG M A K A P P A K eH y:D on’tfo rg et the p a rk , R O U N D TR IP T IC K E T S Phoenix to C hica­ clo ses at twelve on Thursdays! Love, Bob A. ■ - ; . ; - '■ '¿ -¿ ¿ ¿ h ® . ' • go, A p ril 22-AprH 24. O n e, $170; pair, $300. Larry* 967-4463. - SIG M A K A P P A - Live it up at ASU I W e're g lad you're a part o f A S U G reeks! Love, R O U N D TR IP FR O M Phoenix to N ashville. $198, M ay 1ft, return M ay 22. Am erican Tridelta. A irlines. 968-8048. SIGM A K A P P A Sara: You definitely get a Sigm a Kappa cla p far the personal. The "D esert in the breakfast’’ was fun. Thanks for being a great friend. Sigm a Lo ve, M ai. S P LA SH : C H E E R U p! Thinga are going to TYPING/WORD PROCESSING get better soon. Try not to w orry too m uch. $1.2tyP A G E. Feat, .accurate and quality S m ilel H .H . guaranteed. TH A N K S T O Sigm a C h i for your support In G reek Sing . Congratulations! D ifferent fonts. anytim e at 966-2010. CaU R ob '. ________ $1.25/PAGE and up. R eeearch papers, W AN T T O throw a p ia at a PI P h i? O ur thesis, resum es, cover letters, etc. Q uick second annual philanthropic event w ill be with quality. C e ll M ikebe, 941-4075. held today on P V B each at 4:30 p .m . Don’t m iss HI ~ i . ' $1.50 A N D U p. A A A Q uality work and laser prim er. 33 years experience. C a ll Y U P PIES: SK5 Epe, D G '*. A K A 'a , Phi M arian, 8384369._______________, P si's- W e'll have to p u ll a little harder next year, so we w on't lo se our B M W 's. Yup Y u p . Sam m y'». S2.00/PAG E. Q uick turnaround. Virginia anytim e. 831-8450, ' , : C all C a ll' 921-3770 •- y .y . evenings & (AZ-CAN) CaH 845-9637, t 1 W e dn esda y, A p rg 1 Sj, 1989 rJ P I; - i mi V 7. ■ » mm w t® Wm W | i P U p? m M l ! • JfcAlpine Ski & Sports CORNER OF BROADWAY & McCLINTOCK, TEM PE H O U R S ; M O N -F R I 9:30-9:00 S A T 9:30-6 S U N N O O N -5