C o p yrig h t State Press, 1989, Tempe, Arizona
V o i. 7 2 N o . 7
A rizo n a S ta te U n ive rs ity ’s M ornin g D aily
T h u rsd ay, S e p te m b e r 7 ,1 9 8 9
Regents to discuss appealing decision
By TYRONE MEIGHAN
State Press
The Arizona Board of Regents w ill meet in executive
session this week to decide whether or not to appeal a
decision by a Maricopa County Superior Court judge
requiring the regents to release the names o f candidates in
the search for the ASU presidency.
In addition, regents Executive Director M olly Broad said
the board w ill dip into monies from the three state
universities to pay for all legal fees accumulated during the
lawsuit.
But Broad said it was too early to tell if the regents will
appeal the decision.
Editorial, page 4
“ We don’t even have the official documents froth the court
at this tim e/’ she said Wednesday. “ I just really Would not
feel it appropriate to speculate.”
Broad said the regents do not regret taking the case to
court.
“ We thought the court was the right place for us to get
guidance,” she said.
Judge Elizabeth Stover ruled Tuesday that the regents
must release the 240 names involved in the search. In
addition, the board w ill be required to pay the legal fees for
both sides — an amount that could exceed $100,000.
Broad said the legal fees w ill be paid by the three state
universities, with ASU taking the brunt of the cost. ASU w ill
pay SO percent o f the fees with U ofA and NAU providing
25 percent each.
David Bodney, an attorney representing The Arizona
Republic and Tribune Newspapers, said making the
universities pay is “ bizarre.”
“ Why m ake the university pay?” he asked. “ They (the
regents) ought to take it out of the Board o f Regents
Turn to Regents, pegs 0.
Board likely to develop
committee on minorities
B y JOIE ANN LaPOLLA
S tate Press
Thè Arizona Board Of Regents will likely
a p p r o v e an a d h o c c o m m i t t e e ’ s
recommendations to im prove minority
recruitment and retention at the three state
• u n iv e rs itie s at F r id a y ’s m eetin g in
Flagstaff, a regent said Wednesday.
Esther Capin, who chairs the Ad Hoc
Committee on Access, said the suggestions
inclu de e a r ly outreach program s, a
c o a litio n w ith c o m m u n ity c o lle g e s ,
accessible financial aid programs and
linkages with community groups.
T h e c o m m it t e e , c o m p r is e d o f
represen tatives from the community,
regents, faculty, the Arizona Legislature
and student5>began examining the minority
issue last fall.
“ The Board o f Regents is committed to
minority retention and graduation,” Capin
said. “ Increasing culture is necessary to
benefit all universities.”
The regents, also will monitor each
university’s minority programs once they
are in place, and the institutions will be held
accountable for their actions involving
recruitment and retention.
In addition, the universities w ill be
responsible for reporting their progress to
the regents if the recommendations are
accepted.
But methods of reporting the information
w ill be up to the universities.
“ W e will ask the universities to come back
to us with plans for
accountability,” Capin
said, adding that the
regents w ill hold each
university accountable
for the implementation
o f th e m i n o r i t y
programs.
The ad hoc committee
r e c o m m e n d e d th e
formation of a TechniC apin
cal Task F orce to track
students in their progress through high
school ahd university systems to discover
where students are losing interest in school.
This w ill expand the newly created
Arizona Minority Education Access and
Achievement Cooperative,, which offers an
informational exchange about minority high
school students.
Funding fo r the committee’s programs
w ill come from the Legislature and grants,
Capin said
Although ASU’s College of Education is
facing overcrowding, another goal o f the
retention program is to increase the number
of minorities becoming teachers, Capin
said.
But it is up to the universities to decide
w h ere to fit m in ority students into
overpopulated programs, she said.
“ This is going to be difficult,” Capin said.
“ They’re going to have to do some soul
searching on how they can increase
minority student enrollment.”
She also Stressed the need for faculty to
take an active role in recruitment and
retention.
“ W e know the faculty are key in creating
an atmosphere,” Capin said.
A 1on g w i t h v o t i n g o n t h e
recommendations Friday at their monthly
meeting, the regents A re expected to
approve an agreement with South Mountain
High School to conduct a study on the
impact of educatjpnal and administrative
changes in Phoenix Union high schools.
The Board w ill vote on plans to furnish the
public areas of the University House, the
private residence of ASU’s president and a
gathering place for University activities
and social events.
In addition, thé Board is expected to
approve Lattie Coor’s consumption monies,
such as an automobile allowance, medical
benefits and the use of the University House.
Jamie Scott Lytte/Stata Praia
Clean Sweep
John Gruber o f ASU’s classified staff makes one more swipe at the checker-like tile floor in the
new architecture building.
‘Big kid’ killed in Labor Day weekend accident in Mexico
By MIKE BURGESS
State Press
Michael J Nett was just a “ big kid,” his
friends say.
The 21-year-old ASU student filled his
room with all sorts o f toys. He even enjoyed
hoing with children — so much so that he
coached a Little League baseball team in
Tem pe last spring.
“ You know (the cartoon) Calvin and
Hobbes? He was Calvin, 13 years later,”
said Colleen Cronin, an ASU student and one
of N ett’s friends.
Nett, a senior aeronautical engineering
m ajor, was killed early Sunday after he
suffered head injuries during an All-Terrain
Vehicle accident in Rocky Point, Mexico.
Memorial services for N ett w ill be held at
W aiting
Patiently:
NAACP at ASU
President Tanya
Holmes says she is
s till w aiting for
ASASU to implement
a plan against
racism.
P ag© 6
7 tonight at
Our Lady o f Mt. Carmel
Church, 2121 S. Rural Road. Funeral
services w ill be held today in Chicago as
well.
Nett, who was staying in M exico with a
group of friends from ASU, was riding a
friend’s A T V alone about 3:30 ami. on Sandy
Beach when he apparently struck another
vehicle and was thrown from his cycle, his
friends said.
lie was rushed to Lukeville, Ariz., just
across the U.S.-Mexican border, but died
before he could be flown by medical
helicopter to Phoenix.
Friends with Nett in M exico said they did
not know about the accident until about noon
Sunday when they discovered he was
Turn to Nett, page 10.
Tough Job:
Tempe police are
doing their
crim efighting
equestrian
horseback.
Page 12
New Kansas State
football coach Bill
Snyder w ill try to
his team over
ASU this weekend to
KSU Its first vic
tory in three years.
Page 17
Today's w eather Sunny skies ara expected
with temperatures near 106 degrees. Over
night lows should be in the upper 70s.
Classifieds ...............................................21
Comtes.*........ .......................................il
PoHce Report...........................................1 4
S ta te P ie « »
Thursday, September 7,1989 '
Page g
Today
The Today section is a daily calendar o f events
happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the
U niversity com m unity; Any cam pus d u b or organization
can subm it entries fo r publication to the State Press,
located in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15.
Entries m ust be legible, are subject to editing for
content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the
phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot
guarantee publication. D eadline fo r th e entries is 1 p.m .
the previous business day.
M eetings
•S ociety o f W om en Engineers (SW E) invites everyone
who is interested to an open house continental breakfast
sponsored by INTEL from 8 to 10:30 a.m . today in ERC 490.
•C .A .R .P . presents "Develop your ability and sensitivity for
quality love’’ from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. today in the MU
Yavapai Room.
•R ecreation M ajors Student Association will be having its
first meeting of the year, with a chance to meet the
professors, at 12:15 p.m. today in the MU, Room 209.
•E ntrepreneurs Club will have an organizational meeting
for new members at 4:30 p.m. today in University Towers,
Room 206.
•M essianic Fellow ship will meet on the theme “ Messiah in
the Old Testament” from 4 to 5 p.m. today in the MU
Apache Room 221.
•Lesbian and Gay Academ ic Union will have an
organizational meeting at 7 tonight in the MU Apache Room
221.
•S hotokan K arate Club a t ASU welcomes anyone
interested in a traditional martial art to come by and join'
them from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. today in Gym C on the second
floor of the Student Rec Center.
•B a p tis t S tudent Union is providing a free lunch with a
T h e
devotional at noon today in the Baptist Student Lenten,
1322 S. Mill Ave. The topic for discussion is "Invasion of the
Body Snatchers.”
•W om en’s Soccer Club will have its first practice of the
season at 5:45 p.m. today on the Marching Band Field.
Everyone is welcome.
•S k i Devils Ski Club will meet at 7 tonight at Sunny’s Pizza
Pub, 1301 E. University Drive. The club will be taking
memberships and deposits for the trips to San Diego and
Utah. Everyone is welcome.
•P I Sigm a Epsilon will have an information desk on the
Dean's Patio. All majors welcome.
•C am pus Crusade fo r C hrist will meet at 7:30 tonight in
E D C 117.
•E ngineering and A pplied Sciences College Council will
have its first meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in the Engineering
Research Center, Room 490.
•A S U chapter o f th e W ild life Society will have its first
general meeting, with speaker Tom Om ari, from 6:30 to
8:30 tonight in LS 183.
•A m erican M arketing A ssociation Rush W eek continues
with a Beer and Ball Bash from 6 to 10 tonight at Minder
Binders. The association also has a booth on the Dean’s
Patio today and Friday.
•A lp h a Gamma Om ega, the Christian fraternity, will have a
Hawaiian rush at 7 tonight at 1432 S. Stanley Place, off
Spence Avenue in Tempe.
•D e lta Sigm a Pi will have a Recruitment W eek pizza party
from 7:30 to 11 tonight in the clubhouse at the Dobson
Village Apartments II. The group will also have an
information table on the Dean’s Patio today and Friday.
•F in an cial M arketing Association will have a general
meeting at 3:30 p.m. today in BAG 258.
•U niversities fo r Choice wiH have its first general meeting
at 4:30 p.m. today in the MU. Check the monitor for the
St a t e
A WE E KL Y
P r e s s M
C O L L E G E
S C H O L A R S H IP S
A
A
T O WN
room number.
•C am pus A lcoholics Anonym ous will meet at noon today
in Aquinas Hall in Newman Center Old Church as a Support
group for those wanting to quit alcohol or drugs.
•A lp h a Kappa Psi Professional Business Fraternity has
Rush W eek activities today and Friday. The fraternity has
an information booth on the Dean’s Patio.
MUAB Film C om m ittee will show “ Rain Man” at 7 and 9:30
tonight and Friday in the Union Cinema, in the lower level of
the MU.
HBSA will have a table set up today and Friday on the
Dean’s Patio to participate in Business College Rush W eek.
M ém orial S ervices
M ichael J. N ett will be remembered at a service at 7 tonight
at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, 2121 S. Rural Road.
Notices
•B aseball W alk-On Tryout M eeting is at 3 p.m . today in
Room 35/41 of the lower level of the University Activity
Center.
Tem pe YMCA needs volunteer soccer coaches. Call
730-0240 for information.
ASU M ens S occer Club invites anyone who is interested to
call Jason Dahlke at 784-4927.
Statesm en (ASU M ens Chorus) meets from 11:40 a.m . to
12:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays in Grady Gammage,
Room 301. Men interested in singing in a mens chorus are
encouraged to attend.
W om ens Chorus meets from 11:40 a.m . to 12:30 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays in Grady Gammage Music
Building, Room 212. Women of all majors who are
interested in singing varied styles of choral music are
invited to join or sit in and listen.
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State Press
Thursday, September 7,1989
W orld/N ation
coming to power in 1948.
Foreign Minister Pik Botha and Defense Minister Magnus
Malan w ere re-elected by margins sharply lower than in the
white election o f 1987. The Conservatives, who favor stricter
racial segregation, won their first-ever seats in Pretoria, the
capital, and in Cape Province and the Orange F ree State.
The election widely was viewed as among the most
important in history for the whites who control South Africa.
Judge rules Bakker m entally fit
to stand trial on fraud counts
C H AR LO TTE , N.C. (A P ) — A federal judge ruled Jim
Bakker competent to stand trial on fraud charges Wednesday
after a government psychiatrist testified the P T L founder
was not going crazy when he broke down last week.
Bakker’s trial was recessed, and he was sent to a federal
prison in Butner for psychiatric evaluation last week after he
was found in his law yer’s office hallucinating and hiding
under a couch.
U. S. District Court Judge Robert Potter also denied
defense law yers’ motions for a continuance and for a
dismissal of the indictment against Bakker after meeting in
his chambers with attorneys. He did not rule on a motion for
a mistrial.
Bakker, who resigned from the P T L ministry in 1987 during
a sex-and-money scandal, went on trial Aug. 28 on
conspiracy and fraud charges. Prosecutors said he used
nearly $4 million in ministry funds to live in high style.
Raging British soccer hooligans
arrested in Sweden before match
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (A P ) — Police arrested about 100
British soccer fans who rampaged through downtown
Stockholm on Wednesday before a World Cup qualifying
match, the national T T news agency reported.
The hooligans, many drunk, ran through Stockholm’s
shopping district shouting, slapping passers-by and ripping
clothing off sales racks outside stores. P olice with riot shields
gavé chase and scuffled with them.
The news agency quoted a police duty officer as saying
usloads of young Britons were taken into custody, but she
id not know the exact number .
Security was unprecedented for a Swedish sporting event.
Police assigned 600 officers to the Rasunda soccer pitch in
suburban Stockholm, and Swedish Radio said authorities
w ere ready to stop the match if trouble broke out,
Governing party bears deep losses
in protested South African election
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (A P ) - The governing
party headed toward its w orst election setback in 41 years of
power Wednesday , losing many seats to a surprisingly strong
anti-apartheid party and others to the far right.
P olice with whips, tear gas and shotguns dispersed blacks
protesting their exclusion from the balloting. They broke up
stone-throwing crowds in more than 20 black, Indian and
mixed-race townships.
„
Anti-apartheid leaders, who called a general strike, said 3
million people stayed aw ay from jobs and classes, shutting
down factories and schools in “ the biggest-ever mass action”
against the government.
P olice said more than 50 people w ere arrested, and there
w ere unofficial reports of numerous injuries.
With results in from 85 of 166 white districts, the
Conservative P arty picked up 11 seats and the anti-apartheid
Dem ocratic P arty 10 seats from the governing National
Party.
Television projections predicted the National Party would
lose 30 of its 123 seats, with the Conservatives strengthening
from 22 to 40 seats and Democrats going from 22 to 33 seats.
I f the projections hold, the National Party would retain a
m ajority in Parliam ent but suffer its worst defeat since
U. S. evacuates last o f staff
from em bassy in Lebanon
T w o h elicopters landed at the
compound about 7:30 a.m. and a third
hovered overhead, apparently provid
ing cover, while the 30 Americans were
evacuated, a witness said:
It is the first time an American
ambassador has been pulled from
Lebanon since the sectarian civil war
began 14 years ago, and the m ove at
least tem porarily ended Am erican
diplomatic presence in the country.
Bush: Critics should quit
‘carping’ about drug plan
W ASHINGTON (A P ) — President
Bush said Wednesday that skeptics of
his $7.9 billion drug w ar w ere just
“ carping” and should “ stop criticizing
for partisan reasons.”
Democrats, meanwhile, said the
government would have to raise more
revenue to mount an all-out fight
against illegal drugs but conceded it
would be impossible to enact a tax
increase for that purpose as lohg as
Bush opposes it.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-DL, chairman of the House
Ways and Means Committee, said, “ Unless the president
supports the tax increases that w ill be necessary to fight this
war, the drug dealers are going to win.”
House Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash., said, “ Without the
administration’s support, the idea of raising taxes is futile.”
Bush emphatically rejected the notion of higher taxes.
“ E very time you make a proposal,” he said, “ you have
somebody jump up and say, ‘Raise taxes.’ I am not in a mode
to raise taxes.’ ’
The president’s program emphasizes a crackdown on drug
users and proposes more money for treatment centers, law
enforcement and prison cells, as w ell as funds to attack
drugs at their source in Colombia, Peru and Bolivia, It would
require a $716 million increase in 1990 above the programs
already in the budget.
Asked about Democrats’ criticism that his plan is
inadequately funded and doesn’t go fa r enough, Bush said,
“ M y response is, they’re wrong.”
W alesa asks ‘too much, too soon,1
German business says at meeting
State Department spokeswoman M argaret Tutwiler
angrily blamed the Christian arm y commander, Gen. Michel
Aoun, for the move, saying he threatened to expose U. S.
Ambassador John McCarthy and his sta ff to a “ good dose of
Christian terrorism.”
>
DUESSELDORF, West Germany (A P ) — West German
industrialists and bankers told Polish Solidarity leader Lech
Walesa on Wednesday they want to help revive his country’s
economy but that Poland is expecting too much, too soon.
Walesa told reporters he understood West German caution,
but he renewed his appeal for m ore German investment.
Walesa m et in Duesseldorf with the members of Eastern
Committee, an influential industry organization that
coordinates West German business dealings in the East bloc.
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Page 4
Shoving Board of Regents from back room into light
D a rrin H o s te tle r
Editor
The members of the Arizona Board o f Regents ought to be
ashamed.
No doubt a few of them are. Those that have any shame or
conscience left, that is.
Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Stover,
in her decision Tuesday ordering the regents to hand over the
long-concealed names of the finalists in the ASU presidential
search, administered a public whipping to board members —
and specifically to Regent Herman Chanen, who, true to
form, isn’t acting ashamed at all.
In fact, Chanen, the architect o f this'mess, seems to be a
glutton for punishment — masochisticaly suggesting that the
regents may appeal the decision, thus clearing the way for
yet another judge, after another series of lengthy delays, to
bluntly tell him what the rest of us know already:
The ASU presidential search was a sleazy back-room
blunder, ineptly handled by a few influential regents and
government officials — who placed their desire to privately
pick the leader of the nation’s fifth largest university over the
public’s right to know.
Not only did Stover order the regents to cough up the
names to the Arizona Republic and the east-Valley Tribune
newspapers, who pursued them tirelessly during a summerlong lawsuit, but she also rejected the board’s argument that
applicants for the ASU job could somehow be harmed by the
release of their identities and directed the regents to pay all
legal fees for the case — which could run to $100,000.
The problem with that last twist, of course, is that the
money will come directly out of the coffers at the three state
universities — and taxpayers pockets. Which means that we
have $100,000 less to spend on students and education.
And if the regents decide during their meeting this
weekend in Flagstaff to actually appeal the case, then they
would incur even more fees. And w e end up holding the bag.
All because Mr, Chanen wanted to play kingmaker.
In some states, that admission would be enough to have
legislators clamoring for her resignation. But not in Arizona.
W e’ve got more important things to w orry about.
Like Herman Chanen, regent president during the
presidential selection process and one o f Arizona’s most
powerful men. A man who em erges from the lawsuit as the
prim ary villian — a domineering soul whose concern for
universities and students stops cold at the line where anyone
begins to criticize his autocratic control of regent affairs.
Chanen controlled the selection process almost singlehandedly, kept the public and even other regents in the dark
about who was up for the job and, some say, selected Cooras
ASU’s new president over a leisurely dinner with Gov. Rose
Mofford.
When I dared suggest in a column this past June that
Chanen was delib erately concealing the names of
presidential candidates, misleading the press, cutting other
regents out o f the decision-making process and in general
running the regents the way Dick Daley used to run Chicago
— charges supported by regent staffers and even board
members — it got under Chanen’s skin.
The presidential selection process wasn’t about ASU and
what it could become, or even about choosing the best
applicant for president.
It was about power.
More to the point, it was about what happens when a man
who never stopped being a child gets power — and
So much so that while reading the column during a regents
desperately protects it like his favorite bag of marbles.
meeting at ASU, Chanen turned to a fellow regent, blushing
A great many scary things w ere revealed during the
with anger, and said: “ I ’m going to carry this (column) in
presidential search and the ensuing lawsuit debacle — like
m y pocket always, and whenever anyone asks m e to give
the revelation that the current regent president, Edith
Ausländer, didn’t even bother to read the applications for . money to ASU, I ’m going to pull it out and say, ‘No. And
here’s why.’ ”
ASU president. Ausland«* sat on the stand during the lawsuit
and confessed to this dereliction of duty with a casual
I wonder if Chanen threatens to hold his breath until he
manner that suggested she accorded the presidential
turns blue in order to get extra dessert, too.
applications the same attention she gives the Sunday comics.
Here is a man who is firm ly rooted in the Phoenix-40 powerM aybe less.
broker mold, a man who is used to wanting and getting his
own way, a man who, along with a select group of a few
others, has run Arizdna from behind the scenes for decades.
A men who, when finally called on the carpet by Valley
newspapers for dealing state business in 3 smoke-filled
room, plunged the regents into costly litigation aimed at
protecting his power and control. Litigation that w ill be paid
fo r by the universities he supposed to be working for, not
against.
A man who; when chastised by a college journalist during
summer vacation, vowed to deprive 43,000 other students and
a m ajor university of his power, money and influence.
■: A man?
No. A child.
-■'•
.’.
Certainly if Herman Chanen cares for this University no
more than that, if he w ill work for education interests only as
long as his activities can rem ain unexamined and
uncriticized, he should not be a regent.
And under no circumstances should the state universities
pick up the tab for the regent lawsuit. It’s not our bill — it’s
the regents’ — and they ought to pay it, one w ay o r another.
Especially if they have the gall to appeal the decision further.
But it seems, like so many other things concerning the
regents during the past year, that issue has already been
decided. And there is damn little w e can do.
But w e must make sure that- when Gov. M offord gets
around to appointing two new regents to the board next year
that they understand the Herman Chanen w ay o f doing
business is dead.
And that the courts have decided that the regents are done
doing business in the dark.
Letters
D o n ’t s te re o ty p e w o m e n
.Editor:
After reading R. David Hecht’s letter to
you, I felt it necessary to respond. I am
p ro b a b ly a ty p ic a l “ G D I” w om an.
However, I do not “ hate sorority girls” as
Mr. Hecht so broadly assumed I would. On
the other hand, I have no respect for any
woman who willingly denigrates herself
before a man to the point of disgracing all
females. Nor do I have any respect fra: the
man who, like Mr. Hecht, feels that my
attitude is incorrect and who would actually
rather have the women of ASU prostituting
themselves to him for beer.
Mr. Hecht also seems to think that
whether or hot a woman has the right to say
“ no” to a man regarding sex depends on her
physical appearance. By hurling insults at
girls whom he calls “ extrem ely ugly,”
Hecht makes it clear that he feels that these
women should freely be willing to have sex
with someone because she’s “ obligated” to
him.
By using sweeping generalizations, Mr.
Hecht has shown that he would rather be
living in an age when women w ere nothing
more than handy playthings for their “ allp o w e r f u l ” m e n to d r a g a r o u n d .
Unfortunately for him, this is 1989, and most
o f the women at ASU w ill agree that simply
giving away cheap thrills to a casual
acquaintance like Mr. Hecht is not an
appropriate w ay ta sa y “ thank you” in any
situation.
Michelle G, Briseno
Freshman, English
STATE PRESS
DARRIN HOSTETLER
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MARTY SAUERZOPF
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Opinion
Page 5
Thursday, September 7,1989
S tate P rats
Choice
Solution to drug problem: ‘1Every brain for itself
•
M ik e R o yko
Tribune M edia Services
„.S
•*•**’' Ì vV;
“ I think you’re wasting your time,” said Slats Grobnik. In
what regard?
“ W orrying about drugs. Forget it. Concentrate on the
pennant races..’ ’'.
How can I forget it when it is, in the words of many a
pundit, a national scourge?
“ Sure it is, but what’s the sense o f worrying about it when
nothing is going to happen?”
That’s a negative attitude. We must seek solutions.
“ That’s what I mean. You can look for solutions, but you
won’t find any solutions because nobody can agree on what
the solutions are.”
F o r every problem, there must be a solution.
“ No, there ain’t. That’s why I ’m bald.”
It’s not the same thing. This is a man-made problem, so
man can solve it.
“ Then why haven’t we solved it? It didn’t start the day
before yesterday, you know; The grass and the coke have
been pouring into this country fo r years. There ain’t enough
rehab joints to take care of all the dopeheads. The judges
can't send the dealers to ja il because there ain’t enough cells
to hold them. The narcs say they can’t keep the dope out of
this country. So what’s new?”
What’s new is that the public recognizes the crisis and
wants something done.
‘The grass and the coke have been
pouring into this country
for years. There ain ’t enough
rehab joints to take
care of all the dopeheads. ’
“ Sure, that’s what people say, but what do they want
done?”
Well, there are those who say that certain drugs should be
legalized, controlled and taxed. That Way the criminal
middlemen would be taken out o f it. Street crim e would go
down. The money w e spend trying to catch the drug
smugglers would be saved. And everybody in the Colombian
government wouldn’t have to wear bulletproof underwear.
“ Yeah, but there are just as many people who say that they
don’t want to legalize stuff that turns someone into an addict
^
►
*■
Æ
and scrambles brains. You’d have Hie parents of every kid
who died o f an overdose screaming at their congressmen.
You got all kinds of religious fundamentalists who are
against everything they don’t do. And, who knows, the dope
dealers might put together one o f those political action
committees and start making campaign contributions. So
you can forget about legalizing it.”
You’re probably right. But what about harsher penalties?
Why not a federal death penalty for clear-cut cases of m ajor
dope dealing?
*
“ Because first Congress would have to pass a law. And
they’d argue about it for so long that most of the dope dealers
would die of old age before it got passed. And if it ever got
passed, which I doubt because o f a lot of do-gooders wouldn’t
even want to execute Hitler, it would have to get by the
Supreme Court. Then if it got by the Supreme Court, every
dope dealer who got sentenced would put in so many appeals
it would be like a pingpong gam e with the courts, and it would
be the 21st century before any o f them was fried. So you can
forget that, too.”
Possible. But then w e must strike at the sources, stop the
flow even if w e must use the m ilitary.
“ Sure, but the only w ay w e can do that is to send our troops
into countries like Colombia. But Colombia says they don’t
want us there. And, even if they did, and w e went in there,
they’d start shipping the stuff from Peru. So then what do we
do, go to Peru? Take over Mexico? W e don’t have a big
enough arm y to go into all the countries that are in the drug
business. And the drug bosses would have their private
armies' shooting at us, and there would be dead American
troops, and their families would ask what their kids are
getting killed for. So what’s George Bush going to tell them —
that their sons died to protect the life of some crackhead in
Manhattan? So you can forget that, too.”
There must be a solution.
“ Sure there is. Everybody stop using dope, OK? Problem
solved. Now let’s talk about i f the Cubs can win it.”
That’s unrealistic. W e both know that there are many
people who w ill use drugs regardless o f the consequences. So
talking to them won’t change their self-destrudtive, addictive
personalities.
“ Right. So why don’t we get a new motto. Instead of ‘Just
say no,’ let’s say, ‘ It’s every brain fo r itself.’”
What does that mean?
“ It means that if you want to scramble your noodle, it’s
your noodle, so go ahead and scramble it.”
That is a rather unfeeling attitude.
“ Maybe. But have you ever read about any Nobel Prize
winners or Rhodes scholars croaking from crack overdose?”
No, but what does that have to do with it?
“ What it has to do with it is that people with sense either
don’t do it or know when to stop. But you can’t protect some
dummies from themselves. So if they want to turn their
heads into Jello, that’s their lookout.”
In other words, you want to ignore the problem.
“ Hey, Ronald Reagan ignored it for eight years, and they
want to put him on Mount Rushmore.”
The people who came up with that idea must be smoking
something strange.
“ See? It’s everywhere.”
Happy New Year
Let’s move, the year-end holiday to September
J e ff G re e n fie ld
Universal Press Syndicate
NEW Y O R K - Since the United States
has borrowed so much from other cultures
— British law, Italian cooking, Latin
language, Martian tax laws — it is high time
w e turned to Jewish tradition and changed
the calendar to make the new year begin in
September.
Look around you right now (well, wait
until you finish the column and then look
around). What’s going on? The whole
c o u n try is tu r b o -c h a r g e d ; su m m er
indolence is being shaken off, there’s an
almost tangible sense o f tim e’s winged
chariot in full flight. The coming of autumn
is nature’s annual reminder of our own
mortality, and when nature talks, we
mortals listen.
H ere is the president of the United States
suddenly shucking off his tennis togs,
softball jerseys, nauticals and other casual
attire to deliver his stern sermon on the
drug menace.
H e re a re brigh t-eyed , bushy-tailed
students putting appetites and hormones in
check to sweep through the aisles of the
s t a t io n e r y s t o r e s , s to c k in g up on
multicolored pencils, loose-leaf reinforcing
s tic k e r s , c ro k s -re fe re n c e d in d e x e rs ,
staplers, desk organizers and the hundred
other items that w ill make this year the year
that schoolwork is managed efficiently —
for the first six days.
‘The whole country is
turbo-charged; summer
indolence is being shaken
off, there’s an almost
tangible sense o f time’s
winged chariot in full flight. ’
H e re a re a ll the sym b ols o f the
contemporary new year: the millions of
dollars in promotional advertisements from
the television networks, promising all-new
diversions featuring sensitive single father
detectives, single mother brain surgeons
and endearing single parent alien life
forms; the audible pounding hearts of the
political press corps, realizing that yes, yes,
there are actual elections to overcover and
oversim plify for our readers, listeners and
viewers.
Here comes the new Broadway theater
season, which m ay actually offer as many
as three original plays featuring living
human beings (as opposed to animals,
talking automobiles or m aterial cobbled
from shows that first debuted half a century
ago).
Here come the new automobiles, the new
clothes, the new movies, the new books;
here comes, in sum, our real season of
renewal.
Once upon a time, w e got this sense from
our link to the land, when harvest time
approached. It was a time to reap what w e
had sown back in the spring; to take stock —
lite ra lly ; to figu re out what needed
repairing around the spread.
Now there is, for most of us, no link to the
land beyond the state o f the lawns. But w e
have these other reminders of the new year :
the return o f the real anchors to the evening
newscasts, fo r exam ple, and the reemergence o f Johnny Carson.
The fact is that w e already treat Hie fall as
if it w ere New Y e a r’s season. How else
explain a tim e when, on a single weekend,
the dedicated celebrant can witness half a
dozen baseball games, four “ preseason”
college and professional football games and
eight hours o f tennis? How else explain the
fact that spokesmen fo r the Democratic
P a rty have actually been sighted in
Washington?
Ilie r e are d e a r advantages to changing
New Y e a r’s Day to the first Monday in
September and moving Labor Day to
January. First, w e could then officially
recognize August as pre-New Y e a r’s month
and stop the pretense that anyone does any
work at all that month.
Second, w e could throw our New Y e a r’s
parties in a time o f generally good weather,
cutting down on the automobile accidents
that occur when snow and ice outside our
vehicles combine With food and alcohol
inside file driver.
Most important, if we adopted the Jewish
New Y ea r as our own, w e could also adopt
that culture’s tradition o f a day of
atonement right on its heels — a day when
w e examine our shortcomings and express
our own sense of personal responsibility for
our failures.
And if there’s anything our culture needs
right now, it’s that kind of humility — even
outside of Washington.
Page 6
Thuraday. September 7,1989
NAACP president awaiting action on racism
By MIKE VAN DYKE
State Press
The president o f ASU’s chapter o f the N A A C P said
Wednesday that she is “ patiently waiting” for a sign from
Associated Students of ASU executive officers that they are
working to take a stand against racism on campus.
“ We haven’t seen anything actively pursued at this time
and we haven’t seen that ASASU has taken an active stand,”
Tanya Holmes said.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People president said she did not want to discredit ASASU
leaders because the two groups have not yet established a
dialogue on the problem but added, “ students are looking to
see something happen and they have not.”
But J ’Lein Liese, ASASU activities vice president, said she
is working through her department to develop an effective
and sensitive way to channel racial problems through
ASASU.
Liese said she is working to establish the Multi-Cultural
Awareness Board as a liaison for students to inform the
University community of current minority issues.
She said she would like to see MCAB take a more active
role in serving as an advocate for minorities at the
University.
“ M y goal is to setup the board in such a way that problems
on campus of a racial nature can be channeled through
MCAB,” Liese said. •
She said students will be able to discuss problems they are
having with the 12-member board, which will advise the
student and direct the problem to ASASU President Paul
Larson if it is a campus-wide issue.
Larson in turn can call on the attention of administrators to
U K A
look into the matter.
“ The new plan for MCAB sounds like a great idea,”
Holmes said. “ But I ’m concerned with how effective die
group w ill b e."
Holmes said that often committees are set up, but little is
done by them after they are established because they are so
limited in power.
Liese said the board will consist entirely of students: three
Asian-AmeriCans, three Hispanics, three blacks and three
Native Americans.
“ At this point w e are actively interviewing and looking for
applicants for the board,” Liese said. “ W e would like to have
the board completely set up in the next two weeks:”
MCAB w ill also continue to serve as a body to program
cultural events and coordinate programming with campus
minority organizations.
Under a 13-point plan against racism designed by leaders
o f Students Against Racism and agreed upon by the ASU
administration, ASASU was required to “ take an active
stand against racism , including the form ing, of an
independent body to oversee the investigations of the Office
of Student Life, the O ffice'o f Residence L ife and the ASU
P olice Department to see that they are handled properly.”
Students Against Racism is a group that formed last spring
and held a historic student protest April 21 against incidents
of racial violence at ASU, staging a 250 person sit-in in front
of the M em orial Union.
Holmes said she is confident that ASASU will keep in mind
its responsibility to represent the entire student population
and w ill seek opinions from minorities about campus issues
so that her organization w ill not have to act to present the
issues to them.
n K A
P i K a p p a A lp h a
R u s h D in n e r
T O N IG H T
Thursday, Sept. 7, 1989, 5:30 p.m.
6 2 0 A lp h a D r iv e
For more information eall Jason at 784-0618
State Press photo
An historic student rally last April led to a sit-in in front of the
MU and brought the attention of University administrators and
ASASU officials to racism problems at ASU.
il ■
M e mo r ia l U nion A ctivi ti es B o a r d
S P E C IA L E V E N T S C O M M IT T E E
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State Press
Page 7
Thursday, September 7,1989
Campus Christian organization
resigns from Interfaith Council
By TYRONE MEIGHAN
State Press
An ASU religiou s organization has
w ithdraw n its m em bership from the
Campus Interfaith Council because of
differences over whether the cross atop
Danforth Chapel should be removed.
“ The m ajority of them (members of the
council) voted to allow the cross to come
down,’ ’ said Jay nee Teagardin, director of
Campus Aglow — a fundamental Christian
group that has been most opposed to the
rem oval of the cross. “ That is totally
against what we believe. To stay with the
Interfaith Council would be a compromise o f
our faiths.”
Teagardin said her group will remain on
good terms with the council.
“ We care tremendously for all the people
in that group,” she said. “ We all left as
friends.”
A m ajority of the Interfaith Council,
which includes several different religious
groups at ASU, voted for the rem oval of the
cross last semester.
However, Teagardin said Campus Aglow
was not represented when die council voted
this year to support the removal of the
cross.
“ Whether you liked it or not, you were
represented as one voice,” she said. “ To
remain with Interfaith (would) become a
loss o f our identity and religious freedom .”
The cross became an issue last spring
when Randel Helms, an ASU English
professor and form er chairman of the
Faculty Senate physical plant committee,
introduced a resolution calling for the
i
%
N
—o
<0
X
rem oval of the symbol and a chapel name
change to make it a multi-faith center.
The resolution was approved by the
Faculty Senate M ay 8, but the measure was
sta lled when fo rm e r ASU Presid en t
J. Russell Nelson said that many in the
University community wanted the cross to
remain.
Nelson suggested that those who opposed
his decision could could challenge it in the
courts.
But the cross was taken off the chapel
either by the wind or vandals on July 23.
A S U p o lic e c o n d u c te d a tw o -w e e k
investigation but could not determine how
the cross was removed.
The cross was eventually reaffixed by
ASU’s Physical Plant but the Arizona Civil
, Liberties Union is preparing to file a lawsuit
asking Maricopa County Superior Court to
force the University to rem ove the cross.
Rabbi Barton Lee of the Hillel Jewish
Center in Tem pe said he respects Campus
A glow ’s decision to withdraw from the
council.
“ They have a right to be where they need
to be,” said Barton, who has been a m ember
of the interfaith council for 17 years and is
c u rre n tly s e r v in g as its p re s id e n t.
IT
B i l l jnj| i
¡T I
k l LI
H
y
¡
—
In addition, Teagardin said her group left
the council because of differences in opinion
over a planned religious week at ASU in
November.
Lee said the religious week will be called
“ Unity and Diversity: A celebration of
religious life at ASU” and w ill include music
and the discussion of religious issues.
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Page 8
State Press
Thursday, September 7,1999
R eg en ts
ConthMMtf from pag* 1.
discretionary fund.”
But Broad said the board has no fund for professional
services, such as lawyers.
“ It probably w ill com e from the local (university) funds,”
Broad said. U ofA and N AU have agreed to pay a portion of
the legal fees because the lawsuit will affect future searches,
she added.
“ The impact of the litigation extends beyond ASU,” she
said. “ The presidents at UofA and NAU agreed they ought to
contribute. This is an efficient w ay for us to deal with these
services. We don’t have the resources to pay for it.”
Victor Zafra, ASU’s vice president for business affairs,
said the money w ill come from the University’s investment
income, which is interest earned o ff auxiliary funds,
including parking and bookstore revenues.
Zafra said he “ recognizes the need fo r the University to
S ta te
P
r e s '?
M a tth e w s
pay fo r” the lawsuit.
“ The regents don’t have the funds,” he said.
A t issue is a lawsuit between the board and Valley
newspapers. The regents filed suit against the papers M ay 30
seeking a judgment that state public records laws do not
require the disclosure of unedited resumes of candidates for
the ASU presidency. The papers subsequently sued the board
asking the court to dismiss the suit.
The newspapers had contended that the names o f the
candidates should be made public.
The eight-month selection process ended in M ay with the
nomination o f Lattie door from the University o f Vermont.
The regents approved Coor as ASU’s 15th president June 6.
The regents have argued that disclosure of the candidates’
names would result in job repercussions from the institutions
where the candidates are currently serving.
C e n te r
0
ßosem ent
0
9 0 5 -7 5 7 2
0
O p e n
But S tover disagreed
regents’ argument.
with
the
“ The court finds that the selection
process in the future for presidents of
any o f the institutions o f higher
education in the state of Arizona would
not be harmed but would be benefited
from the publication of the names and
identifying information o f persons
considered by the Board o f Regents,”
Stover stated in her 15-page decision.
Broad
“ The public interest is served by
proving that a university presidential
search was notrigged or discriminatory, was authentic, was
an open ancUwide search and was designed to get the best
possible persbn.”
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bands, acoustics, eccentrics
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B re n d an M acN au gh to n
of The Coyotes
Fri-. . G in B lo s s o m s
S at. S to n e G ro o ve
with H o u s e q u a k e
Sun . . .
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neo-hippie, tye-dye music
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$1 draughts with student i.d.
on Baseline, a block east of Price
820-7117
killer food available 'til midnight
Thursday, September 7th
1:00-3:00 p.m.
Memorial Union Fine Arts Lounge
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Room 221, MU
in v ite s y o u
■
R e c ru itm e n t R e c e p tio n
T h u r s d a y , S e p t. 7 th
A P P L 1C A T I O N
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September 8
For moré information contact:
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le m o r ia l U n io n F in e A rts L o u n g e
Get involved!
About newspapers:
A F ree Press:
US. newspapers employ
estimated477,800 people.
(1988 figure)
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Page 10
S tate Press
Thursday, September 7,1989
N e tt
r ~ ^ s
C o ntintM d fro m p * g * 1.
missing. About that time (hey heard about
an A T V accident and the victim , who was
not carrying identification, matched Nett’s
description.
Nett, who was a competitive motorcycle
rider, was identified about 11 p.m. Sunday
at a morgue in Ajo, Ariz. Friends who last
saw Nett alive said he had not been
drinking.
Meanwhile, Nett’s friends are taking his
death hard.
“ Xnever met anyone like him — he’s a one
of a kind,’ ’ Cronin said. “ I ’m going to miss
him so much.
“ I still don’t believe it.”
Nett, known to friends as “ M .J.” or
“ Nitch,” was an airplane pilot who was
intent on getting his aeronautics degree,
friends said. He was the youngest of three
boys and came to ASU because one of his
brothers graduated from the University.
But while he took school seriously, Nett is
best remembered for enjoying life:
“ He loved to have fun,” said friend Donna
Fritschen, an ASU student. “ He couldn’t sit
still.”
The
S ta te
P re s s .
We
p ro v o k e
th o u g h t.
Fritschen said he especially liked toys.
“ He had toy airplanes, y,o-yos, sunglasses
with the nose and other little gadgets — kind
of like the m ovie ‘B ig’ ,” she said. “ He was
a big kid.”
She said Nett always talked about making
the most of each day because he felt life was
uncertain.
“ He did everything he wanted to do,”
Fritschen said. “ He was a special guy.”
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Page 11
niu2day[ September7í^i989^
S tate P rest
ASU Native Americans establish social, cultura) organization
By MICHELLE HENRY
State Press
The sound of a Native American flute resounded through
the Antropology Building Wednesday, signifying the
establishmént of a new organization on campus.
“ We are kicking o ff our open house with the help of some
people from the Gila R ivèr Indian community and the
Arizona Department of Indian Education,’ ’ said Cal Seçiwa,
director of ASU’s Native American Institute. “ We are
basically just opening our doors so people can come in and
get to know us.’ ’
The N A I held the open house for American Indian students,
faculty, and staff. Josiah Moore, a specialist with the state
Department of Indian Education, said he has high hopes for
the institute.
“ It is located on campus,” he said. “ This is a good location
for students to have access to the information we can
provide.”
Moore said his organization has received a grant from the
students up with mentors in their areas
o f ,study and provide connections in
their fields.
Marlene Cody, a freshman nursing
student, said she has m et many people
through the institute.
“ R ight now I ’m just trying to
fam iliarize m yself with the things they
have available,” she said. “ Of the
services they do provide; the one that I
w ill use most is the tutoring program.” éÉ È â
Karen Stone, N A I secretary, said the
Seciw a
institute w ill offer tutoring in math and
science to help bring down the number o f N ative American
students who drop out o f ASU.
“ W e have had an attrition rate of about 54 percent,” she
said. “ W e want that number down 10 percent.”
Stone said tutoring w ill be held from 4 to 8 p.m. daily, and a
group study session w ill follow at 10 p.m.
National Endowment for the Humanities and plans to
establish an American Indian language, history and cultural
institution on campus.
Brenda Morgan, a junior political science m ajor who is
part N avajo Indian and Kiowa Indian, said it is only a matter
of time before she uses the NAI.
“ I ’m still meeting people because I just cam e here,” she
said. “ The N A I keeps m e informed about what is going on (in
the Native Am erican community). In the long run, it w ill be
useful, but right now I ’m still getting to know the program .”
John Sandoval, a senior electrical engineering m ajor, said
the N A I is a vital necessity at ASU.
“ Now there is actually a space where w e can m eet,” he
said. “ I have been involved on campus as the president o f the
Native Am erican Student Association. The N A I provides a lot
m o r e c o n ta c ts w ith th e fa c u lt y , s tu d e n ts and
administration."
Sandoval said he has always had a difficult time getting
people motivated in NASA, adding that N A I w ill be able to set
Hispanic Business Students Association
PALL 1989
OPENING RECEPTION
[
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M emori al U nion A ctivities Boar
PROMOTIONS COMMITTEE
iN A
in v ite s y o u
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T h u r s d a y , S e p t. 7 th
1 :0 0 -3 :0 0 p .m .
Everyone Welcome!
M emorial Union Fine A rts Lounge
Maricopa Room
Memorial Union
Second floor
Thursday, Scptember 7 ,1 9 8 9
3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.
Arizona State University
Get involved!
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S tate Pics»
Tiwida^SeptCTjb«f ^ v r a 9
Page 12
New patrol gives Tempe police an excuse to horse around
By TENNY TATUSIAN
State Prase
Tem pe police are patrolling bars and
apartment complexes on horseback in an
effort to control the ASU weekend party
scene.
“ W e’re just trying to improve the quality
of life,’ ’ said Sgt. Loren Wunderle of the
Tem pe Police Department horse patrol.
The equestrian program, which began in
1974, is successful in curbing rowdy college
incidents, he added.
Wunderle said that because of high
visibility, the horses are more effective in
breaking up unruly crowds than patrol cars
or officers on foot.
“ They may not see a patrol car drive by or
an officer approaching on foot but they will
see horses,” he said. “ It’s not the same
impact as seeing a 1,200-pound animal.
“ And besides, most people love horses.
I ’ve never met anyone who doesn’t like
them.”
Tem pe police decided to patrol “ bar row”
on horseback, the area surrounding Rural
Road and Apache Boulevard, after a large
parking lot fight occurred two weeks ago at
the nightclub M ax’s 919.
“ Nobody gives the officer any static,"
said Wunderle about police atop the
animals.
In addition, officers on horseback are
patrolling apartment complexes around the
Broadway and Rural roads area due to the
high ratio o f parties there.
“ They become out of control for regular
officers on foot" ’ Wunderle said. “ With
about 500 in toxicatetK p eop le, they’re
extrem ely difficult to break up.”
During the Labor Day weekend, the
horseback patrol asserted its authority.
“ W e started early in the evening,”
Wunderle said, “ We made contact with the
residents and gave them a few ground
rules.”
Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity, 1403 E. 8th
St., threw a charity party with several
thousand guests in attendance, he added.
“ When it was time to break up the party,
two officers went in and told everybody the
party was over,” Wunderle said. “ Nobody
said anything and their was no fighting.
Everybody left in an orderly manner.
“ In the past, parties of this size were
alm ost im possible to control Without
injuries or arrests.” .
Sean Mohr/State Press
Riding supervisor Sgt. Loren Wunderly of the Tempe Police Department takes a few minutes to
groom Echo, a 5-year-old member of the Mounted Patrol Division of the departm ent. The
Mounted Unit is used for crowd control during such events as Sun Devil football games.
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Page 13
Thursday, Septembe r 7,1989
Decision to ban greek hazing is strongly supported
By KIMBERLY HARRIS
Stata Press
In the wake o f the National Interfraternity
Council’s decision to ban greek hazing,
ASU’s coordinator said she strongly agrees
with the plan.
fraternities w ill follow in terms of making
n e w -m e m b e r p r o g r a m s p o s itiv e
experiences.”
The NIC launched the “ no hazing” plan
Friday at a news conference.
Johnathan Brant, executive director of
N IC said, “ We áre today launching an anüh a z in g c a m p a ig n th a t d e c la r e s . in
unequivocal terms fraternities’ outright
condemnation of all forms of hazing.”
Vicki Hersh, Greek L ife coordinator, said
hazing goes against the ideals of fratern ity
and sorority life at ASU.
“ The optimum would be that we offer all
new members the opportunity to participate
in a program free from doubt or question of
a good positive experience,” she said. “ The
changes that are being made right now with
p led g esh ip p ro g ra m s (in c lu d in g the
banning o f pledgeship by the national
chapters of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Zeta
Beta T au ) is a m easure that other
Ui
Brant said the anti-hazing program w ill
include the distribution of printed materials
on campuses, the organization of discussion
groups at fraternity chapters and the
publication of articles in alumni magazines.
León Shell, ASU dean o f Student Life, said
hazing is still somewhat o f a problem at the
University,
“ H a z in g is s o m e t h in g th a t th e
Intrafraternity Council, Panhellenic and the
University needs to take a look into,” he
said. “ Together, w e need to work to review
the status each year. I think most
fraternities have taken a closer look at
hazing, and the N IC is taking the lead in
dealing with the problem.”
Shell said hazing has lessened over the
years, and many houses have always had
positive, reinforcing rush programs without'
hazing.
“ The unofficial instances o f hazing
balances out to about one or two complaints
per year, which is relatively low,” he said.
“ However, any reports that w e do get is too
many. These types o f complaints usually
come from parents who are unwilling to
give any names, therefore an investigation
cannot be,launched,” he said.
Shell said the last official complaint dates
back to the summer of 1967, adding that an
official complaint is one in which the name
o f the fraternity is reported and an
investigation follows.
Mike Hendrix, president of ASU’s Sigma
Nu fraternity, said hazing has become less
o f a problem over the years.
“ I ’m sure that hazing still occurs, but I
don’t think it’s to the same degree as it used
to be,” he said.
Dave Rook, president of ASU’s Alpha Tau
Omega fraternity, agreed.
“ I think hazing exists on a small scale, but
the cases that come up are not a fair
representation o f all 24 fraternities at ASU,”
he said.
i l i
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Thureda^SepterrtberVi^Ç
Page 14
Police R eport
ASU police reported the following incidents that occurred
between 7 a.m. Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday:
•An em ployee at Commonwealth E lectric Company of the
M id West, 3901 E. Winslow Ave., reported a 500-foot copper
w ire coil stolen from the construction site east o f the Physical
Science Building. The entry was made through a partition in
a surrounding chain-link fence. The loss is estimated at
$1,790.
•A student reported that someone stole his mens blue 26-inch
M otiv Yukon bicycle from the bicycle racks east o f Cholla
Apartments between midnight Monday and 9 a.m. Tuesday.
The bicycle was locked to itself with a U-lock. The loss is
estimated at $300.
•A student reported that someone stole his mens white and
blue Cannon D ale 12-speed bicycle from the bike racks on the
west side of Murdock Hall between 10: 30 a m. and 11:55 p.m.
The bicycle was locked to itself with a U-lock. The loss is
estimated at $700.
•A student reported that her mens lavender Fuji 10-speed
mountain bicycle was stolen from the racks on the northwest
side of the Business Administration Building. The loss is
estimated at $170.
•A student reported that someone stole his grey mens
Raleigh beach cruiser, which was locked to itself with a cable
padlock, from the Student Recreation Complex between 4:45
and 7 p.m. Tuesday. The loss is estimated at $75.
•A student injured his knee while playing football at the P alo
Verde Residence Hall beach area. He was taken to the
Student Health Center.
•Vandals damaged two bathrooms’ walls in the Farm er
Education Building using a marking pen. The damage is
estimated at $25.
•The Phoenix .Police Department recovered a white 1983
Chevrolet truck that had been reported stolen July 9 from the
area of Terrace and Rural roads. The truck was found
abandoned on 7th Street, north bf Interstate 10, in good
condition.
•A man reported that someone smashed out the rear window
of his 1983 Honda Civic and rem oved a box with speakers
between 2 and 9 p.m. Tuesday. 1116 loss is estimated at $300.
•A student reported that she received harassing phone calls
between 10 p.m. Monday and 1:30 a.m. Tuesday.
♦A man was arrested by the Tem pe Police Department at
Broadway Road and McClintock D rive on a previous
warrant. He was tinned over to ASU/DPS and booked in the
Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office.
Compiled by State Press reporter writer Tenny Tatusian.
Join Our
' - -fa ■
STRIKE FORCE
ASU
BOWLING TEAM
TRYOUTS
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Arizona State University, Memorial Union Bowling Team Try-Outs will
be held this year on Saturday, Septem ber 9 and Sunday, Septem ber
10. > '
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All participants must be full time students at ASU, (1 2 hours and a 2.0
grade point). This is a collegiate division sanctioned tournament.
Members of any Professional Bowlers Organization are ineligible.
M ■y
Each bowler will bowl 6 games on Saturday and 6 games on Sunday.
Selection to the teams wiH debased on total pins with the to p 16 men & 16
women being chosen. All members of past year’s teams must try o u t
Entry fee is $20. Entry fees cover the cost of bowling, collegiate sanction,
tournament expenses and awards. The entry fee will be collected on
Saturday before your squad starts, but. in order to assure a spot you must
turn in an entry form prior to Sept. 9. Award fees will be returned 100%.
For more information on the Teams please contact Judy Knox or Mike
Landrith in the MU Recreation Center at 965-3649.
M ill
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W e wish D ave and Donna continued success as the new owners of O zzie's
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D illa r d ’s
Sports
State Press
Thursday, September 7,1989
Page 17
ASU gymnasts’ work ethic
supplements talent, ability
By t o m i Mc e l r o y
State Press
Experience and talent are present on the
ASU women’s gymnastics team as four
seniors and a handful o f others return for
the 1989-90 season.
“ I think w e have an experienced team.”
Head Coach John Spini said. “ We don’t have
the super talents that UCLA, Alabama or
Georgia have, but w e have kids that have to
work hard to get there.”
Suzy Baldock, Colette Anderson, Molly
C a rp en ter and M a rik a L eS ieu r a re
returning as seniors for the Sun Devils this
season.
“ Baldock will be very •strong in three
events for us,” Spini said. “ She is one of the
best uneven bar workers in the country,”
Last season Baldock competed in the
vault, uneven bars and balance beam events
and did a “ super job,” Spini said.
Although Baldock had the interior
cruciate ligament tightened on her right
knee during her sophomore year, she
competed the entire season.
“ I f she can keep her body healthy she w ill
be an outstanding perform er for us,” Spini
said.
Baldock earned All-America honors as a
freshman with a sixth place finish in the
vaulting event.
All four seniors have been appointed
captains by Spini.
“ I would like m y senior team to have a lot
of input and I didn’t want to pick one over
the other,” Spini said. “ They are all good
students — they care about the team — they
always give 100 percent and I think we will
get a lot of good leadership from them.”
Spini said that the experience junior
Michelle Colavin and sophomore Tracy
Butler gained last year will benefit the
team.
“ I look for Michelle to be an outstanding
athlete for us this year,” Spini said. “ I think
Colette and Molly will give her a lot of
support.”
Butler earned All-American accolades in
the balance beam last season. The beam
and uneven bars events are the strongest
events for the Sun Devils.
“ I think we have depth in those areas and
w e have kids that have the skill level and
experience to help us compete with anybody
— we are five'deep,’ ’ Spini said. “ I think we
have a lot of experience and good beam
workers. That w ill make or break you in
most o f the meets you are in.”
Sophomore Jessica Tudos, a form er
member of ASU’s diving team, will spring
into action as a Sun Devil gymnast.
“ We would like for her to help us out,”
Spini said. “ We have to get her a lot
stronger because she has been out of
gymnastics about one and a half years,”
Spini, who enters his 10th season, has set
two personal goals for himself.
“ First of all to get to nationals,’’ Spini
said. “ Second, to get in that last late
rotation so w e have the chance to win.”
But Spini said he does not w orry about the
win-loss season.
“ That doesn’t get you into nationals,”
Spini said. “ I t ’s your two best away and two
best home scores that w ill get you into
nationals.”
As for Pac-10 rankings, Spini said he
would like to see his team finish in the top
three.
Spini said he would like to see more
consistent judging throughout the Pac-10
program because the scores escalate and
you don’t get the best teams at nationals.
The P ac -10 made a new proposal to the
National Champions to change the seeding
p ro c e s s and e lim in a te s co res a fte r
regionals, he said.
“ Scores will count in the regionals, but
afterwards you w ill be seeded in the
different rotations,” he said. “ So, even if
you are the best team and you are in the
early rotation you still have a chance to win.
“ W e’ve made the proposal but it won’t be
voted on until October and won’t come
through this year. I f it does come through, it
w ill be next year.”
The Sun Devils spent th e ir ' summer
vacations in summer school, vacationing at
home, working in summer Camps and
preparing for the upcoming season.
“ I just gave them a weight program and a
flexibility program and tell them to try and
do other things,” Spini said. “ I think from
looking how they reported, they are in good
shape and w e’re hoping to break into the top
five (in the country).”
Jack W. Beasley Jr./state Prass
All-America gymnast Suzy Baldock Is one of four seniors hoping to lead the Suh Devils back to
the national championships.
Wildcats hope to start new era, win against Sun Devils
KSU Sports Information photo
S n yd er
By JOEL HORN
State Press
Sports Illustrated recently described Kansas State
University as “ Futility U .”
Why, you ask?
• The Wildcats have not won a football gam e since 1986,27
games ago — the longest losing streak in Division I college
football.
• In its 93-year football history, KSU has lost 509 games and
are holding at 299 victories.
• They have had only one winning season since 1970 and
have played in only one bowl game, the Independence Bowl
in 1982. They lost, of course.
• The Wildcats have averaged only 20,000 fans at KSU
Stadium the past three seasons and have only 65 scholarship
players.
• H alf of its 113-man roster consists of freshmen or redshirt
freshmen.
With a new head coach, new uniforms and even a new logo
for the football team, the Wildcats hope to start anew
Saturday at Sun Devil Stadium.
Bill Snyder, who spent the past 10 years as offensive
coordinator at the University o f Iowa, said he hopes to
solidify player relationships and build a strong foundation,
“ The players are coming together and beginning to believe
in each other,” he said. “ They’re learning to practice harder
and I hope that carries over to the gam e."
KSU is expected to put the ball in the a ir Saturday against
ASU. Last year, the Wildcat offense broke the school record
fo r passing yards in a season with 2,578 and averaged 11.4
yards per pass.
Junior Carl Straw, who had the third-best season ever by a
Big Eight sophomore and the third-best single-season total in
KSU history when he threw for 1,947 yards in 1988, w ill lead
the offense against the Sun Devils.
Straw’s backup, senior G ary Swim, suffered a career
ending knee injury in practice.
The biggest KSU offensive question mark is the running
game. Wildcats running backs lost 15 fumbles in 1988.
Tailback Richard Boyd, a 5-foot-6, 190-pound redshirt
junior, stole the show in KSU’s spring gam e with 11 carries
for 122 yards and two touchdowns.
The wide receiver position was expected to be a bright
spot, but G reg Washington, who set KSU standards last
season in yards receiving (928), touchdown receptions in a
season (nine) and receptions in a season (69), was recently
declared academ ically ineligible.
Defensively, the Wildcats are full of holes.
Opposing rushers gained nearly six yards a carry last
season and each enemy pass completion went for an average o f 16.3 yards. The Wildcats surrendered 511.7 yards and 40.7
points per gam e in 1988.
Senior defensive end M aurice Henry was one o f just seven
Big Eight players to log 100 or m ore tackles last season and
senior Marcus M iller, who ranks seventh at KSU in
interceptions with seven and led the team in tackles in 1988
with 102, returns at free safety.
Snyder said he is unhappy about opening the season on the
road.
“ M y preference was for this opening gam e to be (in
Manhattan, Kansas),” he said. “ It’s not that I dislike playing
a team like Arizona State. It’s an excellent team and an
excellent program. I just wanted to play the first gam e at
home,”
Snyder said he is particularly impressed with the Sun
Devils’ starting quarterback and free safety.
“ Paul Justin is probably as fine a quarterback as has been
projected in the Pac-10 this year,” he said. “ Nathan LaDuke
is touted as perhaps one o f the finest defensive backs in the •
country and I wouldn’t disagree with that. H e’s extrem ely
intelligent and he doesn’t m ake a lot o f mistakes.”
Snyder said being the underdog in Saturday’s gam e does
not bother him.
“ Obviously, there’s a tremendous difference between the
program at Arizona State and the one at Kansas State, so
they have something to go on. But that’s just another number
that I can’t concern m yself with.
“ I hope the players won’t concern themselves with it
either.” .
Sial» Prest
Thursday, September 7,1969
Page 18
J o n e s d ea lt bad hand by o ffic ia ls in W orld Cup
Turk was declared the winner.
The referee was demoted as a result of his
mistakes, but Jones had no recourse.
“ I learned that you’ve got to take control
of the match and not let it get into the
referee’s hands,” he said. “ I can’t wrestle
the officials as well. A lot of politics are
involved.”
Jones em erged victorious in the other^
contested match.
/
Douglas said Jones, who is the youngest
Sun Devil wrestler to ever make the
national team, is on target for the 1992
Olympics.
“ He finished a legitimate sixth in the
world and should have been in the top four,”
Douglas said.
Jones earned All-American honors at the
1989 NCAA Championship and gained a spot
on the World Cup team after winning the
gold medal at the U. S. Olympic Festival.
He said the U. S. team was disappointed
after finishing runner-up in the World
Championships, behind the Soviet Union.
Douglas said the U. S. team sat in an
airport for 15 hours after competing in an
e a r 1i e r t o u r n a m e n t i n P r a g u e , /
Czechoslovakia, which did not help the
Americans’ performance in Switzerland.
Jones said he was happy for American
teammates John Smith and Kenny Monday,
who won world championship titles in the
136Vi- and 163-pound classes, respectively.
Monday defeated Arsen Fadzaev of the
Soviet Union, who previously had never lost
in international competition.
“ T h e s e A m e r ic a n w r e s t le r s wi l l
eventually become No. 1 in the world,”
Douglas said. “ The final pieces of the
wrestling puzzle will come together.”
One of the “ final pieces,” Douglas
explained, is finances.
“ We need to play the financial card, and
w e need to change the rules (in Am erica) so
they’re more compatible with freestyle,” he
said, “ Winning w ill take care of those
things.’*
ASU plays an important role in the
By JOEL HORN
State Press
He was robbed.
ASU wrestler Zeke Jones, who finished
seventh in the World Cup Championship last
week in Martigny, Switzerland, said bad
calls by Eastern European referees cost
him a shot at the title — a sentiment echoed
by his coach.
“ He got robbed in two matches,” said
ASU Head Wrestling Coach Bobby Douglas,
who also directed the U. S. freestyle team in
the World Championships. “ It was as bad as
K orea.”
Douglas, now in his 16th season at ASU,
was referring to matches officiated by
referees from Greece and Bulgaria.
“ I think they’ve got a real clique going,”
Douglas said. “ It ’s been happening for a
longtim e“ The Bulgarian was a real weak official
who was dominated by the mat chairman.”
A protest was filed after one match in
which Jones, who was wrestling a Turk in
the 114x
k -pound division, grabbed his
opponent by the leg and threw him down
with about 15 seconds remaining in the
match.
The referee said Jones took the Turkish
wrestler out of bounds, but a later look at
videotapes showed conclusively that he was
in bounds.
With about eight seconds left, Jones
moved behind his competitor and took him
down. The referee said the Turk’s knees
were o ff the mat, but again the videos
indicated otherwise.
Jones lost, 4-3, and the protest was filed
approximately two hours following the
match. As a result, Jones was awarded a
point and the match was tied.
However, since the protest was filed so
late, there was no opportunity for overtime,
which would be the case under normal tie
breaking circumstances.
Jones was not awarded a second point and
since the m atch was still tied and
considering the timing of the protest, the
Jamie Scott Lytle/State Press
Sun Devil Zeke Jones, who finished seventh in the World Cup Championship in Martigny,
Switzerland, has his sights set on the 1992 Olympics.
wrestling program.
“ (The team ’s current) facility is just too
small for a national championship team,”
he said. “ It ’s the No. 1 reason why we
haven’t gotten some recruits at ASU.”
The team must wrestle in two shifts,
Jones said, “ which is not a productive
environment.”
However, Douglas said he is optimistic
about the future of ASU and U. S. national
wrestling.
“ The eagle almost landed.”
development of the Am erican wrestling
program, Douglas said, and the proposed
multi-sport facility on campus would go a
long way to promoting that goal.
The facility, he said, would help increase
attendance and aid in recruiting.
“ I think it’s quite possible” ’ Douglas said.
“ I know the administration is eager to see
(A S U ’s Olympic sports) m ove toward
excellence.
Jones said thé multi-sport complex is vital
for the development of the Sun Devil
C o m ed y C o m m ittee
B y
invites you to meet
MemOMM. U M M AeiM T *»0Q »«)
The A S U baseball team w ill have a walk-on tryout meeting at 3 p m today in
room 3541 o f the U niversity A ctivity Center. Inform ation will be provided about
tryout times. Walk-ons m ake up about 80 percent o f the junior varsity team,
which plays 10 gam es in the fall and approxim ately 40 in the spring. Interested
students are requested to bring a copy o f their class schedule to the meeting.
CAST
Get a laugh!
The A S U Ic e D e v ils a re holding a pre-conditioning mini-camp today and w ill
continue next Tuesday and Thursday from 5:15 to.6:45 p.m. at the T o w er Plaza
Ice Arena at 38th Street and Thomas Road. Participants w ill practice stick
handling and shooting to prepare fo r team tryouts beginning Sept. 19. The minicam p costs $25, and full equipment is required.
at the Recruitment Reception
Thursday, September 7th
1:00-3:00 p.m..
Memorial Union Fine Arts Lounge
Get a life!
(G et original.)
Get involved!
M
P H O E N IX (A P I - The Phoenix Cardinals completed their six-man N F L
developmental squad Wednesday by re-signing two rookies - linebacker Richard
Tardits and w ide re ceiver Andre L angley • and claim in g com erback Marcus
Turner o ff waivers.
Tardits, a fifth-round draft pick from G eorgia, is trying to becom e the first
native o f F ra iice to p la y iii the NFTS^
The 6-foot-2. 218-pound Tardits had two tackles and blocked one punt in four
preseason gam es but was among 13 players cut Monday when Phoenix lowered its
roster from 60 to the league lim it o f 47.
Th e 5-foot-6,160-pound Langley, a free agent from Tennessee-Martih who grew
tip in Phoenix, w as released by the Cardinals on Aug. 29 when the squad was
trim m ed from 80 to 60 players.
He had two catches fo r 20 yards and one touchdown - a 10-yard reception in the
Aug. 11 preseason opener against Seattle.
Turner, an llth-round draft pick o f Kansas City this year, was released Monday
by the Chiefs. The 6-foot, 190-pound Tu rner is nut o f UCLA.
!f¡| |¡g! |g|i ||§ lilfiillil!
1 ¡||g|¡¡ggf - if
C leveland 9 , B altim ore 0
D e tro it 11, Kansas C ity 5
-
P hiladelphia 9, C hicago 1
New Y ork 5 , S eattle 3
B altim ore a t Texas,
Toronto a t C leveland, 4 :3 5 p.m .
Los A ngeles a t C in cin n a ti, 4 :3 5 p.m .
New York a t S eattle, 7:05 p.m .
P ittsburgh at M ontreal, 4 3 5 p.m .
M ilw aukee a t C alifom ia, 7 3 5 p.m .
San F rancisco a t A tla n ta , 4:40 p.m .
San D iego a t H ouston, 5:3 5 p.m .
N
I O N
A
C
T
I V
I I
I E
S
B
O
A
H D
needs an
• T y p in g skills
• T im e m anagem ent skills
•O rg a n iza tion a l skills
THURSDAY'S SCHEDULE
St. Louis at New Y ork, 10:35 a.m .
U
QUALIFICATIONS:
M ilw aukee a t C alifom ia, (n)
C hicago a t P hiladelphia, 2 p.m .
l
•S e ttin g agendas fo r E xecutive C om m ittee, A c tivities
Board and G eneral M em bersh ip m eetings.
»K e e p in g an up-to-date record o f m inutes fo r all
m eetin gs o f Executive C om m ittee, A c tivities Board
and G en eral M em bership. A ls o keep files o f each
com m ittee's agendas and minutes,.
•H a v in g w eek ly o ffic e hours.
-
Texas 3, M innesota 2
San D iego 3, H ouston 2
I A
DUTIES INCLUDE:
Toronto 4 , C hicago 2
:
San Francisco 7, A tlanta 2
R
E X E C U TIV E B O A R D
SECRETARY
O akland 7, Boston 5
S t, Louis 3, N ew Y ork 2
O
\
4
i §H¡ |i§ §g||||ü
C incinnati 9 , Los A ngeles 5
M
M e m o r ia i, U n io n A c t iv it ie s B o a r d
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
M ontreal 11, P ittsburgh 6
E
3:35 p.m .
Applications are available at the Activities Center, Lower Level of M e m o ria l U nion. A l l
Call 965-6731
applications must be turned into the Activities Center by 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 8, 1989.
h je 1 9
Thursday, September 7,1989
Preseason allows lacrosse club
opportunity to fill open positions
By PAUL CORO
State Press
ASU men’s lacrosse Coach Clark M ercer
has put out the welcome mat for some new
players.
M ercer w ill need to fill many holes
because half of the team will not return this
year. Those players, who M ercer lost in the
off-season, include his leading scorer and
goalie.
M ercer w ill use the fall semester as a
p resea so n fo r the la cro sse club to
incorporate both new and experienced
players during a light schedule.
Because fall games are non-league, all
ASU students are welcome to join the team.
Players are hot required to supply their own
equipment, which normally runs around
$200, in the fall.
“ It gives them an opportunity to see what
the gam e is like and what it will entail,”
M ercer said.
The team ’s first meeting for prospective
players w ill be Sept. 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Student Recreation Center classroom.
“ The fall is an important part of the
season,’ ’ M ercer said. “ It gets guys out
playing who need to learn and the guys who
are new meet people with the same
activity.”
The fall schedule tentatively includes two
tournaments, slated for Oct. 28-29 in San
Diego. A tournament to be hosted by ASU,
which is still on drawing board, should
include teams from NAU, Ft. Lewis College
(Colo.) and the University of New Mexico.
^ U
R E C R U I T M
r
7%___________________
The “ Top Gun” of this year’s team could
be third-year midfielder P ete Mitchell, a
senior. Matt Welhaf, also in his third year on
the team, is expected to lead the defense.
Returning at the attack positions, Paul
Inhoff and Dave Pavin' add more experience
to a potentially talented team.
“ We will have a lot of new people who will
have to fill in,” M ercer said. “ That will
make it exciting.”
Last year, M ercer guided the Sun Devils
to an 8-7 record and a Final Eight
appearance at the Western Collegiate
Lacrosse League playoffs. M ercer has
taken his teams to the playoffs in each o f his
three years as coach.
This season, M ercer hopes to reach the
W C LL’s Final Four for the first time.
Their spring schedule includes match-ups
with NCAA Division I Stanford and Division
I I I Whittier College.
Spring team members must be full-time
students and pay dues, which are initially
$175.
The team w ill sell T-shirts on campus and
clean Sun Devil Stadium after a football
gam e in order to subsidize some o f the
player costs. Last year, the money raised
reduced each of the player’s dues by $75.
M ercer said m any players without
experience adapt easily because of athletic
abilities. The hand-eye coordination is much
like baseball, and ice hockey is the most
prominent background found among new
players.
Students who want further information
m ay contact M ercer at 926-4865.
v
¡ ¡ ^
T r y S t a t e P re s s C la s s if ie d A d v e r tis in g ...
^ b e fo re y o u r e a c h t h e e n d o f y o u r r o p e .
E N T
$ 3 .0 0
E M
O
R I A
L
S
U N
B O A R D
Most Stores
38.00
JEA N S +
29.99
Everyday Low Price
$3.00 Coupon
(B lu e A c id W a s h )
$
JE A N S +
$ 3 .0 0
C
2
-3.00
6
. 9
9
Free Length Alterations
o iip o ii
A S U T ee Shirt
$ 3 .0 0
10
Buy any Shirt of equal or
greater value and get an
A S U Tee Shirt for I p
JEA N S +
921-7713 • 911 E. Broadway
p ||j
"SPORTS & SP IR ITS W ITH STYLE"
WHITE RUSSIANS
LONG ISLANDS
PONY PITCHERS
BLUE HAWAIIANS
2
mo
B P
M
•
C
Picol
Get involved! 8
$ 3 .0 0
Levi's
R E C E R T IC N
T h u r s d a y , S e p t. 7
1 :0 C - 3 :C 0 p .m .
H U T i n e A r t s L c u n it e
965-6731
J
B
ir
M
m s*
B
CORONAS
MICHELOB DRY
MARGARITAS
SHOTS OF GOLD
i i
^
D IS C O U N T B IC Y C L E
QUALITY PRODUCTS
ALW AYS DISCOUNTED PR ICES!!
BOTTLED DOMESTIC BEERS
Your New Center for Quality Cycling
Products at Factory Outlet Prices
featuring end o f model year closeouts and
factory overstocks at unbelievably low prices
FIVE
m w
M o u ntain B ikea
fuUy equipped for
school. U-Lock, book
rack, water bottle and
cage
* 1 4 5 ° °
a s s e m b ly in c lu d e d
com pare
KAMIKAZEES
WATERMELONS
STIFF JOHNSONS
2 5 * beer i
i t WELL &
WINE
MARGS&
SCHNAAPS
L.l. ICE
TEAS
STA R TIN G ,A T
7 P .M .
m
ü
To
O TH ERS A T '300*
EXPERT REPAIRS On A L L Makes
D IS C O U N T B IC Y C L E
next to A SU at Lem on T Rural
ju st behind Circle K on Lemon
966-0842
Back to School Hours: Monday-Saturday 8-8, Sunday 11-5
•1
.5 0
HAPPY
HOUR
Come try homecookin’ on o u r
Happy Hour Buffet 4:30-7:30
with $1.50 drinks
• Televised Sports
DJ and Deneing N ightly
j& Ë S S s& fs
eg^ SSSg
,-igaw sa
RURAL & APACHE 968-0243
Page «O
s in t n t s i
Thursday, September 7,1989
RUNDLE’S
April C. Calmelat, FNP and Tom Wisener, O B/G YN NP
are pleased to announce the opening of
The
state
press
i
Production
Department
can t y p e s e t
your resume to
make it stand
lout am ong all
|the others.
LIQUORS & MKT.
| New Location
Ixxxlf
U n i v e r s i t y W o m e n 's C lin ic , In c.
at
,21 W. Baseline Rd., Tempe
(SW Corner of Baseline and Mill)
(6021831-5532
specializing in affordable wom en’s health c a re
including: pap sm ears, b irth control, V D care,
and o th e r gynecological concerns
Annual exam and pap sm ear $ 2 7 w ith this coupon.
(O ffer expires 1 0 -3 1 -8 9 .)
965-5350
CO
I
J T t 's
B E R A L
A
R
L LE
T
S
GE
A
O F
N
D
9
C
I
E N C E
1324 W .
U n iversity
(just east of Priest)
Arandas Tequila 200 m l...:.......$2.29
Pabst Blue R ibbon 12-pack.......$3.99
Volska Vodka 750 m l.......... .......$ 4 .9 $
Used Playboy M agazines....... .......9 4 *
is o n th e s ta n d s
before
most
p e o p le w a k e u p !
Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice,
Wines, over 40 imported Beers.
967-9079
Get off to
the right
start. . .
With this com plete co m p u ter
package for
\
»995
ONLY
PACKAGE INCLUDES:
» D ual flo p p y disk
» 12 M onth w arranty
> N ear le tte r q u a lity p rin te r
* H igh resolu tion m onochrom e
m oni to r (add $175 fo r c o lo r)
» W ord processing w ith spellche ck,
PROGRAM
D E A D L IN E
OF STUD Y
O C T O B E R 2, 1989
IN S U R E Y O U R F U T U R E R E G IS T R A T IO N !!
DOS and basic
All undergraduates in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences who will earn 87 or
more credit hours during this semester must file a Program of Study by October 2,
1989 in the College Graduation Office, Social Science Building Room 111.
For information or if you have any questions, stop by the Graduation Office or
telephone 965-2297.
A ct now. D elay could keep yo u o p t o f the courses you want.
COM PUTER M ULTI SYSTEMS
225 W. University
N
w-j-a,
f t
T e m p e (Next to B uffalo Exchange)
Large selection o f new
and used com puter equipm ent
and printers
966-1388
OPEN 9-6 M on-Fit
10-2 SaL
FINANCING AVAILABLE
15%
BICYCLE
W H E E LE R 'S
S tudent
D is c o u n t
B A C K -T O -SC H O O L
S P E C IA L
FREE
U -LO C K
WITH EVER Y
BIKE PUR CH ASE
C en tu rio n R oad B ike
FIRST
$ 199 • 1118111(891111119 Break
Alta • Park City
I
Snowbird • Solitude
•239*
Party Card w ith mambersh ip:' ;
EVERYO NE IS W E LC Q M E T O ¿ Ö IN i $15 covers your
M EETING TO N ITE
6 :3 0 p .m . at:
NOW $ 1 3 9 . 9 5
Sports B a r i t R estaurant
C om er o f Sth a n d Ask
- > £ r 'v .
VISA-
ASU
201 O S. Rural Rd.
Tempe, 968-8011
BROADWAY
For m ore info call:
APACHE
¡T S S F !
Dennis
Ted
9 6 8 -4 5 3 2
9 6 6 -8 5 6 2
Find out about our
tubing adventure a t
this w eek’s meeting:
1
h \
i
•W W .
..f
p
WMuan«
,
s
H
classifieds
S tik N »
CLASSIFICATIONS:
HO W TO PLACE A
CLASSIFIED AD:
LINER AD RATES:
1 Announcem ents
2. Autos for Sale
3. T ru cks for Sale
4. M otorcycles, for Sale
5: Bicycles fo r Sale
6. Furniture fo r Sale
7 T ickets fo r Sale
8. M iscellaneous fo r Sale
9. Com puters
10 Real Estate for Sale
11. Apartm ents fo r Rent
1 7 . H e lp W a n te d
15 words or less:
$3.00 per day fo r 1-4 days
$2.75 per day fo r 5-9 days
$2.50 per day fo r 10 + days
15 * each additional word
The firs t 2 words are capitalized.
No bold face o r centering.
1 8 In s tru c tio n
19. Jew elry
20. Free Lost/Found
21. On-Cam pus
22. Personals
23. Pets
In P erson:
Cash, Check (w ith
guarantee card), VISA
or M asterCard.
W e’re Ideated in thé
lower level o f M atthews
Center, room 46H.
O ffice hours are
8 a.m ,-5 p.m . M on.-Fri.
2 4 . R e S ta u ra n ts /B a rs
25. Services
26 Transportation
2 7 . T ra v e l
28.
29:
30
31.
1 2 . T o w n h o m e s /C o n d o s
13.
14
15.
16.
Page 21
Thursday, September 7 , 1989
Homes fo r Rent
Rental Sharing
Room m ate Services
Business O pportunities
B y M ail:
Send your ad (w ith
paym ent) to:
State Press C lassifieds
M atthews Center, Rm 15
Tem po, AZ 85287-1502
965-6731
HOW TO CORRECT
OR CANCEL YOUR AD:
C lassified lin e r ads can begin
1 day after they are placed
(if placed before noon).
Liner ads m ust be canceled
before noon, 1 day p rio r to
publication. No refunds w ill
be given.
C lassified 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 w ill be credited to
your account. S orry, no refunds.
By Phone:
965-6731
Paym ent w ith VISA/M C
only! $6 m inim um b n
a ll phone orders.
You can also place
your ad at the
North MU Inform ation
Desk (fa ll and spring
sem esters Only),
between the hours of
9 a m .-2:30 p.m .
M on.-Fri.
Typing/W ord P rocessing
W anted
Adoptions
M iscellaneous
WHEN WILL YOUR AD
RUN?
A d v e rtis in g P o lic y :
The State Press reserves the
rig h t to e d it o r reject any advertising
copy subm itted.
S tate Press E rro rs :
Check your ad the FIRST day it
runs. C all 965-6731 w ith any
corrections b e fo re n o o n . The
State Press is only responsible
fo r th e firs t day the ad runs
in correctly. C orrected ads w ill be
extended one day: Changes called
in a fte r the firs t day w ill not qua lify
fo r a make-good.
C ustom er E rro rs : ;
C orrections m ust be made before
noon. Com pensation w ill not be
given fo r custom er error.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUTOMOBILES
FURNITURE
com puters
REAL ESTATE
DYNAM IC EXCHANGE welcom es back
ASU. O ur firs t m eeting is tonig ht at 7:30
pm in the Pim a Room o f the MU. Join us
as we explore India. For m ore inform ation
c a ll 921-3041 or stop by our table.
SINGLE SCENE new spaper- Arizona
singles, events, advice, personals. Free
sam ple, 990-2669.
’76 JEEP CJ7, clean, loaded, 360 V8,
w hite, fuH cage, tow bar, BF G oodrich w ith
spare, $3800. 962-5253:
FOR SALE: m atching couch and loveseat
$120, coffee table $40, paint p ellet gun
$40. John,996-3673.
IBM AT com patible NEC 286 powerm ate,
hard-disk, floppy, m ouse, m onochrom e,
lo ts o f softw are. 967-6910 (M ax). $1500.
3 OR 4 bedroom hom e near ASU fo r rent.
$595/m onth plus $200 deposit. 966-8838.
HEADS EXAM IN ED -testing in Septem ber
and Novem ber. M ENSA, the high IQ
society. 274^538.
Phoenix Gay Youth Group
’85 JEEP CJ7, V6, 5-speed, 47,000 m iles,
W ranglèr radial tire s, $68,000/offer. Jay,
784-0558
NEARLY NEW m attress sets, queens and
longboys $130/set. Royal Tem pe M otor
Lodge, 967-8891
A '75 Volkswagon Bug, newly rebuilt
engine plus transm ission. Lowered fron t
end, spoked w heels, body in excellent
condition. F irst $2,300 takes. 391-2237.
QUEEN SIZE w aterbed w ith bookcase
f •
headboard, waveless m attress* heater,
and lin e r. $110. 437-1581.
NEW XT, 640K, 1.2M B drive, KB, m onitor,
$830. N o v e ll-c e rtifie d 386-20, 1M B
m em ory, 1.2M B d rive, I/O ports, KB,
m onitor, $1795, H D isk, VGA m onitor
available.. S elf run, low cost. 345-0912
evenings, Jim .
LO VE TO dance? Hate the bar scene?
Y o u 'll love the A ll S ingles Dances, every
Friday and Saturday at better valley
H otels. Recorded inform ation 946-4086.
MAKE SOCIAL and professional contacts
before you graduate. C all between 12-6
pm . 835-9071: M ust be 21.
.M O D EL SE AR C H
screening 389-6618!
M a g a z in e ---F re e
SILVER LAKE C arriage presents Roman
tic C arriage Rides in O ld Tow n Scottsdale/
Exclusive 5th Avenue. $25/2, $35/4
381-0576
r
S T U F F IT
at
Arizona
Storage Inns
A Support and Social Group
fo r Gays and Bisexuals
under 23.
Info, 897-8989
Student Rental
Special
T u rb o XT c o m p a ta b le ,
a m b e r m o n it o r , 2 0
megabyte hard disk, printer
and wordprocessor.
Low, low monthly rates.
Free delivery
No deposit
Telesound
Data Systems
277-1477
5'x10' to 10*x20'
From $ 1 2 & up
CIo m to ASU
AUTOMOBILES
20% DISCOUNT
NOW
C all Randy o r Sharon
k
1978 TOYOTA S tation w agon, a ir, AM /FM,
Arizona-car, 2 new tire s , new battery.
$1,200. Luke. 784-2271.
1981 CHEVETTE 4-door, 4-speed, airco n d itio n in g , but com pressors gone.
$575, Looks bad, runs good. 968-3820,
827-0325.
967-0210
1981 SUBARU DL hatchback, 1600cc
5-speed, m anual, a ir cond ition, excellent
shape. 236-5569 daytim e.
1983 NISSAN Stanza, 5-speed, airconditioning, AM /FM C assette, a ll power.
E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $ 2 ,8 5 0 : C a ll
921-0938
1984 CAMERO, one ow ner, low m ileage.
Runs great, m ust se ll, $4,300: 893-8719
a fte r 6. -
TREE
HAIRCUTS
fin d O ut how
C all o r stop by
G ro o m in g
hum ans
H a ir S tu d io
Arches Plaza
Forest & U niversity
1986 HONDA E lite 150 S cooter, red, 1400
m iles, helm et, cover, excellent condition.
$1200. 968-6351.
1966 RED Honda E lite, great condition,
low m ileage. $800 o r bette r offer. R ick,
273-0833.
1987 HONDA B ite 80 scooter, blue,
excellent condition, w ith helm et, $800.
C all M ichele, 967-5365.
CHEAP W HEELS: M opeds from $549,112
m iles per gallon, Kawasaki o f Phoenix,
241-1100.
HONDA ELITE 150 S cooter, 2340 m iles,
trun k, w indshield, custom seat. $900.
983-3004.
HONDA REBEL 1986. Runs and looks
great. $950/offer. C all and ask fo r M ike,
921-2862 anytim e, fo r inform ation or
m essage.
KAW ASAKI K2200, 50 plus m iles per
gallon, Shoei helm et, low m iles, w ell
m aintained. $400. 968-5971.
1965 MUSTANG Hatchback, pow er steer
in g, windows, cruise, cassett player. Don’t
m iss th is exceptionally w ell-cared fo r one
owner car. A-1 condition, under low book
fo r quick sale. 968-7733, 839-9110..
1988V2 SUZUKI Sam urai, hard top, 4X4
beauty.
10K m iles, AM /FM cassette,
tinted windows, rear seat. $6495/offer.
893-3457.
1988 VOLKSWAGON snow tire s fo r sale.
M ounted on 4 lug rim s! $39 fo r both. Call
John, 9674)924.
S
‘WSká
•Benetton
e l l
•J im m y Z » G u e s s » L e vi
C.C* Closet Classics
| F v :! 4 ^ » 0 2 9
B E A U T IF U L NEW la rg e 1 and 2
bedroom s. W alk to ASU, pool, laundry
room . 1 block south o f U niversity on 8th
stree t. Cape God A partm ents. 968-5238
fo r special,
1ST 10 rows, Andrew "D ice ” clay, The
Cure, M etallica, Hank W illiam s J r., Bonnie
R aitt, M erl H aggard, Sedona Jazz Festi
val* L.A. K ings exh ib itio n gam e, ASU and
C ardinals footb all. In L.A ., Stones and
Phantom o f the O pera. T icket Exchange,
Com er Stone M all. 829-0196.
ASSUME, LOW dow n. Sharp 3 bedroom ,
vaulted ceilin gs, spa, double garage,
professional landscaping, Berber carpet
ing. Easy access to freew ay. Evelyn*
831-1152. W yman R eal Estate.
2 FOURTH Row A ndrew D ice C lay tickets
fo r second show . $40/offer. •966-4307,
leave m essage.
1-10.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
19” COLOR T V. $75, 25” flo o r m odel
C onsole T.V ., w alnut cabinet, excellent
cond ition, $10 0; 254-1412.
'84 KACHINA D ay-cruiser, in-board, low
hours, excellent cond ition, dual axel tra il
er, $9,800. Henry, 932-2038.
DESIGNER W ATCHES and hand bags.
$50. AH styles. D elivery, discounts. Tom ,
631-0424.
FURNITURE
COMPLETE MATTRESS sets: tw ins, $85.
fu lls , $95, queens, $150, kings, $195. AH
sets stored-never used. Can deliver.
841-1688
COUCH $125, g o lf d u b s $150, end tables,
night stands, dresser, bookcase, dining
room table. C all E ric at 464-5433.
MATTRESS SALE: tw in s $49 per set, fu lls
$59.95 per set, queens $88.95 per set, 5
draw ers chest from $39.95, sofas, cocktail
tables plus m uch m ore. M ain St. Furniture.
898-1456 Mesa.
893-0416.
REAL ESTATE
row s
M ICROW AVE, LIKE
M ichele, 967-5365.
new,
$80.
C all
QUEEN SIZE W aterbed. H eater, lin e r and
m attress pad in cluded, $75. 345-0596.
STUN GUNS, safe, re liable protection.
65,000 vo lts, $35
C all 832-7283 or
780-2392.
FURNITURE
G O O D U S E D F U R N IT U R E
"Student Special”
10% Discount With This Ad
mayo’s
furniture rental
CLEARANCE CEN TER
1710 W . S outh ern, M esa 8 98 -0 930
2 0 0 2 N O R TH 4 9 th S tre e t.
A ircond itioning, covered parking, cable, one
bedroom , $300/m onth.
Day 271-9491,
Evenings 244-9357.
ASU only 2 blocks away!
Pool and
laundry. 1 m onth VY o ff. 967-7212.
TICKETS
C lay,
1 BEDROOM N icotian apartm ent and
balcony, $325. 2 Bedroom guesthouse,
$400. H istoric d is tric t M esa. 984-2194.
A S U A R E A 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th ,
3 3 2 5 /m o n th p lu s 'e le c tric ity .
A ircond itioning, ja cq u izzi, no pets, deposit.
2 5 4 -5 9 4 3
"D IC E ”
1 BEDROOM apartm ents fo r rent. 1st
m onth free w ith a 9 m onth lease or 1st and
la st m onths free w ith a 12 m onth lease.
$389-$399/m onth.
1123 East Apache
Boulevard, Tem pe. 968-6383.
ABSOLUTELY THE best place to live.
W eight room , ja cuzzi, 2 pools. Upgraded
apartm ents dose to ASU. C all to reserve
your apartm ent. 968-5444.
Discount prices,
open 7 days
BICYCLES
RACING BIKE, 53 centim eters, M irjata
w ith Shim ano 600 com ponents. M avic
w heels, low m iles. $300. 921-1290.
XT COMPATIBLE, 10 m egabytes harddrive, 840 Ram, 360K flopp y, mono
chrom e, $600. B rent, 820:0976, 7 pm.
Futon Factory
ANDREW
381-0225.
CENTURION TURBO, 22 inch, 12-speed,
excellent condition. $650 new. W ill seH
$315.943-7866
TRUE IBM -XT, 10 m egabites hard-drive,
Herch G raphics, 360 Floppy softw are,
$900. M ark, 967-5879.
W HEREHOUSE SALE on o ffice furn iture .
Desks from $49, C hairs from ,$14, com pu
te r tables fid m $39, file s , bookcases and
m ore. AZ. O ffice Liquidators 4010 S. 43rd.
Place (N orth of-B roadw ay W est o f 48th
S treed) M on-Fri 9-5, Saturday 10-?.
437-2224.
1986 YAMAHA 600 R adian, 5.000 m iles,
excellent condition. $1,800. 946-7188.
1984 TOYOTA C elica-one ow ner, blue/
blue, air-conditioning, great gas m ileage.
Make offer. G lenda 224-0638.
■HI
Fry’s Plaza
1984 HONDA Interceptor, great condition,
under 10,500 m iles, new rear tire , Shoei
helm et inducted, $2,000. 829-8097, M ark.
¡5*5
I B
i Ä
MOTORCYCLES
USED FURNITURE Store, 7620 East
McKeUips Road, Scottsdale. 949-0380. 2
m iles from cam pus.
L O T U S -C H A L L E N G E R S X m e n ’ s
10-speed, w ith lock, $250 C all M ichele,
967-5365.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
B
SAVMOR TH R IFT Store. Q uality clothing
and home furnishings. 1915 N orth Scotts
dale Road, 1 M ock N orth o f M cDowell.
990-3364.
1984 RABBIT convertable, 5-speed, white
on w h ite , AM/FM c a s s e tte , c lo th
seats,cold air-conditioning, alarm system ,
m int condition
Reduced to $6,500.
968-3433, 833-2020.
966-5462
■
CHEAP WHEELS: M opeds from $549,112
m iles per gallon, Kawasaki o f Phoenix,
241-1100;
APARTMENTS
ASU CLOSE. Home near 68th S treet and
M cD ow ell, you’re ju s t m inutes from
cam pus. 3 bedroom block hom e has large
pool, citru s yard, RV gates, 37X17 covered
p a tio w ith ce ilin g fans, S cottsdale schools.
In low $90’s. C all M ickey Sm ith at Tom
Jackson and Associates at 949-8000 or
443-8128. ;;
ASU CONDOS; as little as $3,500 can
m ove you in to a com pletley furnished, 2
bedroom , 2 bath condo. G reat com plex
w ith s w im m in g ,vo lle yb a ll, clubhouse,
laundry fa c ilitie s , sauna, exercise equip
m ent, and big screen T.V. Several avail
able from $55,000. Please c a ll Janet
Q uigley Trade W inds. 967-8306.
CONDO. SAVE m oney! Buy d o n 't rent,
ASU 1 m ile. 2 bedroom , firepla ce, pool,
covered parking. Easy term s. 968-7319 or
893-0249.
FOR RENT. 2 m aster bedroom s, 2 fu ll
baths. A ll appliances. Dobson/U niversity.
$415. A ctive. 838-3264.
LA R G E A P A R TM E N T a v a ila b le , 1
bedroom , close to ASU. CaH Suzanne at
967-6000.
RURAL AND Broadway, quiet, clean, 2
bedroom . A ppliances, u tilitie s included.
$495/m orith. 921-3047, 4974578.
SHORT W ALK. Ideal fo r upper classm en
and graduates, qu ie t and very clean
com plex, 2 and 1 bedroom studios.
$285/m onth and up. 1019 E.Lem on,
Tem pe 968-3520.
STUDENT APARTMENT in W orthington
Place. Phone 1-778-2845.
$170
1st Month’s Rent
Walk to ASU, quiet 1 bed
room, A/C, pool-side apts,
$270/month
G e o r g e A n n A p ts .
MOTIVATED LOW , low dow n, best value
in U niversity. Ranch 3 bedroom townhouse, vaulted ceilin gs, nearly new, a ll
appliances included. Pool, spa, volleyball.
M ake us a deal. $64,900. C all Kacen
Q uinn, M e rrill JLynch 951-1010,
M OBILE HOME fo r sale. 12x68, 3
bedroom , IV Y bath. IVfe m iles east o f ASU.
P rivate fenced yard, storage shed, dogs
ok. E xcellent cond ition, im m ediate occu
pancy. $5,500. C all 961-0444, 965-7679,
o r 833-8175.
M OBILE HOME fo r sale, single-w ide 2
bedroom 1 bath. Located at Price and
U niversity. Can m ove in now. Asking
$6,000 or best o ffe r. C all Sam antha at
993-4010 o r 245-4206.
NEAR ASU: 2 bedroom , 2 bath, vaulted
ce ilin g s, fire p la ce , large, brig h t and
ch e e ry, p riv a c y ! E ve lyn , 831-1152.
W yman Real Estate.
QUESTA VIDA condo. Assum e this, no
qua lify, FHA loan w ith low cash to m ort
gage. 2 m aster suites, firepla ce, pools,
sauna, health club and raquetball. Best
deal around. $76,500. C all Karen Q uinn,
M errell Lynch 951-1010.
SINGLE LEVEL, detached 2 bedroom
townhouse 1V4 bath, m odern, M exican tile
Jacuzzi. 3 m iles ASU. Scottsdale Tem pe
border priced to sale. Ideal investm ent
property. 946-2277 pm.
894-2538
Ideal for Students
Move-In Special
•Affordablestudios & 1 bedrooms from
$295, utilities included
•G reat locationclose to ASU
•Privacy- 1-level apartments
mature landscaping
M arianna Apartments
1214 E. O range
966-8597
""*»**"
' ''
TOW NHOM ES/
CONDOS
1 BEDROOM C ondo. W alk to ASU
W asher/dryer, dishw asher, refrigerator.
C om pletely new in side. $365/m onth. No
pets. 948-1593.
1 G IRL needed to share luxury furnished
Condo at 616 South Hardy, i m ile from
ASU. 892-3497.
Page 2 2
TOWIMHOMES /
CONDOS
2 BEDROOM 2 bath Condo
appliances, pool, tennis, parking.
ASU, U niversity/P rice 831-2387.
State Press
Thurada^S*p t embw T 198 9
A ll
Near
2 ' BEDROOM, 1. bath apartm ent, condo,
townhouse. $325 to $475/iriortth. Even
in gs, 838-2646. Red C arpet-W eary,
968-3414
2 BEDROOM townhom e w ith new carpet,
$450. Also for sale at $31,900. Century 21
Cam elview. 955-5300.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath luxury town home.
W asher/dryer, m icrowave, pool, tennis. %
m ile to ASU. $550/m onth. 820-8995.
3 BEDROOM, 2 com plete baths, cathedral
ceilings, w asher/dryer in u n it, partially
fu rn ish e d , 2 pools.
$630/m onth.
965-2814, 893-2577.
3 BEDROOM 2 bath Q uesta Vida like new.
A ll appliances, am m enities; $700 pips
u tilitie s . 991-5735.
ASU-V4- m ile, lovely townhouse, quiet
R efrigerator, w asher/dryer. $650, lease.
953-2480 weekdays after*4:30.
BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom 2 bath Condo at
W orthington Place, near ASU. Furnished
o r unfurnished. C all 894-5516.
DELUXE 2 bedroom 1 bath condo. U niver
s ity " and Dobson. Pool, tennis, w asher/
dryer. $475. 967-1044, 965-4971.
LARGE 2 bedroom condo, furnished,
w asher/dryer. Close to cam pus. Skip;
483-8454.
LEASE-SHARP 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhou se, re frig e ra to r, w a lk to ASU
$700/m onth. Evenings, - 838-2646; Red
Carpet-W eary, 968-3414.
SPACIOUS 2 bedroom , 1 bath townhouse.
Clubhouse, covered parking, pool, fenced
area, extra storage. $475 plus electric.
U niversity and Alm a School- By appoint
m ent only. 966-8704 cir 581-0928.
RENTAL SHARING
HELP W ANTED
HELP W ANTED
HELP W ANTED
HELP W ANTED
MALE/FEMALE non-sm oker, fu lly furn
ished condo, fu ll am enities, $250/m onth
(negotiable) plus Vb u tilitie s . 921-0098.
CLOSE TO ASU people person wanted to
answer phones in a busy but friendly
office. Tem porary position to last up to 4
m onths. M onday thru Friday m ornings, 4
hours a day. C a ll H arris Laboratories,
437-0097, M onday thru Friday between
9:00am • 3:00pm .
FU LLTIM E /P A R T-TIM E w o rkin g w ith
developm entally disabled children and
a d u lts $5.00/hour 224-5052.
NEED USHERS to w ork concerts. Pick up
job 4300H at Student Em ploym ent.
RESTAURANT DELIVERY driver, flexible
hours. South S cottsdale location. Own
Car insurance. C all a fte r 1 a.m ., 423-0095.
NEED NEAT and responsible room m ate,
$250, u tilitie s in c lu d e d . H ousehold
appliances available. M ust see. Call
831-5595.
NICE ROOM-Tempe hom e in Lakes,
includes Beach and Tennis Club member
ship.
Laundry fa c ilitie s , electricity.
$265/m onth.
For non-sm oking fem ale
graduate student. 820-5108.
NO DEPOSIT, Furnished, $175/m onth, %
u tilitie s , own bedroom , W orthington Place
A p a rtm e n ts, S e ptem ber o n ly . K irk ;
820-7670
NON-SMOKING GRADUATE student to
share spacious 3 bedroom , 2 bath home.
Vfe m ile ASU. nicely furnished, pool,
washer/dryer, $225/m onth, % u tilitie s .
921-1187.
3 BEDROOM 2 bath, pool, patio. Close to
ASU W est. 35th Avenue/Thunderbird
area. 4650/m onth. 780-0464.
5 BEDROOM, pool, d o se to ASU, approxi
m ately 3.000 square feet, $1,200/m onth.
O w ner'agent. 966-7979.
R E N T A L S H A R IN G
$1,000 PAYS fa ll rent plus u tilitie s .
Furnished room , shared bath in 3
bedroom Tem pe house. AH com forts of
hom e.
Q uiet, non-sm oking fem ales.
Ju lie , 921-3860.
2 BEDROOM 2 bath Condo, 1 m ile fro n j
School; Need 2 room m ates at $185 plus
VS u tilitie s , available now. C all M ike at
921-9420
2 MALE C hristian room m ates wanted,
McCHntock and B aseline, $170 plus u tili
ties. C all Randy, 898-3462.
4
BLOCKS west o f ASU, fu ll house
privileges, vegetarian horrie, sm oking ok.
$200/m onth. M ark, 946-8960, 967-9321.
CLEAN, RESPONSIBLE non-sm oker to
s h a re ho m e . M in u te s fro m A S U .
$200/m onth, $200 deposit, VS u tilitie s .
Laura,' 941-1007, o r 941-5612.
FEM ALE, NON-SMOKER to share 3
bedroom , 2 bath hom e, W asher/dryer,
pool, garage. $250/m onth plus VS u tilitie s.
Mesa, 830-4551.
FEMALE NON-SMOKER, own m aster
b ed roo m and p a th .
A w atukee.
$225/m onth plus VS u tilitie s .
Donna,
8938392
RO O M M ATE NEED ED to share 3
bedroom 3 bathroom luxurious townhouse. G reat location, beautiful com plex,
w asher/dryer, pool, backyard, garage.
jSeuzzi. C all 921-2223.
ROOMMATE TO share Condo, own
bedroom and bath. W asher/dryer, pool. 2
m iles from ASU. $350. Leave message,
833-2784:
.
ROOMMATE W ANTED. Share 2 bedroom
cond o, fu ll a m e n itie s. $200/m onth.
431-0499 or 966-3281 (work).
SHARE FOUR bedroom house near R ural
and Broadway. $200 per m onth plus V«
u tilitie s . 821-6378.
W ANTED, FEMALE to share 3 bedroom
house. $165 a m onth plus Vi u tilitie s , V*
m ile from ASU. 968-0298.
15-20 FLEXIBLE hours.
Salary plus
excellent bonuses. Present educational
products to parents/schoots. M ust be 21
plus. C all 834-7432 fo r appointm ent.
ACCEPTING APPLICATIO NS at Asylum
fo r doorm an and w aitresses. 966-9810,
ask fo r Tim .
AM PM NEEDS fu ll and part-tim e
cashiers, day shift/m orm ngs. Previous
convenience o r fa st food experience
desired.
A pply in person.
908 E.
Broadway at Rural.
"A S U IS ca llin g on you.,, to become a
m em ber o f the ASU Telefund team ! Last
trainin g is Friday! O n-cam pus location,
3 1 6 hours per week, Sunday-Thursday
evenings, 5:30-9:30, Earn $4 10/hour plus
bonus, plus com m ission, great nightly
incentives, gain valuable pub lic relations,
m arketing, and fundraising experience
speaking w ith alum ni nationw ide. If you
have sales a b ility, c a ll 965-6754 fo r m ore
inform ation.
Country Glazed Ham
Busy Scottsdale Restaurant
now accepting applications
for:
Retail clerks - FT
Service clerks - Lunch
Flexible hours
Apply in person
6107 N. Scottsdale Rd.
Hilton V illag e
FEMALE NON-SM OKER, 2 bedroom , 2
bath, at the Q uadrangles: Fun, neat,
$270/m orith plus u tilitie s . 966-9475.
A PART-TIME sales cle rk fo r swim shop,
Tuesday and thursday m ornings and
Saturdays. Experience w ith swim m ing
helpful. 264-7774 ca ll 10 to 6.
FE M A LE NO N -SM O KER R oom m ate
needed fo r tw o bedroom townhouse. One
m ile from cam pus. $300/m onth including
u tilitie s . Nfoe. Kathy a t.991-6504.
ATTEN DAN T N EED ED fo r disable d
student. Mesa area. Hours vary. Call Barb,
8939558.
FEMALE, NON-SMOKER, 2 bedroom /1
bath hom e, C handler. $200/m onth, Vz
u tilitie s , u n fu rn ish e d . A lm a S ch ool/
W arner. 786-4934, 971-9975
v;
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share
new 2, bedroom 2 bath condo. A ll luxuries.
C all 820-7341,
FEMALE ROOMMATE to share spacious
2 bedroom , 2 bath, 2 m iles from ASU. A ll
u tilitie s included, private hath, vaulted
ceilings, laundry, pools, bar-b-que, tennis.
L o ri, 423-1588.
HARD W ORKING, conciencious woman in
need of non-sm oking fem ale preferably
20-30 years young to share large fu lly
furnished apartm ent hom e. Am m enities
in clude firepla ce, w asher/dryer, wetbar, 2
baths and tw o patios. Large apartm ent
com m unity includes 4 pools and jacuzzis
and w eight room . Please can 461-1674,
leave m essage.
HAVDEN SQUARE, dow ntown Tempe.
Taro people to share large bedroom ,
$250/m onth. Single room , $315/m onth
M ust see, M ill and 5th S treet. C all John,
829-0160.
COCKTAIL W AITRESS, nights, Zeros,
910 N orth Hayden, Tempe.
COMMISSION SALES position, prom otion
com pany, part-tim e/fuil-tim e . 921-7363 or
pick up applications at Arizona Shorts &
S ports, 5th and M ill.
ROOM FOR rent, $170/m onth 967-8471.
Ask fo r H irih. A fter 6.
HELP W ANTED
HOMES FOR RENT
CLUB UM is accepting applications for
disc jockey and clean up personnel. Apply
in person 1-4 pm daily, 411 South M ill,
S uite 203.
ATTENTION! PART-TIME jo b , full-tim e
pay. Earn good m oney w hile going to
school. H ourly plus com m ission. Call
9 63 2141;
ATTENTION BUSINESS and com m unica
tio n m ajors: local advertising com pany is
seeking three outgoing and hard w orking
in d iv id u a ls fo r m arke ting position.
921-7755
BE ON T V ! M any needed fo r com m er
cia ls. Now h irin g a ll ages. C asting inform a
tio n , (615) 7737111, e xt. T-130.
CALLING ALL class clow ns, ton, outgoing
people, looking fo r a fun w ay to earn great
$7 Becom e a part-tim e DJ. W e train. C all
9837135.
CARDINAL’S PIZZA h irin g drivers and
cooks. C e il John or M ike at 829-0064.
CHUY’S NIGHTCLUB is accepting appli
cations fo r a ll positions on Friday, 9/8
between 2-5. B rin g photo. 310 South M ill.
C IN E ’ CAPRI now h irin g p a rt-tim e
cashiers/concession attendants fo ; m ati
nee shifts. Please apply in person. 2323
East Cam etback Road.
GYMNASTICS COACH one o f the top
clubs in USA, interview ing fo r teaching
and coaching positions. C all 941-3496.
HANDICAPPED STUDENT needs parttim e atten dant, m ornings, evenings,
weekends. H ours negotiable. C all Jason
at 784-9257
HELP W ANTED at O regano’s Pizza, a ll
shifts available. D elivery drivers needed
also. A pply at 945 South M ill/10th Street.
894-1234,
HIRING IMM EDIATELY, excellent oppor
tu n ity fo r am bitious sales team . U nlim ited
incom e w ith fle xib le w orking hours. Call
b e tw e e n 8-5 pm , M o n d a y -F rid a y ,
241-7943.
JACK IN The Box, fle x ib le hours, above
m inim um wage, no experience required.
M anagem ent positions available. Apply at
U niversity and Price o r MHI and U niversity.
E g g in g to n s
PRE-SCHOOL AIDES, Full-tim e and parttim e im m ediate openings. W est Tem pe
area. 437-0153.
ROSITA’S MEXICAN R estaraunt is now
h irin g for lunch and dinner shifts. Food
servers, busers, hostesses, cashiers.
A pply M onday-Friday a fte r 2. 960 W est
U niversity.
PROMOTIONAL ADVERTISING com pany
is seeking individuals fo r sales positions.
Ideal candidate w ill be personable, self
m otivated and able to work rninim um four
nights per week. 921-7768.
SALES, WESTERN hats arid belts.
Saturdays and Sundays. G reyhound Park
and Swap. S alary and com m ission. Call
Bud, 942-2859.
'
RED ROBIN now h irin g experienced lin e
pantry pre positions. A pply a t 1539 North
Scottsdale Road, M onday-Friday, 9 am-11
am , 2 pm-4 pm.
Student Entrepreneur
Aggressive go-getter as outside
travel agent on-campus. No ex
perience necessary. Big earn
ings potential.
Call 967-0575
JOBS AVAILABLE NOW
An
exciting
breakfast
and
lunch restaurant is accepting
applications fo r waitress posi
tions (with Monday Wednes
day and Friday’s available).
Apply in person after 2 pm
1660 S. Alma School Rd.
Mesa
COUNSELOR. FEMALE. fulM im e, private
boarding school.Ideal fo r graduate
student. H ourly wage plus room and
board. Pat Lacorge, 464-1944.
DAYCARE ATTENDANT needed fo r our
Tem pe M edical o ffice im m ediately fo r 2
sm all children. Hours Tuesday and Thurs
day, 3 5 . $3.35/hour C all C indy, 8238741
days, 8232280 evenings.
DOCKTOR PET C enter, Los Arcos M all
now h iring part-tim e sales. Please bring
resum e if you: have one. No phone calls
please.
DOES YOUR d u b or organization need a
fund raiser? I need a clu b to d istribu te m y
publication on cam pus 9/13 and 14. The
fee is $ 5 0 0 .1 need an organized, e fficie n t
club to respond im m ediately. No flakes.
C all Jonathon a t 805-683-3342 today fo r
details.
EARN $2,000-$4,000. S earching fo r
em ploym ent th a t perm its w orking your
own hours, but s till challenging enough for
your entrepreneurial skills? M anage prog
rams" fo r Fortune 500 Com panies. Earn
$2,000 to $4,000 C all 1-803932-0528,
ext. 41.
ENGINEER TECHNICIAN m echanical 2nd
or 3rd year. M echanical engineering or
technology, som e related experience
desired. M ust be available 12 m onths at a
m inim um of 20 hours per week between
the hours o f Bam to 5pm . C all 956-8200
$5/hour and up.
ENGINEERING STUDENT: Engineering
C onsulting firm close to ASÙ needs
student in E ngineering program to w ork 10
plus hours per week. D uties include
1BM-PC w ith a u to CAD, Data Base, etc.
Some general o ffice work- Need a respon
sible individual who is technically oriented.
M ust have car. A pply a t Energy Sim ulation
S pecialists, Inc. 64 E. Broadway NO,230,
Tem pe. Lisa, 967-5278.
FULL AND part-tim e sales positions avail
able at Sky H arbor A ir Port g ift shops.
R e ta il e x p e rie n c e and re fe re n c e s
re q u ire d . P lease app ly W ednesdayFriday, 8:30 am -5 pm . The D el S tar G roup,
7Ó51 5th Avenue, Scottsdale, 941-0400.
GRAPHIC ARTIST: part-tim e work to draw
line draw ings fo r com pany sales catalogue
and advertisem ents, $ 3 $ 8 hourly. M etal
W orks. 8231627. v
LOCAL ARIZONA Com pany looking for
5-10 college students serfous about work
ing and people oriented, sales related
position. Earn $250/week. C all 892-9330.
PART-TIME OR fu ll-tim e delivery people,
dishw ashers and ca s h ie r Pardners, ask
fo r Bob, 825 W est U niversity Drive.
967-9221.
fo r dependable receptionists,
clerical, or data entry
personnel.
LOCAL RADIO station h irin g fo r part-tim e
research position. No se llin g involved,
great jo b fo r Sophm ores and Juniors. C all
Rayejean Tehan between 3 5 , MondayFriddy, 9636236
PART-TIME COOK Pre-school W est.
2152 East Broadway, Tem pe. 894-5338.
SAME WEEK PAY
MARKETING MAJORS: Tem pe firm seeks
part-tim e m arketing assistant to deliver in
form ation to area businesses. Includes
telephone contact. Auto required. Salaryplus bonus. C all Don 730-6495 between 9
am and 12 noon.
Notetakers Wanted
A ll graduate students eligi
ble. Undergraduate upperplassmen with a 3.3 GPA or
above eligible. A ll under
graduates with a 3.3 GPA or
better registered in a class
w ith an enrollm ent larger
than 100 are eligible to be a
notetaker for that course.
TOP WAGES
•Tem porary
•Perm anent
•F u ll Time
•P art Tim e
PERFECT STUDENT jo b , fle xib le hours,
A arons S e lf-S erve C ar W ash. C a ll
8339455 o r apply in person 1201 E.
A p ache..
PHOENIX AIRPORT C ourtyard by M arriott
is accepting applications fo r fufl-tim e night
auditor and fu ll and part-tim e pm cooks.
Please apply in person a t 2621 South 47th
S treet, Phoenix. (Hohokam Expressway
and U niversity Drive).
966-0709
SELL INDUSTRIAL to o ls via w ats line fu ll
o r part-tim e 4 :3 3 8 :3 0 a m , 3 7 p m . Up to
$250/week salary. Ask fo r Hank Edwards
254-8665
THE LOOP, a new fast food concept in a
totally, authentic setting o f yesteryear
C hicago. Full-tim e, part-tim e day and
evening positions available, w ith m anage
m ent potential. A pply Thursday-Saturday,
2-5 pm . Southw est Comer o f Lem on and
Terrace, Temple.
STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now h irin g
hostesses, lunch w aitresses, and w aiters.
A pply in person, 5001 E. W ashington.
--------STUDENT JO BS. S tart at $9.25. Several
fu ll and part-tim e openings in custom er
service and re ta il. Scholarship» available.
C a ll 9 am to 5 pm . 242-9677.
THE PERFECT jo b !
W ork any day,
anytim e. As little as 3 hours. Drive van,
sedans, taxis. W e w ill tra in you. Good
$$$. M ust be over 21. 232-4208.
. ■ " .
• ■ ■/ " ' VTYPIST NEEDED to assist disabled
student in Tuesday and Thursday class.
$7/hour. C all Barb a fte r 5, 8939558.
Applications available at:
city of scottsdále recreation division
ASU Bookstore
Service Counter
Class Quotes
WANTED:
965-4169
O LD CHICAGO R estaurant and Bar now
h irin g fo r a ll positions, fu ll/p a rt-tim e . Apply
in person, 12*5, 530 W est Broadway,
Tem pe.
PAID W EEKLY!
P art-tim e evenings.
$4-$10 hourly.
C asual office, near
cam pus. For appointm ent 921-5436.
PART-TIME W EEKENDS available. Earn
as you learn. R esponsible, hardw orking,
creative students need apply. Teaching
self-help and com m unity s k ills to individu
als w ith physical and/or m ental disabilities:
C ali Weftha-, 894-2355
PART-TIME. LARGEST com pany o f its
kind in the Southw est. Afternoon and
evening sh ifts available. Pleasant w orking
cond itions.
C all M r. W ellington at
381-0477.
PART-TIME DATA entry operator, 60
words per m inute, fle x ib le hours. $4,50. »
C all C elia 991-4460.
PART-TIME RESEARCH, editing arid
typing, evenings an
Q.
Stele Press
ALW AYS AVAILABLE fo r typing. C all
Susan at 833-0373. ' v ■.
MISCELLANEOUS
Reviews
D O N'T MISS John Lyons, Scottsdale,
1-800-8-COW BOY.
News
to
A N A L Y S IS
ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof
read, editing, a ll included. Q uick turn
around C all 894-6074.
PETS
TU TO R A V A ILA B LE fo r C H M 101,
ACC211, ACC212 on cam pus. Contact
m achine at 784-0492 if interested. Fee
negotiable, between $7 and $10.
PREGNANT? FINANCIALLY secure C ali
forn ia couple w ith m uch love to give, wish
to adopt. Please c a ll co lle ct anytim e (408)
289-1371.
POST GAME party w ith the B eta's. Every
one welcom e. The fun is at Rancho Las
Palm as, startin g a t 9 on Saturday.
WOW, CHECK th is out, after ASU wins on
Saturday there’s a huge post game party
a t Rancho Las Palm as. C all 820-7807 or
967-8385 fo r inform ation.
STATE PRESS
Classified Advertising
Matthews Canter
South Basement
A D O P TIO N
PI-PHI ASHLEY-watch out, surfs up. But
your tops com ing O ff-T heta C hi Keith.
TRI SIGMA Lisa T ,, B eing your peart sis
m akes me Happy! Keep sm iling! Sigm a
love Am elia.
APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord
processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie,
945-5744.
CHILD CARE evenings. U niversity and
Alm a School, no pool. 827-1903, leave
m essage.
$1.25/PAGE. Advanced, reliable typing,
le tte r q u a lity p rin te r, sp e llin g . R ick,
834-9279.
TO MARK H W elcom e to ÀSU! To th in k
th a t being a "to y " could lead to som ething
so incredibly special and e x c itin q -1do and
w ill always lové you. For Who you are,
never anything else. W ith tim e and pati
ence th is can and w ill w ork. My w ish on
the clock stHI stands. I’m always here for
you. I love you. Debra. PS, can I touch it
now?
TUTORS
TYPING /W O R D
PROCESSING
Mrt
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