state!press Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Copyright. State Press. 1989 Tempe. Árizona W e d n e s d a y , A p ril 2 6 , 1 9 8 9 Student arrested for allegedly toting gun By MIKE BURGESS and JOIE ANN LA POLLA State Press An ASU student was arrested Tuesday a fter he allegedly brought a loaded handgun into a crim inal justice class where three form er members of the “ Bloods” street gang were speaking, authorities said. C raig Anthony M alm strom , 20, was arrested on m isdem eanor charges of m is c o n d u c t in v o lv in g a w e a p o n , interference with the peaceful conduct of an educational institution and providing false information to a police officer, ASU police Lt: Craig Emanuel said. In addition, the form er gang members, who now are ASU students, brought unloaded guns and bullets to the class and also had what they identified as two baggies containing cocaine and rocks o f “ crack,” a potent smokeable form of cocaine, several members o f the class said. The professor o f the 300-ievel “ police function” class, Armand Hernandez, said he w as unaw are that the fo rm er gang members w ere going to bring the weapons or the alleged drugs. Hernandez said he had invited the gang members to his class because street gangs are a m ajor issue in police work these days. ■Acting ASU Police Chief Doug Bartosh said possession of weapons on campus is prohibited under the U niversity’s Code‘ of Conduct and that his department w ill investigate the guns and reported drugs that w ere brought into the classroom. Malmstrom, a sophomore justice studies m ajor, was cited and released because ASU pólice do not book suspects on misdemeanor charges, Emanuel said. Emanuel said police impounded a 9mm handgun and w ill release it to Malmstrom at a later date. Repeated attempts to contact Malmstrom Tuesday w ere unsuccessful. Malmstrom was arrested shortly after 9:40 a.m. when a student in the JUS 306 class le ft the lecture and called “ 911” to report a map with a gun, Emanuel said. The student, who asked that his name not be used because he said he fears for his safety, said Malmstrom was sitting in class and abruptly left shortly after thé lecture began. The student said M alm strom returned to the class about 10 minutes later with the gun tucked in the back o f his pants. Malmstrom then demanded to see “ the em pty chambers of every gun in the room ,” the student said. “ Nobody had left yet but I saw his hand on the gun and realized something could happen,” said the student, “ I got outside the door and decided to dial 911.” Em anuel said, “ The ca ller gave a description o f the student and we sim ply asked for (Hernandez) to identify the specific student and w e asked to speak with him.” O fficers at first could not find the weapon, but they searched the room and found it inside a backpack. that was in a locked cabinet in the classroom. “ He was very tense and sweating,” Hernandez said o f Malmstrom. “ He was demanding that the chambers (o f the guns) be opened. It seemed like he wanted to have a confrontation. * “ I was darn worried. I was shaking all over.” About 60 students w ere in the class, held at the Farm er Education Building, at the tim e of the incident. Students in the class said only about 10 o f them saw the weapon and many thought that when the officers a rrived that they w ere part o f the presentation. Assistant Dean of Student L ife A rt Carter said about 14 students in the class m et with him Tuesday afternoon to express concern fo r their safety after the incident. “ We can assure you w e have taken necessary actions which include interim Steps to protect the safety o f anyone in the U niversity community,” Carter said. Carter declined to say what a c tio » has been taken, citing the Buckley Amendment which protects student’s rights to privacy in certain instances. Hernandez said he has brought other speakers to his classes who had weapons Turn to Arrest, page 12. ■ k 'i Jack W . Beasley Jr./State Press Piano man M ichael A llen, a finance m ajor, practices M e piano playing Tuesday In tee MU Fine A rts Lounge. A llen says he plays th e re "to o often fo r my G PA .” DPS to seek parking fee evaluation Senate approves racism resolution By TYRONE MEIGHAN State Frees The ASU Department of Public Safety w ill ask University adm inistrators this week to re-evaluate a five-year parking plan that would m ore than double parking rates for disabled students, the acting assistant director o f Parking Services said-Tuesday. The DPS also is studying other universities in the nation to determ ine how ASU’s disabled student parking fees rank among other institutions of sim ilar size, Ron Kucera said. “ It is possible that if the current fee increases rem ain, that down the line, our student fees m ight lode like they w ill be higher than the other universi­ ties,” he said. “ But our procedures tend to be very much in line with whet other universities are doing.” __ The plan wiB gradually increase the MiCOlie rates fo r disabled student parking on campus from the current rate o f $47 per year to a $105 yearly rate. ; Disabled faculty and sta ff parking rates w ill increase from WEATHER Cooler temperatures are expected today with the high expected to reach 75 degrees. Overnight lows should be in the mtd-SOs, with a light breeze. $80 a year to $105 by 1990. The plan is designed to give equal treatm ent to those disabled students who park close to the campus in spaces sim ilar to those used by non-disabled students. The rate increase was approved in March by members of the Arizona Board of Regents. Associated Students of ASU President John Fees said he thinks that ASU administrators w ill reduce the fee increase fo r disabled students. “ I believe that (Business A ffa irs ) Vice President (V icto r) Zafra w ill reconsider this next year,” he said. “ I am confident that this issue is not com plete.” Zafra said Tuesday that he was unaware o f the request and could not comment on it. Meanwhile, Vince Micone, ASASU campus affairs vice president, has sent, letters to members of the board denouncing their approval of the rate hike. “ Communication breakdowns are Expected in a large, organizational setting,” he said in his letter. “ These breakdowns generally do not h aveanen orm ous im pact but can potentially affect a select population disproportionately. “ In this case, the victim s are ASU’s physically challenged students.” By MIKE BURGESS State Press The Associated Students o f ASU Senate, a fter m ore than an hour o f deliberation Tuesday night, passed a revised version o f a resolution that denounces racism on c a m p us and calls fo r a com plete investigation into an A p ril 15 racial attack on Alpha D rive. Meanwhile, officials are expected to release today a form al copy of a revised 12-point plan to combat campus racism that was backed by ASU President J. Russell Nelson and Arizona Board of Regents President Herman Chanen. The ASASU Senate resolution was passed by a 17-1 vote, with College o f Education Sen, Anne Borchardt casting the only dissenting vote. “ I really feel that die w ay (the resolution) is, it says it was a racial incident,” Borchardt said. “ It hasn’t been proven.” ‘ - ' ” 1 The resolution also was criticized by fellow College o f Education Sen. David Auerbach. 5 Tim» to Resolution, page 10. Turn to Disabled, page 13. INSIDE: Contributions to the nation’s colleges and univer­ sities are down, but ASU received more than a 20 percent hike in donations last year. Page 3. Classified....................................... $>4 Comics.......................................... po Entertainment............................................. 17 Opinion...................................................... a Sports......;..................................................,...!7.i:..21 luudy......................... ............................................. ¿ world/nation in brief Boeing engineer claims 747 jetliner cargo doors are safe The plane involved in that incident returned safely to London, Dann said. The NTSB is looking into the Feb. 24 accident of, United Flight 811, which lost the cargo door and part of its SEATTLE (A P ) — A Boeing engineer testified Tuesday fuselage in an explosive decompression shortly after that the cargo doors of the company’s 747 jetliners are takeoff from Honolulu. Nine passengers sitting above the safe, but a colleague at Pan Am recalled a 1987 episode in cargo door w ere sucked out. which one of the doors partially opened in flight. H ie engineers spoke at a National Transportation Safety Board hearing on the February accident that tore the cargo door o ff a United Airlines plane near Hawaii, killing nine passengers. TOKYO (A P ) — The absence of strong, untainted leaders The opening session o f the three-day hearing was dominated by detailed and technical testimony on the in the governing Liberal Dem ocratic Party was a big reason P rim e M inister Noboru Takeshita held on so long design and operation o f the 800-pound cargo doors. “ The basic system has been a safe and reliable system through a personally painful and damaging scandal. fo r many, many years,” said James Fitzgerald, a fuselage Takeshita, 65, was in power only 18 months and had to structural design m anage!' for The Boeing Co., which deal from his first days in office with the multimillion builds 747s in E verett. d o lla r scandal in volvin g the R ecru it inform ation But Robert Dann o f Pan Am said that testing after the conglom erate. , 1987 episode, in which the cargo door came partially open He announced yesterday he w ill resign. That had been in a flight from London, showed the door could open in mid­ expected, but it still left the Liberal Democratic Party, fligh t if there was damage to parts o f the locking system. which has been in control since 1948, foundering. Future of Japan’s longtime governing party uncertain Countdown begins for space shuttle planetary mission CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (A P ) — The countdown began yesterday for Friday’s launch of space shuttle Atlantis and five astronauts on a mission to send a payload to Venus and revitalize a U. S. planetary exploration program. The $550 million Magellan-Venus project w ill mark the end of a decade-long dry spell fo r U. S. planet flights and signal the beginning of a science-rich three-years when four m ajor probes w ill be rocketed into deep space. L ifto ff is scheduled for 2:24 p.m. Friday in a ra re afternoon launch. Only fiv e of the 28 ea rlier shuttle flig h ts took off after noon. The countdown clock began ticking on tim e at 8 a.m., when electrical power surged into the spaceship. Test director Terry Willingham reported there were no problems as the count began. He said work Tuesday included checking computer software, the main engines and communications systems and closing out the engine compartment. — ” today Meetings •Engineering and Applied Sciences College Council will be having elections for next year and completing this year’s business at 4 p.m. at Oregano’s. •Inform ation Systems Club special guest speaker from Alcatel at 4 p.m. in the Business Administration Building, Room 365. Meeting following speaker. If you have certificates please bring them. • Alpha MU Gamma meeting at 5 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building, C-Wing. •Cam pus Aglow Come join us for our final meeting from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the MU Graham Room 216. •P e e r Advisers (Educational Support Program) It’s not too late-to get help on test-taking strategies for finals and it’s free at 3 p.m. in the Student Services Building, Room A-362. •Chess Club meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the MU Room 211. •B eta Alpha Pel elections for fall and spring terms at 4:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room 218. •C areer Sem inar Series FBI, Coopers and Lybrand, Toback, Peat Marwick Main and Company, Ernest and Whinney, Motorola and 1RS will be speaking about opportunities in accounting from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the MU Pima Room 218. Buffet reception will follow. •Hispanic Business Students Association elections for executive council officers to be held at 3:30 p.m. in the Business Administration Complex, Room 218. •R eal Estate Association mandatory meeting for members, elections and raffle drawing will be conducted at 6 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. •Christian Students Fellowship will discuss Haggai and Zechariah — details of Christ building the church from 12:40 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. MU Coconino Room 217. •N ational Association of Accountants mandatory club meeting will discuss elections at 4:45 p.m. in the MU, Room 222. •Hispanic Business Students Association elections for next semester’s executive council will be held at 3:30 p.m. in the Business Administration Complex, Room 218. •Alpha Epsilon Delta — Pre-Med Honor Society Darren Neal, D.O. will speak on osteopathic medicine at 6:30 p.m. in the Physical Science, F-Wing. •Seventh Generation “ Animal Rights and Ecology Group” film and discussion concerning the use of animals in medical research at 1 p.m. in the MU Navajo Room 219. •Recreation Majors Student Association end of the year bash, APRA seminar, new officers will be announced at 11:40 p.m. in West Hall, Room 219. •Arizona Parks and Recreation Association (APRA) mock interviews, question and answer session, resume writing and contacts from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. in the Nursing Building, Room 4. •Alpha Lambda Delta election meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building. •W om en’s Studies Student Association meeting to discuss bank accounts, selling postcards and book donations from noon to 1 p.m. in the Women Studies Office. •Campus Alcoholics Anonymous a support group for those desiring to quit using alcohol or drugs will meet at noon in the MU Gila Room. •MUAB Gallery Committee selection of artists for 1989-90 MU Fine Arts Lounge exhibits from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the MU Gila Room 214. Slides from 120 artists. G e n tle is a m o th e r ’s BY BILL SYNSTAD lo v e THIS WEEK’S SUPER SPECIAL... Wine words: what do wine experts mean when they talk about: ••• 2 4 C A N S U IT C A S E S • acidity — the tang that balances sweetness and fruit. Too much acid is harsh but Without it a wine can be dull. M ille r ,' L it e , M ille r G e n u in e D ra ft, Coors o r C o o rs Light ■' And gentle, too, are Hallmark Mother's Day cards troni • tannin, on the other hand, is what causes your mouth to pucker ... D eann’s H allm ark O N L Y *» 3» H A R D T O F I N D Q U A L I T Y W IN E jS • bouquet is just an elegant way to refer to the smell of the wine. LA U R E L G L E N 1985 C A B E R N E T S A U V IG N O N ( 7 5 0 m l ) . . . . . . , $ 2 5 . 9 9 • flowery is a scent word, too; some wines are reminiscent of favorite flowers. M other's Day is Sunday, M ay 14. ' • body is the feel of the wine in your mouth — is it thin, or rich and heavy? Glycerin in the wine may make it feel thicker. W IL L IA M H IL L 1987 S IL V E R LA B E L C H AR D O N N A Y (7 5 0 m l). . . . . . . . . . . . .$7.99 • fruity is a taste word; certain wines carry the flavor of familiar fruits such as cherry, raspberry or peach. FAR N IE N T E 1987 C H A R D O N N A Y (7 5 0 m l)...... ............ $24.99 ••• ■ « ——**■r'” ” .**,•'» •» the wine has many facets — usually pleasurable—of flavor, body, balance and bouquet. FR EN C H BRIE C H EES E $3.69 I B $3.49 W h o le W heel • finesse is related to complexity, it describes the qualities of an elegant wine, not too rich but not too light either. ••• Winelovers love the wines at D e a n n ’s H a llm a rk Tem pe T e m p e C e n te r 9 2 3 S. M ill 9 6 6 -3 0 6 2 * J | * | ILiquorR m i We have the selection you appre­ ciate. © M esa 1112 N. H ig le y , N o r th p o in t V illa g e 9 8 1 -8 8 2 8 EDW ARDS HO N EY G L A Z E D V IR G IN IA H A M S S P IR A L S L IC E D $3.79 LB (P re-o rd er please) n TEMPE 9 3 0 E. BROADWAY n HOURS: M 0 N -T H U R S 9 -9 . ( l H A w ' 1 I l f « / Ilio # FRI 9 A M -1 1 P M . SAT 8 ÄM-11PM SUN 12 N 0 0 N -7 PM Sfate Pres» Piae 3 Wednesday, April 2 6 ,1 9 8 9 ASU donations up, national average down for first tim e in f 3 years S taff and W ire Reports Changes in federal tax laws and the 1987 stock market crash took their toll on gifts to the nation’s colleges and universities, as contributions dipped over 1987-88 for the first tim e in 13 years. “ The boom days appear to be over, on campus as on W all Street,” concluded an annual survey released Tuesday by the Council fo r Aid to Education. But while the national trend has been a drop in donations, ASU logged a 20.6 percent increase in contributions last year. Dennis Eloe, associate director of development at ASU, said the boost was due to 1988 being the final year of an ASU campaign to raise $100 m illion. He said the campaign has raised about $114 m illion since 1983. But Eloe predicted that 1989 donations likely would be much low er than 1988 due to a poor Arizona economy. He said contributors who had been donating sm aller sums of money continued doing so this year, but the larger contributors are becoming “ a little bit m ore cautious.” Eloe said that about $5 m illion was raised in 1982 before the S p e e c h te a m campaign began. “ Our goal is to m eet $25 m illion a year,” E loe said. The Council for Aid to Education estim ated that gifts to higher education totaled $8.2 billion in the 1967-88 school year, down 3.5 percent from $8.5 billion the previous year. It was only the third yeatt-to-year drop since the council began the survey in 1954-55, said council spokesman Paul R. M iller. v But council officials noted the decline follow ediw o years of explosive growth in contributions, when., alumni giving increased at a 25-percent-a-year clip. “ The increases we have been logging over the past decade, averaging some 12 percent annually, just could not be sustained indefinitely,” said John R. H aire, the council’s president. Haire said donors apparently decided to make m ajor gifts before Jan^l, 1987, anticipating changes in federal tax law that m ade charitable contributions less advantageous. The ensuing stock m arket collapse in October 1987 further depressed the level o f contributions, Haire said. p la c e s e ig h th By MICHELE Mc Do n a l d State Press Six members o f ASU ’s Speech and Debate Team, com peting against 120 colleges, placed eighth Monday in the 43rd annual National Debate Tournament. Robert Adanto, a 23-year-old ASU junior m ajoring in interpretation, won first place in prose interpretation. Sophomore Karen Kim m ey, a 19-year-old political science m ajor, placed fifth in persuasive speaking. Kim m ey chose school bus. safety and unsafe school buses being sold to the private sector as the topic of her 10-minute speech. The two are part of the 35-member campus club, which has been competing in the competition since its inception. Adanto is the first student in ASU’s history to win a national individual event championship. He also placed in the sem i-finals in rhetorical criticism and in the quarter-finals in dram atic duo, a short two-person skit. Adanto was unavailable fo r comment. The council said it did not expect a quick return to double­ digit annual increases in giving. Alumni giving in 1987-88 totaled $2.04 billion, down 13 percent from the previous year’s $2.34 billion. Non-alumni contributions w ere $1.93 billion, o ff 6.7 percent from $2.04 billion. Corporate givin g totaled $1.85 billion, up 1.9 percent from $1.82 billion a year ago. Foundation support rose 6.2 percent, from $1.5 billion to $1.6 billion. Religious organizations donated $197 m illion, 3.4 percent less than the $204 m illion a year earlier, and contributions from other sources totaled $574 million, up 4 percent from $552 m illion in 1986-87. The survey results w ere based on data gathered from 1,142 colleges and universities accounting for about 85 percent of a ll private gifts received by higher education institutions. Stanford University, with $181.9 m illion, was the top fund­ raising university in the nation, followed by Harvard University with $155.1 m illion and Cornell with $142 million. State Press Reporter Richard Lamping contributed to this report. in d e b a t e t o u r n a m e n t Kim m ey, who placed as a quarter-finalist in rhetorical criticism , said the experience was “ exceedingly exciting.” “ It was a great honor,” she said. “ It’s something you rem em ber fo r the rest o f your life .” This is the first tim e the team has placed in the top 10 in national competitions, Kim m ey added. “ It’s something w e worked very hard fo r,” she said. “ W e’ve been trying fo r a long tim e to get into the top 10.” The 1,500 competitors participating in the tournament made the event even m ore significant, Kim m ey said. “ A t the beginning you’re just a number,” she said, but added that as the field of finalists narrowed, support from fellow team members and other competitors grew. As a member o f the ASU Speech and Debate Team fo r one year, Kim m ey said she plans to continue competing with the team until she graduates. “ Once you win, you get hooked,” she said. Meg. Howell, the team ’s assistant coach and a graduate assistant at the U niversity, said the team ’s 22 entries competed extrem ely w ell in the competition’s 12 categories. “ It was a week of hard work filled with excitem ent and com petitive spirit,” Howell said. Vince Meldrum, ASU assistant director of forensics, praised the U niversity’s six-member team. He pointed nut that other teams brought 17 or m ore members to compete in the same events. “ We tend to have high quality in few numbers,” he said. “ The people work very hard.” Team members who also placed in the tournament are: Tony -Zuiker, sem i-finalist-in poetry interpretation and a quarter-finalist in dram atic duo; and Rebecca Gray, quarter-finalist in after-dinner speaking. Meldrum attributed a significant amount of the team ’s success and growth to D r. Clark Olson, coach and director of the ASU forensic team. “ It (the team ) is young in term s of Clark only being here fiv e years,” Meldrum said. “ I do think in the future we w ill become much better. W e’ve had a fantastic year.” g e t into th e a e tlo n ...s ta te p re s s s p o rts ilAvantage 286]I Write Better- Without Cheating! I ' B T 7 T Ë 3 RightWriter 5555555255; B « 555 ^ g a $p 1 ■ G et Rightwritef and turn in better papers. It .ana­ lyzes style, grammer, readability, punctuation, and fees much more. Works with most word processors) Its . FT“ I Dot Matrix Printer EPSON Equity LT Laptop Monitor not included. MOMfcnh* Hot N E W Borland Languages_ O rder, y o u r gra d u a tio n rin g at Books R U s d u rin g fin als w e e k and re c e iv e " B U C K S O F F " *2000 10K • *4000 14K Only *999S fo r th e U ltriu m Books R U s 903 S. R ural in the Cinnam on T ree C enter Includes bittecy powMid, f Turbo C 2.0 T u rb o Pascal 5.0 K WORDSTAR iPROEESSRMVL CARDINAL 1200 Baud Internal Modem G et O nline Instead MdL O f Inline. « D O N 'T FORGET! We start buying back books May 3rd through May X5th. Closed Sunday M a y 7th. HERFF JONES I 1632 fee tateclI 35th Ave. t o p in io n Pa3g 4 _ _ _ ____________________ ^ ^re t* Parking fees Si ‘Equality’ for disabled shouldn’t mean additional hardship Brian Tassinari Asst. Opinion E d ito rJ ||J ^ . It ’s interesting that the Department of Public Safety is going to ask the ASU adm inistration to re-evaliiate plans to raise the fees fo r disabled parking. But I predict that the administration w ill not sway from the unassailable logic o f the original decision: Equality. It was put best by Tedde Scharf the associate director for Disabled Resources who told Tyrone Meighan o f the State Press that disabled students should be treated equally. To Scharf, equality means disabled persons do not want to be looked upon as though they need to be “ taken care of.” In this instance, independence for Hisphipd persons — equality — means a substantial hike in parking fees. You see, w e’re all equal here at ASU, so it is important that w e elim inate any form of favoritism toward a campus group such as the handicapped. And brother, are they favored. The signs are clear and ubiquitous. Take the new Hayden Underground Building fo r exam ple. Why do the disabled get their own elevator? If most students have to walk down the stairs then the disabled should have to m ake their way down the stairs as well. I guess it would be hard for them to walk down the stairs, but they could bring their own equipment — a block-and-tackle for example. They could toss a hook around a bike rack, hoist themselves over the railing and swing down to the lower courtyard. Very reasonable, cost effective (how much can a grappling hook and 50 feet of rope run?) and it w ill give the disabled a sense of accomplishment you just can’t get from an elevator. A fter they right themselves (and coil up the rope and grappling hook) the next opportunity for self-actualization is at the front door. Specifically I mean those little blue boxes with the red buttons that au tom atically open doors a ll around campus — in the name of equality the school should get rid of them a ll! Patience after all, is a virtue. Someone is bound to come along sooner or later and let them in, and in the interim the disabled person can enjoy the great outdoors and the warm glow that can only come to someone who is equal. The point of this seem ingly tasteless attack is sim ple: The romantic notion that abounds in this country that we are all equal is ridiculous. None of us are equal. The only common denominator for the human race is that we are a ll different. What we, in this civilized society should decide is that everyone has a right to equality of opportunity. I f a company has 100 workers and none of them is black, it is safe to assume that a black person who applies for work at that company does not have an opportunity of gaining employment equal to that of a white man. So the state steps in with affim ative action guidelines to ensure equality of opportunity. In the same way, the difficulty that a handicapped person has in getting to class means that if he/she has to park in an outer lot they don’t have the same chance of getting an education as everyone else. The disabled students simply can’t get to class from Lot 59 in a reasonable period of time. And in the summer it would be dangerous fo r many them to even attem pt it. Therefore, the state should step in to ensure that the disabled have the sam e opportunity to get to class and get an education as everybody else, i.e. parking for inner lots should be kept affordable. The physically challenged are every bit as important to ASU as the rest of the student population and their special needs have to be addressed. The Adm inistratiop should spend less tim e trying to make us all “ equal” and realize w e liv e in ah im perfect world and the best w e can hope fo r is that everyone is given the sam e chance to succeed or fail. letters FU ZZY - W INDED 1 OINGOIST FKKìDéNTS M )T V R N '0 F T t ë - © W ! TtCHNùlOólESDOlT KHI I PEOPLE x M lO M S : W llF Ë O P lÊ Schizophrenic nation ~£ Editor: The ludicrous schizophrenia of a nation devoid of any fixed moral, ethical perspective is succinctly demonstrated by ASU’s proposal to rem ove the cross from Danforth Chapel while having the devil as their logo. Dan Roman Senior, Humanities Panel for education forum ‘tragedy’ Editor: The April 19 “ Nation at Risk” education forum featuring Dr. Terrel B ell as keynote speaker was a tragedy! Dr. Bell was repetitious, dull and mostly irrelevant. And, as Ronald Reagan’s secretary o f eduction, Dr. B ell promoted “ private” not public education. In addition, the forum’s panel had no blacks, no Chicanos, no N ative Americans — BU T ASU IS NOT RACIST? The panel was made up o f four women and six men. Somewhat sexist? There was anger from the panel when a Chicano in the audience called most “ education” ” Bep. Bev Hermon told m e she found this objectionable.” C’est la vie. AH you had to do to believe that w e are a “ nation at nsk ^ was to hear this panel discuss “ among themselves” the needs o f Am erican education:” D r. Roger Axford Associate Professor m STATE PRESS quotable MARTY SAUERZOPF 'E d ito r , ‘You can teH the ideals of a nation by its advertisements” -fV-.- •*-A®-'. 'll «• WV. ...... • y .| -.5-H& .. ■gu v - '■".’rf.!" y,' -ft -v ‘Jfji, M "• ‘ K — Norman Douglas ' ........ - --------- •"g g f f a s s s O pintonE ditor......................................... ........... MIKE RITTER LETTER POLICY j T h e State Press w e lc o m e s and e n c o u ra g e s w ritte n re s p o n s e from o u r r e a d e r /o n a n y to p ic . ; .:'v fg fflr j r H | § H A ll le tte rs m u st be ty p e d , d o u b le -s p a c e d a n d n o lo n g e r th a n th re e pa ge s in le ng th to be e lig ib le fo r p u b lic a tio n . P le ase in c lu d e y o u r fu ll na m e, cla s s s ta n d in g a n d m a jo r (or o th e r a ffilia tio n w ith th e u n ive rsity) a n d p h o n e n u m b e r. R e q u e sts fo r a n o n y m ity w ill be g ra n te d w ith an a p p ro p ria te rea son . L e tte rs a re s u b je c t to e d itin g b y th e o p in io n p a g e ed itor. A ll le tte rs m u s t e ith e r be b ro u g h t in p e rs o n w ith a ,p h o to ID to th e S fafe Press fro n t d e sk in th e b a s e m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n te r o r e lse a d d re s s e d to: S ta te Press. 15 M a tth e w s C e n te r, A riz o n a S tate U n iv e rs ity . T e m p e A Z 85 28 7-15 02 . • - ' 1 DARRIN HOSTETLER . M M iO in d a d ito r'^ B S — ’ En8' Paa™ PHC TOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Jam ie'Lytle. — Editor. r j» - . Ed#0r................................. C ? PY EDITORS: Troy Bausinger, Susan Cleere, Wendy Wire News E ditor.......... Arts E ditor............ ................................. LISA HOR8LIT p p CCUCTION: V ictoria Culver, Steve Kricun, Nancy Ness. Sports E ditor;....... ..............................GARY JACKSON ” arl< ^ othabl hm n Senzek, Jason Silver. E ric Zotcavage. Asst. Sporte Editor CHRIS DORSEY ADVERtlSING REPRESENTATIVES: V irginia Boss. Don Copy C hie f...'..;.... .........................MICHELLE ALLMAN Cardona, Bob Castle, Frank Culver. Chad Frazee, Mike Hayes. Photo Editor...... Asst Phntn Frtitnr ............................... JACK BEASLEY K»',lh Kelly. Shannon Kelsey, Paul Lee, Shannon McCue. Asst. Photo E d ito r................ .............................TODD GHEEN Renee Popick. Rich T oltatian, Ray Zickel. REPORTERS Mike Buraess u aumoe D . Jo * U P o lla M iX l^ ^ Meighan, Meighan, Scott Shekel. Michael Vm Dyke. Richard V ig ^ U h Zubalik. i f ! Sr ^ PP R1i RS: Ji" Herbranso" . Erik Lyons, Keith Pond, Mish Tell, Jennifer Yee. COLUMNISTS: Carolyn Hofig, Ed Schubert. SPORTS REPORTERS: Dean Gyorgy, Dave Hodges, Kyle The State Press is published Monday through Friday during “£ » * " a*capt holidays and exam periods, at * Ro0m 15' Arizona S ,a te U niversity. Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 985-2292. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602)965-7572. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and c irc u ite d on the ASÜ campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU adm inistration, faculty, staff or student body. r Honorarium or bribe? It’s all in the eye of the ‘beholden’ Mike Royko Tribune Media Services In itiative is a wonderful quality, part of what made Am erica great. For exam ple, there used to be a cop on the South Side who made a practice o f carrying a couple o f dozen wood pencils in his pocket while on duty. When he stopped a motorist for a traffic violation he would explain the seriousness of the offense. Then, in a friendly manner, he would say: “ I have three kinds o f pencils which I sell — a $5 pencil, a $10 pencil and a $25 pencil.” Depending on the degree o f the violation, he would then tell the motorist what kind of pencil was appropriate. A speeder might need a $25 pencil, while a yellow-light jumper might require only the $5 model. That cop sold a lot of pencils, Since $5, $10 or $25 was cheaper than taking a day o ff work and going downtown to T ra ffic Court. And years ago we had a Cook County assessor who was talented as an artist. When a new, tall office building went up in Chicago, the assessor might photograph it, then set up his easel and do the building in watercolor, his specialty. He or one of his associates would then show the drawing to the building’s owner. Real estate people are aware that the county assessor decides how mudh their buildings are worth for tax purposes. So most of them would m arvel at the beauty o f the painting. And, of course, they would insist on buying the masterpieces. A real estate executive once showed m e his painting. It had been stored fo r years in a Closet in his building. “ What do you think it cost?” he asked. I guessed about 50 bucks. “ It was 10 thou,” he said, “ and worth every penny of it.” These nostalgic memories of initiative cam e back to me while thinking aboigt House Speaker Jim W right and his rem arkable book deal. I know that he’s accused o f a wide variety o f h a n k y -p a n k y but as a w riter m yself, I ’m most intrigued by his literary career. I f you have followed the W right case, you know that a few years ago* he tossed together some of his old speeches, idle thoughts and tidbits of wisdom, and a friend of his in the printing business turned it into a thin book. It has been hailed by critics as being useless, banal and not worth reading. Now, this isn’t the first book ever published about which these things have been said. But what m ade W right’s book unusual was the deal he got from his publisher. ’ A standard book contract gives the author between 10 percent and 15 percent of the retail price o f the book, depending on how many copies it sells. For the paperbacks, the w riter gets as little as 5 percent. But Speaker W right received 55 percent o f the sale price, which m ay be the best royalty deal in publishing history. When this came Out last year, I wrote an open letter to W right’s publisher, pleading with him to handle m y books. He never responded, which saddened me. On the other hand, I could understand why he ignored me. Unlike W right, I don’t have a campaign com m ittee with a big financial w ar chest, so m y non-existent campaign com m ittee couldn’t throw $265,000 in campaign printing business to the man who printed W right’s book. Another fascinating aspect to W right’s literary career was that he didn’t bother with bookstores, where books are usually sold. His books w ere sold at political rallies and to people who wanted to be W right’s friend. When you are speaker o f the U. S. House of Representatives, one o f the most powerful jobs in Am erica, boy, are there a io t o f folks who want to be your friend. And it has also turned out that a university in Texas bought a big batch o f the books. That happened after W right gave a speech at the university. As we all know, congressmen often receive something called an “ honorarium” for g iv in g a speech. Or fo r just having breakfast with rich influence-seekers, some call it a “ fee.” Others, less charitable, call it a bribe. However, there is a legal lim it on how much a congressman can receive in a yea r fo r blah-blahing an audience. And when W right made the university speech, he had reached the lim it. But there was nothing to prevent the university from buying a brickload o f W right’s dust-covered books. And as W right keeps pointing out, there’s nothing illegal about selling books. So what does a ll this tell us? It tells us what initiative can do. The pencil-selling cop had it. So did the art-selling assessor. And so has the book-selling speaker o f the House. The same instincts. The only differences are the products and the customers. And the {nice. U P TO $170 7<»O F F ! \ lo u r B a lfo u r C o lle g e C la s s R i n g Don’t miss this golden opportunity to save on a Balfour College Class Ring! • $30 O F F 1 0 K • $50O FF14K • $ 7 0 O F F I8 K h i m Hurry! Offered for a limited time only! M a y 8 -1 2 ____ 1 0 a .jn .- 3 j> .m . STU D EN T BO O K C EN TER 704 C ollege Avenue i Deposit Requited Balfour. - AFTER TH E G O LD RUSH THUR SDAY: BATTLE OF THE BANDS CIRCUS” , “ RITUAL” (an ASU Band), “ T A C E T ” ALL AGES SHOW - DOORS OPEN AT 8 PM 1 9 8 9 ARIZONA STATE STUDENT FOOTBALL SEASON TICKET INFORMATION PURCHASE DETAILS: I.D . CARDS: Fulltim e ASU students w ith seven o r m ore hours may purchase student discount season tickets fo r the 1989 Sun D evil Football season. Students participating in the season sale must fill out an order form (o n e ticket p er student) and m ail it to th e Sun D ev il.T ic k e t O ffice alon g w ith appropriate paym ent. Ticket applications w ill be Students must present a student ph oto I.D. card, validated fo r th e 1989 Fall sem ester, w hen picking up tickets. Student p h oto I.D. can b e validated at the Gam m age or Sun D evil b o x offices. Students w ill b e asked to present validated student p h oto I.D. w hen purchasing tickets o r w h en gaining adm ission to student discounted events. accepted through the m ail only, as a prioritization process. Applications must be postmarked n o sooner than M ay 1, 1989. Applications not conform ing to the processing tim e p eriod w ill b e returned. Ticket orders w ill b e processed as they are received by the ticket o ffice w ithout regard to class standing. Confirm ation receipts w ill b e sent to those students receivin g tickets. Applicants not ^receivin g tickets w ill have their checks/applications returned. CANCELLATION POLICY: A season ticket m ay b e can celled and refu nded i f the request is m ade in w ritin g p rior to the first h om e gam e. A $ 1.00 handling charge w ill b e forfeited. A refund ch eck w ill b e issued (4-6 w eeks processing tim e). DISTRIBUTION: Th e distribution process w ill begin on Thursday, August 24, 1989. Pick up dates w ill b e assigned alphabetically according to the first letter o f student’s last name: A-H, Thursday & Friday (August 24-25); i-P, M onday & Tuesday (August 28-29); Q-Z, W edn esday & Thursday (August 30-31). Students must pick up tickets in person, at the Sun D evil Ticket O ffice, sh ow in g valid student I.D. Students must b e registered fo r seven o r m ore hours fo r the Fall sem ester, 1989, in order to claim tickets. SPOUSE CARDS: I M arried ASU students, registered fo r seven o r m ore hours, m ay purchase a spouse card. T h e spouse card is g o o d for the Fall, 1989 sem ester. This card allow s spouse to purchase season tickets at the student discount rate. Th e student applicant must present his/her va lid I.D. card and p r o o f o f marriage. GENERAL INFORM ATION: Student tickets w ill not b e upgraded to general pu blic tickets. A ll student tickets are general adm ission, excep t in group seating areas. Students must enter stadium through designated student gates. Seating w ill b e on a first-com e, first-serve basis. U nder n o circumstances w ill saving seats b e perm itted. N o on e is allow ed to exit and re-enter the stadium until the start o f the secon d quarter. N o refunds o r exchanges. Lost, stolen or destroyed tickets cannot b e replaced. 1989 HOME SCHEDULE: GROUP SEATING: Sections 246 and 247 have b een designated grou p seating areas fo r students. Student organizations w ishing to b e seated togeth er m ay d o so in these designated areas. Sept. 9 vs. Kansas State; Sept. 16 vs. San Jose State; Sept. 23 vs. Houston; Sept. 30 vs. Missouri; Oct. 21 vs. O reg o o ;O ct. 28 vs. W ashington State; Nov. 11 vs. Stanford (H o m e ­ co m in g); Nov. 25 vs. Arizona. •1 I I 1989 ASU FOOTBALL STUDENT SEASON TICKETS N am e- . .......................... .......... ..—;------------— -------- P h o n e - I Student I.D .. I Address_____ .Apt. N o - C ity ________ -State- -------- Zip Spouse’s N a m e ___ _ Paym ent: □ Check □ VISA □ MC C re d it C ard N o .-_____ _ 1 □ A m erican Express -I -1 I ---------------------- ~ l (M a k e ch ecks p a y a b le to A S U ) I ----------------- E xp . D a te ____ . I -Season Ticket $- -Spouse C ard ($ 1 5 ) $- Sun D evil Ticket O ffice -Spouse Ticket ($ 3 3 ) $- A rizon a State University H an dlin g TOTAL D UE 33.00 -STUDENT SECTIONS f RETURN TO: I I I à i. / »/ $$- 1 .0 0 Tem pe, A Z 85287 (6 0 2 ) 965-2381 I I ?*•/ I* in ................ State P io » Page? State Supreme Court to rule on photo-radar citations miAPXTTV /Al"»\ ml M _ PH O E N IX (A P ) — The Arizona Supreme Court was asked on Tuesday to rule on' a challenge to Paradise V alley’s practice o f handing out speeding tickets based on photo­ radar. Law yers for Paradise Valley defended the practice, saying it was fa ir and had reduced fatalities as w ell as other accidents. But lawyers for the Am erican C ivil Liberties Union said the practice violates civil liberties because thé car owners who receive the tickets often aren’t the ones who were driving the car. “ W e’re devoting m ore tim e to this case than some death cases,” Justice Robert Corcoran said. Other cases m ay be m ore dram atic, but “ there are few issues before this court that have so much im pact on so many people/’ said attorney Joseph M o tt The cam eras used by the wealthy Phoenix suburb are hooked into a computer and autom atically record the date and tim e o f day as w ell as the vehicle’s speed. A ticket is then issued to the vehicle’s owner. The owner can figh t the ticket by claim ing that someone else was driving but may have to help identify the driver in order to convince a judge. That troubles the ACLU on several grounds. F irst of all, the civ il liberties group says, tickets should not be issued unless officers have a probable cause to believe a specific person comm itted a specific offense. In at least one instance, the group dotes, a dead person was issued a ticket GMAT Class of ’89 and Qtffíi&iE, S p e c ia l F in a n c in g A v a i l a b l e « GRE j PREP CO URSES j I j For m ore inform ation, j please call 11 -8 0 0 -7 7 2 -8 3 7 8 s alon B yfcjlV previous credit required l / a A # down payment required ♦ » SCOTT * j TO Y O TA Cuts *7» Perm Special $2450 A sk fo r M r. K e n t o r M r. L itt (Long hair extra) 6850 E. McDowell Rd. Scottsdale, AZ Walk Ins Welcome 2 N f i OS Qa 1495 N. Hayden Rd. Ste D8 Scottsdale • Next to W orld Gym $4.89 o □ 48 1-0 47 0 994-9922 V) w C h a n g in g because the ca r registration had not been changed. Furtherm ore, the ACLU says, the ticket should be issued right away, instead o f being m ailed out two weeks a fter the fact when car owners often can’t rem em ber anym ore who was driving that day. . But Paradise V alley officials say use o f the photo radar reduced fatalities to 3 in its first year of operation from 6 the year before and cut other accidents almost in half. Charges aren’t Bled if a photo isn’t clear, they add, and the presumption that the owner is the driver isn’t all that different from the presumption that is allowed when an officer tickets a car at an expired parking m eter. In any case, they say, state law permits tickets to be issued as much as 30 days a fter the fact. SPECIAL ® VALID MONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY ONLY. H a nds BOOKSTORE Browse through our 3 floors of: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards v • Books on Cassette • : Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. Forquality cloth andpaperbacks (no text­ books', please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit whichmaybeusedtopurchaseanythingin the store. KU, Only $4.89 plus tax for an Original 12" medium one-item pizza. No other coupons or offers valid with this special. Valid at this Dom ino’s Pizza location only. Lim ited tim e only. Please m ention this special when ordering. (Sorry, no trade-ins on S.at. or Sun.) M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 M ill Avenue • Tempo * 966-0203 W E E K E N D S P E C IA L S VALID AT A SU /TEM PE LOCATION ONLY. No coupon necessary, just ask for the weekend special. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. THURSDAY r - -------------------- ------------- 1 M IN I-STO RA G E 967-3900 D o n ’t H a u l It H o m e . . . STO R E IT!! Original 12" Medium tw o-item pizza ONLY 1 $6.25 Limited delivery area. 1989 Domino's Pizza, Inc. FRIDAY Original 16" extra-large one-item pizza and 4 Cokes ONLY Valid all day Thursday. No coupon necessary. Additional items available for 85c each. *not to be used with ______ any other specials_______ •your lock, your toy •Full security •Visa/Mastercard •Open 7 days 1905 E. Apache Blvd. University Price R unt I p 1 Apache SUNDAY ----------- --- ---------------------1 Original 16" extra-large tw o-item pizza ONLY „$9.25 Valid all day Sunday. No coupon necessary. Additional items available for $1.25 each. ■ wm■mm.'wm- mm mmmm mm Original 12" Medium two-item pizza and 2 Cokes ONLY $7.25 Valid all day Friday. No coupon necessary. Valid all day Saturday. N o coupon necessary. Additional items available for $1.25 each. Additional items available for 85« each. I _____________________________J S p e c ia l S tu d e n t R ate 4 m os.— price of 3 SATURDAY i ■■ ■ ALL WEEK TH E THE PIZZA PEOPLE OFASU IN C R ED IB LE TWO ORIGINAL MEDIUM CHEESE PIZZAS (16 BIG SLICES) FOR $8.88 For a limited time you can get two original 12" cheese pizzas for $8.88. Additional toppings are available for $1.25 for both pizzas. Not valid with any other offers. All prices subject to applicable state and local taxes. 903 S. Rural HOURS: 11:00 a.m. - 1:30 a.m. Sun. -Thurs. 11:00 a.m!-2:30a.m. Fri; - Sat. Page 8 Wednesday, April 2 6 ,1 9 8 9 Poll says Mofford re-election in 1990 likely By L O ftl ZUBALIK State Press Fifty-seven percent of Arizonans recently polled said they w ill vote to re-elect Gov. M offord next year, according to a survey by the Behavior Research Center. The study was conducted earlier this month as part of the Center’s independent and non-partisan Rocky Mountain P oll series. The findings are based on telephone interviews with 729 Arizona residents, 453 of whom w ere registered voters. Those polled w ere asked to respond to the question: “ If the election fo r governor o f Arizona w ere being held today, would you definitely, probably, probably not or definitely not vote fo r Rose M offord.” O f the Dem ocrats who responded, 22 percent said they w ill definitely vote fo r M offord, but the exact same percentage, m ostly Republicans, said that they w ill definitely not support M offord in the 1990 election. Mofford Bruce M érrill, an ASU communication professor, said that it is too early to usé the poll results to predict the outcome of election “ At this point the poll reflects her personal popularity and not her chances in the election,” M errill said; Th® 57 percent are really just saying she’s doing a good job. M errill, who had conducted research fo r ASU Media Research Program , added that if the poll had been conducted with a particular opposing candidate in mind, the results could be interpreted differently. “ If she w ere running against someone like Evan Mecham, I ’d say 57 percent (o f voter support) is poor,” M errill said. “ But 57 percent against someone like F ife Symington, perhaps, would be good.” Currently M offord is the only Dem ocratic candidate in the gubernatorial race. Republicans Mecham and Symington have also announced their candidacies. 1 1 0 0 E. A pache Blvd. Tempe, A Z 8 5 2 8 1 ■ -* C H IN ESE C U IS IN E D o n 't PA N IC ! C a ll us to Reserve your page in our M ay 8 9 ' issue. T hen s it back and enjoy Your G raduation! PROFESSIONAL GRADUATE REVIEW 9 6 7 -1 6 5 6 Pul a Personal in the & STATE PRESS Matthews Center Basement !! Mon-Fri .} H U UAH ONE FREE GAME T E I# F S t ÎW L W ith one paid game. Shoes extra. O n e coupon per person. S f a k p if o u r f a lt ik i "We're the only publication that promotes you, the graduating student, to America[s 500 Leading Companies." 602-990-8441 GRAND FR EE "1” ll ìbhoàdwày r (602) 966-5006 8 1 8 W . Broadway • Tem pe, A Z 8 5 2 8 2 7iie ÿ u & td ù f m O U -ú ta v z fc fle tó le . 5 'x 5 '...... 12. 5 'x lO '.....20 Arizona 10'x10’.....32. Storage Inns 10,x20'.....44. Special Discounted Prices Lim ited tim e offer. .2235 W. First Street Tempe M ake Money Hand Over Fist 9 6 7 -0 2 1 0 FREE R EN T! O Cameron Creek Save Up To *590 In Free Real! 1975 E. University Drive 921-1347 ® Rancho Muriella Save Up To *565 In Free Rent! 1717 S. Dorsey Lane If you know your way around a keyboard—typewnter, word processor or computer— we know a way to make your knowledge pay off this summer. Just register with us at Kelly Temporary Services. We've got the kind of summer jobs you’ll love to get your hands on Choose your own assignments. Work as much as you want Or as little as you need. _____And if you're not a keyboard wizard, there's still plenty of work to go around Receptionist. File Cleric Accounting Clerk. Product Demonstrator. Stock Handler. Check the white pages for your nearest Kelly office. It doesn’t cost vou a thing to register. And chances are we can help you make the coming summer ( ¿ U T I M iT T e m p o r a r y months everything you want them to be. | \ , L L L # Q p r u ir o c Richly rewarding. ' » Kelly Services. Inc. , S tate PPeis Wednesday, S essi 2 Tempe officers involved in car crashes By MIKE BURGESS S tate Press A Tem pe police officer crashed into a car while responding to aid another officer who had cornered a suspect with a knife Monday night, police said Tuesday. Another o fficer was involved in a separate crash later that night but no one suffered serious injuries in either of the accidents. Tem pe police said the first accident occurred about 8:25 p.m. in the 2100 block of South Priest D rive when Sgt. Kevin Kotsur crashed into a car while looking at a pedestrian who was trying to fla g him down. Kotsur was driving to backup an officer who had stopped a man who pulled a knife and fled. O fficers arrested O liver Johnson, 39, of Oklahoma on charges of carrying a concealed weapon, disorderly conduct and delaying and obstructing justice, police said. In the second accident, which occurred about 10:20 p.m. in the 1800 block of East Apache Boulevard, Sgt. Laura Forbes, who was driving, in an unmarked police car, crashed into a car when she tried to avoid Colliding with a vehicle that had moved into her lane, police said. Police said both accidents still are under investigation. ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday: *A thief stole a student’s 1989 F o rt Escort, valued at $10,000, from Lot 63. •A burglar stole a $250 stereo from a vehicle parked in Lot 50. •A vandal wielding a can of red spray paint caused $50 in damages to Noble Library and the Engineering Research and Psychology buildings. •A thief stole an ASU license plate, valued at $20, from a student’s vehicle in Lot 59. •A vandal caused an unknown amount of damage to a telephone line term inal box in Lot 57. •An ASU student w as arrested for driving on a suspended license and an Arizona Department o f Public Safety warrant fo r failin g to appear in court. The student was cited and released. % only $3.$51 H m L Includes 4 pieces o f chicken, tortillas, salsa, beans and marinated onions I Davis County (U tah) D istrict Judge Douglas Cornaby imposed the sentence Tuesday on W illiam Denning, 31, of Bullhead Gity. O fficials said Denning would be returned to Arizona: where he is serving a 30-year term for several abductions and sexuafassaults in Mohave County. A fter his Arizona sentencing, Denning was given immunity from prosecution in exchange fo r his confession to the 1985 murder of 9-year-old Sandi Lynn Sunderland, who was taken from a Bullhead City elem entary school. N E W & R E C Y C L E D F A S H IO N S f=MINI=¡) STORAGE 1/2 Chicken Dinner P T ! PH O E N IX (A P ) — A man convicted o f serial rapes id Arizona has been sentenced to 15 years to life in prison fo r kidnapping and assaulting a 10-year-old Bountiful, Utah, g irl in 1985. w e t in u c t i £L PO LLO SUPREM O v / Serial rapist sentenced in Utah, laces more trials BUY • SELL • TRADE Fashion C o n te m p o ra ry N a tu ra l Fibers For M e n a n d W o m e n R .V . • B O A T S • M A IL B O XE S A LO C K ER S Call Now For Your Sum m er Reservation A SK A B O U T O U R A SU M O V E IN S E R V IC E 221 W . University - 2 Block» West o f Mill Ave one coupon per customer — expires •>-$1-K9 1450 S. M cClintock • Tem pe, AZ 85281 « (602) 968-2212 2 2 7 W . U n iv ersity Dr., T e m p e 9 6 8 -2 5 5 7 . $1300 Haircut? Reg. $17.00 SAVE $5.00 P Includes Shampoo Conditioner & Cut S / 2 - t o p o f t h e c h a r ts ! (With Coupon) F or a limited time, you have you r choice o f three IB M Personal System/2* m odels at a special campus price. T h ese PS/2 m odels are on the top o f the charts in quality and value. So, stop in and see us today! Perms $5.00 Off Regular $10.00 Off Spiral Wraps I In clud es Sham poo. C o n d itio n er & C ut With Coupon fo r First Time Customers Only One Coupon | PS/2 Model 30 286 Cellophane .. Highlights ... I The 8530-E21 includes 1 Mb memory, an 80286 (10 MHz) processor, one 3.5* diskette drive (1.44 Mb), 20 Mb fixed disk drive, IBM Mouse, 8513 Color Display, DOS 4.0, Microsoft^ Windows/ 286, Word and hDC Windows Express™. S oftw are is loaded and read y to go! ,. S .. j W ith C oupon fo r F irs t T im e Custom ers O n ly O n e C oupon | List Price Your Price* $ 4,437 $ 2,399 PS/2 Model 50 Z 966-6111 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 11:30-4:00 The 8550-031 includes 1 Mb , memory, an 80286 (10 MHz) proc­ essor, one 3.5" diskette drive (1.44 Mb), 30 Mb fixed disk drive, IBM Mouse, IBM Micro Channel Architecture™, 8513 Color Display, DOS 4.0, Microsoft Windows/286, Word, Excel and hDC Windows Express. S oftw are is loaded and ready to go! Cell For Appointment $3 E. University Sf Corn« Rural &University time to pack up and go home*«. We can handle it. PS/2 Model 70 386 The 8570-E61 includes 2 Mb memory, an 80386 (16 MHz) processor, one 3.5" diskette drive (1.44 Mb), 60 Mb fixed disk drive, IBM Mouse, IBM Micro Channel Architecture, 8513 Color Display, DOS 4.0, Microsoft Windows/386, Word, Excel and hDC Windows Express. Softw are is loaded and ready to go! G e t your stuff together...W e'U d o the rest Shipping small loads is o ur specialty. As packers and shippers, w e ’re set up to take care o f a ro o m fu l or a closetful and get it hom e on time. ■ C u s to m c ra tin g a n d p a c k in g ■ S h ip p in g fr o m 1 t o 1,000 p o u n d s - in c lu d in g o v e rn ig h t d e liv e ry ■ In s u ra n c e to $50,000 ■ P ic k -u p service ■ P a c k a g in g -s u p p lie s - b o xe s, ta p e , fo a m SW C o rn er o f Scottsdale Rd. & M c D o w e ll (Next to West L.A.) 990-2552 OR . SW C o rn er of Dobson & G uadalupe 831-6021 H A fflr vf*JL $ 2,799 $8,412 $ 4,449 ‘ This offer is limited to qualified students, faculty and staff who order an IBM PS /2 Model 8530-E 21,8 5 50 -0 3 1 or 8570-E61 on or before June 3 0 ,1 9 8 9 . Prices quoted do not include sales tax, handling and/or processing charges. Check with your school regarding these charges. Orders are subject to availability. IBM may withdraw the promotion at any tim e without written notice. K IBM SPRING SW ING SPECIALS ! See the PS/2 Models and Software at COMPASS in the Moeur Building, between 10am and 2pm. Order soon for delivery before Graduation. = = . = - — For More Information, call C O M PA SS at 965-2379 or IBM at 224-2763. 5 § € l ¥ l 'Mocrosoft Word and Excel are Academic Versions * *“ * IBM Panonal System/2 and PS/2 s r. registered trademarks a* International Businees Machines Corporation. ISM Micro Chonnol Architecture is o trademark of IBM Corporation Mtcroooft to a registered trademark ol the Microsoft Corporation. hOC Windows Expross le t tradotti«* ot «ta hDC Computer Corpwallon. P u kin g and shipping and a whole lot m o l. P a g e llo S ia le P r e ti W edngdaj^Agri^^1W 9 Resolution , C ontinued from page 1 ■ ‘ ‘I ’m not sure it happened,” Auerbach said. “ I don’t believe the newspapers.” . Auerbach said he voted for the resolution because if he did not, he feels he would be labeled as a racist. The amended form o f the resolution was introduced by Liberal A rts College Sen. Chris Stiles. The original form o f the resolution was blasted by critics as being poorly w ritten and accusing campus groups of racism without taking due process into account. The new resolution does not specifically identify the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and the ASU police force as the organizations under investigation. The resolution does not identify the attack as a racial incident. “ Sometimes w e need to take a stand even when it gets uncom fortable,” ASASU Campus A ffairs Vice President Vince M icone told senators who feared being labeled racists. “ I wish, damn it, w e would take a stand.” M icone w ill be chairman o f a five-person ASASU com m ittee that has been form ed to monitor investigations of the O ffice o f Student L ife and ASU police into the Alpha D rive incident to determ ine if their procedures and policies are being follow ed as prescribed by the Arizona Board of Regents. The ASASU Senate nearly deleted part of the resolution that deals with what the ASASU commission was form ed to do. MAKE TRACKS IN EUROPE S K Y D IV E STUDENT ATHLETIC BOARD SAB is a registered A SU club whose purpose is to help p ro m o te student spirit and participation at Sun Devil Athletic Events. SAB is looking fo r students interested in m em bership. If you are curious, pleae join us fo r a m eeting Friday, Arpil 28, 1:00 p .m .-2 p.m. at the M em oirial Union Y U M A Room. S T U D E N T A T H L E T IC B O A R D W A N T S YO U! IFyOLTREGONGTCtUROPE, DON'T FORGET THE EURAIIPASSI FT'SFAST, EASY, AND GOOD VALUE FORYOUR TRAVEL DOUARS! 1989 SUMMER RATES TANDEM at TO U TH P A S S E S I M O NTH $360 « M O NTH $«70 SKYDIVING A D VENTURES C O O L ID G E A R IZ O N A At Skydive Arizona, In c. (602) 723-9595 1S T CLASS PASSES IS DAYS $310 I I M VS $390 M O NTH $61« 1 M ONTHS $610 3 MONTHS $060 F o r In fo rm atio n P h o n e Lane W ad d ell, 829-8211 ALL PASSES IN STOCK AND ISSOED ON THE SPOT! ASK ABOUT THE FUXI AND SAVERPASSESI t- CALL O R WRITE FOR • F R II* STUDENT TRAVEL CATALOG! C o u n c il T r a v e l 14515 Ventura Bid *8 5 0 Sherm an O aks, CA 9 1 4 0 3 800-888-8786 G r o w in g S P E C IA L S T U D E N T F A R E S j . R o u n d t r ip f r o m P h o e n ix CHICAGO..................$218 NEWORLEANS . . .. ..$168 ; DENVER ..................$198 DETROIT ............$238 ! PORTLAND.............. $248 KANSAS CITY . . . . . . .$138 ! COLORADO SPRINGS.. $198 SAN JOSE..............$110 ' SALT LAKE CITY...... $198 CLEVELAND..............$188 HOUSTON..................$148 DES MOINES ........$258 NEW YORK...............$208 AUSTIN........................... $118! SAN FRANCISCO........$110 PUEBLO.....................$198 i MINNEAPOLIS...........$258 HOUSTON ...........$158 I Other Cities Available M IL L C \ A V E N U E T R A V E L ( I 966-6300 'V RESTRICTIONS APPLY. SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY. I ) Q r ---------------- -------------- s r ; ---------- H LE A V E Y O U R W A S H A N D F O L D I LAUNDRY W ITH US! • IS f V ' 30% studying. UNIVEli LAUNDR 960 W , U n iversity University & Hardy in the RosIta’sShopping Center 9 2 1 -1 09 8 '! \ t per pound 0 F F ^ i i D R Y C L E A N IN G P R IC E S T H R U 5 -1 5 -8 9 Come try our brand new, clean and modern facilities complete \ I U p H is p a n ic A S U award-winning poet and short story writer Alberto Rios is profiled in this docudrama about the contemporary H ispanic experience as seen through the w ritings o f M exican-Am erican and Puerto Rican authors. Hosted by Cheech M arin, the program features interviews w ith the writers and dramatizations o f their works» Other writers featured are: Edward Rivera, novelist. N ew York; Rolando H in ojosa, poet, short story writer and novelist, Texas; Nicholasa M ohr, novelist and essayist', New York; Lom a Dee Cervantes, poet, California; Judith O rtiz C o ferjlo et and n o velist, Georgia; Alejandro M orales, novelist, California; and TatO Lavfern; p m ; New York. Shock-TV host says hewas attacked by 'skinheads’ SAN FRANCISCO (A P ) — Shock-TV host Morton Downey Jr. said Tuesday he was attacked by “ skinheads” whocut-hishair and marked him with swastikas, but police said they couldn’t verify his report. “ What he’s claim ing doesn’t appear to be the case at a ll,” said Ron W ilson, A spokesman at San Francisco International Airport where the incident was reported at 11:30 p.m. Monday. “ We have not yet been able to confirm any of the statements Mr. Downey made.” Authorities found noevidence o f skinheads in the area, he said. Wilson said a witness reported seeing the talk show host in a restroom where the attack, was said to have happened, but didn’t see any confrontation. The witness said Downey was escorted to a w aiting limousine by a man and woman with whom he was traveling. Downey was cleanly dressed when found in the limousine at the airport and showed no signs of being in a scuffle, said Wilson. Scissors and a marking pen w ere found in the restroom , but there w ere no physical signs of a fight, he said In an interview with the San Francisco Examiner, Downey displayed swastikas scrawled across his face, shirt and If P ress # pants. His right eye was bloodshot and bruised, his .head partially cut. Downey said he was standing in front o f a restroom urinal when someone “ put his arm around m y throat and his other hand across m y eyes and dragged m e to a stall. They sat me down on the toilet. One guy sat on me, and another one started cutting m y hair.” He said they used one of his catch phrases, ‘ ‘Don’ t get mad, get even,” and told him he now “ was one of them.” Downey said he didn’t get a good look a t his assailants, but believed them to be skinheads, or young people with shaved heads. W hite supremacist skinheads have been reviled on the syndicated “ Morton Downey Jr. Show.” According to Downey, his attackers tried to shave his hair o ff and drew swastikas across his face, sweatshirt and pants. Downey ,-f known for his aggressive, blatantly arrogant approach to the talk show form at — said one youth punched him, but that he managed to strike back. : “ One of them’s hurt,” Downey said. “ I kicked him real good.” . The incident was reported about two hours after Downey taped a public service message condemning hate. M a tth e w s C e n t e r # j; b a s e m e n t # 9 0 5 -7 5 7 2 # O p en Downey was in San Fran­ cisco to prom ote his show, which is broadcast weeknights on cable via New Jersey-b ased W W O R-TV and aired in San Francisco on KO FY-TV. About the sam e tim e D o w n e y s a id h e w a s assaulted. a bomb threat jK p w il f forced K O FY to take the show o ff the air for half an Ma hour. The nature of the threat was not known. The one-hour series was . - " ic * H making its first appearance J in San Francisco since being M orton DOWflCy Jr. canceled Sept. 9 by another station, KRON-TV, after a 13-week trial that was vociferously protested by local gay activists. Downey headed home to Secaucus, N.J., mi Tuesday. He said he wouldn’t miss taping any o f his shows and won’t w ear a w ig to cover up his “ haircut.” 8 c t.r n .-5 p .m . M on oliaLj-' — r id a ij X G e t FREE S H O R T S w ith any ru gb y jersey, C h o o se th e classic th re e -c o lo r jersey. O r o u r b old est jersey, sportin g fou r-in ch stripes. Both ■ RESTAURANT are au th en tic in e v e ry d eta il, as are Qur N e w Z e a la n d ru g b y shorts. In v o u r c h o ic e o f e ig h t g re a t colors. 10:00 p.m .-6:00 a.m . Tuesday through Saturday starting May 2nd, 1980 •Also still open all of our regular hours. ANY MEAL FOR 99« 10:00 p.fn. to Midnight M ay 2, 3, 4 •lim it two per customer | «with coupon only l_ _ • e^Juitei^take^outs_and_other ¿ tie rs __ University and McClintock Tempe CANTERBURY OF NEW ZEALAND Biltm ore Fashion Park U p p er Levèl 9 5 7 -2 1 6 1 It took G alileo 16 years to m aster the universe It seems unfair. The genius had all that time. While you have a few short hours to learn your sun spots from your satellites before the dreaded astronomy exam. On the other hand, Vivarin gives you the definite advantage. It helps keep you awake and mentally alert for hours. Safely and conveniently. So even when the subject matter’s dull, your mind will stay razor sharp. ¿G alileo had used Vivarin, maybe he could have mastered the solar system fester, too, Revive with VIVARIN mnwwn W e d r«d a y ^ g ri^ ^ 9 8 9 US W EST provides free phone service to hom eless in tu c s o n T U C S O N ( A P ) — US W E S T Communications is providing free phone service to the poor and homeless at four Tucson shelters as an experim ent, a spokesperson says. The service allows the homeless and those w ith a low incom e to ca ll potential em ployers, said program coordinator Carol Orin, with the Tucson Planning Council for the Homeless. People also m ay receive messages from em ployers and w ill be able to use the phones in em ergencies. Orin said this service would help with one of the biggest problems homeless people face in getting a job: keeping in touch with em ployers. The program , called the “ U S WEST Community Connection,” started A pril 14 at two facilities. Others should be operable within three weeks or by July, said George Favela, community affairs m anager for U S WEST. Long-distance calls are prohibited, and personal calls are discouraged, officials said. Arrest C onttm wd from page 1. and drugs but they were sworn police officers. ‘ T was not fu lly aware of the University Code o f Conduct,” Hernandez said. Hernandez, a form er Cleveland and San Jose police sergeant, said the weapons that the form er gang members brought Monday were unloaded and the shooting pins were removed. The bullets that were brought had tape covering the tips so that they could not be loaded in the weapons. He said he is unsure if the drugs w ere real. “ They m ay be sim ulated stu ff,” he said. . The gang members passed the weapons around the class and many students did not know about the incident because they were so captivated by- the presentation, said Domenica Giannangelo, a junior justice studies m ajor who was in the class. “ The kids absolutely loved it,” Hernandez said of the presentation, adding that he is thinking o f having the form er gang members speak to another one of his classes. O fficials estim ate 10,000 homeless pass through Tucson each year. Favela said that if the Tucson program is successful, the company w ill expand it to oth er cities in A rizon a, p articu la rly Phoenix, Prescott, Flagstaff, Sierra Vista, Nogales and Yuma. ie m p e r s o n a lly ! M O V IN G ^ T O N EW L O C A T IO N 50% - 75% Î O FF On StTrclrtl hems Only A P (Snlr R Ini Lllti\iTini'fMill 22 locution - 30 only) 314 IS McClintock p Fry'» Valley P lu t - NE comer McClintock A Southern 139-9600 V v V S fC fV l d iC iiG S M* rized mment C O U PO N sM am i j j 111 Oil-Lube-Filter includes: M 2 95 Referencing thrust line. m echnical rear wheel adj. -L ttU U f •FREE 12 pt. Safety Inspection MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS C a ll fo r ap p t. E xp ires 5 -3 1 -8 9 . w KM KM m m MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS C a ll fo r app t. Expires 5 -31-89! S »Com puterized spin balance a il fo u r wheels ■ •R o ta te four tiros ■ •check a ir pressure f lf b r proper inflation b 9 m M M m ttK A MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS 9 19 E . A P A C H E B L V D ., T E M P E (N E X T Brake Special I F ro n t D isc B rake o r R ea r D ru m 9 «New pads, shoes ¡ 5 »Turn ro to rs, drum s ¡5 »Repack fro n t bearing H »Install new greaee seals |9 »Inspect hydraulic system ■ » R o a d tost ■ •A d d fo r se m i-m e ta llic ■ pads, spring kits, caliper ■ overhaul wheel cylin d e rs £ y U f t f t y w M O S T C A R S A N D L IG H T T R U C K S C a ll fo r ap p t. Expires .5-31-89. C a ll fo r ap p t. E xpires 5 -3 1 -8 9 . Gas Shocks Belt Change " Lifetim e G uarantee on Q uality G oodyear Belts Labor 12 m onths o r 12,000 m iles 1 B elt R eplacem ent............................... r . .......... *1 2 Belts R ep la cem e n t............................................«j 3 Beits R eplacem ent............................... ............ >4 4 Belts Replacement »Q uality G oodyear belts and hoses »Free inspection o f a ll hoses and belts »Includes installation »Add $20.00 fo r transverse engine »Serpentine belts extra b y M onroe I 9 ■ ■ 9 m a I M O S T C A R S A N D L IG H T T R U C K S | C al) fo r ap p t. E xp ires 5 -3 1 -8 9 . Poors Open at 8:00 A fter H ours 1:00 a m . till 3:00 a.m . (AFTERS HOURS .1 8 A Older) coupon Computerized Spin Balance & Rotation ■ •F re e safety check ■ ■ 4 for theprie» of 3 (Regularly 4 for $132) In c lu d e s L a b o r ■ •T o ta lly new product o ffering revolutionary ride co ntro l P9 im provem ent ••E n g in e e re d to provide extra co ntro l and sta b ility •R eceive peak perform ance from a h ig h ly technical B kw ortuct ■ » W a rra n te d fo r as long as you own your vehicle ■ C a ll fo r app t. Expires 5 -3 1 -8 9 . t o h o l id a y MN) S tale Prest vote W e a p o n s bill given n e w life, g o e s to H o u se flo o r fo r PH O E N IX (A P ) — A concealed-weapons bill that apparently had been killed twice in com m ittees was given new life Tuesday and m ay be broughtto the House floor for a vote. T * » House debated legislation to ban cockfighting, but no vote was taken and it was not clear whether the issue would be brought up for a vote at a later time. The Senate gave tentative approval to a measure that would prevent the state from reaping most o f the windfall created by changes in federal tax laws and saddled a controversial landfill measure with an amendment tfosipnoH to kill it. A bill to require u se'of seatbelts was held in the Senate Rules Comm ittee on a 4-4 vote, but continues to garner support from Senate President Robert Usdane and is expected to clear the panel on reconsideration. Being readied fo r consideration beginning Wednesdsay was a measure that would perm it periodic payments in m alpractice cases. Rep. Dave Carson’s concealed-weapons bill passed the House last month but subsequently was voted down by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Carson, R-Prescott, revived the measure after the Senate vote by amending it onto another bill in the House Judiciary Committee. The legislation then hit a snag m the House Rules Comm ittee w here it was in the process of being voted down when the comm ute chairman, Sierra Vista Republican Bill English, abruptly adjourned the meeting. The bill, which would allow private citizens to apply for permits to carry concealed handguns, was approved when the Rules Committee reconsidered it Tuesday in a meeting boycotted by most of the panel’s Democrats. Rep. Armando Ruiz, D-Phoenix, said the Dem ocrats were reluctant to provide a quorum for a meeting in which legislation they believed dead would be resurrected. “ In the last rules com m ittee we had, that bill-should have been killed and the votes were there to kill it,” Ruiz said. Ruiz said Democrats “ would look fo r amendments that would do away with concealed weapons,” but he did not elaborate. Carson said he did not consider the Dem ocrats’ boycott of the Rules Committee m eeting an indication that his bilMacks support. I just presumed they w ere a ll hungry and went to lunch early,” Carson said. He said that he believed the bill would be debated on the House floor this week “ and that’ll provide some interesting news for all o f us.” But House M ajority Leader Jim Meredith, R-Phoenix, said it was unlikely that the bill would make it to the floor this week. “ It’ll come up a little later if at a ll,” he said. Gov. Rose M offord has said she does not support the measure, which she called “ a bad bill for Arizona” in a recent speech before a law-enforcement group in Show Low. Carson, however, Said he believed M offord would sign the bill i f it got to her desk. “ I realize the governor has said some things that w e might view as negative tow ard the bill but that is not the samé as announcing upfront that there’s a veto,” hé said. “ I think the governor w ill stand by her initial statement that she w ill w ait until the b ill’s on her desk and if there’s enough support fo r the bill she probably won’t veto it.” Rep. John Kromko, D-Tucson, attempted to substitute the cockfighting bill for a Senate measure that would allow state revenues to be invested in mutual funds. There was lively debate over the measure, but it was withdrawn from consideration before a vote could be taken. Krom ko said later that House Speaker Jane Hull wanted the legislation and had told him that he would be allowed to bring it back to the floor at a later time. Hull said, however, that Krom ko “ misspeaks me. ” “ I have never supported a cockfighting b ill,” she said. The windfall-tax measure tentatively approved by the Senate would allow the state to keep $22 m illion of the $172 m illion windfall created by changes in the federal tax law three years ago. The remaining $150 m illion would be returned to taxpayers through a special income-tax deduction as it was last year. The landfill amendment would cost municipalities across the state an estim ated $60 m illion in improvements and could generate enough opposition to kill the entire bill. Backers of the original bill, aim ed at blocking E l M irage from letting Browning Ferris Industries establish a dump thát Maricopa County opposes, agreed to vote for the amended version in hopes of stripping the amendment o ff once it gets to the House. and neither showed up at the meeting. * * -y M ichele M artinez, secretary oU th e Disabled Student Fees said he had talked with Student Regent Pat Organization, said the regents may;"not have voted for the McWhoi-tor about the issue and that McWhortor told thè parking plan in March if someone from ASASU would have- board that he supported the parking plan in .general, but spoken against the rate increase during the meeting. opposed the increase for disabled students. “ I wish that some way ASASU could work closer with the Disabled students would be paying the same as those' people they represent,” she said. ►' . + - - studènte with Gate Access A or B decals by thè ®iid o f the Fees said that no one from ASASU appeared at the meeting fiv e-year plan. Gate Access A provides decal holders with because of m ixed signals between him self and Micone. Each access to one o f the parking structures or to Lots 3,26,41,44 one thought the other was going to speak against the plan, and 45. ’ All'students who obtain perim eter decals w ill pay $41 for l98iNXfand. $45 fo r 1990-91. The $45 rate w ill continue for the rem ainder of the five-year- plan. Disabled C o n tin u e d from p a g e 1. ¿Nautilus j^®0RTs medical industries , inc S f i l i FITN E S S SYS TEM S by CYBEX m se u H EART® MATE S ta iiM a ste r ¡1 Disabled 'parking spaces are available in most lots. . Vehicles displaying a valid ASU disabled parking perm it m ay p ark in any disabled space. According to ASU Parking Services, there w ere 228 permanent disabled student decals sold fo r the 1988-89 school American Bartenders School C O M P U T E R IZ E D B IC YC LES Y o u r F ir s t V is it Is F r e e NO CONTRACTS! NO SALESMEN! TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 W OLFF •FU LL OR PART TIM E JOBS •FLEXIBLE HOURS & PERSONALIZED TR AIN IN G •START AN Y DAY OR EVENING •TERMS — COED COURSES •SERVING AGE IN ARIZONA IS 19 _____ I9CX I l i A ' F ìt n e s s ' -nu \ A S U S tates* Discount Bring in this coupon and A S U I.D. B e a u v a is ’ -Free Weights 20,000lbs. offree weights! V Acnobics / •TremendousLeg Equipment $199.00 TUITION For next two weeks only!! VALLEYWIDE JOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONW IDE EARN EXTRA MON EY I S SEEN . 0», •Aerobics TheVallpy’s#1 Alban's Boip AerobicsProgram. BuildingChamps “Neoshok"springloadedwood •Cardiovascular, floors. ¿EachChit: 16classesper NautilusCircuit ± EagleCircuit; . day-alllevels, bow impactclasses-all 6Stairmaster levels. 4000's 12Windracer •Weitpit Machines ComputerBikes Over100machines. 12Heartmate Completetraining ComputerBikes circuitslorbeginners 957-3770 TELEVISION •AMeccafor rrr< r 1523 East A pache, T em p e EU R O P E P R IC E B U S T ER •Camonienl Horn 1Monday-Thursday Sam-midnight Friday5am-11pm, Satuday-Sunday tm -ttm ___ T h e V a lle y 's # f A e r o b ic s P r o g r a m ! 1 6 C la s s e s P e r D a y — A L L L e v e ls ! $498 F r a n k f u r t , M a d r id , A m s te rd a m , B e rlin , G eneva, Hamburg, M u n ich , V ien n a, Stuttgart, Z u rich, Paris *5 9 8 A thens, Is ta n b ul, O slo, C o p en h ag en R oundtrip R oundtrip Must Purchase by 4/2 8/8 9 Travel - Begin 5 /7 -6 /1 1/89 ' End by 7/2 /8 9 Restrictions Apply - Best Bargain of 1989 PHOENIX BEAUVAIS’ G Y M TEM PE C om in g S o o n ! 4843 N. 8 th P la c e N EX T TO A SU 1102 W. Southern BEAUVAIS’ G Y M 1301E. U niversity 829-6969 W EST PHOENIX 2300055 921-9551 5 4 5 th A ve. & Ind ian S c h o o l —. . . . — 1W A Universal Travel 425 S. M ill Ave. .. .Tempe 967-1573 Uhiuosal ^Travel. -. HUH' ^ I ^ I Page 14 Stale P m s Wednesday, April 8 6 ,1 9 8 9 EVERYDAY SAVING S ON: •L P ’S •CASSETTES •COMPACT DISCS •VIDEO RENTALS •VIDEO CASSETTES •T-SHIRTS io m H m s m i P H O E N IX C H R IS T O W N 5617 N. 19th Ave. Christown Plaza TEM PE 40th St. & Thomas, SE Corner 821 S. Mill at University Tow er Plaza Outlet Mart ATHLETIC TO m FANTASTIC SELECTION OF ATHLETIC SHOES ON SALE NOW ASU AT TEMPE CENTER v - V TEt p l ä c k I Student* ft Faculty ALWAYS get10% OFF 1 Merchandise 3 u In ASU’s Back Pocket U niversity & Mill T em p e C en ter ' 968-0236 967-2083 m i n I BUY 1 pair o f glasses, | get t pair FREE! m in k M w i FROST FOREIGN RUTO PRRTS !ay’s A Quality Ports G reat Service Loui Prices (Same or lesser value. Certain limitations apply.) Fkuro Audi BMUJ Hondo ARIZONA EYE CARE PROFESSIONALS MG Jaguar VW Toyota Nissan Volvo sm s Mercedes Bénz Porsche BARBERSHC •H a ir Styling •H a ir Cuts Appointments Available 967-7864 U niversity & Mill T em p e C en ter flN TEMPE CENTER AT U N IVERSITY & MILL 1 n H H fl '■«J RESTAURANT |||||:' j j j2 0 % OFF^ W 20% off any meal over $2.50 i BREAKFAST O R LUNCH T E M P E CENTER 1 967-9040 M M 'S 1 §? Tempe Center 968-8687 TOPS I LIQUORS UI€'R€TOPSI PfiRIYHEADQUARTERS $1.00 OFF Medium Pizza or $2.00 OFF Large Pizza FREE DELIVERY 894-1234 F IE ST A Full-Service University ft Mill Tempe Center .» J Laundrom at" ■ • Open 7 days per week •Expert dry cleaning & pressing '• Laundry service •Shirt service •Alterations •Leather/suede cleaning TEMPE CENTER next to Ti I I I I ll fo r BASKIN-ROBBIMS ICE CREAM STORE1 Buy any sized yogurt an d . get the next sm a lls size BIG FREE. 46 Oz. Soft Drl Expires 5-02-89 31« (With any ice cream pur T E M P E CENTER E xp iree 5 -1 0 -8 9 Cl •Y ogurt*Yogurt»Y ogurt* Yogurt «Yogurt HONEY TREAT YOGURT TEMPE CENTER CLE/ D ry 967-5643 Expires 5-01-89 önega/i% y AA "A 894-6924 ¡T E M P E C EN TER State Pres« Wednesday. April 2 6 ,1 9 8 9 E Ü mmsamm i h h u h f 'f l tSSm ei ys A S U SUB DEVIL ments Available MTER — RESTAURANT "Home of the Super Steak Sub" E x p ire s 5 -1 0 -8 9 * Includes Large 16” Cheese Pizza university * mill (extra items $1.05 each) Choice of beer or soda-pitchers m * Tossed salad or garlic bread (50* ■ extra) 967-8091 LIM IT 2 ROLLS I NOT VALID W ITH ANY OTHER OFFER. 829-0424 U n ive rs ity & M ill T em p e C e n te r O ffer good 5-9 pm , M on.-Sat Eat-ln-O nly . 968-3515 OFF FILM PROCESSING COLOR • B/W • SLIDES $ 5 9 9 I ARIZONA---------------- ER SHOP ( ] 50% PIZZA MEAL DEAL À ST A C L E A N E R S vice D ry Cleaner and aundrom at" ( In sid e T e m p e C e n te r ) >er week wing & pressing e •25,000 TITLE S •B ESTSELLERS •PAPERBACKS •HARDBACKS •C O M PU TER BOOKS •SC IEN C E FIC T IO N •PO STER & CARDS • M A G A Z IN E S (O V E R SO W •B USINESS BOOKS •L IT E R A T U R E & PO ETRY •SOUTHW EST H ISTO RY •M Y S T E R IE S •H IS TO R Y •A N D M UCH M O RE 30 D IF F E R E N T NEW SPAPERS leaning MEDIUM SANDWICH PURCHASE » ■ _______________ _ TEMPE CENTER ScniotzsKyls 18 E. 10th St. ^ - •• Sm A M iw * Soup* * Salads 968-0056 967-1111 901 S, Mill Ave. M ON.-SAT. 941 SUN. 10-6 968-4351 TER next to Tower Records one coupon per customer not valid with any other offer A Gourmet Feast fo r the M ind . Expires 5-03-89 ff* ..... ....... .... ..... ......I Belson Crimpers fROBBINS m STORE !CATCH A WAVE! SPECIAL ; Com plete Perm Package Reg. $40________ N O W S35 Spiral Perm Reg. $65 and up N O W S 55 an d up (depending on length) Full Set of Acrylic Nails Reg. $40 Expires 5-17*89 not good with any other offer one per household please. BIG )z. Soft Drink IJtelUfeM .1 $5" | HAIRCUT SPECIAL r« g .$ 1 5 — ill FIRST TIME CLIENTS ONLY i EXPIRES MAY 12, 1989 UNITED BEAUTY SUPPLY r ¡ce cream purchase.) ID FREE 32 o z. PEPSI!! WITH ANY B O O K S, E T C . 966-64881 905 S. MILL 829-0221 ftp llj ■ j ~IH » ■ ■ li • 31 E. 9th St. fEMPE CENTER PT Page 16 State Press Wednesday, April 26,1989 100-W ATT STEREO RACK SYSTEM ■ IT ■ SAVE $200 4 4 0 9Rea.; 5 “ T F W Reg. $64 9 95 Digital A M /FM ' tuner, synchro high speed -dubbing cassette with Dolby* B NR, EQ and 12" woofers No. 13-1232 *The Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corp. TEMPE CENTER 894-0669 A Division of T an d y Corporation t7 R e V C 0 DISCOUNT DRUG TEMPE CENTER 967-2076 Q n a O u a tio N Canos Ç ifts Q P anty Witt? CDat H a llM a n k Class, O f Counse! P R E -IN V E N TO R Y CLEARANCE SALE NOW THROUGH APRIL 30TH SSÊ Deanns Home/Car Stereo, Portables, Camcorders, Television, VCRs, etc. | TEMPE 923 S. M ill 966-3062 1I © 1989 Hallm ark Cards, Inc. MESA 1112 N. Hlgley 981-8828 MON.-FRI. 10-8...SAT. 10-6...SUN. 12-5 TEMP ENTES 967-3301 sight & sound j r ^ R A RE L IO N RESALE A FINE SELECTION OF QUALITY u s e d C l o t h in g , a n t iq u e s , COLLECTIBLES, AND JEWELRY A K IIS T IC TROPHIES 807 S. MILL Rare Dea ls at Roaring G ood Prices MON-SAT 10 A.M.-6 P.M. 921 S. MILL. TEMPE Tem pe center (NEAR PIC-N-SAVE) 968-6074 University BUYING SELLING TRADING C 9 :0 0 N AM 9 6 8 -5 0 4 1 ». meni K ate Presi r lp t lH y f t l Fabulous’ special effects help to enhance vampire sequel 9y LISA HORBLIT State Press Actress Julie Carmen w ill star as a deadly vampiress com ing to revenge her brother’s 3eath in the sequel m ovie “ Fright Night 2” vhich w ill be released in Phoenix M ay 19. “ The film deals with im m ortality, and il deals with the pain and the curse oi Im m ortality. There’s this metaphysical zone that there’s no exit from ,” Carmen Said of the m ovie in an interview Monday, Although Carmen received the Best Supporting Actress award at the Venice Film F e stiva l fo r her role in John Cassavetes’ “ G loria” she w ill probably nost be recognized by motion picture audiences for her perform ance as Nancy in iobert Redford’s “ The M ilagro Beanfield Var.” However, “ Frigh t Night 2” has something neither of these m ovies had — grotesque Special effects. “ There’s a hell of a lot of special effects. A nillion dollars worth of budget of specie] effects,” Carmen sa id One of the special effects dealing with the changing of Carmen into her full vam pire ¡form (which can be seenat righ t), took time and patience. “ About three months before (film in g) they took casts of m y fa ce,” Carmen said, f ‘They pour this algenate over your head, so that you can’t breathe, you just have two |ittle straws sticking out your nose." For anyone who has seen Carmen, you can’t help but notice her long mane o f brown hair and wonder i f it gets in the w ay o f some pf the casts needed to change her over. “ They, hung m y hair from the ceiling! iThey put it into a long ponytail, hung it from Ithe ceiling, put plastic bags over it, and then ■covered me with this algenate,” Carmen paid. This “ goo” stayed on her face until it After being exposed to daylight, Regina Dandrtdge (Julie Carmen) begins to decompose In New Century/VIsta’s “Fright N ight — Part 2.” Carmen before decomposition pictured bottom left. hardened 45 minutes later. During this time she began to feel claustrophobic since most o f her face was sealed-off to the outside world. “ The problem was when I got home they said I had to come back tomorrow and do it again because there’s a little chip on the nose,” Carmen said.'“ And I started to cry.” i Besides the “ fabulous” special effects/ Carmen believes the m ovie has a lot to offer/ and that it w ill appeal to college audiences. “ The m ovie has a very sexual edge,” Carmen said. “ The audience won’t watch the film from a removed, objective place. You feel, you taste, you sm ell, you’re in it.” R o ck n’ Roll S ushi’ m eans sushi is h ere to stay cuisine iy JENNIFER YEE State Press ’ ; ~ Until the sushi revolution, sushi bars tended to be Somewhat stale. But since the sushi trend started, Japanese restaurants have expanded to include sushi bars within thè ptablishm ent, and the race is on to be as innovative as you can with sweet rice and seaweed. Once again, Tem pe has surprised us all with the Arizona Beach Restaurant. Located less than a m ile from ASU, this Japanese restaurant is perfect fo r the beginning sushi fan,- as w ell as. the experienced sushi connoisseur. As a m atter of fact, this restaurant is perfect for those who enjoy eating most any kind o f Japanese cuisine — from sashimi to teriyaki. A black and pastel decor, enhanced by a fuschia and blue neon sign, reading “ Rock ‘n’ R oll Sushi,” is the first innovation of Arizona Beach. This “ high tech” interior is a J im la L y llw M a P ra w ro n y Kawa shows off sushi selections a t th e Arizona Beach Restaurent, loeatedat 1438 E. University, 'Pampe. far cryl from the dark interiors o f many Japanese restauras The second innovation (a t least in this neck o f the sushi woods) is theit “ A ll you can eat sushi.” Between 5:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m., Sunday.— Thursday, this $12.50 sushi smorgasbord is the perfect opportunity for tim id sushi .beginners to try some of the sim ple sushi selections, as w ell as .the daring. Not being daring m yself, I ordered the kappamaki (cucumber ro ll), the oshinko (a sweet pickled radish) roll, and the calm aki (avocado and crab ) roll. At costs of $2.00, $2.00 and $3.00 respectively, the combination of vinegar rice, seaweed, wasabe (m ustard) and vegetable was, to say the least, pleasing. M y guests on this first visit w ere both sushi experts, and ordered some of the m ore daring selections. (L ik e I said, it’ s a taste to be acquired, and since I have yet to acquire it, I stick with the basics.) The ikura ($2.50), better known as salmon eggs, and hamachi ($2.50), or raw tuna w ere both “ freshly prepared,” stated one of the experts. Unlike many sushi rolls offered in the Valley, these two specialties represented quality ingredients and skilled sushi chefs. On another visit, m y guest and I ordered from the regular dinner menu. Our appetizers came up almost im m ediately — six gyoza ($3.00) and seven pieces o f tempura ($3.50) and sauce. The gyoza were filled with ginger-seasoned meat and then fried on one side. The dumpling skins w ere just thick enough to complement the fillin g. Light and crispy tempura batter covered pieces of vegetable, shrimp and crab, accompanied by a flavorfu l dipping sauce to accentuate the pieces. The chicken teriyaki ($5.95) was a huge portion of tender chicken, charbroiled and flavored with teriyaki sauce. W hile many establishments serve teriyaki, few have m astered the sauce the w ay Arizona Beach (and m y m om ) have. This perfect specimen o f teriyaki came served with a light miso soup and salad with ginger dressing. Chicken cutlet ($6.95) was their tonkatsu, and while I ’m used to my tonkatsu being made with pork, the substitution of . chicken was a healthy change that was just as satisfying. The chicken was “ panko deep fried,” which is a breading made with bread crumbs, resulting in a thinner, crispier shell. With reasonable lunch and dinner prices, high quality ingredients, masterful sushi chefs, and a m enir which can proudly .boast the basics,„a&wgjLas some specialties, Arizona Beach Restaurant is the Arizona hotspot fo r Japanese cuisine. ret. re S ta te n e s s J e lly brains c a u s e d by n e w d iseasé: In fo rm atio n A n xiety NEW YO R K (A P ) — If barom etric pressure has you baffled, if the Dow Jones average has you dizzy, if you’re likely to lie about having read that 550-page report still sitting on your desk, you’ve got it bad, pal — IN FO RM ATIO N A N X IE TY . Though it sounds like a M el Brooks satire, author Richard Saul Wurman believes thousands,'perhaps millions, suffer from the condition. “ It ’s saying, ‘I just can’t keep up.’ It ’s that feeling of pressure,” said Wurman. “ You know it, I know it. Adm it it, everyone does,” says the fast-talking author of “ Inform ation Anxiety” (Doubleday, $19.95). “ It ’s that feeling that Jerry Smith down the street can put together the bicycle and you don’t know how; that T H E Y can program their VCR to record things 14 days ahead o f tim e and you can’t . . . that he’s read the big, fat report sitting in your box and you can’t because it just doesn’t make any sense, so you have to lie and say, ‘Oh yeah, that was a pretty good report.’ ” That, says Wurman, is what society’s latest high-tech m alady has done — turned humans into masses of lying, quivering jelly brains, too a fraid to adm it they don’t know, or don’t understand. Wurman argues that information anxiety is a result o f the societal demand that everyone become a well-rounded cultural being, coupled with the fact that much of the inform ation being dispersed does not really inform. “ It’s just stuff, or data, and I refer to it as the non-information explosion.” Wurman blames the education system. He says schools teach that “ it ’s better to say, ‘I know’ than ‘ I don’t know.’ It’s better to answer a question than ask a question. . . A longer report is a better report.” His new book is aim ed at calm ing anxiety sufferers by providing such down-to-earth, common-sense ideas as: •Allow that p ile o f periodicals to stack up so high before ripping out individual articles of interest, thereby, reducing a preponderant pile to sm all stacks of what Wurman calls “ interest shards.” The idea: less to look at, less anxiety. •M ake a list of term s you use or hear often, but don’t really understand (barom etric p ressu re, the Dow Jones in d u strial average) and make a point to learn what they mean, one at a tim e. •N ever nod your head at something you don’t understand. Practice saying, “ I don’t understand,” in front of a m irror. The sooner you adm it you don’t know, the sooner you can actually learn. The book, admits Wurman, is fu ll o f a lot of things that people always knew, but having them w ritten in a book “ gives it the kind o f justification to say it out loud for the first tim e.” Wurman, who has an office in San Francisco and a loft-office in Manhattan, is an architect by training but is better known as an architect o f information. “ I realize how ignorant I am ,” he said. “ I ’ m m ore know ledgeable about m y ignorance than perhaps anybody I know.” “ When I don’t understand things, I often do a book about them,” says the 53-year-old w riter, who has turned his thirst for knowledge into a thriving business. The result has been 26 “ Access” books that include guides to the 1984 Olympics, m edical terms and his latest, a guide to The Wall Street Journal, which walks readers through ,a jungle of financial jargon. He also is responsible for revam ping the P acific B ell Yellow Pages, listing goods and services other than alphabetically ^ by neighborhood and category, fo r example. Thou gh p e s s im is tic abou t en din g information anxiety, Wurman believes that within a decade the nation’s data dilemma w ill spawn a new, multi-billion dollar industry: the understanding business. “ Newspapers w ill begin hiring people not just to style their newspapers but to make them understandable,” he said. “ Some bold news program on television w ill do that, and w e’ll actually have a weather map that you can understand. “ And business reports won’t talk about M is, M2s and M3s, which everybody thinks are bus lines. It w ill be inform ation that people can use.” Because he understands this, he’s gotten a jump on the competition and created a new business ven tu re, The Understanding Business. Now that’s using common sense, which is what Wurman says his books, his business and his life is a ll about. “ I already told you,” he says sm iling, “ I ’m not that sm art.” Dolly Parton returns to roots after network TV series fails Ó- N ASH VILLE , Tenn. (A P ) — A year after the failure of her highly touted network T V show, P o lly Parton has returned to her roots: the ¡country music she learned growing up in a two-room Smoky Mountain shack. The 43-year-old perform er, celebrating her 25th year as an entertainer, has just r e le a s e d h e r 50th a lb u m , “ W h it e Lim ozeen.” Parton, who was raised in an east Tennessee hollow where she was the fourth o f 12 children, says the L P is a departure from her pop music m egahit with Kenny Rogers, “ Islands in the Stream .” “ It ’s very country,” she said in an interview . “ It ’s a good album for m e to do at this tim e. It’s very true to what I do best. It captures a lot of the old sound I used to do years and years ago.” It is her second album since “ T rio,” a G ra m m y -w in n in g , m illio n -s e llin g collaboration with two partners of vocal purity: Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris. “ The ‘T rio’ album kind of set up the pace fo r this one,” Parton said. “ It’s what the public has been wanting me to do for aw hile.” H er one-hour ABC variety show, which was not renewed for a second season, didn’t deserve to stay on the air, she said. “ The show was very confusing. It never found a direction no m atter how hard I tried. It never cam e together, never jelled because it was so disjointed. “ I wanted the show to be something like ‘Hee Haw’ when it started. But it was more like hem haw; that’s all everybody did — hem and haw.” > She recently revived her acting career, joining Sally Field, Shirley M acLaine and others in the m ovie “ Steel M agnolias.” Based on the Broadway play and due for release in late summer, it’s about a group of Southern women. “ It’s a fine piece o f work, as good as I ’ve done,” she said. “ We all got along great and made great friends. I like it when it’s that w ay.” I t ’s her firs t m otion pictu re since “ Rhinestone” • in 1984 w ith S ylvester Stallone, a m ovie ripped apart by the critics. “ It ( ‘Rhinestone’ ) was a hit with me, but I didn’t think it was a great m ovie,” Parton recalled. “ It got worse as it went along. It started out kind o f slow and tapered off. Stallone had a lot o f energy and was very funny, but the m ovie itself was not great.” With energy matched by ambition, she made two other'm ovies: “ 9 to 5,” with Jane Fonda and L ily Tom lin, and “ The Best L ittle Whorehouse in Texas,” with Burt Reynolds. E L E C T IO N S P ublic Program s C ollege C ouncil Positions Open: •President •Executive Vice President •Secretary •Public Relations Director •Alumni Liason •Director of Publications Everyone Welcome Join us Wednesday, April 26 at 4 p.m. in the MU, Yavapai Room (S tu d e n ts e n ro lle d in C o lleg e o f P ub lic P rogram s a re a lre a d y m em b ers o f c o u n c il.) SCHOONERS SPORTS BAR & GRILL GREEK N IG H T WED W A T C H FO R T H E J Ä G E R M E IS T E R G IR L S & G IV E A W A Y S 64 oz. PITCHERS * $ 1 5 0 THURS 7 1 -A FRI SAT LIVE She and Rogers are seen every Decem ber in their sentimental m ade-for-TV special, “ Kenny and D olly —- A Christmas 'to Rem em ber.” “ People can see the warmth and love and sincerity in our friendship," she said about the enduring popularity of the show. “ It was fam ily-oriented with children and church and special little things in it. £4 JÄGERMEISTER * 1 M ILLER LITE N IG H T MILLER Bring Your i Ov LITE i Own Mug ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY a z z IZ Z AzMzz Bind shades 9-Close 'W&ssJfflJ 9-Close SATURDAY A T T IT U D E C H A N G E PA R TY SUN All You Can Eat and Drink 5 -8 p.m. •$ 5 Adm ission« WATCH YOUR FAVORITE SPORTING EVENT ON S SCREENS MON “ ‘9 to 5’ was very cute and very good. It was a tim ely m ovie with women’s lib going on. It was die best thing I ’ve done. “ ‘Whorehouse- was a difficu lt m ovie to do,” she said. “ I would say it was average. It m ade a lot o f m one^but didn’t get good review s. There was a lot o f blood on the m ovie — ill feelings from the Broadway show and the original producers. But I loved Burt and all the people in it.” Complimentary Refreshments • $2.75 Pitchers L IT E G E N U IN E D R A F T 750 B O T T L E S TUES 1 0 * W ING S till 10 p.m. Satellite Dish - 8 Screens Happy Hour M-F, 4-7 p.m. FREE BUFFET! I r ■UUHWi 829-0790 1290 N. Scottsdale Road Tempe (1 block north of Curry) MfetfMn ■ .... A iy riU m l State Prag p a s e i9 Wednesday, N e tw o rk s loo kin g at pilots fo r fall T V s c h e d u le LOS ANG ELES ( A P ) — Producer-creator Steven Bochco’s first series for ABC under his new multi-series contract is a medical show. But, w ait, the Bochco twist is in there. The half-hour com edy’s called “ Doogie Howser, M.D.” and centers on the life of a young intern. Did we say young? Doogie’s Voice probably hasn’t changed yet. He’s 15 years old. Bochco, c o -cre a to r o f “ H ill S treet Blues’ ' and “ Hooperman,” generally puts an unusual spin on his stories that makes them different. Doogie’s graduated from m edical school. He doesn’t have to worry about house calls, since he hasn’t learned to drive yet. Intellectually, he's a genius. Em otionally, he’s still a kid. “ Doogie Howser, M .D .” has a series commitment, but dozens o f other comedies and dramas are being considered by the three networks for the fa ll season. The new schedules w ill be announced in mid-May. The networks are lining up plenty o f stars for the fall. Besides that, NBC has Alan Alda committed to a one-hour drama for mid-season next year. NBC’ s lineup of series possibilities includes: Tim Matlteson as an Am erican bachelor who falls in love with a beautiful Russian woman (Iren a F erris) in “ Nikki & Alexander” ; H arvey Korm an and Cloris Leachman as hotel keepers in “ Thé Nutt House” ; Ann Jillian as a widowed mother seeking a new life in California in “ The Ann Jillian Show” ; Robert Mitchum as a homeless man who becomes grandfather to four foster kids in “ One Man’s Fam ily.” CBS’s star schedule: G regory Harrison as a fashion photographer who gets custody of his two sons in “ The Gregory Harrison Show” ; Dweezil and Moon Zappa as brother and sister in an unusual fam ily in “ Norman L ife ” ; James Farentino and Lindsay Crouse in a drama about a newspaper columnist and his politico w ife in “ Am erican Nuclear” ; Lindsay Wagner as the manager o f a zoo in “ A Peaceable Kingdom” ; Tim Reid and Daphne Reid as a stylish Washington couple who keep getting mixed up in solving crimes in “ Snoops” ; Lee M ajors as a man of the road who teams up with a columnist (E llen Greene) in “ Traveling.” ABC’s stars include: Jackie Mason as a man forced into early retirem ent who Works with inner city youths in an untitled series commitment; Howie Mandel as a man who keeps flashing back to different periods in his life in “ Past im perfect.” As in previous years,, the three networks are looking at more comedy pilots than dram atic shows. Show business themes figure in a number of pilots. For instance: Jack W arded hind Mason Adams star as feuding radio partners who team ' up again in NBC’s “ Knight and Daye.” Robert Hays works for a public radio station in NBC’s “ FM .” Jon Cryer is a kid in the m ail room who suddenly becomes a super talent agent in CBS’ “ The Famous Teddy Z.” Ricki Lake is an aspiring actress in CBS’ “ Starting Now.” A group of friends in Kansas are making a horror film in CBS’ “ Curse o f the Com People.” ABC’s “ Morning G lory” is about a morning T V show. ABC’s “ E lvis: Good Rockin’ Tonight” is about the K in g himself. Did you ask about cops? There are enough potential cop shows to satisfy every appetite. Young cops abound in ABC’s “ Protect & Surf,” David Dukes heads a bunch o f cops who work in an old bakery in CBS’ “ The Bakery;” And you thought only bank robbers went where the dough was. Shadoe Stevens is a w ild and crazy cop in CBS’ “ Loose Cannon.” CBS’ “ Nick Knight” is a homicide detective who works at night — he’s a vam pire. Robert Loggia, who starred in the NBC miniseries “ Favorite Son,” reprises his character for “ Maocuso, F B I.” Westerns and outer space are back. George Clooney stars in CBS’ “ Hot Prospects,” a com edy about a train depot restaurant owner who imports waitresses from the East and puts them up in a brothel. CBS’ “ M ars: Base One” is about an average fam ily — on Mars. CBS’ “ Outpost” Combines both. It’s about a W estern-style m arshal oh a distant planet. ABC’s “ The K id” tells o f the young orphans who rode for the Pony Express. NBC also has a bawdy comedy called “ 1761” that smacks of the w it and sexiness o f “ Dangerous Liaisons.” It’s set among the lords and ladies of London, who a re visited by an adventurous Am erican cousin in the decade before the unpleasantness in the colonies. FREE S em inar to answ er all your questions about H A IR LOSS and H A IR REPLACEM ENT Topics tu be discussed are: Rogaine®, [Monoxidil], hair transplants, scalp réductions, hairpieces, foltene, NutriplexX, Nutriol, Hensinki formula, and others. Presentation will be given by a local board certified dermatologist specializing in diseases of the hair and scalp. R S VP AT 2 7 7 -1 4 4 9 TO RESERVE SEA TIN G S E M IN A R S ARE: Tuesday, M ay 2 , 1 9 8 9 The Pointe a t Tapatio Cliffs 1 1 1 1 1 N . 7 th S t,, Phoenix 7 p .m . or W ednesday, M ay 3 . 1 9 8 9 Sheraton Tem pe Mission Palms 6 0 E. 5 th S t., Tempe 7 p.m. A T T E N T IO N A L L E R G Y S U F F E R E R S IT ’S Y O U R M O V E You know how nothing goes right when your allergies hit? d o n ’t settle fo e less th a n th e best! Well, if you’re feeling the effects of allergy season, come get help at the LUXURYAPARTMENT FEATURES: ALLERGY CLINIC. 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Apply • • 88 F ree hot water 88 Free cable T V • 30 stations! $ $ 88 88 88 88 3 pools, 2 therapy spas 7 barbecue an as Lighted, covered parking foundry facilities la rg e exercise room with w e ig h k p IM n e s W hitew ater fountains^ QUADRANGLES VILLAGE ■ APARIMENIS 1255 University Drive Tempe, AZ 85281 968-8118 * SE Com er o f U niversity & Rural ( C O NG R ATULATIO NS C L A S S O F '89 For your family and friends attending graduation ceremonies, Best W estern Tem pe InnSuites is offerin g your Suite choice. A O n e Room Suite fo r $39 WEDNESDAYS STA R TIN G A T 7 PM 1-4 persons Tax not incl. or stay in our T w o Room Suite for Plus, enjoy these complimentary Suiteners: •Social Hour for Guests 0we/ua> •Continental Breakfast •Airport Shuttle •Local Phone Calls •Morning Newspaper •Cable T V , HBO & ESPN IOnVvV in n t kmr N nA a tTio i lN — InnSuites 1651 W. Baseline Rd. at I-IQ Fwy. Tempe, A Z 85283 Less ihan 15 min, to ASU! * INN4RKSORT F ör In fo rm a tio n & R ese rva tio ns ; J l 800-842-4242 fatim i & rafrrg D RAFTS at Rural & A pache BEST LUNCHES IN TH E PAC 101 State Press Page 20 BLOOM COUNTY by Berk* Breathed Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson is m s Dumb wedding GOINS H> BE OVER?/ I DON'T EVEN KNOW THESE PEOPLE. when THIS WOULD BE A LOT MORE FUN IF HOBBES WAS HERE. I CANT BELIEVE. WE LEFT HIM AT HOME, o I HOPE HE’S O lí. WUATS HE GOING TO EAT ? WE D1DNÍT LEAVE ANT FOOD OUT. AND WE'U. BE GONE ALMOST TWO WHOLE DATS.' HOBBES WILL BE STARVING.' the far side By GARY LARSON I THINK. I'LL LET DAD GO INTO THE HOUSE FIRST. " D e a r.... H ave you seen th e beef brains I bought fo r supper ton igh t? " D o o n esb u ry MIKE, I KNOW ITS A MAT­ TEROF PRINCIPLE,BUTIF TOUP O N T TAKE THEJOB, i YOU ODUU?BEFiREP. ANP ! IF THEYFIRE YOU, THEfLC PROB­ ABLYFIRE ' ME,TOO! BY GARRY TRUDEAU PLEASE YEAH. RECON- HAVE SIPER... A HEART, M W E W PECJStON. I KM HERMAN Shoe by Jeff MacNelly ussm Treat your Secretary to Something Special. 1Balloon Bouquets • Cards • Gifts • Stationery Delivery available. Call for details. D E A N N 'S - lH iW v L 1989 Hallmark Cards. Inc. "This Is the best I can do for 'previous em ploym ent/ " “Doesn’t every Pre-med deserve a choice?” Tom Garcia, M .D. Cardiologist Houston, Texas “The right choice was there when I needed it. I made that choice, and now I’m a physician. My alma mater may be just right for you. It’s your choice.” Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara School of Medicine Guadalajara, Mexico Tam pa M esa The International Choice 9 2 3 S. Mill 1112 N. Higley T o receive your videotape preview , call- 966-3082 981-8628 1-800-531-5494 sports state Press JJagejí1_ New-Found Gold ASU gymnast earns gold and bronze medals in Romania } By GARY JACKSON i State Press It is rare fo r an Am erican to visit a communist country and \leave there a hero. ASU gym nast Jody Newm an stole the hearts of : Romanians, and was showered w ith flow ers and applause at ! the Romanian Invitational last weekehd. As one of two gymnasts representing the United States, Newman received a crystal vase, a gold medal in floor exercise and a bronze on still rings while competing against top European opponents Sunday in Poelsti, Romania. Newman said he was extrem ely surprised to be treated like [ a celebrity and have hundreds of girls Woo over him d u ring |the competition. “ I didn’t expect it at a ll,” he said. “ It really gave me a boost. That’s what m ade the whole competition fun, [ especially when they w ere throwing flow ers. “ It was different, I never had that happen to me before — I |was em barrassed.” ASU coach Don Robinson, who made the trip with I Newman, said: “ W e have not had a first-place win there since 1978. Jody is the ¡first Am erican gold medalist since Kurt Thomas. „ f “ That’s prestigious in our community. ” Robinson said he has never been m ore proud of the ! sophomore gymnast, who earned first-place honors in floor exercise at the NCAA championship A pril 17 and then flew to Romania for a repeat perform ance. Robert Cowan, the national m en’s program director o f the [ United States Gymnastics Federation, said he has known of Newman’s potential fo r the last four years, and has shown an interest in him since the gymnast was 8 years old. “ Over the last 11 years, no one has won a gold medal there,” Cowan said. “ Jody made the finals in five of six events, more than any other gymnast (a t this year’s com petition).” Newman, a m em ber of the USA Senior Developmental team, was chosen to represent the United States along with Minnesota’s Jay Caputo, who finished fourth on still rings in Poelsti. “ Sending him to Rom aniais an indication o f what we at the federation feel about Jody,” Cowan said. “ He did a great job. I just wish w e had m ore tim e to train there, but it’s not possible to send a gym nast a week ea rly.” Because o f the recent NCAA championship m eet in Lincoln, Neb., and the long fligh t to Romania afterwards, Robinson said his main concern was for Newman to get sufficient rest before competing again. When competition began-Friday, Newman created an uproar with his routine on the high bar. “ Jody threw a trip le (m aneuver) and perform ed a great set,” Robinson said. “ The judges started arguing — East Germany didn’t want to give him a score. Romania gave him a 9.3, and they eventually settled on a 9.1.” Newman said he was uncertain before the m eet about how the judges would score an Am erican gymnast. He said he thought his routines w ere underscored to some extent in the .beginning and w ere m ore lenient later when the crowd [ supported him. “ On the first day o f competition I nailed my set the best I I ever have and I got a 9.5,” Newman said. Robinson agreed, saying “ he did his best routine, better than he’s ever done before” on still rings. Both Newman and Caputo fe ll during their pommel horse t performances, Robinson said. But Newman finished his set and did the best he has ever done in his life on the apparatus, f first gymnast since Kurt Thomas in 1978 to win a gold medal there. Newman continued to perform at his best during his final events: floor exercise, vault and parallel bars. Robinson said, ‘ ‘because he was in shape and the excitem ent o f it all, Jody was ready.” Newman was also very nervous, he said. But what puzzled Robinson was a statement Newirian made a fter the competition. “ Jody was competing against world-class gymnasts,” Robinson said, “ and he said, ‘a ll I have to w orry about now is how I w ill do in the United States.’ ” Despite winning gold and bronze medals during the finals on Saturday, Newman was still modestly critical about his performances. “ I didn’t think I had that great a m eet,” he said. “ I was pleased — it was the best I could do at that tim e. I definitely have room for im provem ent.” However, Robinson said if Newman continues to train hard, he has the talent to be the best. “ I don’t think he really knows how good he is,” Robinson said. “ I ’ve been tellin g him he’s as good as anybody in the w orld.” Thé Romanian Invitational provided the gymnast a chance to demonstrate his skills and receive the credit he deserves, Robinson said. Newman proved he is better than anyobody in IJo d y Newman received a plaque lo r llrat-p lace honor* at the NCAA Cham pionship m eet, ana earnea a goio ana a pronze m eoai a n a« [crystal vase at the Romanian Invitatio n al Romania is a poor country, but it excels in athletics and allots a substantial amount of money to maintain its gymnastics program , Robinson Said. The government furnished what was considered the top o f the line in food and lodging, he said. “ When w e got there w e saw gray skies, gray buildings and gray people,” Robinson said. “ H ie city was bombed during W orld W ar II, so most o f the buildings w ere new.” But what affected him the most was the tremendous pride that the Romanians had, Robinson said. The crowd’s cheers for Newm an increased with each event, the coach said. “ Right after his routines, they loved him ,” Robinson said. “ The women threw flow ers to him — every tim e he perform ed he got m ore applause.” What amazed the gymnast most, Newm an said, was “ the Romanian people getting excited over m y performances more than they did their own-hometown gym nasts.” During the opening ceremonies o f the final day of competition the crowd was overwhelm ing, Robinson said. “ They lined up all the gymnasts and introduced them, and guess who got the most applause? Jody.” But the fan attraction d id not end at the gym . “ He couldn’t even get on the bus because he was surrounded by hundreds of little girls scream ing ‘Jody! Jody!’ ” Robinson said. Newman said he tried, but could not reach the first o f two buses that transported the gymnasts to the hotel. “ I was walking to the bus, signing autographs along the w ay,” Newman said. “ We have pens that w e trade to other gymnasts, and when I pulled one out all the people rushed over and w ere sticking their hands out.” When he fin ally made it to the bus, Newman said the door closed and he had to take the other one. The gymnast had to endure the swarm of fans a little longer. Although Newman was honored in Europe, Robinson said the gymnast does not receive the same respect at home. A few spectators sneak a peak at the gymnasts, who train at the P . E. West Building, but a relatively sm all crowd attends the home m eets at the U niversity A ctivity Center, he said. Robinson added that Newman is not the only high-caliber gymnast at ASU. ^ : Senior All-Am erican Paul Linne, who competed on the 1986 ASU championship team, competed in the U S . Nationals last summer. Sophomore Licurgo Diaz-Sandi competed at the 1987 World Championships in Rotterdam , The Netherlands, and was a member o f the 1987 M exican Pan AM team. Robinson said gymnasts could teach the w orld about unity. During a banquet after the final day of competition, the gymnasts from most every country w ere together as one. “ The Italians stood up and sang, ‘We are the W orld,’ and asked everyone to join in,” he said. “ Russians, Romanians and East Germans w ere sitting around and singing along.” ■ ^ é U D W Ë lS Ë R • M IC H E L O B « M IG H E L G B •L IT E ¿ r ;; 84&PM s<Ö N LY $ l ä 5 / # T E I f Í 0 R M ^ ! X ; >>; V »g »BüD U G H t UGHT • o o r s c o o r s u g h t CO M PLIM ENTARY BUFFET 4-7 pm M O N -FR I $1.5Q H A P P Y H O U R E V E R Y DAY 1 T am -8 pm Sinn, Arnold, Koch Zedlitz and Fruhwirth w ere named to the 1989 A ll-Pac 10 women’s golf team. USC won the team championship at the Annadale G olf Club in Pasadena, C alif., with a 54-hole total 911 to finish 14 strokes ahead of ASU. Arizona was third at 935, follow ed by Stanford at 937, UCLA at 946, Washington a t 996, Oregon at 1,015, Washington State at 1,028 and Oregon State rounded out the pack a t 1,057. M artinz Koch o f Arizona chased Sinn and Arnold for third at 225, follow ed by Jean Zedlitz of U CLA at 226, Tracy Nakamura o f USC and Lynne Mikulas o f ASU at 228, Jodi F ig ley of Stanford at 229, Susan Slaughter of Arizona and Kim Cathrein o f USC at 231, Gemma Reyne of USC at 232 and Audrey Wooding o f Stanford at 233. News O CD A N A L Y S IS Hw <#) coupons Ads If you said yes, then enter the STATE PRESS contest in the May 2 SPRING SHOPPER... YOU M IG H T W IN $100!!! z: U M H | FdmiLY HdIR CUTTERS FREE SHAMPOO W ITH T H I A Perfect Cut Every Time Reviews U n iv e r s itä t Pliral Rd. CORNERSTONE^MOFPING CENTER 4 968-8008 H p u rs: M o n .- F r i. 9 - & # $ a t. 9 -7 • S un. 12-5 com ics JS science >'*: / ■7 .FUrniLT M J Sfie nc(UTTERS Sports * A 7 ^ (3 $ 100 ? No appointment necessary ever! Bring the whole family state press ^ C o u ld y o u use an e x tra ^ S taff and w ire reports 'Sinn had rounds o f 68, 80, and 73 to post a 2-over-par 221, w hile Arnold had rounds o f 71,80 and 73. Sun D evils Am y Fruhwirth finished 19th at 240, Missy F arr placed 21st at 242 and Heather Hodurtied finished 23rd shooting a 244. DRY « L IT E G E N U IN E D R A F T • WATERMELONS •QUAALÚDES •:- v Y f • S J J F F JOHNSONS Sun Devil victorious at Pac-10 golf meet ASU ’s P ea rl Sinn continued to prove that she is one o f the best am ateur golfers in the country when she captured the Pac-10 tournament’s individual title Tuesday. The Sun D evil fired a one-over-par 73 in the fin al round to hold on to the lead she possessed fo r the entire tournament. Sinn edged Southern Cal’s Dana Arnold by three strokes to earn the title. > • M IC H E L O B H P Includes: •Sham poo ahd Designer Perm •P e rfe ct Cut •S tyling Long hair slightly higher ¡Fres» 23 a n a g e m e n t tired of ro o k ie s salary d e m a n d s NEW YO R K ( A P ) — For the 28 N FL earns, the easy part was dividing up 335 llayers in this year’s draft. The hard part bill be signing 334. Even before the draft ended Monday Evening, several top picks w ere looking at he $11.2 m illion D allas gave T roy Aikman, he No. 1 choice, and saying they would lemand comparable remuneration. If they do, it could be a long summer. “ One of these days, somebody’s going to Lave to stand up to these kids and their [gents,” Jim Finks, president o f the New Orleans Saints said Tuesday. “ W e just have draw the line at a certain point and tell hem ‘it’s been nice talking to you, have a peasant year.’ ” Y ‘Sooner or later,” said Jack Donlan, fcxecutive director o f the N F L Management council, “ the economic rea lity that the flubs wrestle with a ll the tim e w ill begin to lettle in with the players and their agents, fhat’s when meaningful negotiations w ill ake place.” Nonetheless, the draft is barely over and Ihe posturing has begun. Tony Mandarich, the Michigan State offensive tackle who was rated the best overall player available, said the day he was drafted that he wants to be paid that way — more than Aikman, though both Finks and Aikman’s agent, Leigh Steinberg, point out “ the scale for quarterbacks has always been different.” D eion Sanders — the cornerbaC k nicknamed “ Neon Deion” or “ Prim e Tim e” said he would like $10 million over six years from Atlanta, m ore than any defensive player in the league. Sanders has m ore leverage than most — he’s an outfielder for the New York Yankees’ AA farm club in Albany, N .Y., although he says that he prefers football if all things are equal. “ Everybody says Deion is going to get X amount of dollars,” said Sanders, who says he is anxious to begin negotiations with the Falcons. “ I just want it to rhyme with my name — Deion, m illion.” And N otre Dam e’s Andy Heck, an offensive tackle chosen by Seattle with the 15th pick, suggested that offensive linemen, generally at the lower end o f the N F L wage scale, get at least as much as the players they block — pass-rushing linemen and linebackers. “ Defensive linemen, outside backers, rush guys are generally paid a little bit more than offensive linemen,” Heck said. “ You think an offensive lineman is expected to play at the same level as he is and block for that guy, m aybe he should be paid at the same level.” But Donlan said all that is old hat. “ Each year, you hear the same thing about why this player or that player is unique,” he said. “ ‘H e’s a Heisman trophy or (Jutland Trophy winner,’ ‘he graded higher,’ ‘he can participate in another sport.’ Players and their agents use whatever it is they think w ill give them negotiating leverage. ’ ’ Finks, one of the league’s most respected club officials, suggested the problem is deeper than the rookie problem. He noted that many starters are unhappy with their salaries because m arginal players got triple figure signing bonuses and huge raises under the “ Plan B” free agency system that took effect this winter. Under that plan, a team protected its 37 best players and the rest became free agents. And he cited the $11.2 m illion, six-year contract given Aikman, Whom many scouts consider a good but not great prospect and the $7.5 m illion over five years the Buffalo Bills gave defensive end Bruce Smith to match a free-agent offer by the Denver Broncos. A vd a y earlier, Denver owner P a trick Bow len was instrum ental in pushing through a money-saving plan to cut training camp rosters to 80. “ It’s gotten out o f hand,” Finks said. “ The problem is that emotions get involved and the fans get into it and the papers are writing ‘sign him.’ Then you sign him and he doesn’t liv e up to expectations and they get on you again. “ The only way it’s going to stop is more than one club saying ‘it’s not realistic to pay an offensive tackle who won’t sell any tickets unrealistic m oney.’ Then you tell the player ‘The ball is in your court.’ ” f% THE UNDERGRADUATE j LAW CLUB’ presents CROW N LIM O U SIN E Anti-Trust Lawyer Jon Rose fonegcuis% Featuring the latest Lincoln Stretch Limousines & A SU C ollege of Law Thursday, A p ril 27 ' Armstrong Hall, Room 119, 5 p.m. :uniform «! chauffeurs to make a ny occasion special. P IZZA BUFFET H O M E O F TH E ALL YO U CAN EAT P IZ Z A , P A S T A SA LA D BAR BUFFET ASU STU D EN T SPECIALS Everybody Welcome LU N C H 11-2 • D IN N ER 5-8 EVERY DAY L U N C H ..... $ 3 .3 9 D IN N E R .... $ 3 .9 9 C a l i f o r D e t a i ls 9 4 1 -2 5 3 5 24 h rs Bottle of i J L V tt Champagne VNftien you mention this ad FREE DELIVERY ¡■(You must be 21 years dr older) Limited Area 4:30-Close A d ven tu re O n W h e e ls STASH YOUR GOODS FOR THE SUMMER! •Presidential Stretch-Limousines •Professional Chauffeurs •TVs, Stereo, Bar •Privacy Window Call today for our N EW C O M IC S BIG SCREEN CABLE TV ATOMIC COMIC] m ,O Ù Ù C à ^ ^ l N STO CK I ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET LUNCH $2.99 (Reg. 3.39) • DINNER $3.69 (Reg. 3.9g) | j Present this coupon when ordering. Not valid with any other offer. Expires 5-3 1 -8 9 . Special 1 SO U R C E! Student Checks Accepled W/Guarantee Card ^ SHURGARD s S f STO RAG E 409 s. Hayden Rd. (| blk. N. of University) 966-5722 WATCHOUT FORPENGUINS. 1301 E. University ASU/TEM PE 894-1234 Rates! PEN EVER Y D A Y t Z ä j s u m # r a r e S S fa S lS S w Arm y o u r m ind fo r d ie battles ahead at THE COFFEE PLANTATION NOW OPEN C om er 6th St. & Mill Open 7 a.m. weekdays 8 a.m. weekends ANDU H ;• u , A I D r -1e c , r .fM “firsfj&ime clients H A IR D E S IG N w/participating stylists only 8 2 9 -7 1 3 1 FREE Photo Session with $100 purohjss and this ad. Tom Barnes, photographer. ..ama S ili' . mm m ie ad 3 16 8 ß . Indian S chool 4 0 8 - 0 1OO T h e y ’v e been spotted all over. In three different sizes. Lots of delicious flavors. And over 21 different toppings. From fresh straw: berries to crush­ ed brownies. »C O F F E E # PLANTATION Penguins love to travel in pairs: So you sp rin g fo r the firs t, and w e ll tre a t you to the second. dium o r Small, m edium Monday-Friday betw een 4-7 p.m; and en joy 1/2 guitarist Freddie Duran. I f you ’re in the m ood, there’s chess, checkers and backgammon to play, too. E I I | ■ VERY I0WCAI0ME FROZEN YOGURT ■ nmMi!«*ik>i"» owt coupw Htivdeii Square • 3rd & Mill 8 2 9 -7 8 7 8 price drinks, plus live entertainm ent, featuring FREE 2 F M ÌÌ large yo gu rt. B ut to keep Penguin’s fro m becom ing an endangered species, o nly one coupon per custom er. Coffee Roasters & Coffeehouse Stop in fo r H appy H o u r It’s Penguin’s Place “ Frozen Yogurt. A s rich a s ice cream. ¡S isA .*Z ~ 7 But w ith only V2 the calories, x S o you can j get a large. — ¿^.W ith ou t get'.M in g larger. 2 FORI 945 S. Mill at 10th “Coffeefalls into thestomach, and there is a general commotion. Ideas begin to move like Ihe battalion o f the Grand Arm y. . . Things remembered arrive at full gaOop. . . The artillery o f logic hurries up with trains and ammunition, the shafts o f wit start up Uhe sharpshooters." Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) Author of more than 100 novels, atjributing bis success to coffee. 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Keep in touch, and prepare yourselves fo r another year. Love, Nee. ' *' • ’ ANDREA: THANKS fo r choosing this secret agent to be your escort. Hope Disney Assignment is approved "The Spy who Loves You,** 007. ______ A-PHI KRISTI: Had a blast at Forget-menot. I’ll never forget it- Clive.______ _ _ ATO BRAD: Thanks fo r an awesome weekend! It was com pletely out of control, but I had the best tim e. S till can’t quit laughing. Next tim e instead of the Phoeni­ cian, we’ll go to Paris, - — France! Ha! Love, Deanna. ~ ATTENTION RUSHEES: The Brothers o f Pi Kappa Alpha invite you to attend a Pre-rush dinner Wednesday, May 3rd at 5:30 p.m. at the Pike House.__________ CHI OMEGA Melissa: Thanks fo r a classic (with a K) weekend- sex on a beach, radios, missing bathrooms and you. TKE Kevin Kelly. ' ______ DELTA SIGMA Pi Lisa Shelty- Only three days left, are you psyched? Love you, Fluffy. .. . ' - . . DG'S IN blue car com ing from California Sunday- Thanks for the tra ffic ticket! He was after you and got me. You pay half? The tan Jeep. *5 yDON'T BE left out of the tradition. Order your Yearbook today. Call 965-6881 now for more information;. FUIS FRANK and Nick: Thanks for a kille r weekend! Let's do it again!?! Love, Colleen. HEY GIRLS! We’ve gone from D,H. Queens to Chubbets- You a ll know who you are! Love, The Vandel. SIGMA NU*S Awaka Awaka Awaka! Scrrrrapper! C-r-u-s-h! Tan-a-thon, Moona-thon, it just doesn’t m atter. We had an awesome tim e! Love, the Kappas. HEY JIM, You haven't heard? We worked back East in the Southwestern summer work program. For m ore details call 222-8114. SWEET DULCINEA: In some far o ff time in some far away place, surely we were together before, you and I, for kindred Souls are we. Love, Don Quixote. THE ONE: I miss you heavily. I want you badly. Stop. S.top. Stop. Stop. Don’t call me Pokey. Love, HB. invites the m en o f A S U to test d riv e the tradition WORD PROCESSING— $1.50 per page. Resumes, design, editing; & laser printing available. Call 921-3770 evenings & weekends. "Z ” TOUCH word-processing. Student discount-10% . Fast, accurate. Law students welcome. Call M arilyn, 8385559. WANTED AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. CRAFT VENDORS to attend third annual Cortez Street Festival, Prescott, AZ May 27,28,29. For inform ation call 776-0391 or 7787086.(AZ-CAN) TUTOR NEEDED for July CEDComps. Please call 8485708. WANTED. FUTON, queen or king with frame. Charles, 968-8150 after 5. ADOPTION MISCELLANEOUS ADOPTION- CARING, financially secure, professional couple o f Irish and Swedish ancestry wish to love and cherish your newborn child. Legal and confidential. Please call Linda arid Craig, Collect, 212-877-3574. A WONDERFUL fa m ily experience. Australian, European, Scandinavian high school exchange students arriving in August. 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CASH FOR Your tru st deed, contract, mortgage. Any size, term , location. Fast, fair, confidential quotes. Call today, no obligation. M B7778.1-800-346-1731. Note Buyers o f America. (AZCan). With 1flary Kay Try Before Tow TBuy mp you never but the w rong product m'or a com plim entary e again. rû i fl fo r an appointm ent K ________ c lease Kirksey aU7-q57(f 8j8-o8fD RELIABLE BROKE 5th year graduate student seeks house-sitting responsibili­ ties for summer and/or fall/spring. Enjoy pets, yardwork. References available. 965-3650, 966-5477. RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. Larges! library o f inform ation in U.S. Toll-free hotline: 800-351-0222. SCULPTURED NAILS! Full set- only $40 through month of July. Fresco Salon, 1036 S. Terrace (just o ff campus). 967-5799. Ask for Jenny. FREE 1989 International Youth Hostel Pass with purchase of Eurail Pass. Both issued on the spot! American Youth Hostels, Inc. Arizona Council, 1026 N. 9th Street, Phoenix. 254-9803, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday. PERSONAL CO M PUTER PACKAGE for ONLY $ 9 9 5 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1f25/PAGE and up. Research papers, thesis, resumes, cover letters, etc. Quick with quality. Call Mikebe, 941-4075. $1.50 AND Up. AAA Q uality work and laser printer. 33 years experience. Call Marian, 839-4269. $2.00/PAGE. Quick turnaround. Call V irginia anytime, 831-8450; or Bob, 839-3305. A-1 PROFICIENT Typing. IBM Selectric. Loraine, 833-8365, near U niversity and Dobson in Mesa. FROM PACKAG E '349 STUDENT/V0UTH TOURS SOVIETUNION *O ne-W eek L e n in g ra d & M oscow ABSOLUTELY THE best value for your money!! $1.25/page, including graphs, pie charts, etc. Fastest turnaround in the area. Guaranteed satisfaction or your money back! Call 966-7809 anytime. Council Travel 14515 Ventura Blvd. #250 Sherman Oaks, CA 91403 800-888 8786 __ ____ , FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality with a Mac II and laser printer. Call Susan. 9481500. FORMER ASU staffers: Word Perfect, Xerox Memorywriters. Experienced with APA, MLA, graduate school, etc. Gradutate students and faculty work welcome. Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302. TWO FOR ONE MESA SECRETARIAL Service. Term papers, theses, dissertations, resumes. Q uality work on laser printer. 844-1876. Call Danai» at 968-373» PERSONALS at the Phi D elta T h eta house All Welcome! 6 :3 0 p .m . T h u rs d a y , A p ril 2 7 III At Wizards we custom-blend ice cream flavors, choosing vanilla or chocolate ice cream, or yogurt. We add your choice of our fruits, nuts, candies, cookies and special items, blending your combination into a personal ice cream flavor — served in a waffle cone or basket. For more information, call 967-9755 RESUMES. QUALITY, laser printed resumes. 10% student discount. Call Professional Image, 921-1129. Coupon Expires 5-31-89 SHORT OF time? I can help. Reasonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 9485744. WORD PROCESSING for a ll your typing needs. Fast turnaround, overflow work also. Disc storage available. Close to ASU. $l.25/page and up. Roxanne, 966-2825. * Buy One, Receive2ndPurchase o f Equal or Lessor Value FREEI $$$NO OBJECT??? Need to make a good impression? Professional typing, typeset­ ting, proofreading, and editing of your handwritten, typed, or word processed documents done by w riting consultants w ith degrees in English and APA/MLA memberships. Bring your disk to us before you print that file! 438-9202. WORD PROCESSING. IBM pc letter quality printing. Fast, low cost. Call Jackie, 831-8635._________ _____ _________ _ A ny P urchase of 2 Scoops or M o re % QUALITY TYPING- proof-reading- editing next day guaranteed. 897-1038. PRE-RUSH DINNER 225 W. University,Tempo; Next to Buffalo Exchange FINANCING AVAILABLE ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing. Call Susan at 833-0373. (KINKO’S PAPERS make the grade). Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers and self-serve McIntosh computers. 933 E. University, Tempe. Call 9682035 for details. W e d .A p r 2 6 t h 5 :O O p m . > Wl M U L T I- S Y S T E M S ACCURATE, FAST, w ord-processing. Term papers, research papers. $1.50 up. Near ASU West. Vonnie, 934-7487. CEREUS WORD Processing, quality guar­ anteed. Fast, experienced. Term papers, resumes, form letters, dictaphones, edit­ ing. 947-7796. RUSH DINNER C O N rp u ' rE R 9 6 6 - 138 ® ACCURATE TYPING of research papers, group projects, etc. Spelling corrected, quick turnaround. Linda, 838-6830. (AZCanK Celebrating four decades of Greek excellence a l ASU IN C L U D E S : •Dual Floppy Disc *12 Month Warranty •Near Letter Quality Printer •High resolution monochrome monitor •Word processing with spellcheck, DOS Basic and Spreadsheet software (Add $175 for Color Monitor) ACCENTS IN Typing- Moving to 6th Street Commerce Center, Tempe. 1835 E. 6th St., number 23. 946-9982 after 4/11. Call 894-6074 ASU AREAj i Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. C all anytime. Prices com petitive, negotiable. 9682186. VISA/MASTERCARD guaranteed with $1000 minimum credit line, unsecured. No salesmen w ill call. Poorer Trend Credit, PO box 465, Mesa, AZ 85211-0465. WE PROMISE to love and cherish your baby w ith all our heart. W ill be full-tim e mother. Call Sue of B ill collect anytime, 215-872-5675. (AZ-CAN) Y O U C A N B U Y T H IS STOP FORECLOSURE. Save your home. Behind in payments. We can help you. Phone call w ill be held in strick confi­ dence. Call now, 1-992-8551. Mr. Carter WHY HAUL it home? Store it! See our ad today. Best Little Warehouse in Tempe. 967-3900. at Rich at 784-9460 609 ALPHA DRIVE TYPING/WORD PROCESSING TRANSPORTATION FREE RIDE to Chicago or Milwaukee. Drive 1987 Olsmobile. Expenses plus paid. Leave around 5/15. Call 945-6358. OVERWEIGHT? I lost 20 pounds in 20 days- you can too! Guaranteed. Janna, 992-5780. P H I S IG M A KAPPA plus $50 one­ tim e m em ber­ ship fee. TRAW: HAPPY 21st, finally! Vegas is near... are you feeling lucky? PS- Keep the floors clean tonight, O K. SIGMA KAPPA Pledges- Have ya 'II been studying?! The national pledge test is tonight- remember?! Good luck and SK love, Kelly K. SIGMA KAPPA Debbie: Sometimes you just have to make the best o f thinks. Good luck this week and get psyched for W hite Column form al!! Love, Jeff. $12 per month ALL STATES Driveaway- Cars availabte21 or older. 992-5200. ELECTROLYSIS- PERMANENT hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. C all fo r more informa­ tion, 969-6954. SIGMA KAPPA- Hope everyone’s spirits are high this week! Try not to stress about finals. Love ya, Robyn. 966-6621 TKE HUTCH: Great job. Congrafulations Delta Chi and Delts at Teke Oiympics. It was fun had by all. Kevin Kelly. SAE TIM M iller: Hope you have a great Birthday! Remember we need to do cocktails. Sigma love, Robyn. SIGMA KAPPA- Hope ya’II had a great week. Congrats to the new chapter offic-. ers. Sigma sm iles, Robyn. T h o r b e c k e ’s G y m SUSAN: HOW do you feel? Let’s work it out. 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SA VINGS UP TO 30% ALL SALE ITEMS LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND STORE HOURS M ON-FRI 10:00-8:00 SAT 9:30-6:00 SUN 12:00-5:00 Ipine Ski & Sports 1753 E. BROADWAY, TEMPE • 968-9056