Copyright. State Press. 1989. Tempe. Arizona
Arizona State University’s Morning Daily
Vol. 72 No. 29
Monday, October 9,1989
Regents delay vote on funding ford u b
By K ELLY PEA R C E
State P ress
TUCSON ^ The Arizona Board of Regents
Friday delayed a vote on allocating funds to
a club for ASU faculty and staff, and the
University will now hire a consultant to
review how the club operating costs will be
financed.
During the monthly regents meeting, held
on the UofA campus, Regent Jack Pfister
moved to take the University Club item off
the consent agenda because it needed to be
studied further.
Several board members have expressed
their concern about using interest from
ASU’s investment fund to finance the club,
and said they need a few questions
answered before they vote.
Victor Zafra, ASU’s vice president for
business affairs, said the University hopes
to get the club funding issue before the
board again Oct. 26 during the next meeting
of the regents’ Resources Committee.
If the regents accept the plan, ASU will
re n o v a te the F in e A rts Annex to
accommodate the club, and club backers
will lease the facility from the University
for about $85,000 a year for the next 10 years.
Supporters hope to open the club, which
would provide elegant dining facilities and
meeting areas for faculty and staff, in the
fall of 1990.
But some regents said they had questions
about the ability of the club to raise enough
revenue to meet its operating expenses.
Regent Andrew Hurwitz said he is not
entirely opposed to using state monies to
finance the club, but added he “has a
price.”
“If it’s a very small subsidy, then maybe
it’s OK,” he said.
Hurwitz said he needs to know all of the
facts about the funding and Viability of the
club.
“We need more information to see if it is
self-sustaining,” he said. “If not, we have to
look more at what we’re doing. The work so
far (on planning the club) has been
generic.”
Zafra said the next step is to hire a
consultant to study the economic issues of
the club. But he said the funding source is
not an issue.
“We want to go back and double check,”
H Sk
i ,.
Larson
¿è M
èl
ù rÀ
Zafra
Zafra said, “We need to assure ourselves
that the space available will be able to
support the operating costs. We need to take
a little more time to get those pieces.”
Turn to Club, page 7.
Board approves
1990-91 budget
despite concern
Sundi iqsnsted/ttlate Pin»
Tem p* firem en survey the rem ains of a cam per that exploded Sunday on the Superstition Highway near Rural Road, destroying the
vehicle and the boat It had in tow. Firem en said the driver of the cam per hoard a “tapping” sound and pulled over shortly before an
explosion destroyed both vehicles. The cause of the explosion Is under Investtgatlen. There were no ln|urfes.
Studies link jobs to better grades
Official: Working students
forced to schedule time
B y S O N JA LEW IS
State P ress
Contrary to popular belief, ASU students who work parttime have been shown to receive better grades than students
who do not work at all, the assistant director for student
financial assistance said.
Richard Cons estimated that a little more than half of ASU
students work, and their grades improve as they work more
hours per week (up to 20).
“I found students actually do better when they work
because they were forced to keep better schedules and to find
more time for study,” Cons said.
Cons findings are in agreement with recent national
statistics that show “traditional age” students — between 16
and 24 years old — who work at least part-time, receive
better grades than their counterparts who do not work.
A study, conducted by the American Council on Education,
indicates that a majority of students are employed now,
Who is This
Man?
If you don’t know,you’re not alone
among ASU
students, according
to a poll. Hint: his
last name is Peck.
Psge 3
instead of depending totally on financial aid, to avoid big bills
in the future.
But one ASU student disagreed, saying that despite
receiving financial aid he has to also work part-time to pay
bills.
“Financial aid just won’t cover enough expenses, I have no
savings and financial aid doesn’t work with students at all,”
said accounting major Phillip Magwick.
“I have friends that are already in the hole and can’t get
out.”
: ,
However, a study conducted by the Higher Education
Coordinating Board showed that while working students on
the average had better grades, it takes them longer to
complete a degree program.
Other findings of the study were: students who work have
higher course completion rates than students who do not
work, older students get higher grades than younger students
and students who are financially independent of their parents
do better in school than those who are dependent.
Psychology/biology major Doug St. John said he finds
some benefits working for the ASU Student Health Center.
“It’s definitely a boost to my grad school acceptance,” he
said.
“When it comes to exam time though, it’s tough.”
and Clear:
Selleck’s new
"A n Innocent
"’ eludes lockup
prison-film cliches.
D* "4 Ì 3
TUCSON — The Arizona Board of Regents passed its $761
million budget request for 1990-91 despite several regents’
concern that the universities are not getting the funding they
deserve.
The approval came Friday at the regents meeting at UofA,
just three week$ after each university submitted budgets to
the regents’ Resources Committee, which denied the
requests because the total, was $784 million, 26.4 percent
higher than the current $662 million budget for the university
system. The committee said the requests could not be more
than a 22 percent increase over the sum of 1989-90 budgets.
The budget requests were then given to the Council of
Presidents, comprised of the three state university
presidents, which scaled down the
budgets to the prescribed increase.
At the Resources Committee
meeting, ASU’s budget request
totaled $285 million, which was
26percent more than its current
f
budget. The Council of Presidents cut ?
the increase to 21.1 percent, slicing 15 « p S H P r |
of 34 items on the program change F* "*
budget.
The total university-system budget _____ V f f l Jhrequest consists of program change Q rg g c j
budgets, which provide funding to
enhance existing programs and create new ones, and
continuation budgets.
The approved 1990-91 budget will be forwarded to the state
Legislature next session in January.1990.
Regent Doug Wall said th e Legislature should be handed
the original budget requests.
“I’m totally convinced that the budgets the university
presidents submitted are truly needed,” he said. “We should
give it to toe Legislature and let the process begin there. I
don’t think toe Legislature will be offended if they get a
26 percent increase if it’s justified and needed.”
However, Molly Broad, regents’ executive director, said
toe cuts were needed in light of Gov. Rose Mofford’s
announcement to state agencies that they should submit
budget reduction proposals in an effort to reduce toe state
deficit.
Shé said the dialogue among toe regents “served to
heighten the awareness of the board.”
“We made our point,” she said after toe meeting. “The
regents now have a greater appreciation. The cuts are going
to hurt.”
Student Regent Peggy Steffens voted approval of toe
budget requests, despite objecting to toe scaled down version
of the budget.
Turn to Budget. P*0*
Bowled Over:
UCLA quarterback
Bret Johnson com
pleted 16 of 30
passes for 165 yards
and two touchdowns
during the Devils’
dismal Pac-10 premier. S H i
Page 15
Today*» weather: Sunny and unaeasonably
hot, with highs near 100. Tonight should sao
clear skies and a low temperature near 70.
C la ssifie d s.........,....^
College Culture.............^.........................13
Com ics...............................
4
Police Rsport.... 1
Sports..............
State Press
M ñ n d a v O c to b e r 0. 1989
World/Nation
when their visas expired at midnight Sunday.
Hundreds of injuries were reported as police swinging
truncheons repeatedly charged demonstrators in East Berlin
on Saturday and early Sunday. Police punched, kicked, beat
and dragged the protesters away.
At least one Western reporter, Sunday Times of London
correspondent Peter Millar, was detained for six hours.
H u n dreds a rrested , hurt in G D R
in largest p rotests sin ce 1953
BERLIN (AP) — H undreds of pro-dem ocracy
demonstrators began a sit-down strike in East Berlin Sunday
night and security forces immediately blocked off the area
around the protesters, witnesses reported.
The protest followed the arrests of hundreds of people
during demonstrations in East Berlin that tapered off early
Sunday and the violent dispersal of huge weekend
demonstrations in five c^her major cities.
At least 10 people were arrested after protesters began the
sit-down strike on Schoenhauser Allee, the witnesses said.
Regular army troops and police restricted entry to the area,
where an estimated 2,000 demonstrators had gathered.
East Germany accused the Western news media of aiding
the weekend protests.
“Trouble-makers tried to disturb the people’s celebrations
for the 40th anniverary of the GDR (East Germany),” the
government-run news agency ADN said. “In cooperation
with Western news media, they banded together in the
Alexanderplatz (East Berlin’s main square) and nearby
areas and called out slogans against the Republic.”
East German authorities refused to renew the visas of
dozens of Western journalists who were in East Berlin for the
two-day visit of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev that
ended Saturday. The reporters were told to leave the city
D ispute loom s at co n feren ce
o f 39 nations on A n ta rctica ’s fate
PARIS (AP) — A dispute over the future of Antarctica,
pitting countries newly converted to environmentalism
against the United States and others, is expected to dominate
a 39-nation meeting opening here Monday;
At stake is whether the vast continent of stark mountains
and sweeping glaciers will be left in pristine splendor or
mined for mineral wealth.
Among the issues to be considered during the biennial
review of the 1959 Antarctica Treaty will be the disposal of
hazardous wastes and controlling the wave of tourists
visiting the continent.
The issue of Antarctica pits governments such as Australia
and France, whose policies have changed to reflect growing
public concern for the environment, against others such as
the United States and Japan, which generally favor
regulated exploitation.
New co n g re ssio n a l pay raise
in the w orks on Capitol Hill
WASHINGTON (AP) — While House leaders don’t like to
publicly use the words “pay raise,” they are quietly shaping
a scenario under which Congress can vote to increase its pay
with bipartisan accord and the blessing of President Bush.
Still smarting from the political fiasco last February under
which Congress was forced by public outrage to reject a
51 percent raise, House leaders have agreed on a set of
conditions for the next attempt to raise lawmakers’ salaries.
Foremost among them were that there will be a record
vote and that the increase in pay will be coupled with a
phasing out of speaking fees members of Congress receive
from interest groups.
The agreement, as outlined by a Democratic leadership
Source who insisted on anonymity, also includes a demand
for active White House support and a commitment from
party organizations to refrain from using the pay vote as a
political issue. Of course, there is no way individual
challengers to members of the House and Senate can be
forced to refrain from making a vote for a pay raise a
political issue.
Rank-and-file lawmakers earn $89,500, and leaders get
more. Any pay plan would likely also include raises for
federal judges and top federal executives who also came out
losers when the last pay raise was rejected.
Today
Meetings
•Arizona puling Club Let’s get out of Phoenix! Backpack
ing seminar at 7:30 p.m. in the M U Pima Room. New
members welcome.
•InterVarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. at
First United Methodist Church.
•MU Culture and Arts Committee will meet at 3:15 p.m. in
th e MU Santa Cruz Room. All welcome. _
•MUAB Film Committee will have its weekly meeting at
3:30 p.m. in the MU Apache Room 221.
•MUAB Special Events Committee will meet at 3:15 p.m.
in the M U Yavapai Room. New members welcome.
•Overeaters Anonymous, a support group for compulsive
overeaters, will meet at noon in the M U . Check monitor for
room number.
•Shotokan Karate Club at ASU will be offering special
•ASU Coalition for World Peace will meet at noon in the
M U Santa Cruz Room. Guest speaker: Professor Elaine
Ellison Norman, author of the book ‘'H am m er of Justice” .
•ASU Ski Devils Ski Club Anyone interested in learning
more about the club is welcome to attend the meeting at 8
p.m. on the second floor of the M U . Check monitor for room
number.
•ASU Harry Wood Gallery Opening reception for “ No Flat
Art”
the art show of undergraduate work, from 7 to 9 p.m.
in the Harry Wood Gallery in th e Art Building.
•Affirmation: Gay/Lesbian Mormons Family Hom e Even
ing — Charlie Jordan from the Arizona Comm ittee for Pro
gress (gay/lesbian political action committee), will speak at
7:30 p.m. Call 921-4025 for location.
beginners lessons and practicing a traditional Japanese art
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the SRC , second floor, Gym C.
Notices
•T’ai Chi Chuan Club will be meeting from 6 to 7:30 a.m.
on Tuesdays and Thursdays in the Student Recreation
Center, Small Gym C. The club will also meet from 8:15 to
9:15 a.m . on W ednesdays through Oct. 25 in the W est Hall
Courtyard, Anyone interested in a traditional, unaltered long
form of Yang style is welcome to attend.
•Sigma Tau Delta, English Honor Society This is the final
w eek for our great ASU writers of fiction, poetry and critical
writing to submit entries to our literary magazine "The
Angle” . Entries can be dropped off at the Language and
Literature Building, Room C-331, ETD mailbox..
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State Píen
Page3
M on da^ O ctob er9 ^ 9 8 9
W ho is A S U ’s president? M ost students stumped
Student Viewpoint is a weekly poll of student
opinion in the State Press. The unscientific
poll, conducted at points around campus, is
meant to provide an insight into students’
views on issues o f the day.
B y K IM B ER LY HARRIS
State P ra ts
ASU students know when the next threeday weekend is. They know where to get
99-cent margaritas. And they know when the
peak tanning hours are.
But ask them to name the interim
president of the University, and the answers
will vary from “Peek” to “the balding man
with thin hairs.’’
In an unscientific poll conducted Friday,
only 17 out of 100 randomly selected students
could recall the name of the man currently
running the University, Richard E. Peck.
Comments from the 83 percent who
couldn't name die interim president varied
from uninformed to indifferent.
“Oh yeah, is it Larson? No, he resigned,”
his name.
“One of my great ambitions in life is to
keep my name out of the paper,” he said. “If
I can accomplish that, I’m doing OK.”
But the burning question still lingers. Why
can’t students name their president?.
Student Viewpoint
Peck suggested, “People are busy with
other things,” he said. “They don’t pay
attention (to things of this nature.)”
Although Peck indicated that there was no
specific need for Students to be able to name
their president, he added that an effort to
intensify president/student relations has
been implemented.
Peck said he is offering students the
opportunity to meet with him by holding
“Lunch with the President.” Students can
said one student.
“ I don’t even care,” commented a
Student. “I’m graduating.”
In response to the poll, Peck, who was
once stopped by an ASU bike cop and asked
if he was affiliated with the University, said
he is doing his job if people can’t remember
State Press Poll
How many students can
correctly dentHy the interim
president of ASU, Richard
Peck?
Y es
17%
No
83%
call the president’s office to reserve their
place setting to share a meal and some
informal “chit chat” with the president.
The poll was conducted at various campus
locations. Participants were randomly
selected and varied in age and gender.
G allup poll: Students show ignorance about history, literature
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Columbus Day poll suggests one
fourth of American college seniors either never heard or do
not remember the childhood ditty : “In 1492, Columbus sailed
the ocean blue.”
In addition to finding that one in four do not know
Christopher Columbus made his famous landing in the
Western Hemisphere prior to the year 1500, the Gallup Poll
suggests considerable ignorance of other basic facte about
history and literature.
Nearly 60 percent did not know the Korean War started
when Harry S Truman was president, 58 percent did not
know that William Shakespeare wrote “The Tempest” and
nearly a quarter believed a famous saying from Karl Marx is
part of the U. S. Constitution.
“ If the students’ answers were to be graded, more than
half of those tested would have failed,” concluded the survey,
which was conducted for the National Endowment for the
Humanities.
Armed with the survey results, NEH Chairman Lynne
Cheney called Sunday for colleges and universities to revise
their curricula so undergraduates study “essential areas of
knowledge.”
In a booklet titled “50 Hours,” she outlined a suggested
core curriculum for college students.
Responding to her admonition, several college presidents
essentially told the NEH chief — in more or less polite terms
—either to mind her own business or that she was behind the
times.
Here are some of the Gallup Poll highlights:
•24 percent of the college seniors surveyed thought
Columbus landed in the Western Hemisphere some time
after 1500.
•42 percent could not place the Civil War in the correct half
century.
•58 percent did not know.that Shakespeare was the author,
of “The Tempest,” but 95 percent knew that Mark Twain
wrote “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”
•58 percent did not know Truman was president when the
Korean War began. Fourteen percent thought it started when
John F. Kennedy was president.
•55 percent could not identify the “Magna Carta.”
•23 percent believed that Marx’ phrase, “From each
according to his ability, to each according to his need,” is
part of the U. S. Constitution.
>
According to the survey, 39 percent of the college seniors
failed the 49-question history section. On the portion of the
survey devoted to literature, which consisted of 38 questions,
68 percent of the students failed.
Cheney said many colleges and universities allow students
to earn bachelor’s degrees without taking courses in history,
literature, science or mathematics and urged trustees and
administrators to support faculty members Who are working
to strengthen general education requirements.
Cheney’s core curriculum suggests study in five basic
areas of knowledge.
Hie first area, 18 semester hours on cultures and
civilizations, would start with a one-sememster survey
course on the origins of civilization in general to be followed
by two semesters of Western Civilization and one of
American Civilization and then two one-semester courses to
be chosen from among the following: African Civilization,
East Asian Civilization, Islamic Civilization, Latin American
Civilization and South Asian Civilization.
The other four areas of basic study: foreign language, 12
hours; concepts of mathematics, six hours; natural sciences,
eight hours; social sciences, six hours.
The courses, Cheney said, should be taught in small classes
and in ah integrated fashion, so that, for example, students
reading Descartes’ philosophy in a Western Civilization
course are reminded of his contributions to mathematics.
She also suggested that the classes be taught by the college’s
most distinguished faculty.
James Underwood, dean of faculty at Union College in
Schenectady, N-Y., criticized the NEH for recommending a
“superficial, rigid, and impractical” college curriculum. He
added that Union CoUege this fall began a general education
curriculum with an emphasis on history and literature.
Page4
Stateless
Monday, October 9,1989
Growth
mN0THIN6,l32N?
MAÏ0E W> SHOULD
c m T u e m ...
A S U must limit its size
Brian Tassinari
Opinion Editor
To date, the concept of enrollment
management here at ASU has consisted
of making sure there are enough forms at
the various registration sites around
campus. With this “get 'em in and we’ll
deal with the crowding later” attitude,
many freshmen have been unable to get
into their basic classes — like English
101.. Often times it seems that ASU’s
attitude was “bigger is better, damn the
costs”.
. The break in this neanderthal thinking
came not from the third floor of the
adm inistration building but from
Tucson.
When UofA President Henry Koffler
said that his school was considering
capping enrollment, ASU promptly got
on the bandwagon with a loud “me too.”
However, given the Arizona Board of
Regents’ mandate to the University
system to accept Arizona students with a
C average or better, this is not a simple
task. The easiest and most often
discussed method of controlling campus
size is to cap out-of-state enrollment.
This would be a big mistake.
The enrollment problem at ASU is
really a money problem. We haven’t
really run out of room, here in Tempe,
we’ve run out of money. Money to hire
enough teachers so that classes aren’t
the size of a movie theatre. Money
enough to pay the teachers that we have,
a decent wage so they can afford to stay
here and teach.
Capping out-of-state enrollment would
cause ASU’s difficult financial situation
to deteriorate even more quickly.
Here’s why. Out-of-state students pay
more than three times the tuition that in
state students pay. So, if out-of-state
enrollment were cut by 3000, it would
have the same effect, financially, as
cutting 10,000 in-state students. ASU
would lose 10,000 students worth of
tuition money and only 3000 actual
students.
Any way you look at it, this isn’t going to
solve any problems — it’s going to create
them.
The f a v o r ite s o lu tio n of th e
administration is to build satellite
campuses. That is why we now have ASU
West syphoning off millions of dollars
from the main campus — so that we can
have the privilege of driving 45 minutes
to class.
ASU west is a bad idea, and an ASU
East is an even worse idea. The
duplication of services necessitated by
another branch campus is an inefficient
use of scarce education dollars.
This move to branch campuses to solve
ASU’s growth problems follows the
general rule of any bureaucracy whose
main function is to expand — acquiring
more money and more people to control.
So if limiting the number of students
entering the campus is a bad idea
(enrollment cap), and expanding the
campus outward is a bad idea (ASU West
and ASU East), what is the solution to the
problem of a burgeoning campus
population and the associated decline in
quality of education?
One possible solution that has not been
discussed is to retain the current
admission standards but place all
incoming freshmen under academic
probation. New students would have one
year to prove both their desire and
ability to complete college level work or
they’d be gone.
This is better than just raising
admission standards for a number of
reasons.
First, it would allow students who are
less gifted to work hard and overcome
their deficiency. It also would eliminate
the gifted but lazy student who can score
high on a standardized test like the SAT
but performs poorly in the classroom.
Second, it would not adversely affect
current efforts by the University to
attract more minorities to campus. ASU
would have a full year to help minority
students get acclimated to University life
and performing at a college level, which
is the goal of current minority programs
anyway.
Some would argue that this unfairly
penalizes less intelligent students and is
somehow undemocratic, but this is not
the case. Students willing to work hard
would succeed under this program while
those who want a vacation from life —
living off the largess of mom and dad —
would be forced to join the real world just
a little bit sooner.
And by eliminating marginal students,
the academic quality of the entire
student body would rise.
The University would have to provide
the necessary counseling and tutoring to
students who need to work extra hard to
pass the miniumum requirements. Those
unwilling to put in the time would fail,
and good riddance to them.
Under this plan there are students who
would be forced out of the University who
may have succeeded in their second or
third year. However, something must be
done to curb enrollment. Isn’t it more
fair to give students at least one year in
college to prove themselves, than to
exclude them on the basis of a
standardized test or the work they did in
high school?
Educational dollars are scarce in
Arizona and unlikely to get any less
scarce. Given this, shouldn’t we be
spending what money there is on the
students who are most willing and able to
learn?
Letters
Professor’s comment ‘insensitive’
Editor:
In Communication 316 on Friday, Sept. 29,
1989, the class discussion was on non-verbal
behavior and the acceptability of certain
behaviors prescribed for both men and
women. I raised the point that for men,
touching their genitals in public is tolerated
behavior, however, if a woman were to do
so, it w ould be c o n sid ered q u ite
inappropriate. The males in the class
offered several reasons for this behavior,
after which, the instructor, Carol Valentine
said that she heard it was „the Latin
American handshake.
Arizona State University has been
plagued with many racial problems in the
past. Given the University’s reputation for
being an institution filled with racial
hostility and minority insensitivity, one
would think a comment such as this,
e s p e c ia lly fro m an in s tr u c to r , a
representative of the University, would not
find its way into the classroom. This
comment carries extreme negative racial
connotations and has no place in an
educational setting.
This comment made by the instructor to
the class was abominable, especially when
the comment is based on hearsay. The
disheartening part about this comment is
that it came from an instructor in the
Women’s Studies, as well as, Communica
tion Department. An instructor from
Women’s Studies, an area specifically
designed for the sensitivity of women,
should warrant a higher understanding of
what it means to be a minority.
The justification for this racially offensive
remark was that she had heard it from a
frien d . H earsay hardly co n stitutes
information that should be brought into the
classroom. This remark was made purely
out of ignorance, and showed extreme lack
of sensitivity for the minority students
present in the class. This comment is
indicative of the attitudes of the University
and what it will condone.
I am requesting Carol Valentine make a
public apology for the racial remark made
in class and will further suggest that she
spend several hours in the library
re se a rc h in g th e a c tu a l way L atin
Americans greet each other, to clear up any
other misconceptions she’s heard from
friends.
The Arizona Board of Regents and ASU
administrators are continually asking the
question of “Why don’t minority students
want to come to ASU?” This incident is only
more evidence of the hostile environment
minority students face at ASU. Minority
recruitment and retention will only be
further hindered by incidents like these.
Michelle Marquez,
Senior, History
Gun ban not solution
Editor:
On Sept. 22, the State Press printed an
editorial cartoon depicting a mentally
deranged citizen purchasing an assault rifle
from the local gun store. The cartoon went
on to imply that in this country, assault
weapons are only carried by mentally
deranged civilians whose primary intent is
to murder large masses of people.
I would like to point out the areas of
success in keeping dangerous assault
weapons out of the hand of mentally
deranged people. I believe the best example
of this can be seen in such countries as
Germany (1939-1944) and China (1989). But
then again, things like this can never
happen in America . . . or can they?
Please, no short-term solutions for long
term criminal problems.
Bryan Hawk
Senior, Electrical Engineering
STATE PRESS
Quotable
DARRIN HOSTETLER
Editor
“ In the battle o f existence, Talent is the punch;
Tact is the clever footwork. "
CAROLYN HOFIG
Managing Editor
— W ilson Mizner
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O p in ion
SWePrm
PageS
Monday, October 9,1989
Surprise
Cubs come home to prove ‘experts’ know nothing
M ike Royko
Tribune Media Services
Who are America’s true baseball experts? Who are the
wizards who can watch spring training games, then tell us
with great confidence how the season wifi end?
I really hate to do this. Rub it in, I mean. But it is so much
fun.
The experts surely aren’t at Sports Illustrated, the most
prestigious of the fun and games magazines.
Here’s what one of their deep thinkers gushed about the
Mets last spring, while picking them to trample everyone in
sight: “Their lineup is . ,. an embarrassment of riches
Excellence again and again. And again.”
And here is what he wrote about the Cubs: “The Cubs ..
have had only one winning season since 1972. You can be
certain this will not be their second.”
He was not entirely wrong, since the Mets lineup was an
embarrassment of sorts. But in fairness to Sports Illustrated,
it is printed on a fine grade of paper.
Nor can the experts be found at the magazine Inside
Sports, which condemned the Cubs to fifth place, saying:
“The Cubs don’t have nearly enough pitching . . .” But they
didn’t say how much is enough, a profound challenge. Of
course, if they know how much is enough, they might also tell
us what is truth and the meaning of life, which is too much to
expect from sporting types.
Then there is The New York Times. Every season, at the
All-Star break, one of their alleged experts does a lofty essay
called “Contenders and Pretenders.”
At that time, the Cubs were playing like contenders, while
the Mets were looking frayed.
But that didn’t matter. The true contenders? Obviously the
Mets. (“ . . . The Mets will erupt. . .” ) And the “pretenders”?
You know the answer.
Tsk, tsk. Well, The Times still does a fine job with its
Washington and foreign coverage.
‘It saddens me to say that even my
colleagues in the sports sections of
this newspaper, and our friendly rivals
at the Chicago Sun-Times, showed
little wizardry. None saw the Cubs
finishing higher than fourth place. ’
It saddens me to say that even my colleagues in the sport
sections of this newspaper, and our friendly rivals at the
Chicago Sun-Times, showed little wizardry. None saw the
Cubs finishing higher than fourth place. One surly fellow
described the Cubs as a “train wreck,” and compared Jim
Frey and Don Zimmer to a ventriloquist-dummy act. Now
he's pouting because Zimmer doesn’t like him. A sensitive
lad.
And I don’t hesitate to include myself in the egg-on-my-face
category. I thought the Cubs would have a respectable team
and win more than they lost. I bet accordingly and it’s been a
profitable summer, thanks to a New York friend. But I
expected them to collapse at some point. After 45 years of
watching them collapse at some point, it’s a hard habit to
break.
So are there any true wizards and experts? Did anyone
crawl out on a limb and flatly say the Cubs would win the
Eastern Division title?
As a matter of fact, yes.
Just before the season began, I invited readers to enter a
contest. They could predict the exact date the Cubs and the
Chicago White Sox would be mathematically eliminated
from their division races. I offered as first prize dinner for
two at Harry Caray’s restaurant, and books on their favorite
teams.
More than 1,000 people sent their predictions.
One Sox fan, Lisa Incopero, of west suburban Elmhurst,
had the exact date: Sept. 5.
But seven Cubs fans were the winners because they
predicted that the Cubs would not be eliminated, that they
would do precisely what they’ve done.
These remarkable prognosticators are:
Tom Danz, 35, of Chicago. He said: “I’m not surprised that
they won it. Most people didn’t analyze the ‘88 team
correctly. They were a good team, with good players, that
didn’t have a closing reliever. Their record in spring training
didn’t matter because they had a bad spring in ‘84 and won it.
And I thought the Palmiero trade was excellent, just what
they needed to turn it around.”
Frances Jamen, 48, of Chicago: “My husband is a Sox fan
and he laughed for two weeks when I wrote in. I just knew
they were getting better.”
Pam Pijac, 35, of Portage, Ind.: “Everybody laughed at
me at the time. They said I was a fool for picking the Cubs.
Now they’re eating their words.”
John Dietz, 21, Michigan City, Ind.: “Picking them was
real wild. I was hoping, but I didn’t really think they’d win.
Now I think they’ll take it all.”
The other three, Rich Gonzalez and Nancy Brekke, of
Chicago, and Joe Patrick, of Mundelein, 111., couldn’t be
reached.
And so, some time in the near future, we’ll gather at Harry
Caray’s — the seven wonderfully optimistic Cub fans and the
one properly pessimistic Sox fan — for an evening of fine
food, drink; and the telling and retelling of this season’s
golden moments.
As for the rest of you, Sports Illustrated, The New York
Times, the various columnists and experts from the Chicago
papers, I have a dining suggestion for you.
Order the crow. A bit chewy, but it’s the appropriate dish.
I’m having some myself.
Abortion pill could change future for pro-lifers
Cody Shearer
North American Syndicate
WASHINGTON — Hurt by news reports
that say a woman’s right to choose abortion,
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC)
leaders intend to seek legislation that would
outlaw all abortions which are used as a
means of birth control.
NRLC has asked its state directors to
draft legislation that would mandate
parental involvement when minors seek an
abortion; father’s rights; banning public
funding; and requiring women be told of the
pros and cons of abortion.
Anti-abortionists have adopted this
strategy as a result of the Supreme Court’s
decision last year to give states more room
to regulate abortion services. But are
modern women’s lifestyles and changes in
modern medicine consistent with NRLC’s
strategy? Or is a wider schism between prochoicers and anti-abortionists about to be
drawn?
Study after study has shown that threequarters of all women who receive abortions
cite interruption of school or career as one.
of their primary reasons for having the
operation. Another stated cause is not
having enough money to support a child.
None of these judgments seem likely to
change soon.
Meanwhile, the potential widespread use
of the abortion pill, already in circulation in
France, suggests further complications and
new c h a l l e n g e s for the apti-abortion crowd.
Giving a woman a chance to come to terms
with an abortion by swallowing three pills at
home, as opposed to being knocked out cold
under anesthetic, are destined to make this
p ro ced u re m ore co n tro v e rsia l and
appealing than ever before.
A year ago, the Roussel Pharmaceutical
Company in France was granted a license to
distribute the abortion method Mifegyne
(its brand name). Since it became available
at the beginning of the year, 800 licensed
centers in France have distributed the pills,
making it one of the principal methods of
abortion among French women. It is
currently used in a third of all abortions in
France and is about to be marketed
elsewhere in Western Europe.
Mifegyne is a synthetic steroid which acts
as an anti-progestrone by blocking the
progestrone receptors in the lining of the
womb. This makes the womb walls break
down, mimicking a spontaneous abortion,
rather like a heavy period.
The major disadvantage of the pill is that
it usually involves two stages. Women have
to make two separate visits to a hospital
over a period of 48 hours, within 63 days of
their last period. The second visit is for an
injection which speeds the expulsion of the
fertilized egg from the womb. At present,
the pill can only be used during the first
three months of pregnancy.
“It can help save so many lives that we
are determined to build a network, both
nationally and internationally, to insure that
its research and development proceeds as
fast as possible,” said Molly Yard,
president of the National Organization for
Women, (NOW), in an interview last week
with the Washington Post. “I can’t believe
that the medical community of the country
. . . would allow a small group of people to
keep a drug which has such promise out of
the U. S. I know the feminist community
will not allow it.”
It’s not likely that the abortion pill will
reach pharmaceutical counters in the U. S.
anytime soon. But its increasing popularity
is destined to make the abortion pill
experience less daunting and traumatic
than a several-hour stay in a hospital or
clinic. When news of the abortion pill
reaches young women here, they’re liable to
pressure the Food and Drug Administration
for its immediate availability, further
complicating a messy path for the right to
lifers. The pro-choicers say the abortion pill
is the moral property of women. The anti
abortionists suggest otherwise.
’• ' » #r .,
Among other things last week, President
Bush did “bilats,” which is the diplomatic
term for bilateral meetings with heads of
state which last no more than 10 minutes.
At a New York hotel, Bush received'a
succession of minor world leaders at eight
minute intervals. During one of these
sessions with the President of Guatemala,
Vinicio Cerezo, the President’s National
Security Adviser, Brent Scowcroft, fell
asleep. As Cerezo prepared to leave, Bush
kicked Scowcroft. Could it be that the
Guatemalan leader thought some in
Washington weren’t taking his problems
seriously?
StatcPrc«*
Monday. O ctober 9,1989
Page 6
Regents to study, plan future of enrollment growth
tiie c o m m u n ity college system and branch campuses.
He said Arizona universities are large by national
standards. NAU is in the top 10 percent while UofA and ASU
are in the top 1 percent.
Factors that influence enrollment include: administrative
requirements, affordability, university retention rates,
university attraction tonon-residents, high school graduation
rates and the state economy, Elliott said.
UofA President Henry Koffler said it is essential for the
Tucson campus to cap enrollment at 38,000.
“ Unless we take steps to limit further growth,
undergraduate education will suffer,” he said.
He said one-half of UofA’s growth in the last six years has
occurred in the last two ,years., Since 1983, enrollment has
inceased 19 percent or 5,583 students. In two years, UofA’s
enrollment is expected to-reach 38,000.
Koffler said if enrollment is not capped, it will grow by 33
percent by the year 2000. He added that this rapid growth is
not feasible.
“We need a breathing spell,” he said.
NAU President Eugene Hughes said the Flagstaff campus
has experienced 30 percent growth in the last five years. He
added that a cap on enrollment may be necessary in several
years.
Currently, there are 16,062 students at NAU.
Regent Herman Chanen said he was pleased with the
presidents’ presentations and now it is time for the board to
plan strategies to combat the growth.
Regent Andy Hurwitz said the three schools are at the
optimal level before over-crowding and a decrease in
academic standards begins.
“It (enrollment) is close to its capacity,” he said. “We’re
lucky there was not over-crowding this year.”
can be hazardous to the faculty “because you can’t move
them,” Peck said.
ASU’s president said when introductory Spanish classes
reached maximum enrollment last year, German instructors
were asked to teach Spanish.
“It lodes good on paper, but it doesn’t really 'work,” Peck
said.
Regent Donald Pitt, chairman of the newly formed
Strategic Planning Subcommittee, said enrollment
m a n a g e m e n t is vital to providing ti»e best education.
“It is our intention to provide access to all residents of our
state who meet the requirements,” he said- “We seek
diversity for our residents from non-residents.”
By K ELLY PEAR CE
State P re ss
TUCSON — As students continue to ilood Arizona’s three
state universities, the Arizona Board of Regents said Friday
it will take an active role in studying and planning the future
of enrollment growth.
Each university president presented to the board campus
projection figures and the need for short- and long-term goals
to cap enrollment or increase admission
standards.
Regent Doug Wall said the three
presidents need to formulate plans for
their campuses, adding thaH 'as money
shrinks and the years go on,” enrollment
figures grow in importance.
‘Unless we take steps to lim it
Regent Donald Pitt said capping
enrollment is not a long-range solution.
further growth, undergraduate
In addition, he said enrollment is “the
education w ill suffer (at the UofA), ’
most important thing that faces the
P itt
university system."
— H enry K o ffler
ASU Interim President Richard Peck said the University’s
growth, including ASU West, has leveled off at 48,000 after
experiencing its most dramatic growth during the 1970s.
Pitt said it is essential to provide a “temporary expediency
Peck called ASU West a safety valve, able to accommodate
a maximum of 10,000 students, 3,799 of which are already to allow us to absorb everyone that should be admitted to our
enrolled. In the last three years, ASU’s biggest growth has system and have them get the best education.”
Odus Elliott, the regents’ associate director for academic
been at the west campus, he said.
Although growth in one college may decrease, enrollment programs, said there are currently 95,000 students in the
Arizona university system and that steps must be taken now
in other colleges may be on the upswing, he said.
For example, ASU’s College of Business has experienced a to prepare for the future.
Universities must “secure adequate state funding to deal
decline in students, “but now there are more liberal arts
with the bulge of students” in order to solve the growth issue,
majors,” he said.
This may be good for the student population, however, it Elliott said. He added that this Can be accomplished through
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___________ __ ___________ _________ __ ___________________________
C lu b
generated from University revenue such as
parking decals and ASU Bookstore sales,
which is then invested in government
securities.
Currently, there are 560 club members.
Faculty pay a $25 initiation fee and a $300
contribution fee for renovating the Fine Arts
Annex. In addition, a monthly fee that has
not yet been set will be charged when the
chib opens.
Regent Donald P itt compared the
Continued from page 1.
Associated Students of ASU President
Paul Larson said the feasibility of the
funding and club membership projections
need to be investigated.
“This is something that needs to be done,”
he said, adding that he will take an active
role during the consultation period.
ASU officials have said the money
borrowed from the investment fund will be
paid back with interest. The fund is
University Club to the ASU Student
Recreation Complex in which students can
congregate.
“I think that a faculty club is appropriate
to gather people together,” he said. “They
can exchange ideas and socialize.”
But Larson disagreed.
“It (the recreation center) is different —
faculty and staff can use the club,” he said.
“This is not a valid analogy.”
Molly Broad, regents’ executive director,
said she expects the measure to pass die
next time the board considers the issue.
“I thought it would go through,” she said
after the board meeting. “I have no doubt it
will go through the next time around,”
Regent Herman Chanen, who voiced his
concern about the club’s funding source to
Larson last Week, said Friday that the
regents “have asked to find out the
feasibility’’ of the club.
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Pagc8
Budget
■■
; Delegates to discuss wildlife preservation
ConOnuad from pag* 1.
“I don’t think the universities asked for extremes,” she
said. “I think we should consider their (the presidents’)
original requests.”
Regent Jack Pfister disagreed.
“It is not expected of us" just to pass the budget along, he
said, adding that the regents should “exercise independent
judgment.”
Regent Andrew Hurwitz said the board needs to be realistic
when it comes to the budget.
Hurwitz said he was torn between the 26 percent and the
22 percent increases.
“Living in the real world, the Legislature won’t give us a
26 percent increase,” he said. On the other hand, “we should
go with what we really need. Twenty-two percent is a big
number, but it shows that ifs a real number and a solid
number — it’s a starting point.”
— KELLY PEARCE
LAUSANNE, Sw itzerland (AP) — Wildlife
specialists squared off Sunday for a bitter fight over
how to keep Africa’s fast-dwindling elephant
population from vanishing forever into ivory piano
keys and chess pieces.
Delegates from more than 100 countries will meet
until Oct. 20 at the, biennial conference of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, known as CITES. The
conference began Sunday with strategy sessions and
formally opens Monday.
Although they will also consider the smooth-coated
otter, the salmon-crested cockatoo and a Noah’s Ark of
other species, attention is focused on pachyderms and
their valuable ivory.
By some reckoning, the great lumbering' African
elephant, for many an unmatchable symbol of the wild,
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Monday, O ctober 9,1989
“When we talk about halving the population in 10
years, we’re talking about disaster,” Iain DouglasHamilton, a widely respected expert, said in a
telephone interview from Kenya.
D avid W e ste rn of W ildlife C o n serv atio n
International, who commissioned the last census, said:
“Numbers are dropping so fast elephants may be
exterminated in most areas within 20 or 30 years.”
Overall, he said, just more than 600,000 remain in
Africa, compared to estimates ranging from 1.3 million
to 4 million a decade ago. Each year, poachers kill at
least 70,000, often spraying gunfire at females and
calves along with the few old tuskers left.
The convention’s rulings come in the form of nonlegally binding agreements that rely on international
pressure for enforcement. A CITES member can opt
out of a resolution, but that casts it in the role of
environmental bad guy.
E xp. 10-31-89
JAMES MANOR LUXURY APTS.
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968-6322
Pay to the
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•If you have suffered from a neck injury,
you may be eligible
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Castrol GTX Fallnationals
Oct. 12-15
Firebird International Raceway
Present this coupon along with your college ID card
at the ticket booth ana receive $ 10 discount on a
general adm ission pit pass ticket for Friday, Oct.
13, Saturday. Oct. 14 or Sunday, Oct. 15.
One coupon per person. Not valid with any other discount.
Reproduction or facsim ile not accepted
Creating Futures Sem inar Novem ber 4, 1989
Mciro Hotel wcMcoun 9:00 to5:00
B a rb a ra A n d re w s, N a tio n a l Image
speakers:
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+ Rumors have Jit. th a t one of MURPHY BROWN’S exsecretaries will attend.
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Paggi
Fraternities concerned about image, pledge to eliminate hazing
B y T h e A sso cia te d P re ss
An anti-hazing campaign aimed at countering the image of
greek rows as gin-soaked “Animal Houses” appears to be
gaining this fall on campuses from the University of Southern
California to Dartmouth.
Worried by their image, as well as the possibility of
lawsuits, fraternities around the country are moving to
eliminate hazing. Some want to eliminate pledging, the
practice of having a period between the recruitment of a
member and his formal initiation when hazing is most likely.
In August, two of the nation’s largest fraternities, Tau
Kappa Epsilon and Zeta Beta Tau, decided that the most
effective way to end hazing was to ban pledging altogether in
their chapters.
Kappa Delta Rho also approved a long-range plan that
includes a move to no pledging by 1995. Phi Sigma Kappa
■'
I
I
I
I
amended its constitution to allow for experimentation with
non-pledge programs. Alpha Epsilon Pi introduced new
membership education programs.
The National Interfrateraity Council, which represents
fraternities at 900 college campuses, weighed in with an anti
hazing campaign of its own in September, stressing that the
image of fraternities everywhere was suffering from hazing
incidents that harmed pledges physically or psychologically.
“It’s not a concern for decreasing membership,” said
Jonathan J. Brant, executive director of the Indianapolisbased council. “We’re just really fed up with the perception
that silly and dangerous things occur on the college campus,
and fraternities are sometimes associated with those things.
“What has empowered us in making our case to
fraternities is that we are painfully aware that the stakes
have been raised in legal liability,” Brant said.
Fraternity brothers on many campuses still resist the idea
of ditching the time-honored practice of putting new
members through physical or mental ordeals before their
formal initiation, despite excesses that have led to 40 deaths
and hundreds of injuriés in the last decade nationwide.
“I really don’t think you can form any sort of loyalty to a
house without pledging,” said Steve Colafella, a sophomore
initiated last month into Alpha Sigma Phi at Penn State
University,
“The oneness that you show with the brotherhood, the thing
you have in common, is the trials and tribulations that got
you there.”
Some 400,000 u n d e rg ra d u a te m en and 250,000
undergraduate women belong to greek organizations in the
United States and Canada.
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S ttte P rm
Organizations can earn $500 to clean up stadium mess
By ANDY PED ER SEN
C ontributin g W riter
Did you ever think about who cleans up
the thousands of Coke cups, popcorn kernels
and plates of dried nachos after the Sun
Devil football games?
Well, it could be you if you belong to an
organization and want to earn $500 dollars.
ASU offers on and off-campus organiza
tions a unique opportunity to raise $500 tax
free by cleaning Sun Devil Stadium on
Sundays after home football games.
Don Follett, ASU’s athletic facilities
assistant who supervises the stadium clean
up program, sends an application to every
organization registered with the University.
“ Organizations also hear about the
program by word-of-mouth,” Follett said.
Each organization is given a schedule of
the home football games and must rank
them in order of preference. The games are
allocated on a first come, first serve basis.
The only requirem ent is th at each
organization has a minimum of 30 people
attend the stadium clean up.
“At first, nobody wants to work the games
at the end of the season, but now, even these
spaces are filling quickly,” said Stephanie
Trakas, an athletic facilities aidé.
Organizations are allowed to clean the
stadium more than once if spaces are
available.
.. “Many of the organizations, which sign up
are from ASU, but we do have some offcampus groups, such as Mesa Pop Wamér
Football,” Follett said.
The off-campus organizations often hear
about the program through ASU affiliate
organizations, he added. .
hesitant about picking up other people’s
trash. People divided themselves into
sweepers, garbage-gatherers and scouts.
Scouts, for example, would move ahead and
pick up glass and larger pieces of trash.
But at least one REACH member found
something other than the countless
containers of stale popcorn, plates of driedup nachos and thousands of Coke cups.
“After all this work, I only found one
measly dime,” REACH member Jennifer
Scoutten said.
At approximately 9:30 a.m., the REACH
members were three-fourths finished.
People were starting to pick up the pace,
becoming more confident in their duties.
At 10:40 a.m , the REACH members
accomplished their long-awaited goal. After
applauding themselves, they spoke of going
home to take a bath, a nap or both.
Follett schedules four organizations per
game to clean the stadium, which seats
74,865 people, The organization» are each
responsible for one-quarter of the stadium.
If an organization fails to show up, Follett
must hire a professional cleaning service to
replace the group.
“It actually costs me more to have the
organizations clean the stadium as opposed
to a professional cleaning service,” he said.
REACH, a paraprofessional organization
designed to assist students adjust to
University life, participated in the clean-up
last month.
About 31 apprehensive REACH members
showed up for the 8 a.m. task and Follett
gave instructions to the groups and
distributed the battered brooms, rusty
shovels and unlimited garbage bags.
As the clean-up began, some were
getintotheacuon...statepresssports
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and Pit Crew Challenge to benefit...
Valley of the Sun United Way
3 p.m. Wednesday, O ct 11
at Centerpoint Plaza (University & Mill)
Meet Top Fuel and Funny Car Drivers. Cheer
on your favorite A S U Bed Race Team. PitCrew
Challenge starts at 1:30 p.m.
Z-286-LP/12 is a 12 MHZ 80286 zero wait state, small
footprint desktop with a 20 MB harddisk, 1MB RAM, one
3-5" floppy drive, a MOUSE, parallel p o rt and 2 serial ports
an d 14" FTM COLOR monitor. With MS DOS and
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MOUSE, parallel port, a serial port, and a 14" FTM monitor.
With MS DOS and Microsoft Windows With W rite and Paint.
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Supersport 286 is an 80286, switchable 12/6 Mhz, zero
wait state laptop with 20 MB harddisk, one 3-5"1.4 MB „
floppy drive, 1 MB of RAM, parallel port, serial port, and
a full size backlit supertwist LCD screen. Software in
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Prices subject to
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For information
call (602) 274-9877.
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Wednesday and Thursday
PagejM
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ASU Police Report
ASU ponce reported the following incidents that occurred
Friday in connection with sexual misconduct in the second
floor mens restroom at the Farm er Education Building,
police said.
Daniel W. Bodwin, Art Laughter and Michael Chandler
were charged with public sexual indecency in an ongoing
undercover police investigation of the building.
Bodwin is a senior business major and Laughter is a senior
education major.
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74 8 W. U n iv e rs ity , M e s a
(Extension & University)
co p y
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Compiled b y State P ress reporter Tenny Tatusian.
CU T COUPONS
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blunt object while it was parked in Parking Structure Five
between 6:30 p.m. Friday and noon Saturday.
•A student was warned of alcohol violations and drunken
driving after police found him sitting in his car in Parking
Structure 3 with an empty beer can.
•Police confiscated a small amount of marijuana after
receiving complaints of drug use on the second floor of Cholla
Apartments.
•Two minors were arrested after police found them with
alcohol on the fourth floor of Manzanita Residence Hall. •
All three men were released on their own recognizance
ending formal charges by the Maricopa County Attorney’s
iffice, police said.
Six men have been arrested for such charges.
•A thief stole $850 from a cash drawer in the copy center of
Noble Library between 7 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m. Friday.
•A student was arrested when he gave police officers false
information after he was involved in a fight at the Phi Kappa
Psi fraternity house, 418 Adelphi Drive. He was released on
his own recognizance.
•A vandal shattered three windows of a student’s car with a
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9 6 8 -5 5 5 5
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903 S. Rural Rd.
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$1.25 O F F any Original
Extra-large one or more
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O ne coupon per pizza.
Not valid with arty other
offers or specials.
Expires: 10/15/89
O N LY $6.99 -I- tax for an
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O ne coupon per pizza.
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E x p ire s 1 0-16 -5 9
STPR
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Subject to a ll a p p lica b le sta te A lo c a l tox.
$1.00 O F F any Medium
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O ne coupon per pizza. '
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Expires: 10/15/89
•0»
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STPR L «
Includ es a ll a p p lica b le sta te A lo c a l tax J
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NOW HIRING AT 903 S.'RURAL- 968-5555
»
Monday. O ctober 9,1989
Doctor warns of eye damage from excessive computer use
B y M A R K CRISM O N
State P re ss
A local optometrist is warning students
that spending long hours working on
computers can result in permanent eye
damage.
Eyestrain resulting from long periods of
time spent focusing on a computer screen
can cause temporarily impaired vision and
may result in permanent nearsightedness, a
condition in which the acuity of distance
vision is diminished, Kent Kneip said.
Kneip, an independent contractor who
leases examination space from three local
Lee Optical locations including Tempe
Center and Los Arcos Mall, said eye-strain
is characterized by fuzziness of vision,
tiredness, double vision, dryness and
redness of the eyes and headaches.
“These are all symptoms you get when
you work on a computer,” he said. “The
same symptoms are found in people who
read a lot. We’re finding more nearsighted
people in our society as we do more
reading.”
.
R
He went on to say that video display
terminals are harder on the eyes Qian
reading because the resolution on a screen
is much less clear than the printing in a
book.
Additionally, the glare reflecting off of the
screen reinforces eye-strain, he said.
In addition to com puter science,
engineering and computer information
systems majors, computers are being used
increasingly often by students studying
a rc h ite c tu re , journalism , industrial
technology, broadcasting and other fields.
• Said Parag Rastogi, a graduate student in
computer science, “I have become more
nearsighted. I have been working a lot on
the computer and my eyesight has been
affected, but you have to complete the
assignments in time.”
; ,
Tara Allison, a senior studying computer
V information systems, said, “If I’ve been
working on a really tough program for a
long period of time, my vision will be blurry
and it usually lasts 10 to 15 minutes.”
Ma Weiqiang, working for a doctorate in
e a d
a b o u t
t h e
b a s t
electrical, engineering, said, “After a long
time on the computer I go out and I cannot
see far too clearly. Sometimes I get a little
headache and my eyes feel irritated.”
Kneip said for most people there are “no
physical changes of the eyes,” but a person
“can have eye-strain without nearsighted
ness.” He added that once nearsightedness
develops, “it generally is not reversible.”
Don Walton, a junior in CIS and computer
operator for ASU’s Academic Computing
Service, said, “If you spend a lot of time
programming in front of a CRT (cathode
ray tube), it will definitely affect your eyes.
“After programming all night my eyes
are red and irritated and I sometimes have
trouble focusing.”
Walton said he had friends who worked on
computers for eight hours a day, and their
employers provided them with special eye
drops or screen guards to help prevent eyestrain.
Joe Pullaro, a junior studying interactive
computer graphics, said, “I’m concerned
...a
n d
t h e
p r e s e n t
about it for the long run. Sometimes I go
home with a headache at night usually after
long periods of time programming.
“I feel they should be talking to us about it
in class if we’re going-to be spending this
much time on the computer and doing this
for a living.”
Kreip listed a number of precautions that
can be taken to prevent permanent eye
damage.
Most important is taking breaks, he said,
recommending a “ 10-minute break per hour
— just looking at something far away and
relaxing the eyes — and look up or away
every 15 minutes.”
He also* recommended prescription
reading glasses and eliminating the
reflection of light off the screen by using
shields that fit around the screen.
He added that wearing dark-colored
clothing, as opposed to bright colors, also
will eliminate some of the glare reflecting
back from the screen, and that the
brightness of the screen be set at about
three to four times that of the room.
.
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4
College Culture
SttttPTM I
________________
Pa3C 13
-_______________Monday, October 9.1989
The Usual Suspects
M ovie Review
S o n o f B o b b y D arin
YOU’VE SEEN THE COMMERCIAL. A
guy with a big moon-shaped head, goofy
smile and dark sunglasses sings about
grabbing a bite at McDonald’s. The tune
and style of singing are familiar, aren’t
■they?
Dodd Darin, the son of the late Bobby
Darin says that it’s a little too familiar and
is suing McDonald’s for more than $10
million for copying his father’s style of
singing on the “Mac Tonight" commercial.
The suit, filed last week in Los Angeles
County Superior Court alleges that the ads
infringe on rights to Darin’s 1959 version of
“ Mack the Knife.”
J
Darin died in 1973 at the age of 37
because of heart problems. He won two
1960 Grammys and sold 2 million copies of
the single.
T h e Lenn on bunker
THE MOUNTAINTOP HOME of Julian
Lennon recently sold for $1.5 million,
$450,000 more than the pop singer bought if
for only 10 months ago.
The one-acre property, built in the Santa
Monica Mountains, is a former World War
II U. S. Army bunker.
According to Los Angeles Times sources,
the 4,000-square-foot residence wasn’t in
the best of shape — floors were ripped out
and an unspecified indecent British expres
sion painted on the roof to discourage overenthusiastic farfs and photographers.
Not guilty
‘Innocent M an’ offers
believable portrayal
of life behind bars
By FR AN O N E STAH L
State P re ss
I
Jimmie Rainwood (Tom Selleck, “Magnum PI” ) has a
very normal life. He works for an airline during the day
and in the evening goes home to his wife (Laila Robins,
“Planes, Trains and Automobiles” ) and their dreams of a
family. The Rainwoods’ dreams are destroyed when police
officers, acting on a tip that sends them to the wrong ad- '
dress, break into their house and shoot Jimmie.
When they realize their mistake, Officers Parnell (David
Rasche, “Sledge Hammer” ) and Scalise (Richard Young,
“Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” ) plant a gun in his
hand and some drugs in his house and arrest him.
When he is tried and found guilty of dealing drugs and at
tempted assault on an officer, Rainwood is sent to a max
imum security prison. There he hooks up with Virgil Cane
(F. Murray Abraham, “Amadeus” ) who keeps “JimmieRain” (as Cane nicknames him) alive while he serves his
time, and gives him the idea to nab the cops who framed
him.
Rainwood and his wife Kate are very much in love. She
fights the system while he is locked up, and endangers her
own life in the process. Robins, a virtual newcomer to the
big screen, plays her character with a great intensity. She
reacts naturally, considering the circumstances — her
worst nightmare has come true, she finds herself in danger
of losing her husband.
What a great cast! All of the acting, down to the smallest
of the bit parts, is wonderful. Bruce A. Young, who plays
Rainwood’s prison nemisis, Jingles, only appears in a few
scenes, but his facial expressions stick in your mind even
after the film ends.
It’s relatively cheap and easy to make a prison film
where people chop each other up with hand-made
T h e D alai La m a
o n to u r
NOBEL LAUREATE Tenzin Gyatso, the
Dalai Lama, was at the Buddhist Vajrapani Institute in the Santa Cruz Moun
tains this weekend, and they just loved
him.
“ If you were a Catholic and the pope
came to visit your parish, it’s about the
same thing, ’’ said John Schwartz, a
member of the Vajrapani community.
Wearing maroon and saffron robes, the
Dalai Lama rode in a gray Jaguar and
blew kisses to the crowd as they showered
him with roses. The exiled leader of Tibet
recently won the Nobel Peace Prize for his
non-violent efforts to free his country from
Chinese rule.
After the Dalai Lama blessed the Institu
tion’s temple, he spoke to a crowd of 2,000
at the Civic Auditorium in Santa Cruz,
saying:
“Compassion and love is the key thing.
On the family level, the national level, the
international level. It is the key to success
and happiness.”
D e a r M r. T ru m p
KIDS KNOW EXACTLY who moves and
shakes the world these days. When a pro
blem arises, they don’t write to Santa
Claus, they don't write to the governor or
president, they don’t even seem to be
writing to God. They write to Donald
Trump.
Third-graders at Kathleen E. Goodwin
Elementary School have sent letters — by
Federal Express — to Trump pleading
with him to buy an antique carousel and
save it from being broken up and auction
ed off.
“Dear Mr. Trumps,” writes Melissa
Plancon, “Please buy the carousel. We
need it b a d . . . All the kids like it. You are
the riches one in the country.”
The merry-go-round in question was
built in 1899 and has been the main attrac
tion at the Lake Quassapaug Amusement
Park since 1927. The family-owned park
has been hit by rising insurance premiums
and the old carousel is just getting too ex
pensive to keep. It’s expected to be auc
tioned off on Oct. 21 and has been apprais
ed at more than $1 million.
And Jude Harmon says, “It is worth
more if you buy it. Children-adore it. If
they destroy it they will break all 5,000
kids hearts plus my whole school.”
Trump spokeswoman Norma Foerderer
says Trump receives about 1,000 requests
for charitable contributions daily and will
review the Lake Quassapaug situation
soon.
t is said that a man is innocent until proven guilty. Beyond
reasonable doubt, “An Innocent Man” is guilty of only one
thing: being a good movie.
Tom S e lle c k p la y s the fa lse ly a ccu se d Jim m ie Rainw ood in “ A n
Innocent M a n . ”
machetes, and transmit nasty diseases in innovative ways.
Writer Larry Brothers, however, does not take the easy
way out. Every once in a while a knife may appear and so
meone may be shredded, but that is not what the film
relies on for its story.
The action never ends, but the violence is not just blood
splattered in large puddles. The personalities of the
characters, their actions and motivations keep you involv
ed. Rainwood seems to give up everything he once believed
as he lives out his term — the simplest concepts and
dearest held beliefs can change in such a situation.
The cops are pure evil, and their believable portrayal
prompts the audience to react to their sadism with loud ad
monitions. Shouts and applause can be heard throughout
the theater when ..... well, see for yourself.
Go ahead, convict “An Innocent Man” . It deserves
everything it gets, especially at the box office.
Convention of sexism taints ‘Forum’
_________
B y SH A R O N K A N E Y
State P ress
he opening number assures that the evening’s entertain
ment will be “something appealing, something appalling,
something for everyone: a comedy tonight.”
It does have both its appealing and appalling moments.
It all depends on how you look at it.
Lyric Opera Theatre opened it’s fall season Friday night
with “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.”
But appealing or appalling or not, one has to wonder at
the relevance of putting on a show that sets the equal
rights movement back 2,000 years.
Although the show itself is a mere two decades old, the
story comes straight out of Roman comedy with all the
conventions and trimmings. Like a typical Plautus play,
the show abounds with stock characters (clever servants,
star-struck lovers), a farcical plot, mistaken identities, and
more than one foolish character in disguise.
Unfortunately “Forum” makes use of two other Roman
conventions: sexism and oppression.
But if that doesn’t appall you (or offend you) too much,
you may be able to enjoy the show’s more appealing side.
The most appealing thing “Forum” has to offer is its
score by Stephen Sondheim. Unfortunately, neither the or
chestra nor the cast do it much justice: The orchestra,
under the timid direction of Karen Coates, is missing a lit
tle something — namely the string section that the piece
was originally scored for. The overture — traditionally the
orchestra’s best opportunity to shine — was particularly
weak.
But if the orchestra had played to its potential* the vocal
performers would have been drowned out completely.
Without exception the vocal performances were difficult to
hear and understand, and a great deal of the clever lyrics
were lost.
Even though this theater house was designed specifically
for vocal performances, this is one production that needs
amplification.
One of the musical highlights of the evening is
“Everybody Ought to Have a Maid,” in which various free
Jo e M arshall and D ean T arkin gton sta r in “ A Funny Thing
H appened on th e W ay to th e F o ru m .”
men and their slaves sing about the advantages of having a
young woman around the house to do their master’s bid
ding. The song is only charming, though, if you can look
past the fact that it’s the most sexist number in the show.
Jeffery Yarter and Dean Tarkington perform the song and
choreography delightfully well (with reprises by Joe Marshall and John Lucius II).
Most of the remaining musical numbers lacked pizazz
and the show as a whole (under the direction of Brian Hall)
could have been tighter.
Tarkington and Marshall, who play the two clever slaves,
carry the show with their noteable performances. Neither
Tarkington nor Marshall are identified as LOT students in
the program. In fact, only four of the nine leading roles are
identified as LOT protege.
One mUst w'onder where all of the strong LOT performers
are, (and there are quite a few) and why they aren’t seen
in this production.
- ^
'
Comics
Page 14
State Pk w
Monday, October 9 , 1989
by B ill W a tte rs o n
C a lv in a n d H o b b e s
HOW MA i EVER GO!MG TO
REND THREE «HOLE PAGES
OF THIS BV TOMORROW ?
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NOTHING'S IMPOSSIBLE.
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600PEVENING, I'M ROLANOHEPLEV, ANO THOSEARB BUTA FEW
OF THEPLATERS YOU'LLSEE
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OUTA "CRACKEEN'; THE
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CRACKGETSALLTHE
A ttention, a n p i 'm
MUCHMOREAU
“Three wishes? Did I say three» wishes?
I'll grant you FOUR wishes.”
m O&r
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Brothers Kaleo and
Trevor Iwasaki grew up in Hawaii but they think
attending college in North Dakota, where winter is
serious business, is a good deal.
After all, says Kâleo, “you can only take so much sun
■and surf.”
Both young men from the island of Kauai are
attending the small University of Mary, south of
Bismarck, after being lured some 3,000 miles by
football scholarships. Kaleo, 20, a junior, is majoring in
business, while Trevor, 19, a sophomore, is leaning
toward a profession in medicine.
“The island where we’re from is laid back,” Kaleo
said. “Up here, it’s the same way. In North Dakota,
everyone’s relaxed.”
The North Dakota climate, with snow, drier air and
extreme temperatures, took some getting used to, the
brothers admit.
“This weather is so dramatic,” Trevor said.
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State Press
Page 15
Monday, O ctober 9,1989
Missed opportunities, field goals key ASU loss
By JO E L HORN
State P re ss
The Sun Devils may have paid their one and only visit to
the Rose Bowl this season.
Largely due to missed opportunities and Alan Zendejas’
two missed field goals, ASU lost its conference opener to
UCLA, 33-14, Saturday in front of 53,188 spectators in
Pasadena, Calif.
“We didn’t take advantage of things when we had a chance
to,” said ASU Head Football Coach Larry Marmie. “We ain’t
hunting field goals now, we’re hunting touchdowns. But if the
field goal situation comes up, you’ve got to make that, too.”
The Sun Devils dominated the first quarter, accumulating
108 yards and limiting the Bruins to 20, but Zendejas’ missed
field goals resulted in a scoreless tie.
“How did it affect us?” Marmie asked. “We certainly
didn’t have a good feeling on the sideline.”
Zendejas, who has made only nine of 20 attempts since
hitting 15 of 19 two years ago, missed from 37 yards after the
Sun Devils took the opening kickoff and drove to UCLA’s
20-yard-line.
ASU left cornerback Eddie Stokes intercepted a pass from
quarterback Bret Johnson on UCLA’s first offensive play and
returned it to the UCLA 14.
However, the Sun Devils were able to move only seven
yards on three plays and Zendejas missed a 25-yard attempt.
“You certainly don’t have a good feeling when you get
down that close and come away empty,” Marmie said.
ASU defensive tackle Shane Collins said, “It’s frustrating,
but it’s not like Alan tried to miss those.”
Despite the two .missed scoring opportunities, the Sun
Devils remained confident.
“After the first two (missed) field goals, I thought we were
going to run away with the game,” sid ASU nose guard
Richard Davis. “I really did:”
At the end of the first quarter, UCLA began a 91-yard
touchdown drive. Johnson, who scrambled seven yards on
third-and-five from the ASU 14-yard line, completed five of
six passes for 45 yards. He capped the drive with an eightyard scoring toss to flanker Scott Miller.
ASU’s next possession ended when quarterback Paul
Justin’s pass was tipped by flanker Lynn James and
intercepted by UCLA right cornerback Mark McGill, who
made a 21-yard return and might have scored if Justin hadn’t
tripped him up at the ASU eight-yard-line.
Two plays later, Johnson found tight end Randy Austin
open in the right corner of the end zone for the Bruins’ second
touchdown.
Justin promptly marched the Sun Devils 85 yards in 12
plays for a touchdown. He completing seven of seven passes
for 75 yards, including a three-yard touchdown pass to tight
end Scott Veach. Freshman Mike Richey kicked the extra
point.
UCLA tailback Brian Brown returned the ensuing kickoff
23 yards to the 33-yard line and the Bruins were on the move
again. Johnson twice hit tight end Charles Arbuckle, once to
move the ball into Sun Devil territory and again to the ASU
13-yard line with 18 seconds left in the half.
The Bruins settled for a 31-yard field goal from Alfredo
Velasco and a 17-7 halftime lead.
UCLA took the second-half kickoff and drove 64 yards in 12
plays to the ASU 4. Tailback Shawn Wills, who finished with
79 yards on 23 carries, was stopped on third-and-two and
Velasco kicked a 21-yard field goal.
Following an exchange of possessions, the Bruins were
forced to punt. ASU left cornerback Kevin Minnifield
Sun D w d split a n d Ron fa ir 1« brought down by U C L A defsndors R o om Keeton (SS) and M ark M cG ill (19). Fair had seven catches fo r 109
yards against the Bruins.
partially blocked the kick, which rolled to the UCLA 42.
On second-and-19 from the UCLA 38, Justin completed an
11-yard pass to tailback David Winsley. UCLA right
cornerback Dion Lambert was called for a personal foul
away from the play and ASU had a first down at the Bruins’
13-yard ling.
Four plays later, fullback Jeff Simoneau scored on a twoyard run, cutting ASU’s deficit to 20-14 with 2:32 remaining in
the third quarter.
“I felt like there might be a little momentum change,”
Marmie said. “ But offensively, we made too many mistakes.
“I could actually visualize us winning the football game,
21-20.”
On the last play of the third quarter, Justin completed a
pass to tight end Ryan McReynolds on third-and-five at the
UCLA 40, but McReynolds was hit by Bruin free safety Eric
Turner.
The ball popped loose and UCLA left defensive tackle Mike
Lodish grabbed it in midair. The play was ruled an
intercepted fumble.
“I’m not sure Ryan McReynolds had possession of the
ball,” Marmie said. “If it’s not (a fumble), then it’s an
interception, because the ball never hit the ground.”
With 8:19 left in the game, Velasco kicked a 33-yard field
goal to make it 23-14. He added another three points with 1:14
remaining.
With 26 seconds left, UCLA inside linebacker Stacy Argo
intercepted a deflected pass from Justin and raced 48 yards
down the right sideline to add insult to injury.
Collins was not at all impressed with the Bruins.
“They’re definitely beatable,” he said. “I don’t think the
true Sun Devil football team showed up tonight.”
Davis was pit against UCLA center Frank Cornish, a pre
season All-Pac-10 and All-American selection.
“Frank was a good ballplayer,” he said. “He played with a
lot of class. Playing against him tonight, I was able to show
what I could do.”
Davis made 11 tackles, 7 solo, and was voted Sun Devil
defensive player of the game by the ASU coaches.
The Sun Devils travel to Corvallis, Ore., Saturday to play
the Oregon State Beavers.
“We expect that we’ll have a battle on our hands,” Marmie
said. “They’re a better football team than they’ve been the
past several years.
‘‘Hopefully, we can take some of the things that happened
(against UCLA) that we can build on and use next week.”
Marmie said the Sun Devils can contend for a bowl game.
“I still feel like we can be a good football team,” he said.“ I
really do.
“I don't think that’s false optimism.”
N ew lin eu p sp a rk s D evils’ win again st C o u g a rs
By VICKI CULVER
State Press
A S U se n io r N o e lle F rid rich (12) end sop h om o re D ebbie Penney (2) b lo ck s hit b y the U n iversity of
W ashington F rid a y .
Matches whiqh include saves from the
bleachers and back row spikes are not
representative of good volleyball
But ASU Volleyball Coach Patti Snyder
said that the chaotic 15-9, 15-12, 15-13 win
against Washington State Saturday was just
as exciting as any other.
“It wasn’t pretty, but we’ll take any win,”
she said.
Snyder incorporated anew starting lineup
for this weekend’s matches against WSU
and the University of Washington, and said
she is excited about the way it has worked
out.
“I love our new lineup,” she said. “It
allows us more versatility. We can swing
positions on the right.”
She said, however, that the lineup could
use some fine tuning.
,
“There was definitely not as much
continuity,” she said. “WSU’s ball control
really sucked us into a slow mode.”
ASU, whose overall record is 9-9, defeated
the Cougars, 3-0, earlier this year at the Red
Raider Classic in Fullerton, Calif. Snyder
said her team looked sloppier Saturday
night than in Fullerton.
“We were a lot more dominant and
crisper in Fullerton,” she said. “But,
(Saturday) we had our moments of good
plays. We ended on an aggressive, hard,
great hit.”
After five-game heartbreak losses to BYU
and UW last week, Snyder said she was
worried the Sun Devils may be losing
confidence. She said that the WSU win
should boost them up.
“I am happy for the team to have a win,”
she said. “Now they will know that what
they have been doing (in practice) is
working.”
Snyder said although her whole team put
in a great effort on Saturday, senior Tracy
Kisro played exceptionally well.
“ She has been playing phenomenal
volleyball,” Snyder said. “ She is swinging
away and playing aggressively. I really
want to commend her performance against
BYU, Washington, and Washington State.”
In Friday’s match against UW in which
the Sun Devils were defeated 12-15, 15-13,
15-8,9-15,15-7, Kisro earned a career high 24
kills. Saturday, she had 18 kills.
Other ASU players who highlighted the
weekend games, Snyder said, were Noelle
Fridrich and Jennifer Helfrich. Fridrich led
the team with 54 assists against UW, and
Helfrich had six assists and four service
aces against WSU.
I
Page 16
?
l p
Monday, O ctob er 9,1989
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PAC-10 STANDINGS
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Washington S t
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S A T U R D A Y 'S R E S U L T S
U CLA 33, Arizona S ta le 14
CaMomia 26, San Jose St, 21
Fresno St. 35, Oregon St. 18
Notre Dame 27, Stanford 17
Southern Cal 24, Washington 16
Washington St. 51, Oregon 38
S U N D A Y 'S R E S U L T S
Washington 30, Phoenix 28
Indianapolis 37, Buffalo 13
Tampa Bay 42, Chicago 35
Cincinnati 26, Pittsburgh 16:
Miam i 13, Cleveland 10, OT
Green Bay 31, D allas 13
WASHINGTON (AP) — Beating the Cardinals in the
nation's capital has become a tradition for the Washington
Redskins, and the manner in which they won Sunday also
is becoming a habit.
Mark Rypien threw two fourth-quarter touchdown
passes as the Redskins registered a 30-28 comeback
victory over Phoenix, extending the Cardinals’ losing
streak at RFK Stadium t o l l games.
“We were down but we came back and scrambled out of
a hole,” Rypien said. “ We always seem to come back at
the end.”
It was the fourth time in five games that the Redskins
have been involved in a contest that was decided in the
closing moments. Those four games have been decided by
a total of 12 points.
“Somehow we came back and won it,” Redskins Coach
Joe Gibbs said. “ AH our games with them are close. I
think that a lot of the games in our division will end up like
that,”
The game wasn’t decided uittil the final play, when
Phoenix running back Vai Sikahema was tackled at the
Washington 41 after taking a lateral from quarterback
Gary Hogeboom. That tackle assured the Cardinals
another year’s wait in their effort to win in Washington for
the first time since November 1978, when the franchise
was still in St. Louis.
“We couldn’t have played much harder,” Phoenix
Coach Gene Stallings said. “I knew it was going to be a
dogfight, but we were shorthanded.”
The injury-riddled Cardinals took a 21-13 lead late in the
third quarter on Earl Ferrell’s 44-yard touchdown run.
But Chip Lohmiller kicked a 37-yard field goal with
13:17 left and the Redskins marched 92 yards on their next
possession for the go-ahead score. On third-and-4 from the
12, Rypien rolled to his right and stalled for time before
threading a pass between defensive backs Tim McDonald
and Carl Carter to Art Monk in the back of the end zone.
Moments later, Washington safety Barry Wilburn
intercepted Hogeboom’s pass with 5:51 left and the
Redskins drove 63 yards in nine plays, culminating in
Rypien’s 23-yard TD pass to Gary Clark with 1:54
remaining.
Hogeboom threw his third TD pass to J. T. Smith with 14
seconds left and the Cardinals recovered the ensuing
onside kick, but ran out of time.
“The offense was clicking, but we just didn’t get it done
today,” Smith said.
Washington (3-2) won its third straight game and
snapped a five-game home losing streak, its longest such
string in 25 years.
Rypien completed 23 of 42 passes for 333 yards to Help
the Redskins pull within a game of the New York Giants in
the NFC East.
Minnesota 24, Detroit 17
New England 23, Houston 13
Philadelphia 21, New York Giants 19
Denver 16, San Diego 10
Kansas City 20, Seattle 16
San Francisco 24, New Orleans 20
Los Angeles Rams 26, Atlanta 14
M O N D A Y ’S S C H E D U LE
Los Angeles Raiders at New York Jets, 6 p.m.
S U N D A Y 'S S C H E D U LE
Detroit at Tampa Bay, 10 a.m.
Gréen Bay at Minnesota, 10 a m.
Houston at Chicago, 10 a.m.
Miami at Cincinnati, 10 a:m.
New England at Atlanta, 10 a.m.
W ashington at New York Giants, TO a.m,
★ SALE ★ SALE ★ SALE ★
San Francisco at Dallas, 10 a.m.
Philadelphia at Phoenix, 1p.m .
Seattle at San Diego. 1 p.m:
Indianapolis at Denver, 1 p.iii:
Pittsburgh at Cleveland, Tp:m..;
,
New York Jets at New Orleans, 1 p rh
COM PACT
Kansas City at Le» Armeies Raiders, 1 p.m!
M O N D A Y ’S S C H E D U LE
Los Angeles Rams at Buffalo. 6 pm
DISCS
$ 9 .9 5
M O N D A Y 'S S C H E D U LE
V a lu e s UD
S 1 4 . 9 8 lis t
AN D U P
New York Islanders at Vancouver. 2:05 p.m.
I N C L U D E S : 1 0 .0 0 0 M A N I A C S , L E D Z E P P E L I N . S U G A R C U B E S , X T C . T H E B 5 2 S .
Montreal at Boston. 4:35 p.m
D E PE C H E M O D E AN D M AN Y M O RE!
FILM D E V E L O P I N G
S U N D A Y ’S R E S U L T S
$
San Francisco 6, Chicago 4
$
M O N D A Y ’S S C H E D U LE
Chicago at San Francisco, 12:06 p m.
*>
1
9
9
TORONTO CAP) — The Toronto Blue Jays knew what they
had to do to beat the Oakland Athletics.
They had to have solid pitching from the starting rotation 1
and they needed the bats of Fred McGriff and George Bell to
power the offense.
Neither came to pass and the Blue Jays lost their second
chance at the first World Series appearance by a Canadian
team, a five-game playoff loss that was capped with
Stmday’s 4-3 loss.
“We lost as a team,” said center fielder Lloyd Moseby,
whose solo homer in the eighth was his first in 95 at-bats. “I
don’t think you can pin the loss on any one aspect of the
game.”
Take away unamimous MVP Rickey Henderson and the
A’s still had enough to beat the Blue Jays.
“I’m not going to sit around and give one man the credit for
this series,” Moseby said. “Rickey had a great series, but
Rickey Henderson didn’t beat us, the Oakland A’s beat us.”
Bell, slumped in a chair, couldn’t wait for next season to
start.
“I hope they enjoy the World Series,” Bell said, “ I hope
they get beat the way we did. But a lot of people tell me
they’re hot dogs and they cause controversy, but you just
have to control those guys. They have the best attitude I’ve
ever seen from baseball players. They want to beat you no
matter what.” 'i*
12 E x p o s u re
R o lls
J\ 9 9
$
24 E x p o s u re
R o lls
“T
15 E x p o s u re
R o lls
$
£
9
9
3 6 E x p o s u re
R o lls
E V E R Y D A Y LO W PR IC ES!
...
/
0
Cm
Oakland 4, Toronto 3
/>
9 9 99
1
I
Oakland 4, Toronto 3
Campus Corner Coupon
Reg. »1»
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Campus Corner Coupon
Campus Corner Coupon
Reg. 49$
Reg. »1“
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MAXELL XLII 90
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State Press
UCLA,
Page 17
use horde Pac-IU
Stanford outgained the Irish, 316 yards to
296.
John Hopkins gave Stanford its early lead
With field goals from 34 and 42 yards. He
made a 27-yarder in the final period.
Notre Dame is now 5-0, to Stanford’s 1-4
record.
B y T h e A sso cia te d P re ss
Southern Cal and UCLA — the only
unbeaten teams in the Pac-10 conference —
chalked two more victories on their helmets
this weekend, while top-ranked Notre Dame
squelched Stanford’s hopes.
No. 25 UCLA beat Arizona State 33-14 on
Saturday at the Rose Bowl, while the ninthranked Trojans took slumping Washington
24-16 at the Los Angeles Coliseum. Notre
Dame topped the Cardinal 27-17 in Stanford.
C a l 26, S a n J o s a State 21
A goal-line fumble by San Jose State
tailback Sheldon Canley in the fourth
quarter preserved California’s 26-21 victory
in a non-conference game.
. The Spartans, 2-2, had driven to
California’s 1-yard-line on a fourth-quarter
surge that got renewed life in a fourth-down
situation when punter Jim Hughes faked the
kick and threw a 31-yard first-down pass.
Cal linebacker David Ortega stripped the
ball from Canley as he was crossing into the
end zone, and comerback Doug Parrish
recovered the fumble.
The five-point margin of victory came
from a 56-yard Robbie Keen field goal and a
safety — Cal’s first in more than three
years.
The Bears raised their record to 2-3.
Southern C a l 24, W ashington 16
Another redshirt freshman shored up
Southern Cal against Washington.
Todd Marinovich threw for one touchdown
and ran for another, at one point bringing
the Trojans back from a 10-0 deficit.
That was late in the first half. Marinovich
broke the curse with a 15-yard scoring pass
to John Jackson, who later in the game
became Southern Cal's all-time leading
receiver.
The Trojans were only ahead 17-16 when
they put the Huskies away with a 69-yard
drive in the final minutes. Ricky Ervins
scored on a 1-yard run with six seconds
remaining.
The victory gave Southern Cal a 4-1
overall record and a 2-0 Pac-10 mark.
Washington fell to 2-3 overall and 0-2 in
conference play.
Marinovich finished the game with 23
completions in 35 throws for 284 yards.
Jackson finished the game with seven
receptions for 95 yards, giving him 126
career catches for 1,778 yards. Erik
Affholter held the previous school record of
123 receptions.
W ashington State 51, O rego n 38
Steve Broussard rushed for a career-high
205 yards in 41 carries and scored three
touchdowns for the Cougars, who amassed
503 total yards in the high-scoring contest.
The Cougars hit early on a blocked punt
and jumped to a 20-6 halftime lead, then
withstood a second-half rally and added 24
fourth-quarter points to improve their
record to 5-1 and 2-1.
Ron Ricard intercepted two passes by Bill
Musgrave in the fourth quarter to stall the
Ducks’ comeback attempt.
Musgrave completed 29 of 49 passes for a
career-high 347 yards and two touchdowns.
Notre D am e 27, Stanford 17
Notre Dame’s sixth road game in seven
outings didn’t stop the Irish from gaining
their 17th consecutive victory over the
Pac-10 team.
The teams tied midway through the third
period 14-14, just before Raghib “Rocket”
Ismail went 66 yards on a kickoff return and
set up the victory touchdown.
Stanford had pulled into a tie on a passing
touchdown by Steve Smith. The young
quarterback who threw a school-record 68
passes and completed 39 for 282 yards.
F re sn o State 35, O rego n State 18
Get personal
fo r only a
buck, by
Quarterback Mark Barsotti ran for two
touchdowns and passed for another for
undefeated Fresno State.
Barsotti scored on a 1-yard run in the first
quarter and then m ade an 88-yard
touchdown pass to Dwight Pickens early in
the second quarter as Fresno pulled ahead
You can get a 15 w ord State Press classified personal
for only 11.00 w ith th e coupon below u n til O ctober
20, 1989.
21-0 .
S T A T E PRESS
C la ssif ie d s. ..u n l o c k
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State Press
Affltnu West
Amines
HAYDEN SQUARE
51 W. 3rd ST., TEMPE
S94-6774
Classified Ad D epartm ent
Hours;
M on-Sat
6:30-9 p.m.
Sun
10 a.m ..6 p.m.
located in the south
basement o f Matthews Center
965-6731
*
Classifieds
Page 18
Atonda£Oçtober9^989
C LA SS IFIC A TIO N S:
1. Announcements
2. Autos for Sale
3. Trucks for Sale
4. Motorcycles for Sale
5. Bicycles for Sale
6. Furniture for Sale
7 Tickets for Sale
8. Miscellaneous for Sale
9. Computers
10. Real Estate for Sale
11 Apartments for Rent
12. Townhomes/Condos
i 3. Homes for Rent
14. Rental Sharing
15 Roommate Services
16 Business Opportunities
LIN E* A D R A T E S :
17. Help Wanted
18. Instruction
19. Jewelry
20: Free Lost/Found
21. On-Campus
22. Personals
23. Pets
24. Restaurants/Bars
25. Services
26. Transportation
27. Travel
28. Typing/Word Processing
29 W anted
30. Adoptions
31. Miscellaneous
15 words or less:
$3.00 per day for 1-4 days
$2.75 per day for 5-9 days
$2.50 per day for 1 0 -f days
15' each additional word
The first 2 words are capitalized.
No bold face or centering.
965-6731
ANNOUNCEMENTS
an n o u n cem en ts
AT THE gam e room win T-shirts and free
gam es. 903 S. Rural (north of Terrace.).
GOURMET BEER! Brew your own beer
like the imports you buy! Free information.
Boulder Brewers Connection, Inc. 3305
Spring Mountain Road, suite 60-A, Las
Vegas, Nevada 89102. (702) 251-HOPS.
COLLEGE PEN Pais Exchange letters and
get to know other college students across
the U S. For further information, send a
letter of interest to: College Pen Pals,
Attention Robyn Fredericks, Box 105
Waldorf Campus Center, Forest City, Iowa
50436.
DIVORCE RECOVERY Seminar, Satur
day, October 28,1989,9 am-3 pm at Plaza
Del Sur, 2655 W est Guadeiupe, suite 2,
Mesa. An exceptional seminar based on
Biblical Principles that will help you read
just your life and set priorities for your
future. For additional information and
registration, 839-2253.
DON’T FORGET that birthday Send a
balloon bouquet. 273-9710. Delivered
anytime.
GET SHOT for The Sun Devil Spark
Yearbook. Student portraits will be taken
starting October 2 for a limited time. CaH
our offices at 965-6881 for m ore
information.
C L A S S IF IE D S W O R K
HANG-GLIDE! Our gently sloping man
made training hid. Safe and exciting. Fly
ad day . Windsports 897-7121.
HAVE YOU reserved your yearbook yet?
965-6881
HEADS EXAMINED- testing October 21.
Mensa, the High-IQ Society. 274-3538, 24
hours. ■
MODEL SEA RCH
screening 389-6618.
M a g a z in e —F re e
RESERVE YOUR yearbook today Call
The $un Devil Spark offices at 965-6881 to
place your order.
SAFARI RESQRT, Scottsdale/Camelback
Road, offers $49 Sundevil Rate for ASU
fans. CaH, 9454)721
■ n n B D sn p i
QUESTION: To what the circuit does is to
eliminate the number of GATES, the technique
is to SYNTHETICALLY eliminate the circuits
that control RipJSts add-one for its négative
number to ADDED.
This ‘
SSS75.000.000.0000SSS
-OPENING BID”
In addition, to its AWESOME speed and
REDUCES the silicon PROCESS...
The industry known as today Motorola. July
2 4 .1989 is here by. this day 69-15-1989. released
from obligations to bid.
The PRESENTATION wilt consist of 3 to 5
minutes where your semi-conductor scientist
engineer will see the first-full application of the
J.R.-DI2.
This presentation is open to all INDUSTRY
W O RLD W ID E and p riv ate investors...
DOMESTIC' or FOREIGN, news media
welcome under STRICT condition.
Please address your authorization credentials,
for they will be CHECKED. Tune and place will
follow
J.R. GILBERT
P.O.BOX 42252
Phoenix. AZ 85080-2252
S it U liv i s
VITKMION
No industry or educational
institute is associated with this
development. Nor is there a
patent at the present time.
HOW T O P L A C E A
C LA SS IFIED AD :
In Person:
Cash, Check (with
guarantee card), VISA
or MasterCard.
We’re located in the
lower level of Matthews
Center, room 46H.
Office hours are
8 a m.-5 p,m. Mon.^Fri.
You can also place
your ad at the
North MU Information
. Desk (fall and spring
sem esters only),
^
between the hours of
9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Mon.-Fri.
AUTOMOBILES
SELL
IT.
1973 MERCURY Cougar, 351, good
condition. $1,695/best offer. 966-6006.
1977 RABBIT, 4-speed, clean interior,
loaded, runs well. Have receipts and
warranties. $1,200. 423-5346, Gayla.
1978 CORDOBA, perfect interior, airconditioning blows cold, excellent rubber.
$500.966-7641.
1978 FIAT Spider, convertible, runs and
looks great. $2,000/best offer. 968-7049.
1979 BMW 320i, air, alloys, sunroof.
$2,600. Mark, 377-9219 day. 837-0765
.afters.
1980 TRIUMPH Spitfire convertible with
hardtop, white, Arizona car, 1 owner,
33,000 miles, Tonneau cover, excellent
condition, $2,800 firm. 968-4546.
1982 CAMARO, great condition, loaded,
T-tops, alarm, new stereo. Must sell.
Asking $4,000 or best offer. 949-7129.
1984 PLYMOUTH Reliant, blue. 4-door,
air-condition, excellent condition, runs
well, $2,900. 8394)452. must sell!
1984 PONTIAC Sunbird, turbo, fuel
injected, new transmission, new interior,
low miles. $4,200, negotiable. 274-2467.
1985 MITUBISHI Tredia-L. Low miles,
air-conditioning, good tires, cassette.
Runs well. $3,500. M essage, 265-5678.
This device was solely
developed by Mr. J. R. Gilbert
who applied for admissions,
VET Jan. 1990 at ASU.
1987 SAMURAIS, 3 JX models to choose
from. All in excellent condition. From $149
per month (with tax and license down), 48
m onth financing, 14.75 APR OAC.
423-8888, Agent.
Mr. Gilbert's sole concerh is
to lower the deficit to zero,
once and for all, in a minimum
of 10 years in the electronic
in d u stry ...
1988 RED Chevy mini-blazer, great AM/
FM sterio with high quality sound, cool air
conditioning, red cloth interior with velve
teen seat covers and matching dash mat,
top rack with tilt steering. In great shape!
Need som eone to take over payments with
transfer of ownership. Call 966-2449 after
3pm.
The ad will run in the Phoenix
G azette and thé Arizona
Republic, Valley and State, in
th e W e d n e sd a y e d itio n
sh o rtly . . .
Third year students are en
couraged to assist in the
development o f the J.R.-D/2, a
21-day project, if the ad does
not receive public attention.
’77 FIAT Spider, convertible, restored.
$2,000. Tod, 957-9121;
’80 FIREBIRD Esprit, yellow, automatic,
power everything, like new. Reduced to
$2,700. 953-1943
’84 HONDA Accord, 5-speed, full power,
cru ise , tin ted windows, new tires.
$ 6 ,0 0 0 /o ffe r. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n .
893-6877.
’85 RENAULT, 67,000 mHes . cold airconditioning, AM/FM stereo, 5-speed,
clean, runs great! $2,295. 829-8856.
’86 HYUNDAI Excel, high miles but have
complete service records. Only $2,350.
423-8888, Agent.
*87 MAZDA B220O pickup, low miles,
air-conditioning. G reat condition. $5,850.
4238888, Agent.
CHEVY CITATION. V6, hatchback, power
brakes, power steering, new brakes, AM/
FM, air-conditioning. Excellent condition,
must seH. $1,100. 829-7340.
FORD TEMPO GL, 1964, red, 4-door,
automatic, 48K miles. $2,400/best offer.
921-2624, leave message.
BUY IT.
SELL IT.
FIND IT.
C L A S S I F I E D .
State Press
IS IT tru e...Jeep s for $44 through the
G o v e rn m e n t? C a ll fo r f a c ts !
1-312-742-1142, ext 9162A.
By Mall:
Send your ad (with
payment) to:
State Press Classifieds
Matthews Center, Rm 15
Tempe, AZ $5287-1502
By Phone:
965-6731
Payment with VISA/MC
only. $6 minimum on
all phone orders.
W H EN W ILL Y O U R A D
RUN ?
HOW T O C O R R E C T
OR C A N C E L YO U R AD:
Classified liner a d s can begin
1 day after they are placed
(if placed before noon).
Liher ads must be canceled
before noon, 1 day prior to
publication . No ref u nds will
be given.,.
Classified display ad s can begin
2 d ay s after they are placed
(if placed before 10 a.m.).
Ads may run for any length of time.
Canceled ads will b e credited to
your account. Sorry, no refunds.
A dvertising Policy:
The State Press reserves the
right to edit or reject any advertising
copy submitted.
S tate P re s s Errors:
Check your ad the FIRST day it
runs. Call 965-6731 with any
corrections before noon. The
State Press is only responsible
for the first day the ad runs
incorrectly. Corrected ads will be
extended one day. Changes called
in after the first day will not qualify
for a make-good.
C ustom er Errors:
Corrections must be made before
noon. Compensation will not be
given for customer error.
MOTORCYCLES
REAL ESTATE
RENTAL SHARING
1978 HONDA Hawk, 400cc, good trans
portation. $300/offer. For more informa
tion, cal! Matt at 784-0674.
$1900 DOWN, no qualifying, 2 bedroom
hom e and pool. Air-conditioning, evap,
p a tio . $ 6 0 2 p a y m e n t. (M cK ellips/
Scottsdale Road). Owner, 992-8919.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath house, fuUy furn
ished. Close to ASU. $25Q/month plus Vi utilities. 437-3837.
1985 HONDA Elite 150, for sale, $500 or
best offer. Minor repairs needed. Kather
ine, 921-9522.
1987 HONDA Elite 80 Scooter. 2 year
warranty remaining, $795. 966-2067.
3 BEDROOM 2 bath townhouse. Close to
ASU. Has everything. $2,000 down and
assum e loan.
No qualifying.
Call
894-6091.
1987 HONDA, Elite SE50, good condition.
$550 or best offer. 784-0183.
BEAUTIFUL CO N D O , b a r g a in at
$31,000,1 bedroom, pool, near ASU. Call
Sanborne, Coldwell Banker 955-0390.
1987 HURRICANE 600, good condition.
12,000 miles. Vance Hines Header,
$2,500/best offer Must sell! 921-2652.
OFFICE/HOME location with 1600 plus
square feet building on Mill Avenue,
Tempe. $87,500. Roma Realty, 968-6890.
250 HONDA Elite Scooter, 6,000 miles,
runs perfect, original owner. $900/offer.
948-7871, leave message.
ONLY $500 down for Los Prados, 3
bedroom townhome. Only Vi mile from
campus. Save $30,000- only $48,000!
Why rent? Greg, Realty Executives,
4233605.
’80 RD350LC European 2-stroke liquid
cool, fast bike. Low price, $900/offer. Call
967-5986,961-3653.
’81 HONDA Passport 70cc, between a
scooter and motorcycle. Excellent condi
tion, $295. 820-7631 after 5.
’85 HONDA 250 Elite, maroon, lock-box,
seat cover, windshield. Low mileage, must
seH 381-7241.
PRESTIGIOUS OLDER neighborhood of
Tempe, unique 4 bedroom home for sale,
$87,500. Call Roma Realty, 968-6890.
REDUCED TO sell, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2
Story townhouse. 1,008 square feet. Close
to ASU. $32,000. 431-9579
HONDA 80 scooter, mint condition, new
engine. $800 or best offer. 831-9120.
APARTMENTS
HONDA MOPED, the least expensive way
to ride, good condition, $95. 820-7631
after 5.
BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms.
Walk to ASU, pool, laundry room. 1 block
south of University on 8th street. Cape
Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special.
WOMAN’S TURQUOIS Schwinn moun
tain bike, perfect condition. $175 or best
offer. 73t-3085.
FURNITURE
I’LL PAY half your deposit and $100 rent
rebate. 926 East Spence, 968-5630.
1 & 2 Bedroom
Unfurnished units in quiet com
plex. Partial utilities paid. Bike
fide to ASU.
NEARLY, NEW mattress sets, queens and
doubles, $130 per set. Royal Tempe Motor
Lodge, 1020 East Apache Boulevard,
PARK VISTA • 966-1662
STEREO RACK, T.V. table, mountain
bike, lawnmower, dresser, large book
case, new Futon, much more. 438-8684.
$170
1st M on th ’s Rent
TICKETS
1st 10 rows for all concerts, sports and
theatre events anywhere in USA. Won’t be
undersold! Tickets' Unlimited, 840-2340.
ROLLING STONES and Guns and Roses
in L A , all nights, great seats, $50.
829-8599
TICKET EXCHANGE at Cornerstone MaH
h as 1st 10 rows lor REM, Stevie Nicks,
Gallagher, Rolling Stones, Phoenix Suns,
Cardinals and ASU Football. 829-0196.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE________
CANON AE-1 Cam era and accessories^
50mm lens, 28-85mm zoom, Vivitar 40D
flash, filter, case. Mint condition, best
offer. 9632310.
COLOR T V., 19” . $75; 25” floor model,
walnut cabinet, excellent condition, $100.
CaH Bob, 254-1412.
QUEEN WATERBED for sale. Must sell$100 or b est offer. Call 968-6562. leave
m essage.
COMPUTERS
FEMALE NON-SMOKER to share 2
bedroom 1 bath townhouse. $275 includes
utilities. 1 mile from cam pus on McClintock. Call Kathy, 784-4098. Small pets
welcome.
FEMALE NON-SMOKER to share 3
b e d ro o m , Los P r a d o s to w n h o m e.
$265/month plus V4 utilities. 894-6091.
FEMALE TO share 4 bedroom, 2 bath
house (Mesa/Gilbert). 1 to 2 children ok.
$275 plus utilities. 244-1774.
FEMALE TO share beautiful fuHy furn
ished Cond. Own room/bath. Papago
Park, non-smoker, pool, $270/month Vi
utilities. 968-0385.
MALE/FEMALE roomm ate wanted to
s h a re 3 bedroom condo, poolside.
$270/month, Vi utilities. Los Prados,
967-6515.
MALE/FEMALE. OWN ROOM, washer/
dryer, dishwasher, pool, air-conditioning/
evap. Apach/Rural, $170/month. Mike or
Bonnie, 968-7574 or 897-7497.
FOR SALE, 1986 Honda 500 Interceptor.
6,900 miles, good condition. Lots of
extras. $2,70Q/best offer. 784-8507.
BICYCLES
2 ROOMMATES needed for 3 bedroom
Scottsdale condo with male ASU student.
All luxuries imaginable. $190, W utilities
945-0309. Close to cam pus.
W alk to A S U , quiet 1 bed
room, A/C, pool-side apts.
MALE ROOMMATE n e e d e d : Own
bedroom, own bathroom, $227/month, V2
utilities, Vi phone. Keith, 8337025,
8338542, leave messageNICE HOME with pool 1 block to ASU.
N eeds responsible roommate immediate
ly. 894-0288.
NON-SMOKER. FURNISHED, Master
bedroom, private bath, utilities, phone,
cleaning included. Washer/dryer, may
share. $384/month. Scott, 829-1211.
ROOM FOR rent in large house at Miller
and Roosevelt. Includes pool, washer/
dryer, pool table. $235/month plus Vi
utilities. Non-smokers only. 994-1262.
ROOMMATE NEEDED, Student, clean,
responsible, non-smoker. 2 bedroom, 2
bath, own room/bath, pool, jacuzzi. Close
to ASU. $270/month plus Vi utilities. Dan,
921-2074.
CLASSIFIEDS WORK.
Use one today!!
$270/month
G e o rg e A n n A p ts.
894-2538
TOWNHOMES/
CONDOS
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, pool, covered
parking. $495. 966-8838.
ASU AREA, 2 bedroom, 2 bath Condo,
d ish w ash er, w ash er/d ry er, balcony.
$485/month. (505) 5239195.
NICE T or 2 bedroom townhomes/condos,
unfurnished, walk to ASU. From $295.
MGM Real Estate Corporation, Karen,
345-1919.
SHARE 2 bedroom condo, fully furnished,
quiet student. $350/month. CaH Scott,
968-4312.
WOULD IT please you to have more
space, quiet, safety, and an impressive
neighborhood? S pace good! I need a tidy,
no-drugs, non-smoking female who pays
on time. $250 total« unfurnished bedroom.
No pets. 4235842
NISSAN PULSARS, 1985 and 1986. All
w ith a u to m a tic - tr a n s m is s io n , airconditioning, stereo, sunroof. From $149
per month (with tax and license down), 48
months. 15.75 APR OAC. 4238888,
Agent.
APPLE HE with green moriiterlll, 1 D.D.,
Okidata 92 printer, Hayes modem (300
B a u d ), s o m e s o f tw a r e , m a n u e ls .
4235802 $650.
PORSCHE, ’73, red 914, dual carburetors,
good condition. Making room for baby.
$3850. 730-1337 anytime
APPLE LASERWRITER II NT for sale.
Less than one year old- $3,400 or best
offer Call 2435371.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath. Nice iocation on Ash
Street. Big yard. Available November 1.
894-0288.
USED CARS. Several quality used cars
ranging from $1,500 to $5,000. Call
4238888, Agent.
MACINTOSH SE, 40 megabites internal,
CMS disk, and 2.5 megabites memory.
$2.895/best offer. 457-8451.
NICE 3 bedroom home, large yard, 2
blocks, ASU. Newly remodeled. Available
November 1. 894-0288.
HOMES FOR RENT
HELP WANTED
AAAA TELEPHONE ' interviewers for
Tempe Marketing R esearch Firm, flexible
evenings/weekend hours. Start at $4/hour,
rapid raises. O'Neil Associates- Susan,
967-4441.
ACTORS/ACTRESSES Wanted for local
TV commercials. No experience neces
sary. For ca stin g information, call
1-518-459-8697, Ext. TV203.
AN IDEAL on-campus job for students!
Can work 8-16 hours per week, SundayThursday evenings, 5:30-9:30. Earn
$4.10/hour plus bonus plus commissiori.
G reat nightly incentives, gain valuable
telemarketing experience speaking with
alumni nationwide. If you have sales
ability, caH 965-6754.
ANIMAL HOSPITAL. Chandler area,
n eed s clean-up plus Veterinarian assis
tant. Afternoons, evenings, weekends.
Call 9632340.
ATTENTION COLLEGE Students: We are
looking for students in our advertisement
department: Must be outgoing, enthusias
tic, and seH1motivative. Earn $75-$350 per
week. Call Charles Tumbow, 4237012,
between 1-3.
CORK'N CLEAVER accepting applica
tions for lunch waitress and lunch hostess.
Will train. Short shifts. Convenient hours.
Fun atmosphere. C oncern'w ith appear
ance, reliability, and personality are impor
tant. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2-5
pm. or by appointment: 51QT North 44th
Street (44th and Camelback). 952-0585.
S tate Prêt*
Page 19
Monday, O ctober 9,1989
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
PERSONALS
TRAVEL
PART-TIME, telephone answering service,
phone and typing experience required,
Scottsdale. 947-735i .
INDIVIDUALS WHO can find good leads
on companies which are moving. Work
own hours. 423-7004.
FLY FOR less, discount travel. Domestic
and international, package tours to the
Holy Land/lsraet. 491 -0501.
KINGS TABLE- Scottsdale now hiring bus
persons, dishwashers, line-runners, and
cooks. Flexible hours. $4 and up for
qualified applicants. Please apply in
person at 7134 East Thomas Road
between 12 pm-4 pm.
PETE'S FISH & Chips, 1017 East Apache
Boulevard, Tempe. All positions, day or
evening shifts available; W ages are
$4-$6/hour. Apply in person MondayThursday, 9-11 am only.
DTD WIZ Formal was the best. What could
b e better- it's encore Tridelta Pledge
Presents is only five days away. Lisa.
COUNTRY GLAZED Ham. Scottsdale
Restaurant now accepting applications for
retail clerks and service1 clerks, flexible
hours. Apply in person, 6107 North Scotts
dale Road (in Hilton Village)
NOW HIRING outgoing personable female
for m assage technician. Will train. Full
time evenings, 6-11. Must b e honest and
responsible. Excellent working conditions.
840-4646
OFFICE ASSISTANT, answering phones,
inputting information, general secretarial,
roommate Express, 968-7574.
SALES CLERK for North Scottsdale video
rental store. Non-smoker, 18 or older,
$3.50 starting. 941-2415.
THANKSGIVING WEEKEND, Pasadena
D oo Dah P arad e/M ag ic M ountain.
$ 2 4 6 .1 5 , d o u b le o c c u p a n c y . Call
277-3233,
ON CALL people needed for ASU, Cardi
nal football gam es to help set up and take
down concession booths on gam e days.
Apply at The Team Shop, ASU Stadium
ICA building, Monday-Friday, 10-5 pm.
SALES PEOPLE needed for part-time
position. P lea se appfy at The Team Shop,
ASU Stadium, ICA building, MondayFriday, 10-5 pm.
FREE TUITION!!! Have your picture taken
or reserve your copy of The Sun Devil
Spark Yearbook and you will be automati
cally entered in the Photo Finish Scholar
ship Sw eepstakes sponsored by Dominos
Pizza. The grand prize is full tuition
scholarship for 1 sem ester (worth $681);
We will award 1 scholarship during both
the fair and spring sem esters. Call our
offices at 965-6881 for more information.
DAY CARE attendant needed in our
Tempe Medical office for 2 small children
immëdiatlÿ.' Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8-5.
Call Cindy, 829-8741 days or 820-2280
evenings and weekends.
DISABLED CHRISTIAN needs live-in help.
Work only 15 hours per week and recieve
private living quarters. North Phoenix.
870-4158.
DOCKTOR PET Center, Los Arcos Mall,
Scottsdale,- is now hiring knowledgable
p e o p le fo r k e n n e l m a in te n a n c e ,
mornmgs/weekends. Sales, mornings;
and fish department sales: Hours flexible.
Resum es accepted. No phone calls
please.
EASY WORK! Excellent pay! Assemble
products at home. Call for information.
504-641-8003, ext 7836
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $15,400-$72,500.
Now hiring. Excellent benefits. Can
1-312-742-1142, Ext. J-9162A
HOUSTONS’ RESTAURANT is looking for
a responsible and energetic hostess who
works well with people. Needs to be able
to work days, nights and some weekends.
P lease apply in person, 2425 East Camelback, suite 1 10, Tuesdays and Thursday
between 3-4 pm. EOE.
N EW C L U B !
N EW J O B S !
B artender
Barback
W ait P e rso n s
Door/Floor
H ost/H ostess
Pro m otions M anag er
¡Apply in person 10 am-3 pm M -F
LADIES. SET your opw hours. Outstand
ing income opportunity selling a revolu
tionary new product to your friends and
classm ates. There is not competition for
this untapped market. Call 860-0427 or
interview
MARKETING AND S ales people needed.
Entry level positions. Call 280-2807 for
information and appointment.
MERCHANTS EYES, a full service Inven
tory Control/Merchandising company look
ing for counters. Must have car, sporadic
work; $5/hour. Call Eileen; 967-9427.
OVERSEAS JOBS $900-$2,000/month
Summer, year round, All countries. All
fields. Free information. Write UC, PO Box
52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, ' California
92625.
PART-TIME ACCOUNTS Payable clerk,
experience in payables helpful. Mornings
or afternoons, Monday-Friday. Excellent
pay. 966-4424, or send Resume to 222
South 52nd Street, Tempe. 85281.
MINDER BINDERS needs part-time D J’S.
Apply in person Tuesday and Wednesday
between 2-5 pm. 715 South Hayden,
Tempe.
PART-TIME CHILD care, my home, flexi
ble hours, 2 children and 1 infant, refer
ences required- Camelback and 44th
Street 952-9566.
NEED PART-TIME typist in West Mesa.
Must know word-perfect, flexible hours.
Pay commensurate with experience. Call
Kathy, 461-9000, leave m essage.
PART-TIME. LARGEST company of its
kind in the Southwest. Evening shifts
available. Pleasant working conditions.
Call Mr Morgan at 381-0477.
FUNDRAISER
A FREE GIFT JU S T FOR CALLING
PLU S RAISE U P TO $ 1 ,7 0 0 IN
O N LY TEN D A Y S!!!
Student groups, fraternities and sororities
needed fo r marketing project on campus. For
details plus a FREE GIFT, group officers
call 1-800-950-8472, ext. 40
Ba ja y a c h t c l u b
TELEMARKETING PART-TIME
Hardworking
students,
w e’ve got the
job for you!
$5.50 per hour
Flexible
Evening Hours
W eekly Pay
Cornerstone
Mall Location
968-4457
STUDENT JOBS. Full-time. $300/week;
p art-tim e, $ l5 0 /w e ek . O p enings in
customer service and retail. Scholarships
available. Cali 9 am to 5 pm 242-9677.
STUDENTS; SEEKING aggressive, enthu
siastic, individuals for part-time opportuni
ty, 7-10 hours a week. Earn $200 a week.
Call 731-1452.
TEACHER AIDES and part-time cook.
Preschool West, Tempe, 894-5338.
TELEPHONE SURVEY, no sales. Parttime, weekdays 3-9, weekends 10-6. Start
$4.25/hour. Calf Jennifer, 258-4554.
VALET PARKING attendants^ day shifts
11:00am-3:00pm and 11:00am-5:00pm.
Night shifts 5:30pm to close; Full-time and
part-time. Must work holiday season and
m ust have clean driving record. Call for
appointment 861-9384. American Valet
and Limosine Company Incorporated.
WORK AT home: Earn $150-$400/week.
Send Self-addressed, stam ped envelop,
PO box 0666, Davis, California 95617.
•$8.75 per hour (avg. earnings)
•Flexible part-time & full-time positions
•Day & night positions available
•Supplement your income or work your
way through college
•Convenient Tempe location
If. MI’OKAk IIS
Planning a career In Television
News? NOW is the time to
prepare.
October 21 st, 10 AM-1 PM
Airport Days Inn, Phoenix.
Deadline for registration:
October 12th
CALL
The Madia Training Canter,
1-285-1143
JEWELRY
Call Sarah
967-0066
CASH FOR gold, diamonds, sterling; etc.
Mill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. Mill, Suite
101. Tempe. 968-5967.
(after 11 a.m.)
Eq u al O pportunity
Em p loyer
CASH PAID, jewelry of all kinds, including
gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc.
R are Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave, Temjae Center.
968-6074.
TELESALES
Are you
•Articulate?
•Aggressive?
•Motivated?
If so, we have immediate
long-term positions
available with our Fortune
500 client company. If you
have a strong desire to
succeed, a professional at
titude & strong c o m
munication skills
C A L L NOW !!
234-3101
(Part & Full Time Hours Available)
ALCOA
Full or part-time
flexible hours
$300 per week
interviewing Oct.
12th at 1 p m ,
Memorial Union
room 222,
(Mohave).
(Unable to at
tend? Stop by
room to schedule
appointment.)
interested in
advertising or
advertising
management?
The 1990791 a s u student
Handbook and calendar is
looking for a handful of
students to manage its adver
tising sales this semester.
We need an advertising
manager, assistant advertising
manager and ten ad
salespeople.
if you’re a high energy, selfmotivated individual who
would like to earn money
through commissioned sales,
please call Jackie Eidridge to
day at 965-6555,
This is an excellent opportuni
ty for business/marketing
communication majors to ob
tain hands-on experience.
Please call today.
PRINCE, 39, non-smoker, looking for 20
plus, mature princess for dining, dancing,
travel, romance. Dr Bill, 863-1591.
RANDY, I’M so proud óf you! Keep up the
good work! Love you lots and lots!
Christina.
SCOTT HOLLAND- play H20 Polo? You
haven’t the slightest idea of how much fun
is in store, but keep on watching arid J’ll let
you know som e more!
SIGMA KAPPA Activities. You’re the first
and the best. We are looking forward to
following in your footsteps. Thanks for
everything. We love you guys!! Love
Sigma Kappa Pledges.
THE PHOTGRAPHER for student portraits
will be on cam pus for a very limited time
beginning October 2. Don’t delay. Stop by
the photo booth on Cady Mall anytime
during the day and have your picture
taken. It’s free! Don’t be left out of ASU’s
official history book, 20 years from now
you will regret it!
TRICIA, HOPE we can spend next sem es
ter an d the rest of our lives together. I love
you! Kenny.
SERVICES
TV NEWS REPORTERS
FR E E ON-CAMERA
FREE LOST/FOUND
HOUR
PHI PSIS: Thanks for entertaining pur
dots. You guys were the best! Love, Chi-0
Moms.
INSTRUCTION
PRESENTATION WORKSHOP
1420 N. S cottsd ale Rd.
(Scottsdale at M cDow ell)
Ambitious
STUDENT INTERESTED in Health Care
Professions to help female MS patient
w eekends. McCormick R anch area.
991-0104
FOUND; BEAUTIFUL watch. Discovered
in Bimson Library, Business Administra
tion Building, 10/5, 2:30 pm. Call and
identify, Tracy Tipton, M anagem ent
Department, 965-3431.
FOUND, BLACK Australian Shepherd
dog. Height 22” , weight 45 pounds. If you
have lost this dog, please call Reg,
966-7337
LOST, UNIQUE male wedding ring, near
Engineering Building a re a (towards
Language/Literature Building). Sentimen
tal value. Reward. Jim at 829-1506.
POCKET WATCH "Stenor” on 10/5. Very
personal, will reward handsomely. Please,
Please contact Ang, 968-8663.
PERSONALS
ATTENTION ALL Greeks: Group photos
for the yearbook will be starting October 2.
Ask your chapter president or call The Sun
Devil Spark Offices at 965-6881 for exact
times, d ates, an d locations.
ARE YOU tired of tweezing and shaving?
For permanent hair removal, call A Soft
Touch Electrolysis- Free initial treatment.
N ear ASU 829-7829.
8 2 0 -5 6 5 2
TYPING/WORD
PROCESSING
$1.50 AAA Word Processing/Laser printer.
34 years experience. Theses, dissertation,
APA specialization. Marion 839-4269.
$1.65 AND up. Professional word proces
sor and former English teacher. Laser
printer. Bob or Claudia, 964-6012.
$2.00/PAGE.. Quick turnaround:’ Call
Bob, 839-3305
AAA QUALITY typing/word processing.
$ 1 5 0 . Call Linda, 962-8075
ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof
read, editing, all included. Quick turn
around. Call 894-6074.
A KINKO’S paper makes the grade.
Kinko’s typesets papers, resum es, flyers.
Self-serve Macintosh also. 933 East
University. Call 966-2035, or 960 West
University, Call 921-0168.
APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word
processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie,
945-5744
ASU AREA. Typing, word processing,
editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime.
Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186.
FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality
with a Mac il and laser printer. Call Susan,
945-1500.
ELECTRO LY SIS-PERM A NENT h air
removal. Remove unwanted hair forever.
Student discount. Call for more informa
tion, 969-6954.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING. $1.50 page,
Baseline/Alma School in Mesa, editing
service available. Call 897-1038.
FREE CUTS, colors, and perms. Profes
sional Hair Care Company looking for
models for Scottsdale Hair Show. Contact
Mary Jane, 899-2947,
LOST YOUR love? Send a balloon
bouquet for $18- includes delivery!
273-9710.
" w i '' " .........—
Thin and Natural
Sculptured Nail
Strong bonding made w ith
fiberglass resins. Doesn’t yellow
or turn brittle like acrylic. Will
not damage natural nail.
Full set $18 • Fills $16
Cactus Nail Company
Scottsdale
423-5504
TRANSPORTATION
AAA DRIVEAWAY Free cars to most
major cities. G as allowances available. 21
or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530.
PROFESSIONAL WORDPROCESSING of
anything you need. Fast, accurate,
reaso n ab le. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Central Phoenix, 274-5531.
RESUMES FROM $7.00, reports from
$1.50 a page. Fast, close to ASU.
946-7942.
WORD PROCESSING, IBM PC, letter
quality printing. Fast, low cost. Call Jackie,
831-8635
WORD P R O C E S S IN G , s e c r e ta r ia l
services. 23 years experience. Student
discount. Southwest corner, Miller and
Chaparral, 994-8145.
;
WORD PROCESSING for your typing
needs. Fast turaround. Close to ASU.
$ 1 .25/up. Transcription available. Roxan
ne. 966-2825.
WORD PROCESSING—$1.50 per page.
Resumes, design, editing, & laser printing
available. Call 921-3770 evenings &
weekends.
WANTED
BASEBALL CARDS wanted. 2 collectors
will pay cash. P lease call, 423-9592^
821-9881.
;
TRAVEL
AIRFARE TO New York with connection in
Chicago on December 21st. Paid $104,
sell for $85. 894-6227.
FLY ANYTIME continental USA $350
roundtrip. Leave today! NW USA $250!
Alaska-five w eeks notice $450. Other
destinations. We also buy transferable
coupons! 968-7283.
MISCELLANEOUS
HELP WANTED...in spreading cheer. Call
273-9710. Send a balloon bouquet and
cheer som eone up.
Underground Books latest- publica
tion Is now available. For rndre info
send SASE to:
Underground Books, Ltd.
D ip t. 10-2
-v
Book 151
;
V
y.Vr.
T em ps, AZ 85282
*
• f "Take a bite
from the Apple of Knowledge”
C R E S T E D BUI
NOVEMBER 22-26 * 4 NIGHTS
S T E A M BT K &
AX PLEDGE T rade Ricketts: You’re the
best pledge ever, Your mom loves you!'
G uess who?
JANUARY2-12 * 5 OR 6 NIGHTS
BRENDA: GET Well soon so we can do
som e more nude hot marshmeilow wres
tling Eric.
JANUARY 2-7 * 5 NIGHTS
BR ECKEN R ID /M
JANUARY 2-7.* 5 NIGHTS
TUTORS
ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. Eight
years professional writing experience,
ASU English degree. R ates negotiable.
829-6712.
. ¿T C JJS
W IN T ER R A JJ
- ¿ L v J/l
VAIL/BEAVERC
TUTOR WANTED, CIS200 lab, Supercalc
, Lotus 1.2,3, and D atabase. Good pay.
838-4408
4
JANUARY5-12 * 5 OR 7 N IG H IS^.
PHOTOGRAPHY!
C801 C .Jd . You guys are the best! I love
you all for simply being you! Jill.
ODD JANE, Happy Happy Birthday to an
aw eso m e pled g e! C eleb ratio n th is
weekend at Pledge Presents. Deltaluv,
Lisa,
1250 E. Basel ne 'Su4e 102
ASTROLOGY INTERPRETATIONS: Natal
chart arid Interpretations. For more infor
mation, call Kim, 839-6203.
ATTENTION MEN of ASU: AEPi Mid
sem ester Rush starts 6:00 Thursday night
at the Apehouse on Alpha Drive. Call Marc
Wichansky, 350-0204.
AXO JANAE L.: You’re an awesome
pledge! Your mom loves you, Can you
guess who I am ? AX love, mom.
G u a ran te e d low est fares
on any airline!
C a ll L isa at our y.
A S U S e rv ic e D esk
8 th ANN UAL COLLEGIATE W M I B I SKI M ILAN S
m irm Mmturmi KUMmra
1-800-321-5911
JASON SILVER/KIO-MAN ' Photoworks
C om m ercial P h o to g ra p h y M o d els’,
actors’, and artists', portfolios. Profession
al work. Reasonable rates. 946-247ffc
Pase 20
R
D
P
A
4
%
W
S K I W ITH
AIT
ANO STAY
S
MEXICAN FOOD
^
FREE DINNER
With purchase of equal or greater value.
Not good with any other offer or discount.
1Tempe location only.
Expires 10-20-89.
■
University
f| 1
—f
"’ s
<0
X
S t a t e P ie »
Monday, O ctob er 9,1 9 8 9
$3.00
I
Offer good
after
2 p.m.
960 W. University, Tempe, 966-0852
L e v is
$3.00
i
8
White Washed
Most Stores
38.00
JEANS +
29.99
Everyday Low Price
$3.00 Coupon
(Blue Acid Wash)
$ A
JEANS+
-3.00
0
.99
Free Length Alterations
$3.00 Coupon
$3.00
ASU Tee Shirt 10
Buy any Shirt of equal or
greater value and get an
ASU Tee Shirt for 10
U n iversity
N
M
B
Broadway
921-7713 • 911E. Broadway
y o --".-’,
. . . . .
a
.
¡IL h J
W hen you buy
your ski package from AIT
Travel - it’s th e sam e as
staying in your h o telfo r fr e e !
ATTs prices are so low th a t they’re alm ost
exactly w hat you’d pay ju s t for a round
trip ticket to your favorite ski reso rt
B ut w ith a ski package from ATTTravel you get airfare
p lu s hotel accom m odations ~ and fr e e p a rk in g à i
ATT Sky H arbor Parking. It’s all in the package. All you
provide are th e skis an d th e desire to tackle som e of
the m ost challenging slopes in the W est
Call ATT Travel today —or stop by o u r office on the
Lower Level of the Memorial Union. W ell show you
how you can ski —and stay free!
-
If you've decided to treat yourself to
an older bottle of wine that you've
been treasuring for years, take the
tim e and effort to give it a special
welcome. It's not just another bottle
of wine.
.
a i t
' • • •
If, as is likely, the wine has thrown
som e sedim ent, place the bottle
upright for several days beforehand
so that the "dust'' can settle on the
bottom. C ut the fo il neatly below the
rim of the bottle and wipe off any dirt,
mold o f whatever is there before
opening it gently.
>• • •
If decanting is called for, set up a
candle or flashlight behind the neck
of the bottle. Pour slow ly and steadily,
watching the wine pour out. When
you see sediment, stop. (You may
rescue more wine later.)
Good w ins deserves good glasses:
clear, so you can see the color;
stemmed so your hands don't warm
the wine; tulip-shaped to hold in the
bouquet; and scrupulously clean and
well rinsed.
• • V
Bon appetit! For new wines and old
treasures, you can count on the wide
selection at Liquor B irn , 930 East
Broadway, Tempe. 894-1087- W e'll
be glad to help you determ ine what
you need.
P a c k a g e s
S K I UTAH!
• C H A T E A U S T E M ICH ELLE
B LU S H RIESLING
.... . . . . . . . $ 2 . 9 9
750 ML
• C O LU M B IA C R E S T
C H A R D O N N A Y . . . . ...... ..... .........$4.99
750 M L
• ALLISO N C O M B S
C A B E R N E T S A U V I G N O N . . . . . . . $5.99
1.5 ML
s '* *
Most fun of a ll is actually sipping the
wine that's been perfectly matched to
a delicious meal.
s k i
Salt Lake City area Includes Alta, Snowbird, Park City,
Raikw est Solitude, Brighton and S un Dance.
FROM $ 1 8 2 .0 0 p a r p a rso n
SK I COLORADO!
The Sum m it - Arapahoe Basin, Keystone, Copper
M ountain, Breckenridge - a n d Steam boat Springs.
FROM $ 1 9 9 .0 0 p a r p a rso n
SK I LA KE TA H O E!
Lake Tahoe area includes Heavenly Valley, Alpine
Meadows, Kirkwood, Northstar-at-Tiahoe Squaw Val
ley and Diamond Peak a t Ski Incline
FROM $ l 7 5 .0 0 p o ’p a rso ti
1 Lb . S co ttsd ale Farm
W hole C a ch e w s
$379
Exp. 10-16 -89
TEMPE
894-1067
M T Prave!
The Sm art Way to Buy Travel
M em orial Union - Low er Level
930 E. BROADWAY
HOURS: MON-THURS 9-9
FRI 9 AM-11 PM. SAT 8 A M - 1 1 P M
SUN 12 N 0 0N -7 PM
AmericaVfest
Wha we serve is you.