Arizona State University’s
Morning Daily
s ta te p r e s s
Voi. 71 No. 135
Copyright. State Press, 1989
Tempe. Arizona
Thursday, April 27, 1989
Senate approves resolution
to remove Danforth cross
»w m i/auynci ijr/oiaio r i v w
The Associated Students Senate has voted to recommend that
the cross atop Danforth Chapel be removed.
By MICHAEL VAN DYKE
State Press
The Associated Students of ASU Senate has affirmed its
support for a Faculty Senate resolution calling for the
removal of the cross from Danforth Chapel and the renaming
of the chapel to Danforth Interfaith Center.
The ASASU Senate voted 11-3 Tuesday night to remove the
cross in an issue that was met by mixed reaction fromstudent legislators. The removal of the cross even struck an
emotional chord in one usually reserved senator.
Sen. Greg Wattier of the College of Architecture, a selfproclaimed “ quiet” member of the Senate, said he had never
felt as compelled to voice his opinion about ASASU
legislation as he did with the proposal supporting the
removal of Danforth’s cross.
“ We really have not gotten into any real issues worthy of
debate in this year’s Senate until now,” Wattier said.
Wattier said he opposed the resolution because of the
building’s historical, architectural and religious significance
to people of the Christian faith.
“ Danforth chapel is a memorial standing its ground,”
Wattier said. “ The architecture of the chapel is symbolic of
the Christian church and by taking *he cross off you are
slapping Christians in the face.”
But Vince Micone, ASASU campus affairs vice president,
said he favored removing the cross because he said its
presence indicates that the University supports the Christian
religion more than others.
“ The cross is a symbol which causes certain emotions in
people,” Micone said, adding that students fee ! the cross is a
barrier to their entry of the interfaith center.
“ The cross should not have been there in the first place,”
he said. “ We should yank the cross down if it is affecting
students.”
College of Engineering Sen. Yousef Hashimi said because
the chapel’s purpose is to serve as an interfaith center for
meditation, it is hypocritical to have a cross on top of the
building.
“ There is historical merit to the building,” Hashimi said.
“ I f it was not supposed to serve as an interfaith center, I
would have no problem.”
Hashimi said having the cross atop the chapel restricts the
use of the center to Jewish students who cannot go into a
Christian church because the tenets of their religion forbid it.
The Faculty Senate w|ll vote M ay 8 on whether to remove
the cross. The removal of the cross was proposed April 17 to
the Faculty Senate, but the cross’ presence on the chapel has
been an issue since it was constructed in 1948.
M o c k m u rd e r tria l h e ld fo r a b o rtio n ‘d e fe n d a n t’
By STACY HAYMES
State Press
A mock trial held at the ASU College of
Law Wednesday examined whether or not a
woman who has had an abortion should be
convicted of murder, but those who attended
were left to make their own decision.
T h e tr ia l, p resen ted by P la n n ed
Parenthood, the East Valley Pro-Choice
Support Group and the Women Law
Students Association, was developed to
educate people of die legal impact of
declaring that “ life begins at conception”
and making abortion illegal.
On trial was 25-year-old Sarah Jones, a
fictitious divorced mother of two children
who is also unemployed. She became
pregnant find decided to have an abortion
because she couldn’t properly provide for
another child.
Jones was played by Julie Hickman, an
ASU student in the College of Public
Programs.
The trial’s scenario included a pseudo-law
passed by the state Legislature stating that
life begins at conception, thereby making
abortion murder.
Jones was tried for murder and faced
possible life in prison.
“ I tried to decide what was best for them
(her children),” Jones told the prosecution.
“ I didn’t murder anybody. I ’m not the first,
and I can bet I won’t be the last.”
Gloria Feldt, executive director of
Planned Parenthood o f C entral and
Northern Arizona, said the verdict was left
to the audience because it is impossible to
predict what would actually happen.
“ The idea was to get people to think about
it,” she said.
The mock trial coincided with the actual
abortion case of Webster vs. Reproductive
Health Services o f M issouri, which was
heard Wednesday by thè Supreme Court.
The case could overturn the 1973 R oe vs.
Wade decision >that legalized abortion
nationwide.
The Webster case, which will be decided
in June, challenges the right to choose, and
could make abortion illegal or return the
issue to the individual states to decide.
“ I don’t think they would have taken the
case if they didn’t intend to do something,”
Feldt said.
But Feldt said it would be tragic if the
court overturns its 1973 decision.
s
“ If abortion is illegal, women who have
abortions would have to be brought to trial
with criminal penalties,” she said. “ Who
should be the judge of these women? Who
should decide — the individual or the
government?
“ It is our belief that people should.decide
themselves.”
A S U fr e s h m a n K r is t in F io r e , a
psychology major who attended the trial,
agreed.
“ I'm definitely pro-choice,” she said.“ If
it was made illegal it would do more harm.”
But although Fiore was supportive of
Jones, she said the prosecution presented a
better argument than the defense.
“ I felt if it was a real trial, the prosecuting
side would win (because) of the way it was
presented here. The prosecution was more
based on fact, and the defense side was
more based on sympathy.”
After the trial, Feldt asked the audience to
sign petitions supporting safe and legal
abortions.
Jack W. Beasley Jr./State Press
ASU senior Julie Hickman, in the title role, pleads her case to the “ court” In a production called
the “ Trial of Sarah Jones.” The mini-drama, staged Wednesday at the College of Law, portrayed
a young woman oh trial for murder because she had an abortion.
Domed stadium could catch new team
By RICHARD A. VIGIL
State Press
Major league baseball could add two expansion teams as
early as 1992 or 1993, but unless there is an established
stadium in the Valley to support a team, other cities will win
the franchises.
I f new teams are added, they most likely will be members
of the National League, which has two fewer teams than the
American League.
Katy Feeney, director o f media and public affairs for the
National League in New York, said baseball Commissioner
A. Bartlett Giamatti is “ in favor of expansion,” but added
that there is no timetable for bringing new teams into the
league.
P
.~
■
She said a committee of team owners is studying expansion
possibilities. Cities that want expansion teams will have to
have a stadium exclusively for baseball and will need to
demonstrate a healthy economy and fan support, she said.
Cities that are competing for teams include Buffalo, N.Y.;
Denver; Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla; and Phoenix.
Although the assumption has been that one team will be
located in the eastern part of the country and one will be in
the west, no guidelines have been set up officially, Feeney
said.
Burton Barr, the form er Republican gubernatorial
candidate who is active in the fight to bring a major league
team to Phoenix, said he thinks the Valley would give strong
fan support to a big-league team.
“ We are a made-to-order baseball community,” he said.
Turn to Basaball, page 3.
WEATHER
Unseasonably cool temperatures are forecast for
today with a high near 75 degrees. Lows tonight
should be in the mid-50s.
INSIDE:
Betty Turner Asher, A SU ’s vice president for stu
dent affairs, prepares to say goodbye to the
University.
Page 7.
Classified., U;,.....;....................
21
Comics.....».;.........
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Ophifen......i
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Police Report...... .............................
10
Sports...... » ............ ;............. ........ ................... 17
T oday...».... ........
2
Page g
Siale ftt o »
Thursday, April 9 7 ,1 9 8 9
world/nation in brief
Supreme Court urged to overturn
landmark 1973 abortion ruling
WASHINGTON (A P ) — Abortion opponents led by the
Bjish administration urged the Supreme Gourt in a longawaited courtroom showdown Wednesday to overturn its
landmark 1973 ruling that women have a constitutional
right to end their pregnancies.
Outside, p o lic e . arrested 27 abortion-rights activists,
among a noisy crowd of people demonstrating on both sides
o f one of the the nation’s most 'divisive issues. Those
arrested were charged with crossing a police line.
In sharp contrast, the hour-long argument session took
place in a packed but hushed courtroom.
“ The United States asks this court to reconsider and
overrule its decision in R oe vs. Wade,’’ said Harvard law
professor Charles Fried, referring to the ruling that
legalized abortion.
But Frank Susman, a St. Louis lawyer representing those
who successfully challenged an abortion-limiting Missouri
law in lower courts, argued, “ There can be no ordered
liberty for women without control o ver their
Gorbachev lists Soviet Union’s
problems despite his reforms
childbearing.”
“
Missouri Attorneys, General William' Webster urged the
court to restore the sta te’s abortion regulations even if it
does not reverse the broader; 1973 decision, which was
based on women’s privacy rights.
MOSCOW (A P ) — Mikhail S Gorbachev said in a speech
released Wednesday that shortages of housing, food and
consumer goods are growing despite his reforms. He
blamed runaway government spending and Soviets who
“ forgot how to work.”
In one of his frankest admissions o f the Soviet Union’s
problems, he said citizens vented their anger March 26,
when at least three dozen senior Communist Party
candidates were defeated in parliamentary elections.
Gorbachev said perestroika — the program he launched
four years ago to overhaul Soviet economy and society —
remains the proper course, but reforms are not being put
into effect properly, particularly at the local level.
Iran’s information minister says
U. S. involved in spy operation
NICOSIA, Cyprus (A P ) — Iran’s information minister on
Wednesday revealed details of what the Iranians say is a
U. S. spy operation in Iran, alleging the agents included
military officers, clergymen and civilians, official reports
said.
In a televised news conference, Mohammad Mohammadi
Reyshahri said the CIA had “ carried out acts of terrorism
and sabotage in Iran, including assassinations of highranking officials,” the Islamic Republic News Agency
reported. The dispatch was monitored in Nicosia.
“ These spy networks were organized by the United
States to infiltrate the Islamic Republic system and divert
the revolution in the next decades,” Reyshahri said.
His harsh criticism appeared to set the stage for even
more radical measures.
“ The food problem is far from solved,” the general
secretary said. “ The housing problem is acute. There is a
dearth of consumer goods in the shops.
today
Meetings
•Student Alumni Association Board of Directors meeting
at 3 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. General membership
meeting follows at 4 p.m.
•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.
•SFantasy will show “ Blade Runner” starring Harrison
Ford at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room 217. On
Reading Day, SFantasy will show “ Monty Python and the
Holy Grail” . For details, call Heather at 784-9848.
•In te rV a rs ity Christian Fellow ship will discuss
“ Christianity for the 90s” with Gordon Aeschelman at 5:30
p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
•University Toastmasters special meeting with election
and induction ceremony for new members at 5:15 p.m. in
the MU Navajo Room 212. 1
•Financial Management Association Dr. Kane from Ohio
State University will speak about election for president at
4:40 p.m. in the Business Administration Building, Room
341.
•Lesbian and Gay Academic Union planning end of
semester party, aiso nominations for elections at 5 p.m. in the Engineering Research Center* Room 393.
•Undergraduate Law Club Jon R ose will speak on the
the MU Pinal Room.
•Campus Crusade For Christ "Thursday Night Live” at Antitrust Law at 5 p.m. in the Law Building, Room 119.
•ASU Theatre Department features “ Rad Art” , a student
7:30 p.m. in the Physical Science Building, Room 100.
•A ll Greek Fellowship/Alpha Gamma Omega at the AGO production and an original play by Chris Danowski. A love
house, 1814 E. Randell at 7:30 p.m. Call 966-8637 for more story for the 90s. Drama City, 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday.
•American Marketing Association will vote on bylaws at
information.
•American Indian Science and Engineering Society last 4:30 p.m. in the Business Administration Complex, Room
meeting of the semester at 6 p.m. in the Engineering 218. Copies will be available this morning in the marketing
department. Also, Julian Hoffer from Pepsi will speak.
Center, G-Wing Room 228.
•Campus Alcoholics Anonymous a support group for •Ad Club Statia Ballant of Phillips Ramsey will speak at
those desiring to quit using alcohol or drugs will meet at 3:15 p.m. in the MU, Room 211. Also, officer elections. r;
•ASU Ski Devils deposits are due for the May 19 trip to San
noon in the MU Yavapai Room.
•Outreach/Rejoice in JesUs Ministries Bible study and Diego and also pick up map for this weekend’s giant end; of
fellowship from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. in Cholla Recreation the year party. Meeting at 7:30 p.m. at Sunny’s Pizza and
Room.
Pub, 1301 E. University Drive, next to Beauvais.
•MUAB Gallery Committee selection of artists for 1989-90 •Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
MU Fine Arts Lounge exhibits from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Edwin J. Saeger, Phoenix Public Library “ Shakespeare’s
MU Activities Center. Sjides from 120 artists.
Texts” at 2:30 p.m. in Hayden Library, Special Collections.
•CiRCL ■- Circle For Research in Computational •Adult Children of Alcoholics guestspeaker Ann Hunt
L in g u istics A ryeh F a ltz d is c u s s e s “ L a n g u a g e from “ Overcomers Anonymous” will speak from noon to 1
Mechanisms” with examples from Navajo at 1:40 p.m. in p.m. in.the basement of the MU Room 58E.
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Page 3
Thursday, April 27,1989
Baseball
Continued from page 1 .
But thé owner’s committee will have to be convinced that
investment group from Tampa that is trying to land a major
Phoenix can support a major league team. Other cities have
league franchise has signed a letter saying it will lease the
been working just as hard to show the owners that they are
I stadium from the city if a franchise is awarded there.
ready to support the big leagues.
The Tim es source said the two cities form erly were rivals
n
I f a team is located in the west, Phoenix’s main rival for
in the campaign to land a big-league team, and the
baseball’s affections is Denver,
- i 'fs7>
Team
unification of Tampa and St. Petersburg has given thf area a
Avg. M
StadiumCap. Pet.
The Denver Zephyrs, a triple-A farm team for the
stronger position.
Cincinnati Reds, play in the 77,000-seat Mile High Stadium,
Another of the Valley’s m ajor rivals in the hunt for a
Highest |
which is the home of the National Football League’s Denver
franchise is Buffalo. The Buffalo Bisons, a triple-A farm
N ew York Mets
Broncos.
team for the Pittsburgh Pirates, have put together a bigBut Doug Ward, public relations director for the Zephyrs,
Los Angeles Dodgem:
league operation that is waiting for a team to support.
36,793
56.000
said the stadium is far too large for a big-league team.
Michael Buczkowski, the Bisons’ public relations manager,
St. L$uis Cardinals Jf
35,714, | | j§ fc
“ It’s like the Cleveland of the West,” Ward said. “ It is
said Pilot Stadium, the Bisons’ 19,006-seat home park, was
N e w ^ o ^ t jp p y e s ^
32,515
57jj>4S
tough to sell season tickets in Cleveland because everybody
designed to be expanded to 40,000 seats in the event Buffalo
knows they can walk up and get them on game day.”
lands a major league team. He added that the expansion
X o w e s ff\ n l
I
Cleveland Municipal Stadium seats 74,208, but average
project would take about six months.
attendance at the Indians’ games in 1988 was only 17,427.
Atlanta Bra|e£P:
Buczkowski said the Bisons also have a full-time staff of 50
ltò m o 1-| ^ 0 0 6
20.1
He said preliminary plans are being drawn Up for a
people. He said the transition would be easy for expansion to
Seattle Mappers'
^ 9 ,4 3 8
21.2
baseball stadium to be built in Denver if the city is awarded a
Buffalo because the team would not have to make too many
Cleveland Indians"^ >f
franchise.
23.5
$ ¡¡2 7
-74,208
adjustments.
wt
A ballot initiative, which will go before the city’s voters in
Besides having facilities, a fan base and a staff in place,
Chicago White Sox I f
fm 7 5
4 4 ,0 8 7
31.2
the 1990 general election, w ill propose a one-tenth cent sales
the Bisons’ management is working toward building a
tax to pay fo r the open-air stadium, which will seat about
system o f farm teams from which a major league Buffalo
45,000 people and be modeled after the 40,625-seat Royals
team could draw players.
Stadium in Kansas City. The initiative has a clause that
Buczkowski said that even though Buffalo is poised to
would nullify it should Denver fail to win a franchise.
Team
receive a big-league franchise, the city will have to compete
But there are two major potential stumbling blocks in
with other locations, including Phoenix and Denver.
Phoenix I
2,375
Denver’s path to the major leagues, W ard said.
“ We always compare ourselves to a typical minor-league
“ Denver is lacking a big-time money guy to take charge of
player
who is trying to put up the numbers so the big leagues
D en ver^djifty^
357.0Q3 : - ^ < X 9 5 8
the situation,” Ward said.
will call him up,” he said.
16.481
Billionaire Marvin Davis had Ted the fight during the early
Last year, the Bisons drew nearly 1.2 million fans to their
1980s by trying to influence the major leagues to expand into
games — more than the Chicago White Sox, Seattle Mariners
The Zephyrs’ attendance is just average, however. Last or Atlanta Braves — putting 16,481 fans per gam e into their
Denver and by attempting to buy and relocate an existing
year, the club drew 357,003 fans to games, an average of 4,958 stadium.
team, the Oakland A ’s. But Davis has since left Denver for
per game. But Ward said the team’s annual July 4th game,
But even the major league teams with the best attendance
California, and though he retains business interests in
1 which includes a fireworks display, draws more than 50,000 figures do not sell out everygam e. The average attendance
Deliver, he no longer leads the fight for a franchise.
fans to the stadium each year.
for last year’ s games was 25,166 fans per game. M ajor league
The other problem Denver’s big-league baseball advocates
But the Phoenix Firebirds, a triple-A farm team for the San stadiums range in size from 33,583 seats at Fenway Park,
face, Ward said, is Denver’s v o t e «. The city was awarded
Francisco Giants, drew even smaller crowds to games, as home of the Boston Red Sox, to 74,208 at Cleveland Municipal
the 1976 Winter Olympics, but voters rejected the bid, and the
171,000 people attended in 1988.
games were held in Innsbruck, Austria, instead.
Stadium.
Craig Pletenik, the Firebirds’ public relations director,
4,3Ve have to get rid of the stereotype of Coloradans as
Barr said Valley residents w ill support a team, and added
people who want to get back to nature with their Grape-Nuts^ -said he thinks major league owners are more concerned With that die main thing preventing major-league expansion into,
the population of an area than they are with minor-league
and biodegradable toilet paper,” Ward said.
Phoenix is the lack o f a domed stadium.
attendance figures.
Denver has shown that it can support major sports teams.
“ To play m ajor league baseball in the summer, there has
Tampa-St. Petersburg is another area committed to the
to be seme mechanism to cool it o ff,” Barr said.
The Broncos have sold out more than 100 consecutive home
fight for a major league team. St. Petersburg Is building a
games, a string which began even before the team’s
He said that means a new stadium will have to be built in
domed stadium that will seat 45,000 people for baseball
relatively recent successes. Also, the Nuggets, Denver’s
the Valley, and that it will have to be publicly funded.
games.
“ I f (a community) is not prepared to pay for a stadium, it’s
National Basketball Association franchise, are consistently
According to the St. Petersburg Tim es, the stadium, which
one of the top ten teams for attendance in the NBA, Ward
not going to go anywhere,” he said. “ I f we want to play that
is about two-thirds finished, cost the city $110 million. An
said.
ballgame, we have to think along those lines.”
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opinion
State Pn%*
Page 4
Humans have responsibilities, animals have no'rights’
Mike Ritter
Opinion Editor
Animal rights is a topic of much debate
these days, particularly in the context of
such a research-oriented institution as ASU.
The presumably m aniacal deviations
visited upon our furry or web-footed friends
in places such as this have prompted nation
wide attention to the topic.
I have my own opinion about animal
rights: They don’ t have any.
Now before the Animal Liberation Front
starts mixing Molotov cocktails, let’s think
about this for a moment.
What is needed is not an “ Animals’ Bill of
R ig h t s ’ ’ but a “ H u m a n s ’ B ill o f
R esponsibilities” to ensure that our
treatment of animals is as humane as
possible, while recognizing our need to
utilize them for the benefit of the human
condition. This would mean creating and
e n fo rc in g su fficient laws to protect
endangered species and their habitats and
mandate humane treatment of domestic
animals used in medical science and food
production.
While the difference between animal
rights and human responsibilities to
animals may seem largely semantic, there
is a distinction: to create “ inalienable”
rights for animals could be potentially
detrimental to human beings. Once such
“ rights” were institutionalized (or God
forbid, constitutionalized!) it would open
the possibility of banning the use of animals
in such situations as medical research.
Surely this is what many animal rights
advocates would prefer to see happen. To
many involved in this cause, the mere
suggestion that animals should ever be
sacrificed for the benefit of mankind is
somehow akin to racism.
Bullocks.
In a perfect world, all creatures would
live in harmony with one another in a
system of total equality, with .none of the
“ speciesism” supposedly inherent in the
utilization of animals by humans. In this
Utopian garden, the needs of humans would
not encroach upon their fellow creatures —
disease would be unheard of, and manna
would fall from the heavens.
But we do not live in such a world. The
advocates of “ animal rights” may say that
this is the fault of humans, that our
existence on this planet is some form of
bizarre aberration . . . and to this extent
they m ay be right.
Humans have been destroying this world
— its plants, animals, resources and people
— since we first dropped from the trees. Our
greed and prejudices have moved us to
.m ake war, pollute and wipe out entire
species from the earth.
Perhaps this very fact — a self-realization
of our largely unfavorable impact upon this
earth —- is what inspires the collective guilttrip propelling the animal rights cause.
There are those involved in the crusade
for animals, perhaps a fanatical minority,
but vocal nonetheless, who sincerely believe
that the “ rights” of animals must be
absolute and exist on a p a r— if not above —
the needs of humans. Considering our track
record it is not a difficult point to argue.
But before we damn the human race for
our crimes against animals by completely
cutting ourselves off froth the benefits of
medical research, let’s be really honest.
The fact is that human society has
claimed for itself supremacy over the
creatures of this world. Our stewardship has
been wasteful and cruel perhaps, but our
dominion is undeniable. Like it or not, we
have made a collective decision as a species
that our welfare comes above that of other
creatures.
Animal rights advocates seem to feel that
they Can purge their consciences and
reverse this fact by eliminating medical
research and cutting red meat from their
diets. This belief represents the pinnacle of
human arrogance.
How many animal rights advocates live
indoors? A goodly sum would be my
estimation. Where did the wood, come from
to build those homes, and what was living in
the trees before they were cut down? Hmm
. . . could it be . . . animals?
How many of these crusaders live in
urban areas and eat. food grown on
cultivated fields? What do they think lived
on that land before die cities were built and
the ground was tilled? How many creatures
die from the the building of dams that
provide water and electricity to the homes
of animal rights advocates?
If most animal rights proponents were to
roll up their shirt sleeves they would likely
find a small pox vaccination scar. How
many of them would prefer that they and
millions of other human beings suffered
from the deadly, disfiguring and now —
thanks to medical reseach with animals —
rare disease?
The point is that none of us living in
modern society is isolated from the
advantages humans have created for
ourselves at the expense of animals.
We exist today— good or bad — through
centuries of clothing ourselves, feeding
ourselves and keeping ourselves healthy
through the utilization of animals.
It is true that we have, and continue to,
commit horrible atrocities against animals.
I ’m certainly not about to defend the
p r a c tic e o f w h a lin g o r the highly
questionable importance of cosmetics
testing. But this is where the application of
human resp o n sib ilities needs to be
unbendingly enforced. The secret is tostrike
a bargain between our needs as a society
and our responsibilities as fellow creatures
of the earth.
The solution is not to “ liberate” the world
population of white rats in the hypocritical
belief that we can at once live in this society
without infringing on the lives of animals.
That sort of paradise doesn’t exist. And if
it ever did, we might well remember that we
w e r e k i c k e d o u t t h r o u g h the
s h o r t s ig h t e d n e s s o f tw o c a r e le s s
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letters
Keep chapel’s cross
Editor:
AN OPEN LE TT E R TO THE ASU FA C U LT Y SENATE:
As you deliberate the removal of the cross from atop
Danforth Chapel, please consider the following:
•Danforth Chapel, including its cross, has been a part ol
campus life and arch itectu ral context since its
construction.
•The existence of Danforth Chapel, including its cross, on
campus predates any current faculty, staff or student.
•The cross is part of the building’s design; an
understated, yet elegant composition, defined by the
masonry-faced tower tyhich ascends to a faceted cupola,
culmination in the simple cross.
•Danforth Chapel, including its cross, was built with
privately donated funds, according to the stipulations oí
Mr. Danforth. To violate such a significant part of the
design would not only be disrespectful to the donor’s intent,
but may also have legal consequences.
Mark C, Vinson, AIA
Board of Directors, Architecture Guild of Arizona State
Class Representative, ASU Alumni Association
ftp van Bush theman whosieptr*? iooiw s ...
q u o ta b le
STATE PRESS
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Thursday, April 97,1989
;
Page 5
“ ' r
Street violence more offensive than white-collar crime
Jeff Greenfield
Univeral Press Syndicate
N E W Y O R K — T h is past w eek,
Washington put the finishing details on a
plan to rescue America’s battered savings
and loan structure, at a cost to the
taxpayers that will exceed $100 billion. By
some estimates, most of that cost stems
from unethical or flatly illegal behavior on
the part of S & L executives all across the
country.
At roughly the same time, in New York
City, a 28-year-old fem ale investment
banker was found near death in Central
Park. A “ w olf pack” of six thugs, between
the ages of 13 and 17, had set upon her while
she was jogging, and brutally raped and
beat her.
We know two things abotft these two
stories: In a “ cosmic” sense, the story of
the S & L is much more important, much
more consequential and. will cause much
mof-e suffering — in the form of lost savings,
higher costs and a weakening of America’s
underlying financial health.
We also know, in a visceral sense, that the
story of the horrors inflicted on that young
investment banker will strike much closer
to our hearts than the ongoing crisis pf our
savings and loan industry.
F o r m a n y w ho c a l l th e m s e lv e s
progressives or liberals, this is a highly
unsatisfactory state of affair. Why, they
want to know, is crime in the streets so
cutting an issue — as George Bush helped to
demonstrate last year — while “ crime in the
suites” doesn’t seem to stir the emotions
nearly as much?
over street crime. A price-fixing conspiracy
may well make milk more expensive for our
children. But it cannot compare to the
outrage created by a teen-age hoodlum who
puts a knife to the throat of a child for her
lunch money.
The answer, I believe, has to do with what
has for centuries been considered the first
duty of government: to protect us from our
fellow men and women.
Government is not rooted in an optimistic
sense of human nature. It is, instead, rooted
in the conviction that men are not angels,
that we need to band together to escape the
law of the jungle, where the predator would
simply take what he wished from the weak.
Today, fo r m illions of Am ericans,
government has failed its first duty.
Particularly for the least privileged — the
poor, the very young, the very old, those
who have little or no choice about where
they can live — the streets of their
neighborhoods, the corridors of their
apartment buddings and schools, are places
o f ceaseless menace.
That kind of fear is pervasive; it can
spread whenever the sense of helplessness
is conveyed by a dramatic event. A quartercentury ago in New York, a woman named
Kitty Genovese was murdered after her
repeated screams for help, heard by dozens
o f New Yorkers, went ignored. That event
left a lasting impression of New-York City
as a jungle. This Central Park savagery will
have a similar effect.
By contrast, most white-collar crime does
not, cannot, create that sense o f personal
violation that is at the heart of our outrage
The S & L executives who bled their
companies dry, who took kickbacks for
making inherently unsafe loans, did indeed
do great harm. But what they did does not
make the blood run cold in the way that
footsteps echoing down a deserted subway
platform can.
Every once in a while, of course, the
misdeeds of a huge company do produce
just such reaction. The oil now corrupting
Alaska’s Prince William Sound has, in the
polite words of a New York Tim es headline,
created a “ public relations problem” for
Exxon. Why? Precisely because the sight of
filthy beaches and dying birds and animals
puts a concrete cast to the abstraction of
“ pollution.”
As a political proposition, though, liberals
aré in for a long wait if they expect the
depredations of the executive suites to
trigger the same kind of fury as street
crime. As an abstract proposition, the two
may be equally evil. In the real world, most
folks just don’t see it that way.
'^OU'KEflRE£T060(V« S & L , S l l ? - R E M FELON. '
more letters
Judaism’s resilience
Editor: .
.
.
. v.: .
Throughout time Jewish people have been persecuted. We
have met head on with every known wrath of hate. Yet, we
have survived. My question to you is how?
This question has perplexed many including Mark Twain.
Twain wrote the following in an article “ Concerning The
Jews.”
. . . Peoples have sprung up and held their torch high for
a time, but it burned out . . . The Jew saw them all, beat
them all . . . All things are mortal but the Jew; all forces
pass', but he remains. What is the secret of his
immortality?
Many would answer Twain’s question by referring to the
Torah (Old Testament). They would say that the Lord has
watched over the Jewish people according to the Covenant
that he (she), made with them. This may be true, but I
have a feeling it’s much simpler.
The answer to this difficult question has three key
ingredients. These are P R ID E , CO M M UN ITY and
JERUSALEM. And it’s that simple.
Pride: It was pride that helped Moses lead the Jews out
of slavery in Egypt. It was pride that helped Mordaccai
overcome the evil tyrant Haman of Persia. It was pride
that helped the Jews to survive the Holocaust, It was pride.
Pride gave the Jew the strength to defeat all forms of
physical persecution.
Community: It was community that helped the Jews live
throughout the bondage of Egypt. It was community that
helped the Jews live through the exile in Babylon. It was
community that helped the Jews live through the ghettos of
Easter'n Europe. It was community. Community gave the
Jew the strength to defeat all forms of social persecution.
Jerusalem: Finally, the most important reason why the
Jew has survived through tim e, Jerusalem. Jews
everywhere have lived knowing the prophecy, “ If I forget
thee, Jerusalem, may my right hand loose its cunning and
may my tongue stick to the roof of my mouth.”
Jerusalem has been the source of our pride and the glue
of our community wherever we have dwelled. From
Ethiopia to Alaska, Jews have never forgotten Jerusalem.
It has been and will always be the heart that pumps our
blood.
These are the reasons for the immortality of the Jew. If
you are a Jew, I hope that I have touched you. For it is you
who knows deep within your soul that I am right.
Don’t be afraid. Stand and show your pride in being
Jewish. Join in the activities of your local Jewish
community. And V shana Haba’ah Biyerushalayiom, Next
Year In Jerusalem.
S, Yousef Hashimi
Senator, Engineering and Applied Sciences
Racism and ignorance
Editor:
This is in response to Gary Bouch’s letter to the editor
(A pril 24). Mr. Bouch says that “ as is.usually the case with
every incident involving minorities here at ASU, the subject
of racism has taken center stage.” Look Mr. Bouch, if it
wasn’t for the SAE violence on three innocent non-white
students, the issue of racism would not have become an issue
at all.
In case you did not know, Mr. Bouch, racism toward
minorities at this campus existed long before this “ incident’ ’
occurred, We cannot even begin to understand why you
would want to discredit this act of violence and say it is
another example of minorities hiding behind a racial facade.
It is ignorant people like you who believe that minorities
are the cause of racism, In fact, it is people like you who
instigate racism because you are insensitive to minority
issues, uneducated in cultural diversity, and stereotypical of
every minority.
Finally, in your conclusion you stated that you would
rather be “ insulted and spit at than beaten over the head with
pipes.” That is the difference between you and us, Mr.
Bouch. While you are worried about physical affliction which
can quickly heal, we are more concerned about mental
afflictions which take much longer to heal, if at all. Sean
Hedgecock must not have been severely injured, since he
was out partying the next night. We can guarantee you one
thing, Mr. Bouch, the mental anguish suffered by James
Liddell, Bob Rucker and Darren Viner w ill be with them long
after the bumps and bruises suffered by Mr. Hedgecock have
gone away.
Ignacio Gonzalez
Freshman, Computer Science
Mario Enrique Diaz
Junior, Political Science
SAE ‘morons’
Editor:
After reading the Op-Ed page on April 20, let me tell you
I was pissed! The brothers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon are
absolute morons. Do they really think they can get away
with attacking someone so violently? They are worried that
their fraternity was being “ bashed.” Let them think about
this for a while: what about the victims? Weren’t they
physically bashed? Do the brothers of SAE realize the
humiliation and the embarrassment they went through?
Not to mention the pain.
Racism is something that should not be dealt with lightly.
No one should be able to get away with it. No one! SAEs
must be punished. The ASU administration must do
something! I f they don’t I ’ll start to wonder what they
believe in.
SAEs defended themselves by saying they have “ black
members.” Big deal, What is that supposed to prove? To
m e that proves absolutely nothing. I would love to see how
they would feel if this happened to one of them. They would
obviously want something done. I ’m so tired of this “ Red
Neck” idealism. It’s pathetic. Double-standards are so
ridiculous. I have no idea how black students and faculty
feel comfortable in a place where they are looked down
upon. If these morons from SAE are against blacks and
other minorities, maybe they should just go back to their
little WASP farm towns in Missouri!
SAEs claimed that they were the “ biggest victims.” Well
let me tell you something, I really feel sorry for you. I
really do. Give it a break! If your brothers are capable of
committing such violence, then they should be able to
handle the consequences. SAEs stated, “ The frightening
fact is that these articles may cause unnecessary violence
in the weeks to come.”
The way I look at it, it’s not the articles that a regoin g to
cause the violence, it’s SAE’s actions.
Scott fL Ha|;shay.
Sophomore, Fine Arts
Racial incident points to need to move greeks off campus
Editor:
Isn’t it high time that the g(r)eeks of ASU take
responsibility for their actions? Since I ’ve been at ASU,
thdse frat BOYS have continuously been in trouble with the
law or the school for one thing or another. Regardless of
whether this riot (weekend of April 14, 15) was.racial or
not, it does not give them the right to act like juveniles. Or
does it? Not only did the riot headline disgust me, but
another act of Greek “ maturity” hit me in the face Monday
morning. Some “ child” had spray-painted a black “ P ” and
a black “ P i Kappa Alpha” on the west side o f the Student
Services Building. Like other universities have done in the
past, why doesn’t ASU eliminate this growing problem by
moving all greeks off campus? This would force them to
act as citizens of the community, rather than the spoiled
brats they are here on campus!
Dave Fox
Sophomore, Interior Design
MHIHNHÍ
Page 6
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A d d itio n a l ite m s a v a ila b le fo r 85
Asher has been the leading force behind the construction of
many new buildings at ASU, including the Student Services
Building, the Student Recreation Center, which is expected to
open this fall and the planned expansion of the MU.
But she said the one thing the University has been remiss in
has been in developing more programs and services for
evening students.
Asher also said there needs to be better management of
ASU’s increasing enrollment.
“ There aren’t that many universities that students can
attend in Arizona,” she said. “ I have real mixed emotions
about saying to an individual that they do not have access to a
public university.
“ On the other hand, once you admit those students, you
have an obligation to provide for them quality education and
good services. Because we have so many students we are
simply not providing a high level of service that I ’d like to see
us provide.”
And many times the lack of funding has hurt the University
and programs designed to make life easier for students, she
said.
“ There are all kinds of new ideas out there that we haven’t
attempted yet simply because we haven’t had the resources
or the people to do it,” she said.
Asher obtained her doctorate in Counseling and Higher
Education Administration from the University of Cincinnati.
She has done post-doctorate work at both Dartmouth and
Harvard.
She also is an honorary member of ASU’s chapter of the
Golden Key National Honor Society and has served as a
consultant, trainer, evaluator, author and presenter on a
variety of topics, including the professional advancement of
women.
She was the recipient of ASU’s 1985 Affirm ative Action
Award, which is presented to the University employee who
demonstrates a commitment to women and minorities.
Prior to her ASU appointment, Asher served as associate
vice chancellor for academic affairs in the Minnesota State
University system and worked in several administrative
capacities at the University of Cincinnati, including senior
vice provost for student affairs.
Asher said that USD, which has an enrollment o f about
5,600 students, would allow her to have more individual
contact with students. She added that the increasing
enrollment at ASU did not play a part in her decision to leave.
“ I think the (USD) environment and the size lends itself to
that, but I think that’s something adminstrators need to be
intentional about,” she said. “ I make the time to be with
students because I want to be
tkOT>"
Asher said she wants to
con tin u e to w ork w ith
students in the future.
“ I ’d love to have a job
where you work directly
every day with students,”
she said.
Asher said that she never
thought about applying for
the ASU presidency, which
will be vacated by J. Russell
Nelson in May.
A S iie r
But she added that when Nelson announced his intention of
leaving the ASU presidency, she began to think about her
own future.
“ Most likely without his announcement, I would not have
said ‘yes I ’m willing to become a candidate somewhere
else.’ ”
Nelson said that Asher was his first major appointment
when he hired her in 1982.
“ I believed then that she had the ability to become
president if that was something that she wanted to do,” he
said. “ I never had any doubts about her capability. I think
she’s done a splendid job as vice president for student affairs.
“ She has developed into an outstanding, mature university
leader and I think she’ll be a fine president.”
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Page8
Final version of racism plan released
By MIKE BURGESS
State Press
The final version of a comprehensive 12-point plan to
combat racism at ASU, which was released Thursday, calls
for a probe of the ASU Police Department and changes in the
University’s Code of Conduct.
The plan, which was signed by ASU President?-,!. Russell
Nelson and the Arizona Board of Regents President Herman
Chanen, also asks for University administrators to work with
the Faculty Senate in ‘ urging the establishment of ah
ethnicity course as a general studies requirement by the
1990-91 school year.
“ These goals are the results of fruitful meetings between
representatives of the University and student leaders on
campus,” Nelson said in a prepared statement. “ l am proud
that students at ASU feel passionately about issues of human
rights and equal justice and that their peaceful, Constructive
efforts have contributed to further actions which will be
undertaken at ASU.”
Nelson also said: “ The University will take whatever steps
are necessary to prevent violence, racial or otherwise, from
occurring on this campus.”
The plan was developed after more than four hours of
negotiations Monday between University officials and
members of Students Against Racism at ASU. It was
prompted by an April 15 racial attack on Alpha Drive and
three days of campus protests last week including a march
and sit-in at the MU.
Frank Sackton, director of ASU’s Affirm ative Action
office, will oversee the plan. Officials said they expect the
first progress report on the plan in January.
According to the plan, the University will form an
investigative body, consisting of three community leaders
unaffiliated with the University, to probe the ASU Police
Department’s handling of an incident on fraternity row in
which two black students were handcuffed and taken into
“ protective custody.”
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The students also claimed they were Maced and roughedup by the officers.
The students were attacked by white fraternity members
who mistook them for suspects in the assault of a Sigma
Alpha Epsilon fraternity member earlier that evening.
The plan also calls for reforms in the police department,
including the formation of a committee by the police chief to
study the possibility of establishing a police disciplinary
review process by the 1990-91 school year.
ASU police officers, who currently undergo racial
sensitivity training, will continue to do so, but the plan
requires the Officers to undergo the training before
employment and every three years after they are hired.
Also, ASU police will formalize a deparment policy that
provides that women and minorities participate in employee
search committees.
___ ...______* ,
Acting ASU Pdlice Chief Doug Bartosh, who could not be
reached for comment Wednesday,, has said he supports the
investigation into his department’s actions.
The plan also calls for the University Code of Conduct to
prohibit all forms of racial and sexual harassment and
related violence.
Chanen and Provost Richard Peck, who will be serving as
acting AStJ president, w ill ask the Regents at their May 19
meeting in Tucson to include those demands in the Code of
Conduct.
According to the plan, the University w ill take appropriate
action toward any groups found guilty of Code of Conduct
violations. Such action may include probation, revocation of
the use of University facilities for a definite period of time, or
denial of recognition or registration, as well as other
appropriate sanctions permitted under the Code of Conduct.
Facu lty Senate President Kristen Valentine was
unavailable for Comment Wednesday,- but at Friday’s sit-in
she said she would support making an ethnicity course a
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RACIAL
Continued from page 6.
requirement for graduation.
Other items in the plan include:
•Additional funds be made available to minority student
activity programs.
•Associated Students of ASU to monitor the University’s
investigation into the Alpha Drive incidents and for the
ASASU Vice President for Student Affairs to prepare an
annual report on the status' and treatment of minority
students at ASU.
•The University continue to adhere to the goals of the Action
Now program which was implemented in 1988 to attract and
retain minority students at ASU.
•The Office of Residence Life to require a racial sensitivity
program for studénts living on campus,
•All administrative staff be required to attend a racial
sensitivity workshop within one year of employment.
•A committee, broadly reflective of the University
community, to be appointed to study the desirability of
establishing a Campus Environment Team to help prevent
instances of racial, sexual, religious or political intolerance,
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Page 10
s ta te P i m
Thursday, April 9 7 ,1 9 8 9
19-yea r-old Tern pean arrested on an arson charge
By MIKE BURGESS
State Press
A 19-year-old Tempe man was arrested Tuesday night in
connection with a deliberately set fire that caused $5,000 in
damages to his home, authorities said.
Vincent Patrick Williams was arrested on a charge of
arson in connection with a 10:48 p.m. blaze at 709 S. Priest
Drive, said Tempe police spokesman Sgt. A1 Taylor.
Williams was arrested after he gave fire investigators
conflicting statements as to what happened, Taylor said.
Fire investigators said the fire was set in a bedroom.
Taylor said investigators also are looking into an arson fire
that occurred early Wednesday and caused $400 in damages
to Coyote Towing, 1230 S. Smith Road.
There are no suspects in the 2:55 a.m. blaze which was
confined to a vehicle and a shed, Taylor said.
Tempe police also reported Wednesday:
Undercover narcotics officers arrested two Phoenix men
Q*îg tf/ÿ
s
t o
police rep o rt
-
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and s e iz e d « pound of cocaine.
Heriberto L. Esquer, 44, and Roberto Sanchez, 19, were
arrested on charges of offering to sell narcotics at about 5:05
p.m. Tuesday in a parking lot in Scottsdale.
In addition to the drugs, police confiscated $450 cash, a 1980
directed the man to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital.
Buick and a Smith and Wesson 9mm handgun.
•A thief stole an ASU student’s motorcycle, valued at $2,400,
ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday:
from
Lot 29.
•An ASU student told officers she was sexually abused,
•A thief stole three spools of wire, valued at $1,900, from the
threatened and assaulted by a man on campus. She said she
fears for her safety but did not want to hie charges because of north side of Sun Devil Stadium.
•Thieves stole two bicycles, valued at $555, from campus in
her current study load.
separate
incidents.
•An ASU student reported that she saw a naked man standing
between the C and D wings at the Palo Verde Main residence -•A vandal caused $300 in damages by breaking a window at
hall. The man fled, running east through a courtyard at the the ASU tram yard building.
•An ASU student suffered minor injuries when her bicycle
residence hall.
was
struck by a vehicle at Mill Avenue and Gammage
•A man who is unaffiliated with ASU caused a disturbance at
the Student Health Center where he requested a pair of shoes Parkway. The driver of the car, who is also a student, was
cited for failing to yield the right of way.
and an ambulance because his shoes did not f i t Officials
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- 9
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State Press
P a g e ll
Queen of comedy dies, but
her ‘gift of laughter’ goes on
LOS ANGELES (A P ) - Lucille Ball, the
d a ffy com ed ian whose h arebrain ed
schemes drove her television family crazy
but delighted viewers for four decades, died
Wednesday of a ruptured abdominal artery.
She was 77.
The actress, star of the extremely popular
“ I Love Lucy” and related situation
comedies seen in mòre than 80 countries,
had undergone major heart surgery April
18.
She had been recovering steadily, getting
out of bed and joking with the staff, but
.shortly before dawn Wednesday, she went
into cardiac arrest due to internal bleeding
and could not be revived, said Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center spokesman Ronald Wise:
She suffered complete heart failure at 5
a.m. and 47 minutes of resuscitation efforts
proved fruitless, Wise said. “ There was
nothing to indicate this would’ happen,”
Wise said. “ The heart itself apparently was
not involved in Miss Ball’s sudden death.”
In the 6%-hour surgery at Cedars-Sinai,
doctors replaced her aorta and aortic valve.
Although the replaced portion of Ball’s
aorta did not apparently fail, the entire
artery was in poor condition when she was
operated on, said Dr. Robert Kass.
Kass, who performed the operation, §aid
at the time the tearing in Ball’s àortà
“ progressed all the way down into her
abdomen.”
- Ball, with her fire-engine red hair and
siren wail, was considered the queen of
situation comedy and a pioneer of the sit
com format.
“ I and 100 million others will miss her,”
said comedian George Burns. “ But we
haven’t lost Lucille Ball, because she’s still
with us on television and we can see her on
and on.”
“ Lucille Ball possessed the gift of
laughter. But she also embodied an even
greater treasure — the gift of love,”
President Bush said in a statement. “ She
appealed to the gentler impulses of the
human spirit. She was not merely an actress
or comedian. She was Lucy and she was
loved.”
“ Her red hair, her antics on the screen,
her timing and her zest for life made her an
American institution,” former President
Ronald Reagan said in a statement. “ Just
the mention of her name brings a sm ile... .
We lovei Lucy and will miss her deeply.”
“ It’s a shock after working very closely
with her and loving her for over 35 years,”
said Ball’s frequent sidekick, Gale Gordon,
who was in Edmonton, Alberta.
While in the hospital, the comedian was
deluged with, thousands of cards, letters,flowers and phone calls from fans as far
away as Australia and Europe.
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Page 12
‘Wrongly convicted’ man freed
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (A P ) - Freed
after more than two decades in prison, a
former orange picker whose lawyers say he
was wrongly convicted in the poisoning
deaths of his seven children said, “ I don’t
feel freedom yet.”
A judged ruled late Tuesday in Arcadia,
the southwest Florida town where the
^children died, that James Richardson’s 1968
Hal on a single charge of murder was
ainted by prosecutorial misconduct and
perjured testimony.
Retired Circuit Judge Clifton Kelly,
assigned to review the case by the state
Suprem e Court, released 53-year-old
Richardson to the custody of Miami
attorney Ellis Rubin.
Richardson, Rubin and others scheduled a
news conference Wednesday afternoon in
this Atlantic Coast city, near the state
prison where Richardson spent most of his
time after being taken off death row.
R ic h a r d s o n ’ s d ea th s e n te n c e w as
commuted to life in prison in 1972.
“ I don’t feel freedom yet,” Richardson
said late Tuesday. “ I guess it’s going to take
a while to get use to it, but I ’m going to keep
trying to make that step.”
“ Within my heart, I knew that these great
men were going to get. me out — they
weren’t going to let me stay in there,” he
said of his attorneys.
The state has 10 days to order a retrial,
but attorney Mark Lane, whose 1971 book
“ A rc a d ia ” cla im ed Richardson was
framed, predicted the case will be closed.
Gov. Bob Martinez issued an executive
order that leaves the final determination
about a new trial to Janet Reno, the special
prosecutor he appointed to review the case.
The governor also encouraged Reno to
continue her in vestig a tio n into the
possibility of wrongdoing on the part of
officials involved in the prosecution.
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Schaub denies there was anything
improper in the trial and has filed a
defamation-of-character suit against the
two attorneys. Schaub accused Lane and
Rubin of orchestrating Richardson’s release
to feed “ the ever increasing demand for
fictionalized stories from the news and
closely allied entertainment industries.’ ’
Topics to be discussed are: Rogaine®, [Monoxidil], hair
transplants, scalp reductions, hairpieces, foltene, Nutriplexx,
Nutriol, Hensinki formula, and others.
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dermatologist specializing in diseases of the hair and scalp.
SEMINARS ARE:
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Rubin and Lane accused former State
A t t o r n e y F r a n k S c h a ub of usi ng
manufactured testimony to railroad their
black client in the trial before an all-white
jury.
FREE S em inar to answ er all your questions
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HERFF JONES
State Près»
Page 13
Thursday, April 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
Drug dealer’s body found near Mexico
TUCSON ( A P ) — The body of a reputed drug dealer
reportedly has been found by Mexican police who say his
slaying may be linked to that of 12 others who werè tiéd,
tortured and shot at an idle ranch near Agua Prieta, Mexico.
The Arizona R epublic and The Arizona D aily Star both said
a body identified as that of Efrain Valdez Rueda had been
found last weekend by Sonoran judicial police.
The Star quoted Jose Luis Peraza of the Sonoran attorney
general’s office in Hermosillo, Mexico, as saying Valdez was
identified by tattoos of butterflies on his arms and chest. Valdez, nicknamed El Kaliman after a popular masked
Mexican wrestler, had been shot twice at the base of his neck,
and his arms were tied behind his body, Peraza told the Star.
The newspapers said his body was found in an arroyo near
a highway leading i o Chihuahua after ranch workers at
Colonia Progreso, five miles south of Agua Prieta, reported
finding a corpse that had been dug up by animals. .
Peraza said Valdez’s body was badly decomposed and that
lime, which hastens décomposition, had been tossed on his
ÿU c*d ttf
face. Peraza also said Valdez was believed to have been
killed about the same time as the 12 torture victims found at
E l Alamo ranch in late March. The ranch is about two miles
west of Agua Prieta and about five miles from where the
body was found. Agua Prieta is about 130 miles southeast of
Tucson and directly across the border from Douglas.
U. S. and Mexican authorities have said those 12 slayings
were drug-related and that they apparently were linked with
the drug-related slayings of five men whose bodies were
found stacked in a shed at a rented home in Tucson two days
earlier. The Agua Prieta bodies — nine men and three
women — were found near the end of March in a well and a
sewage pit tank at the abandoned ranch owned by Hector
Fragoso Burguena, described by Mexican authorities as the
No. 1 suspect in the Agua Prieta slayings.__
Lime had been scattered over four of the bodies in the
sewage pit, and Peraza said that was one reason why the
Valdez slaying was beiieved to be linked with those on the
Agua Prieta area ranch.
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Page 14
Thursday, April 8,7-1989
Pennsylvania lottery to exceed $110M
HARRISBURG, PS. (A P ) — Players drove, flew, took the
train and walked to the nearest Pennsylvania lottery ticket
counter up to the last minute Wednesday before the winning
North American record jackpot of mere than $100 million
was drawn.
The official winning numbers were: 06,16,24,34,35,37,40,
41, 45, 60, 71, A winning ticket must have seven of the 11
numbers drawn.
James Scroggins, the lottery’s executive director, said the
prize would be “ something higher than $100 million when it’s
all said and done.”
How much higher won’t be known until sometime
Thursday, but unofficial estimates put the jackpot in excess
of $110 million. And Scroggins said lottery officials won’t
know until Friday if any winning tickets were sold.
In an average week, the state usually sells about 4 million
or 5 million tickets, but on Tuesday alone about 24 million
tickets were sold, said Karl Ross, deputy revenue secretary.
From 6 a.m. to 11 a.m. Wednesday, about 7 million tickets
were sold. Players came from all over the country.
But lottery officials considered the nightmarish possibility
S
that no one would win Wednesday night’s Super 7 drawing.
The odds of any one ticket bearing seven winning numbers
is one in 9.6 million. With more than 74 million ticket&sold in
the last week, the jackpot rolled over because of no winner in
six previous drawings, Ross said the odds are about 4,000-to-l
against another rollover.
Although a winner or winners could come forward, lottery
officials Said that because of the high volume of sales they
wouldn’t know for certain until sometime Friday if a winning
ticket had been sold or how many had been sold. They said
the computer would give them a preliminary indication
Thursday afternoon, but that it would take another day to
complete backup reviews o f ticket numbers. If there is a rollover, next week’s jackpot could approach
$200 million, payable over 26 years, and some lottery agents
would run out of tickets.
“ We couldn’t handle another week like this, selling all
these tickets, without having spot shortages,” Ross said in a
telephone interview. As a precaution, he said, the lottery was
lining up vendors to do emergency printing runs if necessary.
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Thursday, April 8 7 ,1 9 8 9
Father unhooks child’s fife support
CHICAGO (A P ) — A father tearfully unhooked his
comatose baby son’s life-support system early Wednesday,
then took him into his arms and kept hospital workers at
gunpoint until the child was aeadvauthorities said
“ I ’m not here to hurt anyone. I ’l l only hurt you if you try to
plug my baby back in,” police quoted Rudy Linares as
saying.
“ You can understand the motivation,” police Sgt. W i l l i a m
Rooney said. “ I guess he didn’t want his child to continue
living under those conditions.”
The painter from west suburban Cicero was charged with
murdering his 16-month-old son, Samuel, said Lisa Howard,
spokeswoman for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office.
Linares, 23, was held at a police lockup pending an
appearance in bond court. His wife, Tamara, who said the
couple had planned to see a lawyer Friday about having the
child’s life-support system disconnected, was not charged.
“ This is the best thing,” Mrs. Linares told radio station
WBBM-AM. “ Sammy is out of his misery.”
The couple has two other children, both under 5.
Linares also unhooked his son’s life support system Dec. 30
but staff members reconnected it, Detective Gary Bulava
said. When Linares arrived early Wednesday, he spoke
briefly with security personnel but was not searched, Bulava
added.
Doctors had notified the parents Tuesday that the child was
to be transferred to a long-term care unit, said RushPresbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center spokeswoman
Carolyn Reed.
Police said Linares and his wife walked into the hospital
about 1 a.m. and were escorted to the pediatric intensive care
unit; where their son’s breathing had been sustained by a
ventilator since an accident in August.
About 20 minutes later, Linares pulled out a .357-caliber
handgun, ordered hospital staff out of the unit, unhooked the
infant from the life-support system and sat with his son in his
arms.
“ He never pointed the gun at anyone other than the child,”
said Rooney, “ He sat there in a chair until the baby had
expired, then turned the gun over to the officers.”
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Thursday, Aprii 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
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State Press
Page 17
Thursday, April 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
ASU cyclists to race in national tournam ent
By VICKI CULVER
State Press
Even though ASU’s brand-new cycling club won every
event in the Southwest Conference Cycling Tournament last
weekend, they do not have the honor of attending the national
cycling tournament in Colorado Springs, Colo.
The criterion for a team to go to the nationals is done on a
point basis. The two teams with the most consecutive points
gained throughout the^eason are^he ones that attend.
ASU’s d u b has only been in existence for three weeks —
clearly not enough time to score as many points as any team
that has been competing all season.
^
,
This, according to ASU team manager Tina Brecto, is the
biggest flaw in the U. S. Cycling Federation’s system.
“ (The system) is not an indication of the best team,”
Brecto said.
Although ASU will not attend the tournament as a team,
two individual riders will compete in Colorado. Those two are
team cáptain Rich Nelson and David Anthes.
Nelson is also very upset about the scenario, claiming that
ASU was obviously the best team in the Southwest Regional
tournament.
“ Hopefully, our individual riders will prove that ASU had
the best team,” he said.
. - <>
ASU originally contemplated protesting the situation, but
decided that any actions this year would be tod late. The club
is, however, writing a letter to express their disapproval of
the current system.
“ We want the selection process altered in hopes to select
the best team,” Nelson said.
At the Southwest Tournament, whieh was ASU’s first
organized collegiate tournament, teams represented
universities from Utah, Nevada, Néw Mexico and Arizona,
which competed in four racks.
The four races consisted of one point-to-point, and three lap
races. Nelson said that when ASU won every event, UofA’s
team seemed superficially happy.
“ Up front they said how good it was that ASU finally had a
team, but they were obviously intimidated by our guys,” :
Nelson said. “ They knew we had outstanding riders.”
Throughout the summer, the Sun Devil team will be
competing in tournaments away from the beat. They plan to
close o ff parking L o t5 9 fo r praeticepurposes. That way,
Brecto said, both the regular riders and mountain riders can
practice.
Next season, the teaim will compete from the start of the
season to the end. Brecto urges potential riders to contact her
before the start of the season.
According to Nelson, the Sun Devils are young and will only
get better.
“ I foresee ASU being the cycling powerhouse,” he said.
Ic e D e v ils g e t n e w c o a c h
in
.Jack W . Beasley Jr./State Press
The ASU Ice Devils could receive more money under a new reconstruction program. During the
renovation, the Ice Devils have a new coach to lead them next season.
m a jo r r e c o n s tr u c tio n
By DAVE HODGES
$ $ $ frees
As part of a major restructuring of the
ASU ice hockey program, the University
has agreed to provide funding for the team,
which will have a new head coach next
season.
Jim Manguso has replaced Dan Murphy
as coach of the Ice Devils, manager Mike
Hoffarth said.
Hoffarth said he and Murphy agreed that
a coaching change would benefit the team.
Murphy, who was unavailable for comment,
will remain with the Ice Devils as the
assistant manager.
Manguso, who was an 11-year coach of the
Arizona Sharks, a junior team for 17- to
19-year-olds, said he was notified last week
that he would be the new coach.
“ It sounded good to me,” Manguso said,
adding that he’ll bring a general plan o f
attack into the program.
“ All my practices, games and traveling
are highly disciplined,” he said. “ I ’ll bring
some discipline into Hie program, but I ’m
also a listener. I like a lot of the players’
inputs.”
Manguso said he’ll try to choose more
well-rounded ¡»layers for the team next
season.
“ I think we can have a highly competitive
team,’41»? said.
The reorganization is part o f a major
overhaul, of the program, which now will
re c e iv e funds fr o m the Clubs and
Intramittrals department.
Hoffarth also said the funding will help
ASU field a competitive team and will allow
students who could not afford to play on the
team last year to participate.
“ It is m y belief that w e’re now up on the
same level of any of those other NCAA
sports, so that’s a big plus,” Hoffarth said.
“ It’s going to allow us to improve facilities
and bring in better teams.”
Last season, when players had to pay for
everything, the team had to cancel a road
trip to Colorado when a majority of the
players could not afford it, Hoffarth said.
Next season, ASU already has solidified a
six-game series with both UCLA and
perennial power Arizona, and games
again st Ohio U n iv ersity , WisconsinWhitewater, Southern California, Stanford
and Colorado.
Games also are possible with Penn State
and Iowa State.
Dennis Eloe, associate director in ASU’s
Turn to Hockey, page 20.
Softball coaching legend calls it quits after 20-year career
By KYLE ENG
State Press
In the span of 20 years, one can accomplish many different
ttjinebkftw,
*’w *
«.
In that time, M ary Littlewood has done one thing; coach
softball, a task that she has performed very well.
After 20 years Littlewood has decided to call it quits, thus
ending an era in Sun Devil athletics.
ASU honored Littlewood last Saturday night with a
retirement dinner at the Tempe Mission Palms hotel.
Form er players came back to see their old mentor off. Also
in attendance were Littlewood’s family and close friends.
ASU athletic director Charles Harris opened the night with a
few kind words introducing the coach.
The dinner was a nice affair.
But for a coach who has done as much as Littlewood has, is
a dinner enough?
Harris in his opening speech thanked Littlewood for what
she has done in the past, for what she has meant to Sun Devil
athletics. Then he went on to thank her for the tradition she
has established at ASU.
Littlewood was born in the midwestern United States and
attended the University of Miami (Ohio), where slje excelled
in sports, lettering in five different ones.
She came to ASU in 1965. At first she taught physical
education and coached several different sports. Among those
sports were the women's volleyball, basketball and softball.
Littlewood coached the three sports until 1976 when she
was appointed to dual coaching duties that consisted of
volleyball and softball. After three years, in 1979, she
relinquished her volleyball duties to concentrate solely on
softball.
During her career at ASU, she has never had a losing
record in the sports she has coached, but Littlewood’s forte is
softball.
Dating back to her first official season in 1970, Littlewood
has compiled a win-loss record of 497-222 (.691).
With six games remaining, this year’s injury-marred
squad holds a reeord a t 29-20,r and it looks like post-season
play is out of the question.
.. ..
.3 The Sun Devils need to win just.three of their last six games
to give Littlewood 500 wins. This is a feat that no other
softball coach has accomplished at the Division I level,
l Littlewood has led her teams to nine college world series
appearances. During that span, ASU captured two national
titles (1972 and 1973), finished fourth four times (1971,1976,
1977,1982) and has settled for ninth place twice (1978,1979).
Littlewood has also coached six All-Americans and more
than 30 all-conference performers.
It is safe to say she is a legend in the softball world.
“ She’s the pioneer of women’s softball,” UCLA head coach
Sharon Backus said. Backus should know — she has coached
the Bruins for 15 seasons and her teams have won the
national title the last two years.
“ I don’t think there is one person who can be credited with
bringing softball to the level it is now more than Mary,”
Backus said. “ She was vital during the early years, and when
anybody had questions about when and why softball should
be brought to the NCAA level, Mary would be the one to
answer.
“ In others words I ’d say she is considered an authority
when the subject of softball comes up,”
Although Littlewood w ill be retiring at the end of this
season she will be around the University in some type of
consulting capacity.
While many are sorry to see her leave, Littlewood said she
is ready to leave.
.“ I ’m ready to retire,” Littlewood said. “ The time is right
Carol LeM aster/State Press
and there are just some other things I want to do.”
Sun Devil softball coach Mary Littlewood will retire at the end of
Among those other things Littlewood has mentioned she this season. The ASU mentor has posted more softball victories
would like to develop and market computer programs that than any Division 1 coach in NCAA history.
she has been working on.
Ex c e p t . . .
She has also given thought to conducting a summer clinic
The University could rename Sun Devil Club Stadium
for young players interested in softball.
“ Mary Littlewood Stadium.”
Oh yeah, Saturday’s banquet was real nice.
It is a known fact that the Sun Devil Club put up a lot of
It was filled with emotional speeches given by former
players and assistant coach Betty Barr and funny moments money to build the stadium. It is a first class set-up and it has
been rumored as one of the nicest in the country.
that have encompassed Littlewood’s 20 years.
Could it be possible for the Sun Devil Club to be renamed
But it seems something was left out.
the “ House that Mary built” to honor the coaching legend.
The University did not present her with a plaque.
At the end of the retirement dinner, players from this
However, it would seem that a plaque would have been too
year’s squad went up to their mentor, gave her a hug and told
generic for a coach of Littlewood’s caliber.
The University did say it would try to present the members her a little something.
“ Now we know the real you, the real coach,” they said.
of her 1972 national championship team with rings they nevfr
In~the future' when given the opportunity to visit “ Mary
received, later this year. Her 1972 team did not receive rings
Littlewood Softball Stadium,” , we can say that we knew
because of a lack of money.
There are not many things ASU could give Littlewood that Mary, too.
Even if it is just dragging to friends.
could match what she has accomplished here in 20 years.
Page 18
State Press
Thursday, April 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
Thompson pleads guilty to distribution cocaine
OKLAHOMA C IT Y ( A P ) Charles
Thom pson, O k lah om a’ s starting
quarterback before being arrested on a
fed era l drug charge, pleaded guilty
Wednesday to conspiracy to distribute
cocaine. He said he was ready to face the
consequences.
“ What I did was wrong,” the 20-year-old
Thompson told reporters on the courthouse
steps after his appearance before U. S.
D istrict Judge Ralph Thompson. He
apologized to his family, the University of
Oklahoma and to his supporters before
quickly leaving with his attorney.
—The former Sooner was arrested Feb, 13
and accused of selling 17 grams of cocaine to
an undercover F B I agent on Jan. 26.
“ He’s just an athlete who got caught up in
the fast lane and got himself in a regrettable
situation,” attorney Garvin Isaacs said
before the court appearance.
Thompson, dressed in a dark suit,
“ It’s in his best interest to plead guilty
appeared in court on crutches because of a
and get on with his life,” Isaacs said.
broken right leg. He originally fractured the
The judge delayed sentencing until he
leg in Oklahoma’s game with Nebraska in
receives a report from the U. S. Probation
Office, but asked Thompson if he realized he ’ .November and missed the Sooners’ Citrus
Bowl game with Clemson. Thompson broke
was almost certain to spend time in prison.
the leg again recently while playing
“ Yes, your honor,” Thompson replied. He
basketball in Bethany.
later said he was ready to face the
With the guilty plea, Thompson waived
consequences.
rights to a jury trial and grand jury
The maximum punishment for the charge
consideration of his case.
is 20 years in prison and a $2 million fine,
The charge filed against Thompson
plus a special assessment fine of $30,000.
alleged that between July 14,1988, and Feb.
“ Even under the most lenient conditions
10, .1989, Thompson “ knowingly and
under the guidelines, a defendant would
in ten tion ally conspired to distribute
face some time,” II. S. Attorney Bill Price
approximately 29 grams of cocaine” to
said. “ The more severe conduct involves
federal undercover agents in Norman.
huge amounts of prison time without parole.
Prosecutors said they had tape-recorded
He (Thompson) definitely would fall within
conversations between Thompson and
the lower range of this, but I cannot
federal agents to back up the charge.
comment on the precise sentence he is likely
Thompson became a starter midway
to get.”
Bush gathers team
to speak in favor
of competitiveness
*» •
I
I
PA LO ALTO, Calif. ( A P ) — Early in the first season of
President Bush’s four-year contract, the big names in his
lineup are Tomm y Lasorda, Yogi Berra, Satchel Paige and
Lou Gehrig.
Bush sent three of them up to bat in one speech Tuesday
when he took his team on the road for a pep talk on
competitiveness in business at Ford Aerospace in Palo Alto.
Sports were big in the Bush Administration’s first 100 days.
The president played tennis, pitched horseshoes and talked
baseball. Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak visited the White
House, and Bush took him out to the ballpark in Baltimore.'
Even cabinet members tossed around sports jargon. Said
Budget Director Richard Darman: “ What w e’ve done is,
with the first batter up and in the first inning, hit a double.
You can’t hit a grand slam home run until we have a few
people on.”
The president looked a little ragged, though, in cheap,
tacky jogging outfits, according to a sporting goods store
owner who sent him a catalog and note Monday suggesting a
new wardrobe.
Bush, who has been criticized for making decisions slowly,
responded immediately by sending his aides to pick out $1,800
worth of clothes from Giuseppe Cala, owner of the Fila shop
in San Jose. Bush may not solve the budget deficit for a while,
but Cala promises he’ll look better while jogging.
Bush shares with form er President Reagan a fondness for
the sports anecdote and metaphor, which m ay not be so'
suprising. Bush was captain of the Y ale baseball team in
1948, despite a .167 batting average, and Reagan was a
sportscaster.
+
Bush may have given a clue to the type of leadership he
would like to provide when he said his personal hero was Lou
Gehrig, the New York Yankees’ low-keyed first baseman in
the 1920s and ’30s.
“ He played in 2,130 straight games — a record which still
stands,” Bush said. “ But more than that, he was a good and
decent man about whom a teammate said, ‘Every day, any
day, he just went out and did his job.’ ”
1There are perils, however, in quoting sports figures. The
big E for error lit up on the scoreboard at Ford Aerospace on
Tuesday when Bush began his speech by quoting Los Angeles
Dodgers Manager Tommy Lasorda.
The crowd of San Francisco Giants fans booed and Bush
looked a little chagrined, but he went on, quoting “ that noted
gourmet” as saying “ I ’m on a sea-food diet. I eat all the food
I can see.”
Lasorda happens to be on a diet these days, and has lost
more than 20 pounds, but Bush said the pot-bellied pasta
lover “ never met a meal he didn’t like.”
“ And if you ask, he’ll insist that food ranks among his most
precious investments,” Bush said, leading up to the idea of
investment in high technology. “ It uplifts his performance,
mentally and physically. It enhances his ability to compete
and, indirectly, to keep the ballclub in contention.”
That last line was a slight departure from the prepared
text, which mentioned Lasorda’s ability “ to keep the
Dodgers number one.” Bush remembered the boos and
changed the words.
Later, Bush advised his audience to “ think of deficit
reduction as ex ercise. . . Believe me, I know. Exercise keeps
you at the top of your gam e.”
Talking about statistics, he quoted the late Ohio State
football coach Woody Hayes: “ Statistics always remind me
of the fellow who drowned in a river whose average depth
was only three feet.”
Then Bush cited a statistic he liked, mentioning that 20
million new jobs were created in the country since 1982.
“ I want to give the high-five symbol to high tech,” he said,
though the high-five is a slap of the hands not a symbol.
And he noted that the Superbird satellites Ford Aerospace
built for Japan weigh 5,500 pounds. “ That’s even bigger than
the 49ers’ offensive line,” he remarked amid light laughter.
Heck, it’s even heavier than their starting offense and
defense together.
In talking about competitiveness and the need to look
ahead, Bush quoted pitcher Satchel Paige, who played into
his 60s: “ Don’t lode back. Somebody might be gaining on
you.”
through the 1988 season because of an injury
to Jam elle Holieway. Thompson was
expected to be the starter as a junior this
fall.
Co a c h B a r r y S w i t z e r s uspe nd ed
Thompson from the football team a few
hours before he was arrested.
Thompson’s arrest was the latest in a
string of arrests involving Oklahoma
football players.
On Jan. 13, starting cornerback Jerry
Parks was arrested and accused of shooting
with intent to injure in the wounding of a
teammate in the athletic dormitory. Three
days before Thompson’s arrest, Nigel Clay,
Bernard Hall and Glen Bell were arrested
on first-degree rape charges in an alleged
gang assault in the athletic dormitory.
Parks is scheduled to appear in court next
month. A trial for Clay, Bell and Hall has
been set for Sept. 11.
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State Press
Page19
Thursday, April 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
A losing proposition?
A S U could lose m oney, exp o su re d u e to C ard in als
By DAVE HODGES
State Press
John Smith is a typical football fan. Last
season was special ; he owned season tickets
for both Phoenix Cardinals and ASU Sun
Devils games.
But a slumping economy has forced Smith
to eliminate one set of season tickets. WiH it
be the professionalism of the National
Football League or the colorful pageantry of
the Pac-10 Conférence?
Smith will not be the only one to be faced
with such a decision this year. Valley fans
might have to choose between Cardinals or
Sun Devils games. I f ASU is the losing team
in the deal, it will suffer in attendance and,
most importantly, lost revenue.
ASU took a big gamble last year when it
decided to help lure the N F L ’s Cardinals
from St. Louis to the Valley. ASU even went
as far as to allow the Phoenix Cardinals to
play in the centerpiece of its athletic
empire: Sun Devil Stadium.
Wi th the r e c e n t a ddi t i o n o f the
Intercollegiate Athletics Complex and the
near-completion of Sun Devil Stadium’s
luxury skyboxes and the Karsten Golf
Course, ASU boasts some of the best athletic
facilities in the country.
Since the 1970s, ASU has had one of the
most successful athletic programs in the
nation. The K noxville (Tenn.) Journal
annually ranks the country’s collegiate
athletic programs based on finishes in 10
men’s and 10 women’s sports. During the
1987-88 school year, ASU women ranked
fourth and the men placed fifth.
The invasion of professional teams in
what was previously a collegiate market
has crippled some schools, like Minnesota,
Miami and Georgia Tech. Others, like
Washington, manage to peacefully coexist
after a rocky start.
For years the Sun Devils were the only
team in town. But then came the NBA Suns
in 1968 and the Cardinals in 1988. And with a
Major League Baseball team on the horizon,
is ASÜ strong enough to survive the
challenge?
Cardinals reimburse ASU
ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris has
said studies o f other schools in N F L markets
indicate ASU could experience a revenue
loss of between $1 million and $1.6 million
annually in ticket sales because of the
Cardinals.
As a result of budget cuts, non-revenue
sports such as badminton, archery and
volleyball could suffer cutbacks or be
eliminated.
ASU is being compensated by a financial
agreement that gives the University 10
percent of the face value of tickets and 6
percent of premiums on tickets sold by the
Cardinals. Fifty percent of parking and
concessions also is included in the deal.
It is estimated that ASU will receive
approximately $2 million to $2.5 million per
year from the Cardinals.
But is money enough? What about loss of
media exposure as more attention is focused
on the Cardinals? In what ways could ASU
be helped or hurt by the NFL?
‘What the Cardinals
have done is taken
away our buffer.’
- Mike
Parkinson
Attendance holds steady
One of the most obvious signs that would
indicate ASU is being affected would be a
decline in attendance at Sun Devil football
games.
Since 1970, on the average, more than 90
percent of Sun Devil Stadium’s seats have
been filled.
The stadium’s capacity in 1970 was 51,000.
However, when the Sun Devils take the field
Sept. 9 against Kansas State, the soon-to-be
completed luxury skyboxes and an alumni
seating area will boost the capacity to
around 75,000.
Even with the arrival of the Cardinals,
Sun Devil Ticket Office Manager Dianne
Yeager said those seats should all be filled
with ASU fans this fall.
Yeager said morfe than 90 percent of last
year’s season-ticket holders have renewed
for 1989.
“ Anyone who has had tickets for a long
time\jjas stayed with us,” she said. “ The
majoriljMrf the seats not renewed are in the
end zone andinthe corners.
“ We were able to move some people, but
most of the prime seats were renewed. ”
Different marketing approach
A S U D i r e c t o r of l^tarketing and
Promotions Mike Parkinsohsiid the arrival
of the Cardinals did affect the direction his
department took this year.
“ It did force us to take a different
approach to what we have done in the past,”
Parkinson said. “ In the past, our strategy
was to keep finding new season-ticket
holders. Now we’ re taking the approach that
it’s more beneficial to put money up front to
try and retain season-ticket holders.”
So far it has worked.
During the 1986 season, the Devils went
10-1-1 and won the Rose Bowl. The average
attendance at Sun Devil Stadium was 69,433
— 99 percent of capacity. The following
year, ASU averaged 70,513 — 101 percent of
capacity.
ASU or the Cardinals, and Parkinson’s
department is trying to persuade Valley
fans that the collegiate game has more to
offer.
Parkinson said the slogan for this year’s
season is “ You got to see it to feel it,” which
he says implies the collegiate game is more
colorful.
“ We think there’s a distinct difference
between college and the pros,” he said.
“ With the bands and the cheerleaders and
fans, there’s more pageantry and more
color than in the professional game.
“ It’s not just wins and losses. Our games
are social events.”
Winning is everything
“ What the Cardinals have done is taken
away our buffer,” he said. “ We really can’t
afford to have several consecutive seasons
where we don’t do as well as we would like.
“ As long as w e maintain our winning
tradition, w e’ll be all right.”
Yeager agreed.
“ A lot has to do on the win-loss record,”
she said, adding that ticket sales would have
ASU hom e atte n da n ce
I I
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2 67000
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>
< 65000
63000
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982.1983
m
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
Y ear
Steven Kricun/State P rete
Last year, the Cardinals’ inaugural
season in the Valley, ASU averaged 70,717
while Phoenix averaged about 62,000.
Parkinson said his department began
planning three years ago when it appeared
inevitable that an N F L football franchise
would appear in the Valley.
“ Until then, our philosophy was to keep
10.000 tickets available for individual game
sales,” he said. “ But then we began an
important effort to sell out the stadium on a
season-ticket basis.”
Although 10 percent of last year’s ticket
holders did not renew, ASU does have the
“ Hotlist," a waiting list for Sun Devil season
tickets.
Parkinson said there are about 3,500
people who want to buy season tickets, and
with the deadline for renewals already past,
applications are being sent out to those
people.
Cardinals ticket manager Steve Walsh
said between 70 and 75 percent of ASU’s
55.000 season-ticket holders also owned
Cardinals season tickets last year because
Sun Devil season-ticket holders and Arizona
Outlaws season-ticket holders were given
priority for acquiring Cardinals tickets.
Walsh declined to comment on how the
Cardinals are affecting ASU ticket sales but
did say Phoenix ticket sales were going
“ very well.”
The Cardinals, whose average ticket price
last year was the highest in the N F L at $38,
have lowered the cost of some end zone
seats, but the average price still is about
$36.
The average cost of ASU tickets is $16,
Yeager said.
Like Smith, most fans probably will have
to decide whether to buy season tickets for
7 think that if the
mW-i
Cardinals weregoing 1H|*§
tohurt us, this would
have been theyear:’
v
— Dianne Yeager
But wins and losses are one factor that
will determine where the general public will
spend its “ entertainment buck,” Parkinson
said.
710Ó0
69000-
like Cincinnati and Miami of Ohio,” she
said. “ But we did sell out for games like
Florida State.”
Young also said the abundance of
activities in south Florida is another reason
Miami can’t draw big crowds.
“ In Arizona, there’s probably not as much
to do as in Florida,” she said.
suffered this year if the Cardinals were to
have an im pact
“ I think that if the Cardinals were going to
hurt us, this would have been the year,”
Yeager said. “ A 90 percent renewal rate
sounds pretty good to me.”
But fans in other cities sometimes have
abandoned their collegiate teams for the
glitz and glitter of the N F L when their
markets were invaded.
P rofessio n a l' teams in Minneapolis,
Atlanta and Miami almost have cripppled
attendance at schools like the University of
Minnesota, Georgia Tech and the University
of Miami.
„Hurricanes suffer in Miami
Miami shared the Orange Bowl with the
N F L ’s Dolphins until last season, when the
Dolphins moved to new Joe Robbie Stadium.
In 1987, when the Hurricanes won the
national championship, Miami only could
draw an average of 53,921 fans to the
75,500-seat stadium.
Although only 71 percent of capacity, it
still was an improvement over 1986, when
the Hurricanes went undefeated during the
regular season but only drew an average of
48,571. the average was about 54,000 last
season.
Hurricane Ticket Office Manager Pam
Young saM the university now is starting to
draw people away from Dolphins games.
“ Since the Dolphins haven’t done real well
the past couple o f years, we’re starting to
see a lot of people beginning to switch over
to us,” Young said.
Young said that although the Hurricanes
can’t sell out many games, it is because of
the schedule, not the Dolphins..
“ It’s-tough to draw big crowds for teams
Wealth of activities in LA
The situation is similar in Los Angeles.
With two NFL, NBA and Major league
baseball teams and a hockey franchise, both
USC and UCLA have suffered somewhat as
attendance has dipped since the mid-70s,
when collegiate sports still were dominant
in the area and the Trojans were winning
national championships.
In 1987, USC, which went to the Rose
Bowl, only could draw an average of 53,647,
just 58 percent of capacity at the Los
Angeles Memorial Coliseum, which also is
the Los Angeles Raiders’ home field.
But last season, when the Trojans made a
return trip to Pasadena, attendance rose by
an average of 22j000 to 76,063 — a Pac-10
record.
Why the big turnaround?
USC A ssistan t Sports Information
Director Nick Salata said the win-loss
record always is the biggest factor in
attendance.
“ The thing that has the biggest effect is
winning and losing,” Salata said. “ If all (the
Raiders, Rams, UCLA and USC) are
playing like gangbusters, you’re going to get
great crowds at all of them.
“ Losing in this town creates apathy.”
Salata also said that, like in Miami, the
sports industry has to compete for crowds
with the beach and the arts.
“ There’s so many things to do and L.A .’s
so spread out,” he said. “ It’s not like
Phoenix and Tucson, where you can say,
‘Oh, the Devils are playing today,’ and they
go up and nil up the joint.”
ASU situation similar to UW
A SU ’s situation with the Cardinals
probably most resembles the University of
Washington when the N F L Seahawks moved
into the Seattle sports scene in 1976.
“ Washington hurt considerably at the
beginning, but they didn’t plan for it,”
Parkinson said.
Gae Burr, University of Washington
Ticket Office manager, said UW was in a
similar situation as ASU, since the Huskies
were the only major attraction in the area.
“ At first, the public fell for the novelty of
p r of e s s i o n a l f o o t b a l l and the new
Kingdome,” Burr said.
Prim* to the huge Kingdome and the
landing of the Seahawks, the Huskies
a veraged 51,383 fans, 86 percent of
59,800-seat Husky Stadium.
The following year, the average dipped to
42,595 or 71 percent. Although the Huskies
had some good seasons, attendance did not
rise to the 90 percent plateau again until
1982, when it reached 95 percent.
But for the past five years, UW has
averaged 98 percent capacity at 61,809,
including a Pac-10-leading 71,396 in a newly
expanded stadium in 1987.
“ I think the novelty (of the N F L ) began to
wear off,” Burr said. “ There just wasn’t
that amazement anymore.”
Burr said that, like ASU, most people
purchased both Seahawks and Huskies
..ticketsat first, ■'v ■
'¿fe;'?
“ I don’t think there’s much of that
anymore,” she said. “ In a period of three or
four years it tends to sort itself out.”
But Burr said the Huskies were winning
and going to bowl games every year.
“ When we started to go to the bowls,
attendance immediately began to go up,”
she said. “ Winning is always the top
ingredient.”
Some people, like Parkinson, also believe
Turn to Choice, page 26.
Page 20
Siate Piks »
1.
Thursday, April 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
C hoice -------
Continued from page 1B.
an N F L team can have a positive effect on a
university if the correct approach is taken.
“ We found out that we don’t want to
compete with the Cardinals,” Parkinson
said. “ We want to work with them.
“ I feel there are enough people in the
Valley to support both programs.”
Young said an N F L team could be useful
when recruiting and added that the Dolphins
and Hurricanes actually try to help each
other.
Cardinals w ill hurt ASU too much. ,
“ I think they should go handrin-hand,” he
said. “ But, I think it might take awhile for
the Cards to become Phoenix’s team.
“ Sun Devil fans have been pretty loyal,
and I think the Cards will have to earn that
loyalty.”
Parkinson said he was worried several
years ago about the effect an N F L team
would have until he saw the results of a
survey conducted by an ASU marketing
Hockey-------------Continued from page 17.
class.
t
The survey asked Valley residents and
Sun Devil season-ticket holders if they
would continue to support ASU once a
professional team came into the area.
“ The response was that the majority of
the fans would keep their tickets for ASU,”
Parkinson said. “ I felt better after I saw
that.
“ Maybe our fans are much more loyal
than we really thought.”
,
“ We don’t really feel like we’re in
competition with them,” she said. “ It kind
of sells your program, too. It’s a great
recruiting tool for recruits coming in.”
Burr, however, said ASU might lose some
fans the first few years the Cardinals play
here.
“ It depends on a lot of factors, but I think
you’re going to see a substantial decrease in
attendance at ASU.”
But Salata said he doesn’t think the
5 1 ate P
re ç ç
d )p e n Ô
a .m .-
p.m . M
o n d a u - j— r i d o \\
t
Development Office, said Hoffarth was
referred to him by a President’s Club
member who had an interest in the Ice
Devils.
“ I just got Mike in contact with the right
people at the University,” Eloe said. “ We
talked about how we could get the program
on the right track. I think now they’ve got a
little outside support and they can just grow
on that.”
Hoffarth said Director of Recreational
Sports and Student Activities Jerry Moss
helped the Ice Devils receive funding.
“ (Moss) was quite experienced in
knowing how to develop hockey as a club
sport,” Eloe said.
“ It’s going to be structured like a real
club,” Hoffarth said. “ The students w ill be
doing a lot of public relations, selling tickets
and things like that, and w e’ll be overseeing
it.”
The goal of the team is to achieve a
prograih comparable to Arizona’s. UofA has
dominated club hockey in recent years,
drawing crowds of more than 6,000 to home
games and finishing in second place at the
national championships several years ago.
“ I think we already have a pretty decent
hockey team, so Mike’s goal is to do better
than UofA,” Eloe said. “ I think we have the
right ingredients, we just have to pull it all
together.”
“ We’re definitely going to give UofA a run
for its money,” Manguso said.
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State Press
Page 21
Thursday, April 27,1989
classifieds
L IN E R R A T E S ___________ __________ _
CLASSIFICATIONS:
FOR CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES
AND FURTHER INFORMATION,
PLEASE CALL:
15 words or less is $3.00 per day for 1-4 days
$2.75 per day for 5-9 days
$2.50 per day for 10 days & up
d 5C each additional word)
The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering
965-6731
CLASSIFIED ATTRACTIONS
a n d ask f o r
P E G G Y M C G IN N
Classified A d v e r tis in g M a n a g e r
OR
S T E R L E N E M O RR IS
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Free Birthday Ads: Limit 20 words; must show
proof of birthday.
Typing Directory...Look fo r itl
May 2.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUTOMOBILES
ANYONE W HO recorded Time Line last
Thursday please call Brad, 894-6306.
1972 VW Superbeetle.
$1250. 966-8809.
NEED CASH for summer? Buffalo
Exchange at 227 W. University pays cash
for fashionable used clothing. Also trades
our clothing for yours. Get cash and
clothes for summer. Remember, your
closet is our wearhouse.
1973 VW Campmobile. 99K miles. Sleeps
4. Built-in sink, cooler. Great shape.
Asking $1500. 967-4535.
CHI EPSILON is sponsoring a lecture by
Mr. Roger Boisjoiy on Engineering ethics
and the responsibility of the individual
engineer regarding public safety on
Friday, April 28, 1989 at 7 p.m. in the
Arizona Room of the Memorial Union
building. A former Morton-Thiokoi chief
engineer, Boisjoiy documented warning to
his firm regarding the vulnerability of the
o-ring seals that were later determined to
be the cause of the space shuttle Challen
ger explosion. Questions from the audi
ence will be answered by Boisjoiy at the
conclusion of the lecture. Admission is
free and open to the public.
FOR.RESEARCH purposes. ASU crimino
logist seeks phone interview with persons
who have given crime information to Silent
Witness, Crime Zero, or the like. No
names. Strictly confidiential. Phone
965-6311.
M IS S AMERICA Preliminary accepting
applications now. Contact Miss Maricopa
County Scholarship Pageant directorKay, 945-2838.
PEGGY AND Brian McGinn our proud
parents of Katelyn Julia, born March 25,
1989. Congrats?!!
c
9 65 -68 91
for
shape.
1977 VOLKESWAGON Beetle. 61,200
plus miles. Only $1500/offer. For more
information call 265-6749.
1979 TRIUMPH Spitfire. 44,000 plus
miles, $850/offer. Call 784-9130, leave
message.
26” W OMEN’S 12-speed. Includes head
light, tailight, sturdy lock/chain, much
more. $100/offer. Available early May.
Contact Barb, 921-9031.
SUNS PLAYOFF tickets for sale. Great
seats! Reasonably priced! 784-0880 or
230-5286.
CALL THE Police!! It’s a steal! Nishiki
International 1987. Perfect condition,
barely used, paid $550, sacrifice for $200
firm. Raleigh Capri, excellent condition,
$50. 894-9182.
PEUGEOT BICYCLE 501 Cromalloy-m
frame, Rigida wheels. Great condition.
Tricia, 967-0109. $200.
TREK 510. Chromaly frame; 22 inches,
Campagnola components. Like new.
Asking $325. 894-8640.
1981 TOYOTA Corolla. Perfect running
condition. $1450. Call 831-2053.
TREK 800 mountain bike, 18 gears, 21
inch frame. Brand new, must sell, $295.
967-3316.
AUDI 5000S. Absolutely perfect condition!
No scratches or tears. Power everythng
including sunroof. Keep-up papers from
since it was new. 1980 but looks new.
Moving, must sell by May 12th so- only
$2600. 829-1025, leave message!
BMW 733i. Bright red sports model, 1979.
Excellent condition. $8500 or best offer.
Jacques 971-5945.
RABBIT DIESEL 80. 65,000 miles, 4
doors, air-conditioning, radio, good gas
mileage. Call 966-3004.
SUZUKI SAMURAI JX, 1986. Convertible,
fun to drive. New Kenwood stereo/
cassette. $700 plus take over payments.
968-9430.
GRAND OPENING SPECIALS!
Specialized Detailing
in
more
SINGLES NEWS, organizations, personal
ads, mopthly in Single Scene Newspaper,
since 1971. Sample $1, box 10159 Dept.
B, Scottsdale, 85271.
and ALL other makes!
Detailing from $ 2 5
Pick-up & Delivery Service
MARIO’S BY-HAND
CARWASH
678-1114
MOTORCYCLES
1965 HONDA Spree scooter. Red, great
condition) W ith basket. Must sell.
$250/offer. Eddiè, 894-2300 ext. 3749.
1987 ELITE 150. White, only 1675 miles.
Must sell by 5/14. Best offer. 897-2369,
Y O U USE
A N EXTRA
TICKETS
1980 200SX. Ice cold air, some body
damage. Warranty on tires. Perfect
running condition, $1550. Katie, 730-9964.
RESERVE YOUR Yearbook now! Don’t be
left out. C ali
information.
Great
BICYCLES
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
BUY TOP rated audio components, speak
ers, accessories at. dealer cost. Full
warranty. 829-6710,
ELECTRIC GUITAR. Tanara Flying V. in
excellent condition. Also Peavey compan
ion amplifier and Stuntmant Flock’n Stroll
mini-amplifier. $350/offer. 831-9862.
V ltU S - ALUMINUM racing bicycle 48cm
(17 inch). Excellent condition, asking
$500. 265-8260.
COMPUTERS
COMPAQ PORTABLE 286 .640 KB/20MB,
Dos 3.1, Symphony, DBase 4*M SW ord,
G ramm atix, Norton,. Hayes Modern
Peachtree, $2500. 969-0284.
TICKETS
SUNS PLAYOFFS, first two games with
more to come. Call, leave message or ask
for Rich, 990-3526.
MISCELLANEOUS
EOR SALE
FOR SALE. Sony receiver, 120 watts per
channel with digital equalizer. Sony mini
CD piyer that holds 5 CD’s. Two Advent
speakers with longthrow woofers. Only
two months old. $900. Call 894-1761.
GUYS: GUARANTEED way to meet and
charm the ladies at bars, nightclubs, and
parties. Send $1 to PO box 27172, Tempe,
AZ 85285.
MOVING? FOR Sale- 6x8 heavy duty
pickup box trailer, $300. Phone 890-2149
(leave a message).
QUEENSIZE WATERBED. Less than a
year old, dark wood, bookcase headboard,
50% motionless mattress. Super comfort
able! Need to sell by end- of May.
$200/offer. Jennifer, 829-8780, leave
message (I’m never home).
USED COMPUTERS! Computer Multi
System s, Tem pe (next to Buffalo
Exchange), 225 W. University. 966-1388.
25 %J Pardners
o ¥ood,
fi
Any
purchase
Famous Mesquite
Smoked M eat & Barbeque
825 W . University Dr.
Tem pe
Limit one p e r custom er
Eat-in orders only
Based o n availability
(G ood weekends only through Sunday, May 7,1989)
MEED CASH OR CLOTHES?
Jim.
•Guess
1988 HONDA ELITE ES. Excellent condi
tion, black, $600 or best offer. Susan,
•Levis
•F q r e n z a
•Girbaud
•Outback Red
•Bugle Boy
C-C.’s
CLOSET CLASSICS
784-0853._____________
1989 WHITE Honda Elite 150. 2 months
old, $2100 new. best offer. Helmet
$ 100?
Enter th e State Press
contest in the May 2
SPRING SHOPPER...
YOU MIGHT WIN
$100!
SUNS PLAYOFF tickets for Friday and
Su nday gam es. C all 9 6 8 -0 9 9 4 or
829-1612..
f
included. 230-2032.
Buyers and S ellers o f
Quality P re-O w n ed C lothes
BICYCLES
MENS FUJI 10-speed, lightweight, $40.
Womens Gitane 10-speed, $50. 967-4535.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
S u n t 2 -5
Mon-Sat 1 0 -6
1 4 9 1 -2 0 2 9
Fry’s C enter. N.E. Com er Of Southern & McClintock
Classified liner ads can
begin 1 DAY a fte r they
are placed (if placed
before noon).
How to Attain a Lucrative Career in
Medicat/Pharm aceutical Safes
This book is an essential resource providing a wealth of vital
information for your job search. Business Week Careers
Magazine states the HOT jobs are in health care sales.
ONLY
^
_
$0 9 .5
^
At ASU Bookstore
send $ 1 1 .6 0 to:
OR
Med-Sales Pro
1713 E. Broadway, Suite 273
Tempe, AZ 85282
Don’t be fooled by imitators!
BOB’S BICYCLE BARN
is the original used bike dealer.
Call and reserve your STU D E N T
SUM M ER STO R A G E SPAC E now.
Student Discounts
1908 E. Apache
♦
Visa/MC
Tempe
♦
Layaway
894-6852
Cancellations:
Liner ads m ust be canceled
before noon, 1 day prior to
publication. No refunds will
be given.
State Press Errors:
Check ypur ad th e FIRST
day it runs; Call 965-6731
w ith any corrections, before
noon. The State Press is only
responsible fo r th e firs t day
the ad runs incorrectly.! Cor
rected ads wifi be extended
one day. Changes' called in
after th e firs t day will not
qualify fo r a make-good
Custom er Errors:
Corrections must be made
before noon. Compensation
w ill n o t be g iv e n f o r
customer error.
Classified display ads
can begin 2 DAYS after
they are placed (if placed
before 10 a.m).
Ads may run fo r any
length o f tim e Canceled
ads will be credited to
your account. Sorry, no
refunds.
APARTMENTS
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
UNIDEN CB Pro 530e. 40 channel, never
used, $100. Mike, 784-0968.
Ideal for Students
•A ffo rd ab le -
WASHBURN G2-V electric guitar with
whammy, 3 pick-ups, 22. fret. Also Washbum SX60C amplifier. Both $450/offer.
Will sell separately. Call Del weekdays
after 1:30. 345-1685.
W E BUY/SELL used computers. Compu
ter Multi Systems, Tempe (next to Buffalo
Exchange), 225 W. University. 966-1388.
studios & 1 bedrooms
from $295
•G rea t locationclose to
ASU
•P ri vacy1-level apartments
mature landscaping
M ARIANNA APARTMENTS
1214 E. O range
966-8597
REAL ESTATE
2 BEDROOM condominium, Vi? mile ASU.
Anxious owner. Reduced $5000. $2500
down. $52,500 flexible. 991-2868.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath. Fireplace, washer/
dryer. Assumable loan, no qualifying, near
ASU. $3000 down. 9 6 6 -7 1 5 *
4 BEDROOM, 2300 square feet, 3 car
garage, 2Vfc bath. Vaulted ceilings, formal
dining room, “Great Room,’’ walk-in
pantry. Available June. Qualified buyers,
assumable 15 year loan, $134,000,
approximately $35,000 CTM, will carry
portion. University and Ljndsey, Mesa.
965 -66 58 (days), 4 61 -39 30 (home),
"Angel.”
ASSUME 9V i% FHA $74,900, $61,000
loan. 3 bedroom, 1% bath, targe yard,
family room, fireplace. Very' nice, lots
extras. 1772 sqare feet. 48th Street/
Southern. Call Cain, 438-9284, Ponte,
997-7324
ASU PROFESSORS walk to work. For
sale, five bedroom, completely remodeled
home on % acre garden spot. Workshop,
guest quarters. Call Maria, agent WHY
VSA, Tempe, 820-9909 or 895-9623.
GOOD INVESTMENT close to campus. 3
bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, vaulted- ceil
ings. Call 967-1824.
MOBILE HOME for sale. 12x65, 2
bedroom, fuNy furnished or unfurnished
and ready to move into location. Price and
University. Very reasonable. Call Samant
ha, 967-7609.
NO QUALIFY, low down, Papago Park I
condo. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, upper unit.
Owner-agent. Call Chantal, Realty Execu
tives, 996-9910 or 948-8871.
OWN YOUR own 2 bedroom townhouse.
Cheap! At Los Prados in Tempe. Pool,
spa, lighted tennis, volleyball. Assumable
mortgage. FHA loan. 894-9232. Rob/Lisa.
STUDENT CONDO. $59,000. Parents, a
tax advantage investment. Furnished 2
bedroom, 2 bath, near campus, all facili
ties. CaH owner after 6, 991-1223.
TOW NHOUSE FOR sale, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, 1300 square feet. FHA’s fully assum
able 9Vfe % 30 year fixed low down. Pool,
spa, tennis, sportcourt. 607 W. 14th St.,
Tempe. Pat, 967-4908.
ASU AREA. 3 bedroom, 1 bath apartment.
$395/month. 966-8838.
ASU AREA: Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms,
$260 and up. Pool, no dogs. 966-8838.
FREE AIR-CONDITIO NING . Available
now. AH utilities. Early summer special,
$333/month, 1 bedroom only. 1 person
maximum. 42 unit, very quiet, well
m a n a g e d , n e a r S a fe w a y /C o c o * s .
$100/deposit. Quiet people only please.
Landmark Apartments, 967-6620.
BEAUTIFUL NEW large 1 and 2 bedroom.
Walk to ASU. Pool, laundry room. One
block South of University on 8th Street,
Cape Cod Apartments. Phone 968-5238
for special.
CUTE, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Vaulted ceil
ings, pool side. Assume summer lease.
Pets. $368/month. 966-8809.
LAST CHANCE for the ultimate apart
ment. 3 bedroom, 3 bath, covered parking,
tennis courts, 3 pools, volleyball, fishing,
putting green, all appliances, 2.7 miles
away from ASU. $750/month. Act now!
345-8165, anytime.
L U X U R Y T O W N H O M E S , 2 and 3
bedrooms, washer/dryer, pool, spa,
tennis, sportcourt. Vz mile ASU. 967-4908.
NEAR TRICITY. O ne bedroom duplex.
Utilities paid except electricity. Newly
decorated. Graduate students. $2$0.
964-6352.
.
-■
, • [£■
NO DEPOSIT. Two bedroom, two bath,
close to ASU. May free! CaH 966-3195
immediately.
ROOSEVELT AND University. 2 bedroom,
2 bath, 1st month’s rent free! $390/month.
967-4789.
TEMPE. QUAINT 1 bedroom in fourplex.
Spotless. $289. 1st Street/Hardy. Debbie,
945-1013.
TIRED O F the noise? Tired of the dorms?
Stay cool this summer with free airconditioning. 100 0 square feet; 2
bedroom, 2 bath, 1/10 mile from campus.
Pool, laundry. $475 includes all utilities.
910 E. Lemon. 966-8704.
TW O BEDROOM, two bath available mid
May. Call Kat/Cheryl. 9665153.
BUY OF THE WEEK
Papago II, $74,900
2 bd, 2 bath directly overlooking pool.
Great light and bright floor plan,
b a lc o n y , a ll a p p lia n c e s . F H A
assumable loan.
SUMMER DISCOUNTS!
Reserve Now
For Fall!
W A L K TO ASU!
O n ly
APARTMENTS
pharmaceutical sales
HO W TO CORRECT
OR CANCEL YOUR AD:
W HEN W ILL YOUR AD RÜNT^
Bob Bullock • Realty Executives
900-2992
BICYCLES
BICYCLES
HOW TO PLACE A
1. Announcements
CLASSIFIED AD:
2 Autos
in Person:
.3. .Trucks
C ash, C heck ( w i t h
4. Motorcycles
guarantee carcp, MC. or
5. Bicycles .
VISA.
6. Furniture
Matthews Center
. 7. Tickets For Sale
Basement
8. Miscellaneous Fdr Sale
(South End)
9: Real Estate For Sale
M—F, 8 a m —5 p.m.
1Q. Apartments f o r Rent
North MU
11. Townhomes/Condos
Information Desk
For Rent
.M—F,
9 a.m —2:30 p.m.
12. Homes For Sale
By Mail:
13. Rental Sharing
State Press
14. Business Opportunities
Classifieds
15. Help Wanted
Matthews Center, Rm 15
16. Instruction
“ 17. Jewelry
Tempe. AZ 85287-1502
Please enclose
18. Free Lost/Found
19. On-Campus
payment w ith ad.
20. Personals
By Phone:
21 Pets
965-6731
22. Services
Payment with visa /mc
23. Transportation
only. $6 minimum on all
24. Travel
phone orders.
25. Typing/Word Processing
The Stare Press reserves
26. Wanted
the right to reject any
27. Adoptions
a d v e rtis in g copy
28. Miscellaneous
_____________________________
sub m itted.
Vi b lo c k fr o m
cam
p u s . B e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d ,
h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th : 2
1 BEDROOM, furnished. $250-$310. Pool,
laundry. 1339 S. Sunset Drive, apartment
9. Palm Vista Apartments. 967-3658.
b e d ro o m ,
TV,
1B ED R O O M apartment with 2 singles; 2
blocks from ASU. $300/month plus electr
ic. Available early May. Barb, 921-9031.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo. Vk mile to
ASU. Fenced area, porch/patio, kitchen
appliances, pool, energy efficient, mini
blinds, volleyball courts to be added soon,
rent/purchase, $475. Call 966-0962,
968-7173.
2 B E D R O O M , 2 bath. Papago
$750/month. Bob Bullock, 998-2992.
1.
2
b a th
a p a r t
m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le
h e a te d
p o o l,
and
s p a c io u s la u n d r y fa c ilitie s .
Friendly,
courteous
m a n a g e m e n t.
to d a y !
S to p
T e rra c e R oad
A p a r tm e n ts
9 5 0 S. T e r r a c e
9 6 6 -8 5 4 0
by
Page 22
TOWNHOMES/
CONDOS
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo. University
and Price, pool, Jacuzzi, covered parking.
$675/month. Matt, 241-7930 or 946-8212.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath one story townhouse. AH appliances, pool, Southern and
Hardy. 834-9288. $615/month.
HALF PRICE! Winter rental. XLarge 2
bedroom, 2 bath furnished townhome. See
to appreciate. 831-9573.
LUXURY CONDO, Papago Village II. 2
bedroom, 2 bad), all appliances including
washer/dryer. Fenced patio, covered
re s e r v e d p a r k in g , p o o l, ja c u z z i.
$645/month. 921-0539.
PAPAGO PARK Condo. 2 bedroom, 1
bath. W asher/dryer, enclosed patio,
community pool. 461-9213 evenings or
leave message.
PAPAGO PARK I. Summer, winter rental,
two bedroom. Available May. Tom, collect,
714-840-2874.
Q U E S T A V ID A c o n d o , 2 m a s te r
bedrooms, fireplace, washer/dryer, microwave, 2 pools. $62S/month. Available May
17. Mark, 924-7374 or 786-0050.
------------- *----------- --------
QUESTA VIDA condo. 1 room now, 1 room
Jqne 1st. All amenities. Summer rates.
9$7-3677.
HOMES FOR RENT
2 BEDROOM house, furnished; $475. 1
bedroom apartment, furnished; $245, utili
ties included. 1 mile East ASU. 967-3658.
RENTAL SHARING
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
MAROBOURGH PARK townhouse room-
ATTENTION STUDENTS, leading firm in
mate(s) needed. 3 bedroom, 2to bath, 2
miles North of ASU. $275/month plus %
utilities. Washer/dryer, garage, yard, pool,
ceiling fans, SRP, budget. Call 947-0631,
Lisa or Mike.
its field opening new Corner Stone Mall
location, $6 to $8/hour to start guaranteed.
Flexible evening hours. Call Mr. Lind
264-3426 to arrange interview.
G O V E R N M E N T JO B S ! $ 1 8 ,0 3 7 to
$69,405. Immediate hiring! Your area. Call
(refundable) 1-518-459-3611, ext. F203 for
OFFICE ASSISTANT needed to answer
phone and help In clerical areas. Good
personality/phone voice needed. $5/hour.
federal list 24 hours.
893-6190.
VALET PARKING attendants needed full
time and part-time. Must be 20 years old.
Clean cut and well groomed. 861-9384 or
apply at'34 W . Dunlap. Phoenix.
HANDICAP ASSISTANT for 10 weekend
hours. See above. $200/month. 969-1144.
OVERSEAS JOBS.
HANDICAP ASSISTANT for 2 teenage
girls. Jobs includes personal care, chauferring, meal preperation, tutoring, light
housekeeping. No experience necessary.
Applicant will be trained as Respite Provid
er by DES. Minimum year committment
beginning May 89. August free, 6 to 8 am
and 2:30 to 6:30 pm. Monday-Friday
$550/montb. 969-1144.
52, Corona del Mar, CA 92625.
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs,
PAID INTERNSHIP. Earn $3000 and 3
college credits. Call 894-5283. Thomas
Nelson Internship Program.
Work Temporary!
MASTER BEDROOM with private bath
available. Located at beautiful Lakes,
Tempe. Excellent amenities, $225/month
plus Vi utilities. 921-1400, 897-1611.
facilities. 964-0816.
NONSMOKING FEMALE to share 2
bedroom, 2 bath apartment. $180/month,
to utilities. Move in May 11. Quiet complex
with pool, laundry room, sauna. Broadway
and Hardy area. 967-1185.
OWN ROOM in 3 bedroom, 2 bath
townhome. Female nonsmoker. Close to
campus. Furnished, except for bedroom.
Pool. Move-in end of May. $185/month
plus to utilities. Call 829-8780.
RENTAL SHARING
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo. Washer/
dryer, pool, jacuzzi. $250 includes utilities.
Stapley/University. 844-7808.
DOBSON RANCH patio home. Garage,
own bedroom, bath, nonsmoking male.
$250 including utilities. 820-9131.
FEMALE FO R fully furnished 3 bedroom
c6ndo near campus. Air-conditioned, pool,
tennis, washer/dryer. 953-1159.
FEMALE NONSMOKER. Worthington
place condo. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool,
clubhouse, laundry. $200/month plus utili
ties. Tracy, 894-2848.
FEMALE NONSMOKER. Room in private
home. Kitchen privileges, pool. $215,
ROOMMATE
SERVICES
_________ a*.------------------
LOOKING FOR A
PLACE TO LIVE?
Hundreds o f properties
to choose from valley-wide.
Personal & residential
profiles offered.
Or need a roommate?
The Roommate Express
893-6190
995-4331
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
3-D CAMERA. Ground floor opportunity to
earn virtually unlimited income introducing
revolutionary three dimensional photos.
Nothing to lose by checking it out; much to
be gained. Call Dave, 461-1247.
HAIR CU TTIN G and tanning. New
patented tanning equipment- to the time,
twice as dark. Patch test for proof. I
provide capital for tanning. Need partner
for salon. Call 464-8888.
HIGH POTENTIAL, fast growth. Exciting
billiard industry. Sales, managing, and
self-motivated. New patented products
and scoring system. Senjors/Graduate
students only. Call 877-2303.
utilities paid. 831-6276.
FEMALE ROOMMATE. Clean, qtiiet, airconditioned, furnished room. V« mile from
campus. Utilities paid. $205/month. Atta,
968-4440.
FEMALE ROOMMATE. Beautiful house,
pool, washer/dryer, microwave, quiet
neighborhood, near ASU. $235 plus Vi
utilities. 966-2360 or 966-6111.
FEMALE ROOMMATES. Share large 4
bedroom home near ASU. Smokers,
metalheads, geeks need not call. Charles
or Pat after 5, 968-8150.
FEM A LE RO O MM ATE share house.
Washer/dryer. $208 plus Vi utilities. One
biock from ASU. Large yard. Melissa,
967- 0804._____ _____________________
FEMALE ROOMMATE for summer at
Quadrangles. $250 per month pips half
u tilities. H ave own bedroom . Call
968- 5435, leave a message.
FU RNISHED ROOM for student with
kitchen privileges. Including electricity,
$ 235/month. 947-4528 or 947-4912. Pool
*fâ *
and cable.
MALE/FEMALE NONSMOKER to share 2
bedroom, 1 bath house. Furnished,
wpsher, dryer, microwave, nice area. 24th
S|reet/Thomas. $l95/m onth plus to utili
ties. Call Matt at 957r7605.
MALE/FEMALE to sliare 2 bedroom, 2to
bath split-level townhouse on Roosevelt/
Hjsyden. $ 280/month plus to utilities. Call
9 0 -3 4 3 0 . Available M ay 1.
_________
MALE ROOMMATE wanted for next
semester. Two blocks from campus. Utili
ties paid!!! $ 200/month. Fully furnished
aj)d very spacious!! Scott, 784-8973.
$10/H O U R
T O S TA R T
Sell industrial tools
and supplies for na
tional firm. We will
tra in . 2 shifts
availab le. W alk to
ASU.
Call Dave Green
254-T O O L
LOOKING FOR a summer job? 24 hour
recorded message. Please call NuSkin,
392-4107.
START YOUR own part-time business
selling T-shirts. Apply now, toll free,
1-800-842-2336.
CORK’N CLEAVER accepting applica
tions for lunch waitresses and lunch
hostesses. WiH train. Short shifts, conve
nient hours. Fun atmosphere. Concern
with appearance, personality and reliabili
ty are important. Apply in person, MondayFriday, 2-5 p.m. or by appointment, 5101
N. 44th Street (44th and Camelback).
952-0585.
C PROGRAMMER wanted for summer
project. Earn $1500 in six weeks. Western
Design Center, Mesa. 962-4545.
DO YOU have your entire summer free.
Wild off the wall summer jobs. Make
$5000. Call 222-8114.
.
EAST VALLEY Boys and Girls Club now
hiring for summer day camp position at
clubs in Chandler (899-8302), Mesa
(844-0963), Tempe (966-6656), Guadalupe
(897-6247).
EXCITING SUMMER Job with great travel
opportunities!! Local software firm needs
system implementors with good communi
cation skills and computer programming
experience. Apply with resumes at Lewis
and Associates, Inc. 5829 N. 7th Street,
Suite 2-A, Phoenix, AZ 85014.
EXPER IENC ED ,
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT intern. The
Valley's largest publisher of suburban
weekly newspapers is looking for an
enthusiastic advertising, public relations,
or marketing student to intern in our major
accounts department part-time. Responsi
bilities include assisting the major
accounts manager and director of sales
and marketing. Call Meg Ridden, Indepen
dent Newspapers, at 483-0977.
APACHE LAKE Resort needs exper
ienced, hard-working waiters/waitresses
for busy summer. Salary plus housing.
467-2511.
ASSEMBLY PROGRAMMERS. Rapidly
growing company seeks persons with
strong math aptitude to assist in the
development of real time/multi-user/multiprocessor operating systems for Vax and
68000. Flexible hours. Call 279-2816 or
unofficial transcripts to Ticket Master,
3118 W. Clarendon, Phoenix, AZ 85017.
ATTENTION! $7-$12/hour during 8 week
training program. Must be aggressive and
self-motivated. 968-7013 or 894-2049.
LADIES APPAREL. Year round, part-time,
sales help wanted. Some experience
helpful, additional training provided.
Professional appearance and energetic
manner desired. Call Mrs. Mathis for
interview, 945-1528 evenings* Desert
Dweller, 7149 5th Avenue, Scottsdale.
LANDSCAPE HELPER, install plant and
rock material. Experience helpful. Full or
part-time, $4.50 to start. 945-1015.
LARGE SCOTTSDALE health dub needs
part-time help. Apply 1465 N. Hayden.
LOOKING FOR a summer job? 24 hour
recorded message. Please call NuSkin,
392-4107.
MALE/FEMALE bartender for fun, local
s p o r t s b a r . 2 0 - 3 0 h o u r s /w e e k ,
$8-$l2/hour. Weekends a must. Apply 1-4
p.m., The Woodshed 1 , 19 West Baseline.
MANAGER, YOUTH hostel in Phoenix.
Salary plus commissions. Information can
American Youth Hostels, 254-9803.
SUMMER JOBS
W e a re h irin g 100
students & teachers for a
va riety o f tem porary
clerical positions. If you
have office skills such as
ty p in g , r e c é p t io n ,
clerical, wpo, secretary,
etc., p lea se call for
appointment:
264-4537
STIVERS TEM PORARY
PERSONNEL
STIVERS
I I fs/|i »O.M A M Y
PIUHONNI L
,
NEED EXTRA money? Part-time position
available. Telemarketing. No selling, simp
ly make appointments for our consultants.
No experience required. Position available
now and in the summer. $6-8/hour. Call
Lamb Financial, 246-0116.
B U SIN ESS
A ND
C O M M U N IC A TIO N S
M A JO RS
A d vertising firm n e e d s a n outgo
ing, professional sale s perso n to
h e lp w ith lo c a l pro m o tio n s.
C h o o s e ow n sch ed u le.
C a ll 9 2 1 -7 7 5 5
fo r P e rs o n al In terview
MODEL SEARCH. Now screening for
males/females for the .next issue of Model
840-4140.
GAYLAW. STUDENTS and law students
needed to handle calls on gay legal
information hot line. Call 949-7353 for
information.
NANNY POSITION for the summer to care
for 2 children. Own transportation. Hours;
Monday-Friday, 8-6 with flexibility. Call
952-2369 after 6 for interview.
GOLFLAND/SUNSPLASH is now hiring
for full/part-time summer positions: ticket
cashiers, ticket takers ($3.50-$5/hour).
Cashier experience preferred. Apply in
person at Golfland, 155 W . Hampton,
NEED A great summer job?! Restaurant
delivery drivers, full/part-time, very flexible
hours. 423-0095 after 11 a.m.
NOW HIRING giHs to sell roses in bars,
Call or leave message, 423-0262, Wendy.
— ------------------------------------ ------
ture store, walking distance from ASU.
20-25 hours weekly. Apply in person« 10-5,
at The Bedroom, 825 N. Scottsdale Road.
PART-TIME JOB, flexible schedule (Satur
days mandatory). Moderate to heavy
liftin g . N u rs ery sale s and labor.
$4.50/hour. Arizona Cactus Sales, 1619 S.
Arizona Avenue, Chandler, Az. 963-1061.
PART-TIME GRAVEYARD position avail
able, at Kinko’s Copies, 933 E. University.
D e pendable, self-m otivated people
needed. No experience necessary.
PART-TIME SECRETARY for psycholo
gist office. Flexible hours. Good typing
skills. Macintosh experience, and working
knowledge of m edical terminology.
$5.5Q/hour. Send resume to J. Phillips,
3337 N. Miller Road, Suite 105, Scotts
dale, 85251
W ork Back East
RECEPTIONIST/MARKETING coordina
tor needed part-time in Tempe on Fridays.
Work with clients developing a fast grow
ing flight school business. Doug,
897-7121.
ROSE LADIES wanted to work nightclubs
and restaurants. Great money. Call
Bobby, 945-3658. Full/part-time.
STUDENTS, HAVE we got the school year
job for you! Great hours, 4-9 p.m. Great
pay, $5/hour plus bonuses. Great working
conditions. Weekends off. Must be 17 or
older/C all now. to see if you qualify. Mr
Foreman at 381-0477 between 9 a.m.-5
Delivery/
Front Counter
Part-time (th rou gh ou t
sch o ol and summers).
Must have vehicle. Mile
age plus hourly.
Alphagraphics
Call
8-10 a.m. only
968-7821
Be prompt!
SUMMER WORK. Part-time receptionist
for Tempe boat dealership. Requires good
organization and typing skills. 894-2778.
developmental^ disabled individuals. 21
years or older preferred. 224-5052.
(M e e t in L ob b y)
TELEMARKETERS FU ND raising for local
law enforement organization. On campus
location $6 to $8/hour to start guaranteed
flexible evening hours. Call Mr. Lind
264-3426 to arrange interview.
If unable to attend, send nam e, m ajor,
phone num ber and ad to:
Summer Work, PO Box 1084
Tempe, AZ 85281
THOUSANDS O F Career opportunities as
well as jobs if you just know where to look!
Send $10 to Careers and Jobs, 2500 N.
Hayden suite 26, Scottsdale, AZ 85257.
BSlin
U S
T H E SO U THW ESTERN CO M PAN Y
J
•F lexib le schedule
•E a m $ $ $ $
•V alu ab le experience
•A ll kinds o f Jobs:
Receptionist
Word Processors
Data Entry Operators
General Office Clerks
Typists
Secretaries
Asst. Bookkeepers
Call
Cosmopolitan
Temporary
Personnel
WANTED. COLLEGE students and high
school seniors looking for that perfect
summer job! Local Arizona company
looking for a few hard working and sales
oriented students to help with summer
work schedule. Excellent income. Please
call 892-9330.
WANTED. CONSUMER product merchan
diser for grocery stores. Must be flexible,
light to medium lifting. Must have adequ
ate transportation. $5.75/hour, 25 hours
per week. Reimburse mileage and bonus.
Apply in person, All American Distributing,
235 E. Pima Street, Phoenix, AZ 85004,
Monday-Friday, 8-5.
WANTED: VOLUNTEERS for the Arizona
State Hospital. If you are interested,
please contact Susan, 220-6014.
WORK BACK East. The Southwestern
Company is now interviewing for summer
WRITE YOUR own paycheck. Part-time or
SUMMER PART-TIME, full-time jobs.
$5/hour. Working with mentally retarded,
No phone calls, please.
Moroccan
REAL ESTATE office in Scottsdale needs
part-time receptionist. Light typing,
phones. 8 a.m.-Noon, Monday-Friday. Call
Lisa after 1 p.m. at 481-1200.
Thursday,
A pril 2 7 ,1 9 8 9
12, 3 or 6 p.m .
Howard Johnson’s
the
positions. Make $1,740/month and recieve
coliege credit. Interviews today. 3 p.m. or
6 p.m. at Tempe Howard Johnson’s (meet
in lobby). Please arrive 10 minutes early.
S U M M E R JO B S on cruise ships.
$300-$900/week. Airline jobs available
also. Call 817-626-6136. ext. C-20.
Interviews T o d a y !
at
PEOPLE NEEDED to move the library,
5/15-5/25. $5/hour, 4> hour shifts, 7 to 12
and 1 to 6. Call 829-2821 and leave name
and number.
SUMMER JOBS,leading firm in its field
opening new Corner Stone Mall Ideation,
$6 to $8/hour to start guaranteed. Flexible
evening hours. Call M r Lind 264-3426 to
arrange interview.
Average $5000+
NEEDED
Restaurant. 947-9590.
248-7766
SUMMER CARE for two children, six and
nine. $100/week, four weeks. Ellen,
277-9212, 948-4021, evenings.
NEED
SUMMER
WORK?
WAITER
PART-TIME, $6-$8/hour. Futon and furni
p.m!
Search Magazine. No experience neces
sary. In town limited time. Call message
line, 892-6077.
Mesa.
111 AIR-CONDITIONED summer job. Up
to $8/hour guaranteed to start. Salesmen
trainees wanted for construction supply.
Call Mark, 966-5765. 1953 E. Apache.
time. Experience required, excellent bene
fits, salary DOE. Apply inj>erson: Person
nel, Scottsdale Conference Resort, 7700
E. McCormick Parkway, Scottsdale,
85258. An equal opportunity employer.
sales
FREE ROOM arid board in exchange for
babysitting some evenings and weekends.
20 minute drive from campus. Ideal for
mature, female student. Call Marissa.
full
$ 900-$2000/month.
Summer, year around. All countries, all
fields. Free information write: UC, PO box
delivery.
TECHNICIAN/photographer,
help for children’s toy and clothing resort
shop. Nights and weekends. Apply Toy
Jungle, 7142 E. 5th Avenue, Scottsdale.
r
HELP WANTED
AGG RESSIVE
HELP W AN TED , part-tim e
$6/hour. Call Larry, 860-8256.
LAB
NO EXP. NECESSARY
Call Chris, 829-1379.
HELP WANTED. Suntmer help needed in
Teaching Tools distribution center. Apply
at 3154 North 34th Drive, Phoenix, Arizo
na (corner of Flower and 34th Drive).
KOREAN STUDENTS- Unique summer
opportunities. Earn $500 plus per week.
Call 844-8186.
Price Road (Price and Guadalupe).
R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , fem a le . 3
bedroom, 2 bath townhouse, $170/month,
to utilities. Ask for Linda or Celeste,
829-6982.
ABSOLUTELY WONDERFUL! Must see!
Share patio home. Female grad preferred.
$260/month plus to utilities. Own room/
bath (furnished/unfurnished) 2 miles from
ASU. Washer/dryer, fenced yard, pool,
ceiling fans, enclosed patio. 345-7280
after 6.
COCKTAIL WAITRESS/Barmakj. Apply in
person, McCartney’s Pub, 6322 South
ROOMMATE FOR luxury 3 bedroom, 3
bath; South Mountain Pointe. Pool,
washer/dryer, cable. $300 plus to utilities.
431-0177.
ROOMMATE WANTED, male/female. 2
bedroom, 2 floors, townhouse. to mile,
prime location. Move M ay 1st. 945-3430.
ATTENTION FACULTY! In San Diego
near SDSU, professors home with private
pool. Available 6/1 to.8/15. Ideal for 1 or 2
persons. Call Lee Payne, Realty Execu
tives, 997-7324 or 840-7279.
CAR WASH .attendant part-time, $4/hour.
Apply in person, Country Club Car Wash,
1726' N. Country Club Drive, Mesa.
827-0671.
spacious 3 bedroom condo. Own
bedroom, fully furnished except bedroom.
Move-in starting August 4 for $320/month.
Call Darren for more details, 784-0488.
2 OR 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Close to ASU.
3 OR 4 bedroom, 1% bath. Very close to
ASU. $595, available early May. 966-8838.
CAMP STAFF male/female, 8 weeks in
Prescott, summer salary $720 to $800 plus
room and board. Camp Fire, 1366 E.
Thomas Road, suite 200, Phoenix AZ.
85014, 263-7725.
PAPAGO PARK I. Roommate needed in
ROOMMATE NEEDED. 2 bedroom, close
to ASU at Meridian Corners. $250/month.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath home. Large yard, 1
block from ASU. Available 5/15. Great
summer rates. 894-0288.
BILLIpN $$$ Industry is seeking agressive
women/men for sales/management posi
tion. Earn $500 per week part-time or
50K-75K full-time. Bonus plus car allow
ance. Call Karen, 9-4, Monday-Thursday,
968-0025.
MOVE IN today or reserve for fall. Resort
condo. Loft, $245, master bedroom, $215
plus to utilities each. Terrific recreational
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath house. Large yard,
block fence, 5 miles ASU. rent or lease
with option. $525/month. 437-8994.
$550 plus utilities. Available 5/15-8/15.
967-1974.
J3fc
s w K n fS S
T h u rsd ay, A p ril 8 7 ,1 9 8 9
TO W RITE beginning fortran program.
Call Jim, 966-6257.
fuM time. 966-5765.
YMCA CAMP in Oracle is looking for
summer staff. Good salary plus room and
board. Positions available are for counse
lors; archery, arts and crafts, nature,
riflery, horseback riding, and swimming
specialists; kitchen staff, nurses, business
manager and maintenance staff.
Call
1-884-0987 for information or write YMCA
Triangle Y Ranch Camp, 516 N. 5th
Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85705. Directors will
be on campus for interviews April 12th.
JEWELRY
CASH FOR gold, diamonds, sterling, etc.
W e have Sun Devil watches and Sparkies.
Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S: Mill, Suite
101, Tempe. 968-5967.
^
CASH PAID. Jewelry of all kinds, including
gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc.
Rare Lioij, 9?1 S. Mill A ve„. Tempe
Center, 9686074.
WATCHES- M EN’S and ladies' replicas
and fashion. Also wide selection of fashion
jewelry. Call Teresa at 966-0901.
FREE LOST/EOUND
LOST MAROON plastic wallet with all ID’s
Saturday night near B.G. Einstein’s. Cash
reward. 784-83?9.
PERSONALS
AAAA DELTA Tau Delta Rush dinner at 6,
406 Adelphi Drive. For information cali
784-8507 or 784-8144.
ADPI- BIG Leaguers wear cotton! Win it
and the keg’s on us. Steve, Danno, Mark.
ATO CHRIS M - Piano Man, drug dealers,
trolley. Beer Forest, are we lost? Put that
fire extinguisher down! He gave our
schnapps away! Where's my rose? Lasar
lips! Just ketchup, salt, and Ranch
dressing, please! Thanks for such a great
weekend! Love, your dateless date!
Sammys:
Congratulations
New Council
Brian Shapiro
President
Cuçt Baumgarth
Vice-President
Mike Rush
T reasurer
David Levy
Recorder
State Pres»
Page 23
Th ursd ay, A p ril 2 7 ,l9 ß 9
PERSONALS
PERSONALS
SERVICES
SERVICES
ATTENTION RUSHEES: The Brothers of
PEGGY AND Brian McGinn our proud
parents of Katelyn Julia, bom March 25,
1989. Congrats!!!
ALEXANDER PHOTOGRAPHER. Call us
for parties, graduation photos and photo
business cards. 834-7213.
W HY HAUL it home? Store it! See our ad
today. Best Little Wàrehouse in Tempe.
’S IG M A C H I N a tio n a l P re s e n ts :
Sweetheart Ball Friday, June 23, at the
Phoenician Resort. Any girls interested in
attending please contact Mark, 784-0546,
or Jim, 968-5148 for reservations.
A SOFT Touch Electrolysis. Student
discounts. Remove unwanted hair, perma
nently. 12 years experience, near ASU.
Call 829-7829
Pi Kappa Alpha invite you to attend a
Pre-rush dinner Wednesday, May 3rd at
5:30 p m- at the Pike House.
DAVID: HAVE a great 19th Birthday! I am
looking forward to Saturday. Love, Erin.
DELTA SIQS in tan Jeep: So sorry! Cop
gave us a warning. Better luck next time!
PS- No halvsies! Love, DG’S in blue car.
DON'T BE left out of the tradition. Order
your Yearbook toddy. Call 965-6881 now
SIGMA KAPPA Pledges- Only three days
until Initiation... and.yes, I’m counting!
Can’t wait until ya’H are my sisters!! SK
love, Kelly K.
for more information.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Thea! Hope you are
ready for a great day. I’ll meet you at the
pool after class for margaritas? Love ya
tons! Shadee.
HEY JANEEN, Tell me how you made
$10K in just three months last summer!
Jim.
-- .■ . ,
■_ . •
HEY JIM, You haven’t heard? W e worked
back East in the Southwestern summer
work program. For more details call
222-8114.
JENNY D.- Our loyalty is endless. Through
thick and thin and sick and sin. Love
a
SIGMA KAPPA Debbie: Can’t wait to see
you in red Saturday night at White
Column! Love your ATO man, Jeff.
•■
HEY JEFF: How in the world did you make
$35K your last three summers? Jim.
always, Nicki C.
SIGMA KAPPA Gina- You’re a social
chairman from Heaven. Thank you. TKE
Kevin Kelly.
-
•
Congratulations
Tri Sigma Colonists
on your Anniversary.
Sigma love and all ours,
The ETA Pledges Class
%
♦
SUSAN: I’M sorry for calling you a scum!
Will you still be my friend? -???
LAMBDA CHI "Bel’’- What a weekend! I
can’t believe we missed Neil Diamond for
a beer forest, jumbo jacks at 6 a m. (did
you call Guido for room service?) and 5
hours of good uh, sleep? Good thing your
friend was there to drive us home! Love,
THETA DELT Dave: Thanks for the last
two weekends titled “ Where’s my date?"
and “ Mutiny of the Bounty." I had a blast!
But sorry, I have plans this weekend!
Love, Jill.
the chic with the cotton.
THETA MICHELLE: Thinking of you. Love,
Hap.
LAMBDA CHI- Sigma Pi Blues bash
tomorrow night! Get an invitation while
they last!
LISA SHELLY: Two days left. I’m scream
ing. Life’s too good. Fluffy.
LMV- THANKS for being there on Friday. It
means the world to me. Watching on
Saturday meant more. Love you, Phut.
MARY A.- Did I ever tell you you're my
hero? Love, Nicki C.
------------
,
TO LARRY: Thank you for the happiest
three months of my life. You're the best
thing that ever happened. I love you!
Marie.
TO THE two Alpha Phis who hazed us in
Tucson. Thanks for the neck wounds.
From your Delta Sig captives.
YO, ANDIE! Enjoyed your company the
past few weeks. Hope it’s destined to
continue. Luv, "The Cookie Man."
. . . .-------- ------- -------------- ---------
PRE-RUSH DINNER
at the
Phi Delta Theta House
A ll Welcome!
6:30 p.m . Thursday, April 27
For more information, call 967-9755
967-3900.
TYPING/WORD
PROCESSING
:
$2.00/PAGE.
Quick turnaround. Call
Virginia anytime, 831*8450; or Bob,
ELECTRO LYSIS- PE R M A N E N T hair
removal. Remove unwanted hair forever.
Student discount. Call for more informa
tion, 96943954.
GREAT TOUCH massage. Relaxing,
stress reducing, energizing, pain reduc
ing. Tempe, 225-8156 for appointment.
LET US ship your belongings home! No
hassles, just bring your boxes to us a n d '
we will handle the rest! Sureway Air
Express Company will be located in
parking lot 17 on Friday, May 5th from 1-7
p.m. and on Saturday, May 6th, from 10-4
p.m: Cash and personal checks accepted,
Arizona checks with guarantee card only.
For advance pick-ups or information call
276-5199.
OVERWEIGHT? I lost 20 pounds in 20
days- you can to d Guaranteed. Janna,
992-5780.
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.
R E SE A R C H A S S IS TA N C E . Largest
library of information 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 off campus). 967-5799.
Ask for Jenny.
VISA/MASTERCARD guaranteed with
$1000 minimum credit line, unsecured, No
salesmen will call. Power Trend Credit, PO
box 465, Mesa, AZ 85211-0465.
S T U F F IT
at
Arizona
Storage Inns
5’x1 O' to 10'x20’
From $12 & lip
Close to ASU
20% DISCOUNT
NOW
Call Randy or Sharon
967-0210
PERSONALS
S o you never buu the w rong product
or shade again, r o r a complimentary
facial, call for an appointm ent
'r-VM SQ7-g57Q 8.iW-o8)0
TRANSPORTATION
AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most
major cities. Gas allowances available. 21
or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530.
ALL STATES Driveaway- Cars available21 or older. 992-5200.
TRAVEL
AIRLINE TICKET, Chicago, Illinois. $225,
roundtrip. Expires July 1, 1989. Call
931-6591 after 5 p.m.
FLY FOR Less. Discounted tickets,
domestic and international. For competi
A-1 PROFICIENT Typing. IBM Selectric.
Loraine, 833-8365, near University and
Dobson in Mesa.
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.
Thanks Kim and Deb for making our stay at the
Manzy Country Club so excellent. You are both
studettes. 2nd floor.
Monya and Jessica: Thanks for a great year. You're
the greatest! Manzy love, your girls..
Joe: You “ go o d to g o ” on 2-10? Sorry about the pipe.
You’re a great RA (ha!) 4th floor.
Owen: You’re both a great friend and a great RA.
Thanks for being you. Floor 4.
Tierney and Karyn: Thanks for everything this year.
FLY FOR Less! Discounted tickets.
Domestic, Alaska, Europe, Israel, Orient,
South America, South Pacific. 491-0501.
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.
ASU AREA. Typing, word processing,
editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime.
Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186.
CEREUS WORD Processing, quality guar
anteed. Fast, experienced. Term papers,
resumes, form letters, dictaphones, edit
ing. 947-7796.
945-1500.
FORMER ASU staffers: Word Perfect,
Xerox Memorywriters. Experienced with
APA, MLA, graduate school, etc. Gradu
a t e students and faculty work welcome.
Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302.
(KINKO’S PAPERS make the grade).
Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers
and self-serve McIntosh computers. 933
E. University, Tempe. Call 966-2035 for
details.
ONEWAY TICKET to Chicago (Midway)
May 16. $85/best offer. Call 784-9869.
LAST MINUTE Rush? Call Teresa at
786-1022.
MESA SECRETARIAL Service. Term
papers, theses, dissertations, resumes.
Quality work on laser printer. 844-1876.
TYPING/WORD
PROCESSING
$1.20/PAGE. Quality guaranteed. Fast
and well experienced, laser printing, dif
ferent styles. CaH Rob anytime, 966-2010.
$1.25/PAGE and up. Research papers,
thesis, resumes, cover letters, etc. Quick
with quality. Call Mikebe, 941-4075.
$$$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 writing consultants
with degrees in English and APA/MLA
memberships. Bring your disk to us before
you print that file! 438-9202.
and word
243-3000,
PRECISION PROCESSING. Term papers,
$1/page, resumes, $5. Close to ASU West.
843-0383.
$1.50 AND Up. AAA Quality work and
laser printer. 33 years experience. Call
Marian, 839-4269.
QUALITY TYPING- proof-reading- editing
next day guaranteed. 897-1038.
$1.40 PER Page. Typing
processing. 994-3141 or
Roberta.
RESU M ES. Q UALITY, laser printed
resumes. 10% student discount. Call
Professional Image, 921-1129.
PERSONALS
RHA RA Personals
Palo Verde Main
Rita: Roses are red, violets are blue. You’re the BEST
RA, and the Sigmas love you!!!
Diana: Thanks fo r everything you ’ve done for us this
year. W e know w e made a lot o f noise, but thanks for
your patience. W e love ya!! Love, Chi Omega.
Sandy: The Dee G ee’s are lucky to have you, and will
miss you next year. You've been a constant source of
strength and enthusiasm.
Cory: Th e Kappa flo or enjoyed having you as our
RA. You've done an aw esom e job!! H ope to see you
again on C3. Love, the Kappas.
Dawn: Pi Phi wants to say thanks for all o f your hard
go get “ delerious” ? The 6th Floor.
work! W e may not always be “ angels” to live with, but
w e think you are doing a great job!
Don: Love the socks, match your underwear? You’re
Taml: Thanks so much fo r all o f your hard work,
a great person - big, but great! Floor 6.
patience and consideration. You’ve made the flo or a
more enjoyable experience for all o f us!! Congrats
on VP - You’ll do a fantastic job!!! Th e A D Pi’s.
Suzanne: You are a G REAT RA!! W e love yai Love,
Diana: Excellent RA and good friend to all the 7th
Tri-Delta.
floor girls.
Lisa: You're the #1 RA! Thanks for .all the fun
Scott: N o Studly, w e w on’t mention the “S” word. Eh,
programs you have s et up fo r us! Love, the Thetas.
how’s it goin g? ...Later! 8th Floor.
Deani: The wom en o f AXO would like to comm end
you on an aw esom e job as our RA. W e are sad to say
the year is almost over, but it has been an aw esom e
one. Thanks for all you've done. Love, the AX's.
John: “ If I was a robin, I’d love to build my nest...”
W e’re glad you’ve joined our floor. 8th Floor.
Lori (Picasso): Ah! A purple pickman rushing at you
in sweats? G iggles? Pickles? C ookie dough? Got all
RAW on m o - keep smiling - have a great day - hand
in there - leave your SS#, parents address - you’re a
stud RA, Jammin' 13.
Casey and Shawn (Shawn and Casey): Sorry we
keep mixing you tw o up!! Casey...sorry about the
crayfish. Shawn...Mickey rules! T h e 14th Floor.”
Lisa and Janelle (Anita): You tw o are totally cool and
awesome. W e appreciate everything you've done for
us. G o Anita! And Lisa, stick in there! Love, 15H
ImoOOOOOttOOOOOQQM Q M M M M I 1
action.
FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality
with a Mac II and laser printer. Call Susan,
Monday-Friday.
Car“los”: Foul demon, that’s sick and wrong. Please
-not only recognized as a great RA, but a wonderful
person and leader.
the
ACCURATE, FAST word-processing.
Term papers, research papers. $1.50 up.
Near ASU West. Vonnie, 934-7487.
tive quote call 491-0501.
You have been our friends and our mothers.
Klffie: One o f the most organized, fun loving RAs
Into
ACCENTS IN Typing- Moving to 6th Street
Commerce Center, Tempe. 1835 E. 6th
St., number 23. 946-9982 after 4/11. Call
894-6074.
SHORT OF time? I can help. Reasonable.
Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in
academic. Call Jessie 945-5744.
TYPING, $1.50/page. Editing $10/hour.
Call 834-7213.
RHA RA Personals
Manzanlta Hall
set
839-3305.
WithVían KauTry
!BeforeT om TBuy
Rita: Thanks for being so understanding about all
the noise in the hall. G ood luck next semester!! The
pledges o f Sigma Kappa.
* --
W ORD PROCESSING— $1.50 per page.
Resumes, design, editing, & laser printing
available. Call 921-3770 evenings &
weekends._____________ '
state
press
sports
_________
W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l
services. 23 years experience. Student
discount. SW comer, Miller and Chapar
ral. 994-8145.
WORD PROCESSING, IBM pc letter
quality printing. Fast, low cost. Call Jackie,
831-8635.
W ORD PROCESSING for all your typing
needs. Fast turnaround, overflow work
also. Disc storage available. Close to ASU.
$1.25/page and up. Roxanne, 9682825.
"Z " TOUCH word-processing. Stucjpnt
discount-10% . Fast, accurate. Law
students welcome. Call Marilyn, 833-5559..
ADOPTION
A CARING Adoption. Happily married
white professional couple deeply wishes to
adopt a newborn. W e promise every
advantage for your baby. Let us help you
through this difficult time. Confidential. All
expenses paid. Call Phyllis and Michael so
we can talk, 212-473-7251.
ADOPTION- CARING, financially secure,
professional couple of Irish and Swedish
ancestry wish to love and cherish your
newborn child. Legal and confidential.
Please call Linda and Craig, Collect,
212-877-3574.
ARE YOU Pregnant? If you feel you can’t
keep your baby, know it can have a loving
home. Private. Legal. All expenses paid.
Let's talk. Call Katherine in Tucson collect,
1-323-6229.
fc
Ellen: You have had a tough year, but you handled
everything beautifully. You’re a fanstastic RAH Love,
“Your Floor.”
Holly: Thanks for being the best RAI! W e love you
lots!!! Love, the Alpha Gams.
Laura: You 've been an aw esom e RA, and w e have
enjoyed having.you on our floor. Love, the Alpha
Phis.
Á
i
Page 24
Thursday,,
Siale Prat«
,1989
TWO FOR ONE
V
/ k
Any Purchase of
2 Scoops or More
THURSDAYS
B uy O n e, Receive 2nd Purchase
o f Equal or Lessor
V alu e FREE!
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.
C ou pon Expires 5-31-89
N o t good on deliveries
WE DELIVER
966-0022
46
ALL N IG H T
*250 P IT C H E R S
*150U .IC E D T Ê A S J y <
AND 7-10 PM
m tm n n & tu h m
500 M A R G S
**
C LL O
O N L Y M 00 1 0--C
( SE
Im B at Rural & Apache
LIVE JAZZ
NIGHT
is
\y
937 E. Broadway SE Comer Broadway & Rural, Tempe
Beside Wherehouse Records & Tapes
HOWI MADE $18,000
rn n
college
r
When my friends and I graduated
from high school, we all took part-time
jobs to pay for college. ■
They ended up in car washes and
hamburger joints, putting in long hours
for little pay.
Not me. My job takes just one
weekend a month and two weeks a year.
Yet, Fm earning $18,000 for college.
Because I joined my local Army
National Guard.
They’re the people who help our
state during emergencies like hurri
canes and floods. They’re also an
important part of our country’s military
defense.
So, since Fm helping them do such
an important job, they’re helping me
make it through school.
f t
As soon as I finished Advanced
Training, the Guard gave me a cash
bonus of $2,000. Fm also getting
another $5,000 for tuition and books,
thanks to the New GI Bill.
Not to mention my monthly Army
Guard paychecks. They’ll add up to
more than $11,000 over the six years
Fm in the Guard.
And if I take out a college loan, the
Guard will help me pay it back—up to
$1,500 a year, plus interest.
It all adds up to $18,000—or more
—for college for just a little of my time.
And that’s a heck of a better deal than
any car wash will give you.
T H E G U A R D C A N H ELP P U T
Y O U TH R O U G H COLLEGE, TOO.
SEE Y O U R LO CAL RECRUITER
FOR DETAILS, C A LL TOLL-FREE
800-638-7600? OR M AIL THIS
CO UPO N.
•In Hawaii: 737-5255; Puerto Rico: 721-4550; Guam: 477-9957; Virgin Islands
(St. Croix): 773-6438; N ew Jersey: 800-452-5794. In Alaska, consult your local
phone directory.
© 1985 United States Government as represented by the Secretary of Defense.
All rights reserved.
MAIL TCh Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015 ^
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