Copyright. State Press. 1989. Tempé. Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Voi. 72 No. 47 Thursday, November 2,1989 FBI reopens civil rights probe of police B y MIKE B U R G E S S State Press An FBI investigation into the ASU Police Department’s handling of a racial brawl last April was reopened Wednesday, about one week after the U. S. Justice Department cleared the campus police of committing any civil rights violations. “ It was ' reopened «based on some individuals who wanted to give state­ ments,” said Special Agent Dave Small, of the FBI’s Phoenix field office. He would not identify the individuals with whom agents plan to speak. The reopening of the probe comes auei the FBI’s investigation was sharply criticized last week by Robert Rucker and Janies Liddell, two black ASU students who claim University police handcuffed and bullied them during an April 15 incident on Alpha Drive. Rucker and Liddell said they wanted the federal investigation reopened because they were never interviewed by the FBI. In addition, the FBI did not interview the ASU police officers who handled the incident but did request copies of their police reports. “I think it is fair,” Rucker said of the FBI’s decision to reopen the probe. “In order for an investigation to be complete and fair, you have to talk to the victims.” Rucker, a junior criminal justice major, said he contacted Small on Wednesday morning, and at that time, Small told him the case would be reopened. “ I’m very happy he decided to do that,” Rucker said. “ Now it (the investigation) will be complete. ” Small, who heads all civil rights investigations in Arizona, said agents will send the new information they gather to FBI h e a d q u a rte r s in W ashington. The -information then will be forwarded to the Justice Department’s civil rights division. Meanwhile, Small defended the FBI’s investigation, “Obviously the investigation sent in was complete or a decision wouldn’t have been reached,” he said. Small said that during civil rights investi­ gations, the FBI acts as a “fact-finding agency,” and that if anything was missing or incomplete in their investigation then the Justice Department would have sent the case back and told them what was missing. “That was not 'the case,” said Small, who added that in every case agents make attempts to interview all victims. Acting ASU Police Chief Doug Bartosh f t « f i# Liddell Rucker was in California on Wednesday and unavailable to comment on the reopening of the case, but ASU General Counsel Bruce Meyerson said he hopes the renewed investigation has the same outcome. Meyerson, who has been overseeing an independent University panel investigating Turn to FBI, page 9. Phoenix man accidentally shot at party B y T E N N Y T A T U S IA N State P ress Sundl K|enstad/State Press Lend Me Your Ears W ashington-bated artist M ichael Conley, 40, d isplays his beadw ork Jewelry W ednesday at the Serendipity Art Fair on C a d y Mall. T h a fair will continue until Friday. County declines to charge M CC athletes The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office will not pursue felony assault charges against two Mesa Community College football players who were involved in a fraternity-house brawl Oct, 8 that seriously injured an ASU student. Hie charges were sent back to the Tempe Police Department, said Bill Fitzgerald, a spokesman for the office. But he would not specify why the office chose not to file a complaint. The police department is expected to file misdemeanor trespassing and assault charges against the two players with the Tempe City Attorney’s office, Sgt. A1 Taylor said. A misdemeanor carries a maximum one-year jail sentence and a maximum $2.500 fine. MCC suspended. Brent Hatfield, Mark Rotter and Ray Coultrap after they admitted involvement in the brawl at the Delta Chi fraternity house, 1402 S. Jen Tilly Lane. Twelve Kilt Stuff: Yet another poll will gauge students’ day­ care needs, but som e groups call for action. Page 3 other athletes admitted to witnessing the incident, but no arrests have been made in the case. Police would not release the names of the two athletes in the report, saying only that they were two of the three players who were suspended. The incident occurred when a group of MCC football players allegedly ransacked the fraternity house after a rock thrown during the fight left ASU student Matthew Springer, 19, with a fractured skull. Police estimate that there were almost 100 people in the fraternity parking lot during the fight. Springer underwent four hours of surgery at Desert Samaritan Hospital and was released Oct. 13. He «nil not return to classes this semester. — Q uite a Fellow: Maybe Ronald ’ Reagan was right when he so glowing­ ly reviewed Mikhail Gorbachev. Joseph Sobran column. Page 5 T E N N Y T A TU S IA N Halloween turned into a nightmare for a group of students when a 20-year-old man accidentally was shot in the head by a close friend at a Tempe apartment complex early Wednesday morning, police said. Killy Rankin, of the 2500 block of West Corrine Street, Phoenix, was taken to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital-Osbom, where he was listed in extremely critical condition, said Peggy Ackerman, a hospital spokeswoman. Rankin was transported to Barrow Neurological Institute of St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix late Wednesday afternoon, a Scottsdale Memorial nursing supervisor said. The shooting occurred at The Commons on Apache, t i l l E. Apache Blvd. Rankin and two other friends were dressed as cowboys from the 1988 motion picture “ Young Guns,” said Sgt. A1 Taylor, of Tempe police, adding that all three men had guns they thought were unloaded. The men and about 10 others, including ASU students, spent Halloween going to various parties in Tempe and Phoenix at which they had been drinking alcohol, Taylor said. At about midnight, the group returned to the Tempe apartment, where some of them began cooking breakfast, he said. Shortly after, a few people in the bedroom came into the kitchen and said the eggs were burning. Acting angered at the remark, Rankin’s friend, whose name has not been released, picked up a .38 caliber Smith and Wesson gun from a kitchen counter, pointed it at several friends and pulled the trigger three times, Taylor said. When his friend pulled the trigger the fourth time, a blank made of cardboard wadding entered Rankin’s forehead, knocking him unconscious, he said. Police were called and the friend who pulled the trigger started CPR on Rankin. Taylor said the incident was an accident and no arrests are expected. The blank in the gun was left over from a party that the men attended Saturday night. When the men were getting ready at a friend’s house for the party Saturday, a parent commented on how real the guns looked. Rankin acknowledge the guns were real, Rankin knew students at the apartment complex through friends he works with at Alpine Ski Keller, 2005 E. Camelback Road. He is a student at Paradise Valley Community College. H ello, Hoops: Ron Waller and the rest o f the Sun Devil basketball team make their first public appearance. Page 11 Today’« weather: Sunny, with a high near 80. Tonight ahould be clear, with a low In tha lower 50a. C la ssifie d s..............................................1 4 PoHce Report.............................................7 POS*!?" .-■'■I# " ________________________________________________Th,ufSd^Np^fl^g,,t989 ^ _Mm_. .. . , . . . . ■■■■ . . '■■ - • -•• - — —— = World/Nation —■ S tf P r C M - ■-- '■ -~ • -; -:>fih u -. W h ite H o u s e d e n o u n c e s O r te g a , h o ld s b a c k ta lk o n C o n tr a a id WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House on Wednesday denounced Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s decision to end a truce with the U. S.-backed Contras but brushed off talk about renewing military aid for the rebels, saying “we don’t want to give him any excuse” to cancel next year’s elections. President Bush, lashing out at Ortega, said “the man is so out of step with the other democratic countries in this hemisphere and so wildly insensitive to the feelings of others that we shouldn’t have been surprised” by his action. “On the other hand, I don’t think he has unleashed a fullscale offensive at this moment,” Bush said in a radio interview with ABC News. “He’s hedging his bets now.” The administration said Bush was consulting with leaders in Central America to bring diplomatic pressure on Ortega to reverse course. “ It is obvious that he’s afraid of the ballot box,” White - • ■ • ä ~ House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said, referring to presidential elections set for Feb. 25 in Nicaragua. Ortega, at a news conference in Managua, suspended the 19-month-old cease-fire with the Contras, citing continued rebels attacks, and hinted he might cancel the elections. He accused Bush of “supporting terrorism in Nicaragua.” Meanwhile, administration and congressional sources said that between 1,000 to 1,500 anti-Sandinista rebels have returned to Nicaragua from base camps in Honduras over the past month, bringing the guerrillas’ troop strength to about 4,000. Under a Central American peace plan, the rebels are supposed to be disarmed and demobilized by Dec. 5. Iran s t ir s a n ti-U . S . p a s s i o n s , p a s s e s la w t o s e i z e A m e r ic a n s NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Iran on Wednesday approved a law giving it the power to arrest Americans anywhere and put them on trial, and one newspaper suggested that the first ' :;&S ö iö target be the former commander of the USS Vincennes. The action came amid growing anti-U. S. passion being whipped up to mark the 10th anniversary of the storming of the U. S. Embassy in Tehran. Protesters plan to burn 160 American flags outside the compound — now a school — on Saturday. The official Islamic Republic News Agency said the Majlis, or parliament, unanimously approved a final version of the bill that earlier had been passed by the 12-member Council of Guardians, a constitutional watchdog body. The council acted after the 270-seat Majlis approved a first draft of the measure on Tuesday. The law will remain on the books “as long as the U. S. president is authorized to commit inhuman practices against the lives and interests of Iranian citizens,” the agency reported in a dispatch monitored in Cyprus. The Iranian move was in response to the Justice Department’s authorization of the FBI tb arrest suspected terrorists abroad and bring them to trial in the United States without the permission of the countries where they were located. Today Meetings •Amnesty International at ASU will meet at 3 p.m. in the Fine Arts courtyard. •American Institute of Architectural Students will be showing the film s "Fountainhead” and “ M etropolis” at 6:30 p.m. in Neeb Hall. Adm ission is $1 — members w ill be admitted for free. •ASU Snow Devil Ski Club will be discussing the Utah trip at 6:30 p.m. at McDuffy’s Sports Bar, on Fifth Street and Ash Avenue. Two $50 gift certificates to the Alpine Ski Keller will be given away. •ASU Cycling Devils will have a team meeting at 6 p.m. at the Bicycle Co-op. •ASU Ski Devils will meet at 7 p.m. at Sunny’s P izza and Pub, 1301 E. University Drive. It’s the last chance to turn in deposits for the Thanksgiving Utah trip. We w ill also be accepting deposits for the Lake Tahoe trip. Everyone welcome. •American Marketing Association will have a general meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the MU Pim a Room. •Baptist Student Union will have a free lunch at noon at the Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. M ill Ave. Everyone is welcome — bring a friend. •Campus Crusade for Christ Thursday Night Live!!! — at 7:30 p.m. in ECD , Room 117. Don’t m iss it! •Christian Students Fellowship Bible Study on Matthew Ch. 13:1— 23 — Knowing W hat’s In Your Heart, at 12:30 p.m. in the M U Apache Room. •DEX, Dynamic Exchange C lub “ It's Happening Now: What Are Eastern Europe’s Choices?” , at 7 p.m. in the MU Pim a Room, •Engineering and Applied Sciences College Council will meet at 4:30 p.m. in ER C , Room 493. We w ill discuss the computer calendar, next sem ester's “ E-Day” , President's Day. •Golden Key National Honor Society w ill have a reception planning meeting at 5 p.m. in the M U Apache Room. Any new or current member interested in helping run the reception, please com e to the m eeting or call 730-1401. •Graduate Women In Business will meet at 4:30 p.m. in BAG, Room 226 — Graduate Redding Room. Speaker: Susan Gallagher on “ Utilizing the Government Process in Business.” •Lesbian and Gay Academic Union (LGAU) w ill meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Yum a Room. Faculty, adm inistration and students w ill discuss homophobia at ASU. Everyone is invited to attend. •MUAB Film Committee w ill show the film “ C hild’s Play” at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the MU Cinem a. Adm ission is $1. •University Toastmasters will meet at 5 p.m. in the MU MohaVe Room. Build public speaking skills and leadership awareness. Post Toasties afterwards. C o r r e c tio n s In T uesday’s edition, Steven Tseffos was misidentified in a story about a proposed professional baseball stadium in Tempe. Tseffos works for local developer John Benton, a member of the Tempe Sports Authority. In Wednesday’s State Press, participants in a blood drive were misidentified. The Army and Air Force ROTC put on a competitive blood drive, which the Air Force won, No w. . . * * * LIMITED EN G AG EM EN T NOV. 8-11 ★ * T ifou rO Scooters from... 8 ^ •G reat on Gas •Low Insurance •Easy M aintenance •Easy Parking •Bring in Your ASU I D. for Discounts •Free Pick-up & D elivery rr\e c ° Elite LX's! CHSO'sH Elite 150!!! Helix's!!!! ALL SALE PRICED mW 9 — N O W !!!!! *Dest. & Prep Addi Come Ride With Us! ■ - s s » T O W N & C O U N T R Y - h °m w A 1701 N. Arizona Ave. 13 miles south of Superstition on Country Club) Last Valley 4 899-9088 Phoenix * 275-3001 ASSOCIATED »STUDENTS • o r » A « 1 2 0 H A ■ I T T A T È > Ù :W l V E « S I T V- Sheraton Tem pe M issio n P alm s Hôtel . . fCIUT.»*- *'«*€» ’ fwa« »<;awi P ag« 3 Thursday November t , 1989 Leaders differ on how to spend extra rec center funds B y M A R K CRISM O N State P ress ASU student leaders are hashing out differences with administrators on how to spend an extra $377,000 raised through the $25 Student Recreation Complex fee. Gerry Maas, director of the SRC, said that if the $377,000 is not used for operational expenses, the complex Will be forced to “cut hours and cut people,’’ possibly by closing during weekends and limiting athletic programs. “We are one of the biggest student employers on campus and the cut will mean taking money out of students pockets,’’ he said. But Associated Students of ASU President Paul Larson said that when the students originally passed the referendum approving die fee in 1985, “our understanding was that the $25 would only be used for paying off the bond issue (for the facility), additional construction or possibly new equipment.” Lowell Crary, assistant to thé vice president in the Student Affairs Office, said : “I’m not sure this was the understanding. There are no restrictions other than some might feel there’s à good-faith restriction. There are no legal restrictions. “I’m sitting here today trying to figure out howto make this building work, and nobody seems certain of how to do it without using those funds.” The 30-year bond issue must be paid off at the rate of $1.5 million a year, which comes fr om the $25 p er semester fee added to each student’s tuition. Projections for the 1990-91 academic year estimate that the total amount raised through the $25 fee will exceed the $1.5 million by $377,000. Members of the SRC Larson Board, which include Larson, Crary and Maas, thumbed through stacks of old correspondence between past ASU presi­ dent J. Russell Nelson and ex-ASASU president John Fees on Wednesday in an attempt to determine the original intent for the extra funds. Crary said he thinks both students and administrators have the same objectives concerning the complex. Larson said that although he wants to see the funds earmarked for equipment and future expansion of the complex, he wants to avoid cutting student wages or complex hours. “I’m simply trying to uphold the spirit of the original agreement four years ago,” he said. Crary echoed Larson’s sentiment that the situation is a Catch-22. Turn to Comptex, peg* #. O n -cam pu s child-care center needed, official says By NICK! C A R R O L L State P ress The Office of Student Affairs currently is conducting a survey of 90 classes to gauge students’ child-care heeds, but Student organizations that have pioneered their own child­ care programs say more pragmatic action should be taken. “People come to our office looking for the ASU child-care center,” said David Dotts, director of the student-run Office for Off-Campus Student Services. “I think there needs to be one. I don’t understand why there isn’t an ASU child-care center.” The OOCSS, which was created by Associated Students of ASU to address specific needs of commuter and tenant students, currently publishes a free baby-sitter referral list. administrative move. “I think it’s a good step the University’s made,” Duane said. Duane will be responsible for compiling the results of the student opinion survey and preparing a report of child-care objectives for student affairs. She said she hopes to publish a brochure which will inform parents how to lode for child care, create a database of child­ care options and compile a five-year University child-care plan by June 30. “ I want ASU to become an example to other urban universities on how to handle day-care issues,” Duane said. Dotts said his office asked students in residence halls, fraternities and sororities for days and times they were available to babysit. The information was compiled into a list and is given out to some of the 350 people who visit the office eachweek. “I see a need out there,” Dotts said. “It’s frustrating to say all we can do is provide a list of babysitters, but we can’t keep kids in our office. ; “It seems more should be coming from ASU.” The Office of Student Affairs recently hired a new child­ care coordinator, Maureen Duane, who assumed her office on Monday. Duane, a form er child-care center director from Minnesota, said the creation of her position was a positive p n m Former President J. Russell Nelson appropriated funds for Duane’s position last April in response to a report by the Child Care Steering Committee, a 14-member panel appointed by Nelson in 1987 to study the need for campus child-care facilities. The committee based its recommendations on a survey of 664 ASU employees and 250 female students done by the Tucson Association for Child Care. The report also recommended compiling a referral list of child-care facilities available for ASU faculty, staff and students and listed the option of establishing an on-site facility. Lee Ellen Brigman, student affairs research director, said the $16,000 survey didn’t accurately represent the current University child-care situation. “The committee felt some things weren’t quite together yet in the area of assessing student needs,” Brigman said. The UofA distributed 300 of its own day-care referral lists recently, said Amy Berlin, Associated Students of UofA child-care coordinator. “They’re almost all gone after two weeks,” Berlin said. “There are a lot more students who need child care out there than we expected.” Berlin said the student-initiated list cost a total of $300. Currently, thé only full-time campus child-care center at ASU is the Child Development Lab in the department of family resources. It can accommodate 60 children from the ages of 3 to 5 years old. In addition to students, staff and faculty, anyone in the community can utilize the service. All Maricopa Community Colleges have on-site child-care centers, said Susan MacCleary, child-care assistant at the Scottsdale Community College Child Enrichment Center. “We help anywhëre from 70 to 90 families a semester,” she said. The service costs $1.50 an hour plus a $15 registration fee. Cindy Peterson, peer-adviser at the ASU re-entry center, said child care is the main concern of adults returning to college. “The comment most often made by re-entry students is ‘There is no day care on campus?’, ” Peterson said. “They find that hard to believe. “I think if they made a facility for students as well as faculty, it would be a well-used center.” ü ON-CAMPUS NOVEMBER 8TH K m Com pany: Firem an's Fund ■ O n e o f Am erica's foremost insurance companies ■ O n e o f the largest IBM shops in N orthern California Location : M arin County, CA >A San Frandsco suburb VVI ■ Commitment to create the best systems in the insurance business Requirem ents: SUNDAY ■ M ajor in Business/MIS, D ata Processing ■ Know ledge o f C O B O L Interviews: B -Q & • Novem bers W e are an equal opportunity employer. Fireman’s Fund tm n a u m fm INSUUNCS COimNY State Prêt» Thursda^jovemb«^^989 Page 4 Chapel cross Court should let tradition stand, leave Danforth alone the Danforth Foundation, makes keeping the cross on top of Danforth an issue of historical integrity. Yes, this is a public University. Yes, it is run with state tax dollars. Yes, there is the division between church and state. But removing the cross is breaking the contract with Mr. Danforth, and going back on your word is not something the fifth largest University in the nation should be doing. Plus, Danforth Chapel is a historic building, built from an agreement between two organizations. It should not be altered in any way. History and tradition at ASU are rare. Items rich in these areas should be protected, not adjusted to fit the changing times. Whether or not the cross should remain atop Danforth Chapel is not a matter for the courts to decide. The choice to display a cross on the chape] has already been made — by Arizona State College in 1946, When Grady Gammage signed an agreement with Mr. Danforth. The agreement was to take Danforth’s money to build the chapel in exchange for displaying a cross, a painting of Jesus ‘The fact that there is a place and an inscription above thé door of the chapel. on this campus where people The painting is no longer in the chape]; it is in another can go to worship — to worship location for the purposes of historic préservation. The inscription still exists by the door at Danforth. And the cress? whomever and whatever Well, the cross is going to court. they please — is a g ift.’ Here’s a little history : In 1945, students of Arizona State College began to toss around the idea of a religious center on campus. On Feb. 1, 1945, they contacted the Danforth Foundation to seek funding for such a facility. Mr. Danforth The building itself is a place for interfaith worship. Does himself made an verbal offer of $5,000 to the students. They the cross impede that? Viewed as a symbol of religious accepted his offer. omnipotence, perhaps it does. Viewed as it should be — as a The Danforth Foundation contributed approximately historic feature of a campus landmark — no, it does not. 35 percent of the $12,000 needed to build the chapel. The A chapel for meditation is meant to be a quiet place where difference came from various private sources. No state people can go to be alone with their beliefs and values. The money was used. building is just a structure ; it is not a needed part of religious The fact that Danforth Chapel was built in the late 1940s — worship. Many people say the real church is the church of the when ASU was not even a University — with money tied to heart. If what’s in your heart is in keeping with your beliefs and values, then Why worry about what’s outside your heart? The fact that there is a place on this campus where people can go to worship—to worship whomever and whatever they please — is a gift. It is the zenith of religious freedom. That this place was provided by a man who held certain beliefs and wanted them displayed is not evil; it is natural. That this place was constructed before ASU even existed as we know it today, when only 7,000 students attended one college, makes it one of the few remaining historic buildings on Campus. Students fought to save West Hall, and they should fight to save Danforth Chapel, in its original, historic form. For a campus that Claims to be so rich in cultural diversity, the idea of removing a religious symbol from a historic building is ridiculous. It is an attempt to create a sterile environment, not a diverse and dynamic one. Buildings all over campus are modeled after different cultures and religions. The Nelson Center for the; Performing Arts is designed to resemble a Sphinx. The Sphinx is an ancient Egyptian and Greek symbol for die worshipping of the god Horus. It represents the guarding of temples and tombs. The entrance to the Hayden Underground Building is reminiscent of an Asian shrine. Every time a student walks down the stairs, beneath the labyrinth of pillars, he might as well be entering a religious shrine. When you come down to it, many religions have influenced our culture. Since architecture is a part of our culture, it is only natural that it, too, is influenced by religion. If ASU can build new buildings with religious symbolism, it can preserve one of the most historic buildings on campus with all of its religious symbols intact. The cross does not deserve to go to court. Letters Halloween unsafe Editor: Regarding the Oct. 31 article in the State Press, “X-rays unable to detect poison in Halloween trick or treats.” It is appalling that a parent must feel the need to have candy X-rayed at all. If a person has that much fear of candy tampering, why does he even let his kid go out on Halloween? It’s enough to worry about a driver hitting a child, or a child becoming lost or abducted. Incidentally, the chances of one of these events happening is greatly reduced if the child is chaperoned. Any one of these reasons is enough to stay at home. Personally, my kids won’t be going out because I forbid them to beg for 37 pounds of sugar and chocolate. Additionally, I won’t give out candy. Holiday spirits won’t be dampened because in the next two months, we have Thanksgiving, Hanukkah or Christmas and New Years. The term holiday was derived from Holy Day. I don’t see how a day representative of paganism and evil, and filled with evil as evidenced by police reports, can be considered a holiday. The true holiday this season is three weeks away, and I wish a safe and moral one for everyone. Ronald J. Friedlander Sophomore, AirWay Science Management STATE PRESS Q uotable DARRIN HOSTETLER Editor “ Do not use a hatchet to rem ove a fly from your friend’s forehead CARO LYN HOFIG Managing Editor MAGAZINE STAFF: Scott Seckel. — Chinese proverb FREELAN C E W RITERS: Sharon Kaney, Francine Stahl, Mish Tell, Richard Vigil. CARTOONIST: Mike Ritter EDITORIAL ASST,: Lynn Vavreck LETTER POLICY The State Press welcom es and encourages ^written response from our readers on any topic. ' ' -\ AM letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity w ill be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tem pe A Z 85287-1502. REPO RTERS: Mike Burgess. N icki Carroll, Mark Crismon, B ise Elsberry, Kim berly Harris, M ichelle Henry, Adriane Hopkins, Kelly Jain, Joie Ann La Polla, Sonja Lewis, Kelly Pearce, Tenhy Tatuaian. SPO RTS REPO RTERS: V icki Culver, Joel Horn, Tomi M cEl­ roy, Larry Newell, Keith Rosenhagen. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jam ie Lytle, Sundi Kjenstad, Brian O'Mahoney. Scott Troyanps. -CO PY EDITORS: Kelly Ettenborough, Nicole Perron. PRODUCTION: Daniel Donley, Steve Kricun, Nancy Ness, Mark Nothaft, Deborah Prewitt, Lynne Senzek, Jason Silver, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Frank Culver. Jay Eckhardt, Dan Ellstrom , Lysa Fitzhugh, Lisa Horn, John Leathers, Paul Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Brook Mullen, Terri Smith, Ray Zicket. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academ ic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7572 The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Opinion H rt» N M Thursday, November 2,1989 Glasnost r ' Page 5 Reagan saw in Gorbachev what others missed Jo se p h S o b ran Universal Press Syndicate WASHINGTON — I owe Ronald Reagan an apology. I was one of those conservatives who thought he’d gone soft in the head when, at the signing of the INF treaty in 1987, he spoke of Mikhail Gorbachev as “a new kind of Soviet leader.” It turns out that Mr. Reagan knew something we didn’t. I think conservatives can be pardoned for their skepticism at the time. We’d been hearing about these new, improved Soviet leaders ever since Stalin died, and each time, the euphoria had been dampened with blood — in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Afghanistan. The silliness peaked when Yuri Andropov, succeeding Leonid Brezhnev, was hailed in the West as a “closet liberal” with a private taste for Western jazz and Scotch whiskey; the former KGB chief coolly continued the crackdown on dissent. But behold Reagan’s vindication! The Soviets have permitted democracy to blossom in Poland and Hungary, have tolerated angry dissent without reprisal in the Baltic states, have admitted cheating on the ABM treaty, have renounced the right to interfere in the affairs of what have hitherto been their satellite nations, have held elections of their own, complete with real opposition candidates, have confessed that they were wrong to invade Afghanistan, have begun publishing Solzhenitsyn’s “Gulag Archipelago” and on and on. All this reflects the impact and direction of Gorbachev, who, if he succeeds with his reforms (and the experts say his position is fragile), will surely be remembered in Russia as Abraham Lincoln is remembered in this country: as the Great Emancipator. Of course there is still, shall we say, room for improvement; and it may be that Gorbachev would say, as Lincoln said, that he was more controlled by events than in control of them. Communism has failed. The system was no longer sustainable. Something had to be done. But this much, this fast? Give the man some credit. If he has not performed miracles, at least he has attempted them. He has moved far more swiftly than necessity would seem to dictate. He might have acted far more grudgingly and slowly. Put it this way: You’d have to have been clinically insane to have predicted accurately, two years ago, the changes Gorbachev has already wrought in the communist world. All this is not to say that the West should abandon caution. It’s still possible that Gorbachev will be toppled and that a reaction will set in or that he himself-will feel obligated by pressure to reverse his course, a la Deng Xiao-ping. But as of now, he deserves our accolades. He apparently is bringing about what we have hoped and prayed for: the end of the total state, complete with empire. It’s a great beginning, all right, but you have to wonder: How on earth is he going to finish it? Some conservatives are now arguing for putting more pressure on Gorbachev or for giving aid to Poland to assist it in the democratization process^ Having no special knowledge of such matters, I can only say that my instict is that the United States should stand back and leave well enough alone. Any intervention on our part might give Gorbachev’s enemies an excuse to force the reversal we don’t want. Besides, it’s not as if the United States is the sole proprietor of freedom. The Poles and Gorbachev are doing fine without us. People have, after all, managed to find their way to civilization from time to time without the direct assistance of the U.S.A. We can wish them well without butting in, and we can celebrate without gloating. I can say without reserve that the events in Eastern Europe give me more joy than any political events in my lifetime. It took me a long time to believe that it’s all for real. It will take me longer to believe that it’s also permanent, but for once I feel more like writing a song than a column. When I thought, dismally, (hat Reagan was being taken in, he was actually seeing something that was invisible to many of us. “He’s quite a fellow,” Reagan writes of Gorbachev in his new book, “Speaking My Mind.” And so is Reagan. Maybe his memoirs will describe their conversations in detail. Let’s hope Gorbachev lives to write his own memoirs, too. Jim Baker Secretary of state maneuvering for vice president’s spot C o d y S h e a re r North Am erican Syndicate WASHINGTON — It is a flexible rule in politics that the unexpected should always be expected for the most unlikely people. Who would have guessed that South Africa’s leader F, W. de Klerk would release Walter Sisulu and other African National Congress leaders? Could it be that East Germany’s Egon Krenz, former chief of that nation’s feared secret police, is the man to bring down the Berlin Wall? Of late, this bending rule of politics has found life in the way Secretary of State Jam es Baker has given conservative ideologists the cold shoulder in foreign affairs and hugged America’s moderate plotting diplomatic corps. Such a game (dan, political analysts here suggest, is a long-term plot by the ambitious Mr. Baker to position himself for higher office. Anyone who doubts Baker’s course need only examine two speeches he has given in the past two weeks on our nation’s systematic approach to perestroika and arms control. After a period of suspicion about whether Gorbachev was going to survive or not, Baker is now willing to map out U. S. foreign policy in conjunction with the Soviets. This is a major change in U. S. policy. Only two months ago, Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger delivered a foolish speech in which he declared it was the objective of U. S. foreign policy to act irrespective of what Mr. Gorbachev did, so long as American interests were served. P art of Baker’s conversion is a result of his blossoming friendship with Eduard Schevardnadze. In September, on their way to Wyoming, the two diplomats spent five hours discussing the Soviet economy and possible threat of destabilization. By the time they arrived at Jackson Hole, the gentlemen were sure they could work and trust one another. After decades of dealing with Byzantine Soviet diplomats, Baker, like his predecessor, George Shultz, found h i m s e l f b e i n g i n v i t e d b a c k to Shevardnadze’s apartment in Moscow for a late night family dinner. Everyone who deals with Jim Baker knows he has maneuvered himself in the near term to topple Vice President Dan Quayle. For starters, it’s no secret in Washington that Jim Baker does not respect Dan Quayle. He vigorously opposed his nomination as vice president in private discussions with George Bush. Twice during the controversies surrounding Quayle’s avoidance of seirvice in Vietnam, Baker is said to have referred to the then junior senator from Indiana as “a dead man.” It is not only a difference in intellect and personality that separates these two public servants. The two men have a long history of policy clashes: over the sale of the Awacs early-warning system to Saudi Arabia during Reagan’s first term, over the Job Training Bill, which was Quayle’s chief legislative achievement, and most recently, during the 1988 presidential campaign. At present, Baker is trying to determine whether it makes more sense to shut Quayle up or let the vice president hang himself with his outspoken conservative views. Baker, the keen political pragmatist, is ‘Everyone who deals with Jim Baker knows he has maneuvered himself in the near term to topple Vice President Dan Quayle. ’ convinced that his primary Republican obstacle to high office is not moving in the right direction by broadening ceptrist Republicanism. On the other hand, Quayle supporters think Baker has misjudged public opinion by feeding the natural reluctance of Americans to provide adequately for their defense. Moreover, the Quayle crowd believes that Baker’s views are determined by a desire to. maintain a bipartisan policy with congessional Democrats. But it is not only the conservative hip- shooter from Indiana that poses a potential problem for Jim Baker. The way in which he runs the State Department begs the question of whether Jim Baker can lead America. Baker operates his department through a small coterie of advisers, mostly younger women, through which the world’s largest foreign policy b u r e a c r a c y must communicate its memos. What disturbs many foreign policy experts at the State Department is that their material is not being read. How else would one explain the series of foreign policy reversals that Baker’s tenure at the State has encountered? Baker, for example, did not realize until recently.that the rest of Latin America was not about to rally around his call to ditch Gen. Noriega. Moreover, what can explain Baker’s inaccurate conclusion that Gen. Najibullah would not survive afte r the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan? Or what about the current deflation of the latest Middle East peace effort? Given these setbacks, one can readily understand the importance to Mr. Baker of the Soviet Union’s gracious new foreign p o l i c y . W i t h t h e a s s i s t a n c e of Mr. Shevardnadze, a future summit is in the works to cut troop levels within Europe, as well as halve strategic arsenal. Such > accomplishments should make up for any number of Third World setbacks for the rich, Ivy League-educated Texas lawyer. For the moment, this superpower is Jim Baker’s ace card. Paseó The state press BEFORE YOU CAN G O T O G R AD SCHOOL, THERE'S O N E M O R E RIDICULOUS TEST. is on the stands before most people wake up! The GRE. TheGMAT. The LSAT. Chances are, you!) have to face one of these to get into grad school. The Princeton Review can make the expedience a lot more bearable. Not to mention rewarding. Well teach you the skills necessary to conquer these tests. Unlike that "other” prep course, we feature small classes and personalized instruction. Even individual help. And our results are inarguable. If you want to know more, just call us at If we don't hear from you, well... good luck. Register for J im » San Francisco Honolulu Now York Costa Mca iT T Ä Q I iS WOMEN AND JUDAISM RELIGION AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE Marcie Lee, Women’s Studies WST 394 6:40-9:30 p.m. Monday Joel Gereboff, Religious Studies REL 494 1598 1:40-4:30 p.m. Monday Tahiti Rio Auckland Nairobi Johannesburg INTRODUCTION TO JUDAISM AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY Restrictions apply. Add-on fares available to LA. W ei do everything by mail!! Joel Gereboff, Religious Studies REL 210 12:40 p.m. MWF Barton Lee, History HIS 270 3:154:30 p.m. TTH Call fo r FREE student travel catalo g! 800- 888-8786 For Further Information Call: 965-7255 or 967-7563 CASINO NIGHT Saturday, Nov* 4 7 p m * ll :30 pm 9 5 2 -8 8 5 0 Princeton University and The Educational Testing Service are i m affiliated with The Princeton Review. W A R E H O U S E D E L I & F t iB ''' TEMPE ACTIVE 20/30 CLUB PRESENTS: DAILY LUNCH SPECIAL | ‘ n. to 2:00 p.m. ONLY! Tempe Holiday Inn 915 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe All proceeds go directly to Child Crisis Center _____ East Valley, Inc. PRIZES INCLUDE: For I I I I « 1 I I i I $035 •Sandwich of the Day •French Fries •Soft Drink or Draft Beer M - BBQ Beef T - Hoagie W - Pastrami Th - Steak F - Fish L O N G E S T H A P P Y H O U R in T E M P E 10:30 a.m .-7 p.m. j ___________________________________________________ ;____________________ j NO COVER CHARGE V FREE CHECKS IN JU R E D r (When you become a m em ber at Tempe Schools C redit Union) Studentsand faculty are eligible ✓ Convenient location to ASU on Mill just South of Broadway / No-fee checking account that earns interest Complete line of financial services / r \ lo in The nemesis of standardized testing. 14515 VENTURA BLD #250 SHERMAN OAKS, CA 91403 Danny Ben-Gigi, Foreign Languages FLA 294 Elementary Modem Hebrew II 8:40 a.m. MTWTH FLA 294 Intermediate Modem Hebrew II 9:40 a.m. MTWTH FLA 394 Advanced Modem Hebrew 10:40 a.m. MTWTH Additional Information C A LL 831-7625 ¡E Council Travel MODERN HEBREW • Weekend for 2 at The Pointe • Weekend for 2 at the Holi­ day Irm • Portable AM/FM TV • Various Dinners for 2 • Silver Bullet Rubber Raft • Many, Many, Many Morel THE PRINCETON REVIEW 1 3 0 E . U n iv e r s ity D r. (Forest & University) 9 6 6 -7 7 8 8 IN A N A C C I D E N T ? YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! •FR E E Consultation to students and faculty •Auto Accidents •Motorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •W rongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip & Fall •Dog Bites •Insurance Disputes •R E D U C E D percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Home, evening & hospital appointm ents available N o w R e c e iv e : FREE checks Interest on funds No m onthly fees BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers (O ffe r good th r o u g h D e c e m b e r 3 1 , 1989) e Sckooßs Credit Union 2800 S. Mill 9 6 7 -94_7_5 , J D O N ’T G E T H U R T T W IC E 4 3 § -12 12 (4625 S. Wendler Dr., Suite 1 I I , Tempe) Stille Press Page 7 Thursday, November g, 1989 ASU Police Report ^ ASU police reported the follbwing incidents that occurred between 7 a.m. Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday: •Two ASU employees were arrested Tuesday in connection with the theft of two NFL goalposts from Sun Devil Stadium last Thursday night, police said. Joseph Bilducia and Augustine Keeme, Physical Plant workers, allegedly stole the $10,000 unassembled posts from beneath the bleachers and cut them up with intentions to sell the aluminum scrap, Det. David Hayes said. The men were charged with felony burglary and felony theft, he said, adding that they were released pending a formal complaint to be filed by the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office. •A student’s car was hit by a water balloon While he was driving west on University Drive near Manzanita Residence Hall. The balloon, fired from a slingshot from ah unknown direction, shattered the car’s windshield. •A vandal damaged an employee’s car while it was parked in Lot 63, causing $500 in damages by shattering the passenger side windows and denting the door frame with an unknown object between 5: 30 and 7 a.m. •A minor was arrested and charged with possession of alcohol in the hallway on the 15th floor of Manzanita Residence Hall. •A minor was arrested and charged with possession of alcohol in the B-wing of Irish Residence Hall. •A student was arrested after he gave police officers a false name in the B-wing of Irish Residence Hall. Compiled by State Press reporter Temty Tatusian. Tempe Police Report Tempe police, reported the following incidents that occurred between 7 a.m. Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday: •A 41-year-old man was arrested after he asked an off-duty police officer to hide a plastic bag of marijuana that was in his pocket while police were questioning him regarding a probation violation. The man thought the plain-clothed police officer was a citizen rider with one of the other officers. •A 45-year-old woman was arrested after police found her using false identification to visit inmates at the Madison Street Jail, 325 W. Madison St. •A 20-year-old female Mesa Community College student was arrested at the Tempe Mission Palms Hotel, 60 E. Fifth St., after she stole two fire extinguishers and sprayed the second floor hall. She also was charged with disorderly conduct after P 'Z Z Á Tom Garcia, M.D. (UAG. ’75) Cardiologist Houston, Texas “The right choice was there when I heeded it. I made that choice, and now I’m a physician. 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First St., and saw sexual activity taking place. •A 34-year-old man was arrested and charged with indecent exposure after several people, including children, saw him urinating on a palm tree in Kiwanis Park. He was plainly visible from the houses on the east side of MUl Avenue. Compiled by State Press reporter Tetmy Tatusian. The International Choice For your free video preview call; 1-800-531-5494 a 10th Street C h e c k s Ac c e p te d »Card e x p . 11-15-89 N ot g o o d w /a n y o th e r o ffe r. A S U /T E M P E = 945 S. M ill at 10th s L ittle Caesars P izza H A N D PICK U P Y O U R $5 B O N U S B Y MENTIONING THIS A D Through the Month o f O ctober (New Donors Only) (May Not Be Used With Other Bonuses) TEM P E P LA SM A 933 E. 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Attorneys for the ASU officers had advised them not to speak with the University panel until the Justice Department concluded its case because they did not want the officers to implicate themselves. “We’ll have to find out how they (the officers) feel at this stage,” Meyerson said. The FBI launched its initial probe of ASU police shortly after the fraternity row incident and sent its findings to the Justice Department in late July. The Justice Department announced last week that the case had been closed and that it was not going to prosecute. Rucker and Liddell, who is not attending classes at ASU this semester, had accused ASU police of roughing them up and humi li at ing them when they w ere handcuffed and taken into what police called “protective custody.” The students and two black friends were attacked by a mob of white fraternity members who had mistaken them for suspects in an earlier assault on a Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity member. Rucker and Liddell were the only people arrested and they said they were humiliated because they were handcuffed in front of a mob of about 500 students, many of whom were chanting racial slurs. Rucker and Liddell were taken to police headquarters, handcuffed to chairs and were released about a half-hour later. Although they were never interviewed by the FBI, Rucker and Liddell did meet with an agent during the summer at their attorney’s Phoenix office. An agent met first with Liddell and began questioning hi m, but L i d de l l t e r m i n a t e d the conversation because he felt uncomfortable With the way the agent was asking him questions. “They will be dealing with a different agent because the agent who conducted the interview is no longer with the FBI,” Small said. Complex _ _ Continued from page 3. Larson said it would be self-defeating to save the $377,000 for future expansion of the center. “ If we have to Start laying off students now and closing on the weekends we won’t have the type of facility we hoped for,” he said. The problem stems from the fact that before the referendum was passed, no formal discussion of what to do with surplus SRC fee money took place. “We still don’t know what they originally intended,” Crary said at the board meeting. “We’re faced with making a budget and I don’t See how we can do it with out using the money.” The board discussed several other alternatives for raising money to pay these operating costs. You Ware It Well. Rev - U p y o u r fall w ardrobe with y o u r very ow n high-quality, prem ium w eight JO B -W A R E ™ Wm sportsw ear... 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Sheldon is to take the first bite at a ceremony Wednesday at the Stage in New York. by Mike Ritter Veau...im tired of tue EtXTORS OF TW5 NEWSPAPER EVCLUD IN6 M E FR aM TU aR ePiTOR DISCUSSIONS O F fu m e e WAVE A COMPLAINT AND CORRECT EVENTS... OF-TV1E-PAV? LIK E U S SfÖ R TSG U « I CANT GRASP E X P E R T R E P A IR S O n A L L M A K E S DISCOUNT B IC Y C LE “TWO THUMBS UP!”- n ext to A S U at Lem on & R u ra l ju st b eh in d C irc le K on Lem on “★ 966-0842 AN ADDITIONAL $20 off any tiim c im e SALE BICYCLE T U N E -Regular U P S$29.95 ★ ★ ★ great SISKEL 8c EBERT FILMMAKING.” - M IK E CLARK/USA TODAY “ ‘CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS’ HITS THE BULL’S-EYE...” -V IN C E N T CA N BY /N EW YORK TIMES “THIS IS A GREAT FILM.” - J O E L SIEGEL / GOOD MORNING AMERICA $ 1 4 b0 5 p lu s parts ” ... CONSTANTLY ENTERTAINING.” - G E N E SHALIT / TODAY SHOW Exp. D ec. 31, 1989 r 3 §i titt 50 Lon9 ■ICE T E A S Island lit e taum t Sc ratm j B CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS $ 2 5 0 P IT C H E R S CAROLINE AARON ALAN AIDA WOODY ALLEN CLAIRE BLOOM MIR FARROW IOANNA GLEASON ANIELICA HUSTON MARTIN LANDAU JENNY NICHOLS JERRY ORBACH SAM WATERSTON •A- • .' ' ■ ' CASTlNGBY . : COSTUMf DlVGMP JACK ROLLINS..o CHARLES PRODUCTION H. JOfFE ‘ CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS’ JULIET WLDR JEFFREY KURLAND. B EST LU N CH IN T H E PAC-10 Rural & Apache fa PRODUCTION DESIGNER __________________ ___ - ___^ - PHOTOGRAPHY _DIRECTOR __ Of __ __ EXECUTIVEPRODUCERS . SUSAN E. MORSE tc .t SANIO LOQUASID SVEN NYKVKF use JACK ROLLINS.« CHARLES H. JOFFE ROBERT GREENHUT WOODY ALLEN J PrintsbyDeluxe* ..owon PTC.Tu« i Burnt1989 ORION PICTURES CORPORATION A ll RIGHTS RE SERVE u S T A R T S FR ID A Y , N O V E M B E R 3 AT A SE L E C T E D TH EATRE N E A R Y O U Sports Page^M ThirsdayJ^ovembwfijJÇSV Statt h t » Mack savors moment, emerges in scrimmage By PAU L CORO State P re ss ASU Sports Information photo A S U sophom ore R on W aller d ished out a gam e-high seven a ssists during W ed n esd a y’s intras­ quad gam e at Saguaro H igh S ch o o l. Bill Frieder, the ASU head basketball coach, is suffering from a big Mack attack after watching the ineligible Sun Devil dominate Wednesday night’s intrasquad game. Junior forward Sam Mack, who must sit out this season because he transferred from Iowa State, showed flashes of brilliance as he racked up 24 points (22 in the final three quarters) in the pre-season scrimmage at Saguaro High School. “Sam has been our best player,” Frieder said. “He has quickness and he knows where to get his shots.” As Frieder juggled lineups at each of the 10-minute q u a r t e r s , M a c k ’s t e a m cumulatively outscored the opponents, 75-67. Mack made big plays on defense and exploded offensively on the break and in the half-court set. “When I let my first shot go, I knew it was going to be a good night for me,” Mack said. Mack opened the third quarter with a breakaway steal and a double-clutch slam. As the ball came up the court, Mack made another pick and went coast-to-coast for a layup. Wednesday’s game may have been Mack’s only public performance with the team this season, depending on his undetermined eligibility for exhibition games and whether or not another Maroon and Gold game will be played. “My approach to the game was just to go in and play hard,” Mack said. “I have to make my teammates better. I’m going to score to make their defense better.” This is not the first season Mack has sat out. He was a Proposition 48 victim in his freshman season at ISU, where he was the Cyclones’ second leading scorer last year. Mack said this time Will be different because he will concentrate more on schoolwork, be able to practice with team and stay in good physical shape. “I think he shows we’re off to a good start in recruiting for next year’s team,” Frieder said. “Recruiting is going to be as important as anything this year.” Outside Mack, Frieder was not thrilled with much else. “We’ve got a long way to go,” Frieder said. “We have trouble scoring. We need to find a way for them to stay in games.” Sophomore Emilio Kovacic, who sat out last season after transferring from Grand Canyon, turned in a performance that Frieder said he was pleased with. He tallied 19 points and seven rebounds. “ Personally, I ’m satisfied with my improvement since last year,” Kovacic said. “I just want to bang the boards and the points will come.” Sophomore Ron Waller appears to have stepped to the forefront for the Sun Devils at point guard, ASU’s most needed area of improvement and depth. Waller dished out a game-high seven assists. Frieder said he was disappointed in Waller’s play in the first quarter because the team “ didn’t get into much of anything^”. Weller Said he did a decent job, büt is not satisfied. “I’m not doing what I said I wanted to do at the beginning of the year,” Waller said. “I need to be more disciplined and in control. I can never be satisfied.” Senior Mike Redhair ran the point for the majority of the time on the opposing team. Sophomore Adrian Brown and freshman Brian Camper, who struggled badly from the field, also-saw time as playmakers. The Austin brothers also turned in solid performances. Isaac, a junior, scored 16 points and Snared 10 rebounds. Alex, a senior, totalled 15 points and nine rebounds. Although the Sun Devils found some success bn offense in reversing the ball for the big men, Frieder said the team dribbled too much and wasn’t able to execute under pressure. ASU let time expire before getting a shot off in three of the quarters. “ We need to eliminate the stupid mistakes,” Frieder said. “But they’re working hard at it. If they work hard, they have a chance of getting better.” Frid rich out-standing hitter, prefers setting in sid e B y VICKI C U L V E R State P ress Noelle Fridrich said there was never a doubt in her mind that she could jump high and hit hard, but she still prefers the setting position on the ASU Volleyball team. “As a setter, you get to control the whole event of the game,” Fridrich said “I get to decide who’s doing well and who to give the ball to.” Although she primarily plays at the setting position, Fridrich has worked at the outside hitting positions during the past three ASU matches. Fridrich, who came to ASU four years ago on a volleyball scholarship, was recruited by then Head Coach Debbie Brown as a defensive specialist, but trained extensively for the setting position. As a junior , Fridrich started in the setting position for ASU, and remained there for nearly two full years. When Coach Patti Snyder assumed the position left by Brown this season, she experimented with Fridrich’s talent, only to find a great leaper inside her 5-foot-7 frame. Assistant Sun Devil Coach Steve Schlick said Fridrich is a great athlete on any area of the court. “ Noelle is a fine athlete,” Schlick said. “She is strong and she hits hard. In any facet of the game, she fills it well.” An important aspect bn the court, Fridrich said is keeping a positive attitude. She said, however, her attitude is not always positive, but she manages to at least remain in control. “Volleyball is such a reaction sport,” she said. “It’s all in the attitude. If I can get people to get fired up too, then that’s all I can do to help the team.” One of the honors that Fridrich has achieved throughout her collegiate career is a nationwide Academic All-America ranking. She has accumulated a 3.4 grade point average and majors in graphic design. She will graduate in May of 1991, She said although it has been hard at times to maintain the high standing due to the rigorous traveling schedule, she feels education should'always take top priority . “The numbers aren’t so important, but applying yourself to school is,” she skid. “ It comes down to knowing your priorities, and that education comes first.” The goals Fridrich said she set for herself when she entered college were actually team goals. She said the largest one, making it to the final four in post-season play, is not entirely out of reach for this season’s 12-15 team: “The season is not over,” she said. “We still have a ways to go. Making it to the final four has always been a dream of mine since my freshman year.” When Fridrich’s eligibility runs put at the end of this season, she said she would like to possibly become involved in a professional team such as the USVB association. Fridrich If she does not decide to pursue volleyball beyond college, she said she will not feel like something is missing in her life. “It might be hard; I might miss the team, I might miss playing and competing at ASU,” Fridrich said, “but there will always be things to fill that space.” Experience may provide A S U edge in rugby tournament B y LAR R Y N EW ELL State P ress The ASU rugby team has faced some of the mo6t talented teams Arizona has to offer, leading up to the 1989 Michelob Continental Rugby Classic in Tucson, on Friday and Saturday. “We planned our schedule so that we would have our toughest contests just before the Michelob Tournament, in hopes that our players can learn from some of the best teams in the state,” ASU rugby Coach Barry Carter said. Last Saturday the Sun Devils gained experience as they played the Tempe Old Devils, one of the top teams in the state, getting trounced 47-0. “This was the best lesson our players could have gotten, as Tempe has a lot of talent, and our players learned a lot,” Carter said. “Although the score was not close, I felt that we played very good 15-player rugby.” Tempe scored quickly and frequently, pulling out to a 29-0 halftime lead. “The criticism I had for our team at this point was that our forwards were not looking for the baU; and because of this, we missed out on some scoring opportunities,” Carter said. ASU played stronger in the second half; and although they yielded 18 points, the intensity level on defense was up. “We played a spirited second half, and we made some defensive adjustments at halftime that enabled us to slow Tempe down,” Carter said. He said he is optimistic that the Sun Devils’ spirited play will carry over to Friday when they face the University of Colorado, a school rich in rugby tradition. “Colorado will be a tough team to beat, but I am confident that if we play with the intensity of the last two weeks, we will do very well.” Carter said. Later in the day, the Sun Devils are slated to take on Long Beach State. “If we can win both of our matches on Friday, we will have an excellent chance of making it to.the finals on Saturday,” Carter said. The finals at this tournament are not foreign to ASU, as the Sun Devils have captured top honors more times than any other school. “ ASU won this t ou rn am en t four consecutive years (1979-82) and we were the runner-up in 1979,” Carter said. “We are optimistic about our chances to bring the title back to ASU.” Page 12 State Pres« Thursday, November 2,1969 S p o rte. S n o r t s UofA shows off 1989-90 team to Phoenix TUCSON (AP) -*■ At least 2,500 people in Phoenix and 12,000 in Tucson have bought tickets to join Lute Olson in rounds of smiling today or Saturday night. Olson has 13 reasons to be smiling a lot. He’s obviously pleased with his 1989-90 Arizona basketball team, which he’ll unveil publicly tonight at Brophy Prep and Saturday at the university’s McKale Center in intrasquad scrimmages. Arizona’s season begins next Thursday with an exhibition game against the Australian National Team, With a hiatus until Nov. 25, when the Wildcats play defending national champion Michigan in the Hall of Fame Tipoff Classic in the first of seven network TV appearances. Suns’ Johnson to trade assists for shoes PHOENIX (AP) — Phoenix Suns guard Kevin Johnson announced Wednesday that a pair of basketball shoes will be donated to a charity for every assist he makes during home games this NBA season. Johnson, a third-year pro, was the league’s Most Improved Player last season and set a club record with 991 assists. Sum president Jerry Colangelo said Johnson should get about 450 assists in the club’s 41 regular-season home games in 1989-90. “So we’re looking at a minimum of 450 pairs of shoes. The value is substantial — about $30,000 plus,’’ Colangelo added. Under an agreement with the Foot Locker athletic shoe and apparel store, a pair of Fila brand sneakers will be donated to the Suns’ Boys and Girls Clubs Basketball League for every Johnson assist at the Coliseum. Johnson, who wore Nike sneakers his first two seasons in the NBA, said he recently signed a five-year deal with Fila. “I want to give something back to the community and give an assist to kids,” Johnson said at a news conference. “These kids often don’t have the money to buy proper shoes for basketball.” Robinson named A L Manager of the Year NEW YORK (AP) — Frank Robinson, who guided the Baltimore Orioles to one of the greatest turnarounds in baseball history, was selected American League Manager of the Year on Wednesday. Robinson took the Orioles from last place in the AL East with a 54-107 record in 1988 to second place and an 87-75 mark this year, only two games behind Toronto. It was the third-best one-season turnaround ever. He got 23 of 28 first-place votes and 125 points on a 5-3-1 basis from a panel chosen by the Baseball Writers Association of America, Cito Gaston, who managed the Blue Jays to first place in the AL East, finished second with three first-place votes and 62 points. Tony La Russa, who guided Oakland to the AL pennant and World Series title, was third with two first-place votes and 51 points. Kansas stars cut; NBA snips rosters ( The fr ie n d ly m in i-storage p eo p le AT B y T h e A sso c ia te d P ress Arizona It was a bad day for former members of Kansas’ 1988 NCAA championship team. Milt Newton and Scooter Barry, who helped the Jayhawks to a surprising victory in the Final Four, were cut by their NBA teams on Tuesday. Newton was cut by the Los Angeles Lakers, who also put veteran forward Orlando Woolridge on the injured list to get the team at the roster limit of 12. Newton missed most of training camp due to an ankle injury and averaged 3 points in four exhibition games. The Boston Celtics reduced their roster to 13 players by waiving Barry and forward Dave Popson. Barry, son of former NBA star Rick Barry, played in five exhibition games, scoring six points. Allen Leavell, Frank Johnson, John Long and Earl Cureton were among the longtime veterans cut Tuesday as NBA teams pared their rosters before Friday’s season openers. Cureton, a member of the 1983 champion Philadelphia 76ers, was dropped by Charlotte, with whom he played all 82 games last season and averaged 6.5 points. Cureton isa nineyear NBA veteran of five teams. Leavell, who played 10 years with Houston before being waived last week and picked up by Denver, was waived by the Nuggets along with guard Corey Gaines and forward Winston Crite. Leavell averaged 3.3 points for Houston last season and 9.5 for his career. Long, an 11-year veteran, was dropped by Dallas, which had signed him as a free agent. He averaged 5.5 points with Indiana and Detroit last season and has a career mark of 14.6. Johnson, an eight-year veteran, was cut by Orlando, which signed him as an free agent during the offseason. He averaged 4.4 points for Houston last season and 9.5 for his career. In other roster moves, Tyrone Corbin, expected to start for Minnesota at forward, ended a 25-day holdout that cost him $11,350 in fines. With the addition of Corbin, taken from Phoenix in the expansion draft, the Timberwolves still must try to sign Steve Johnson. The Timberwolves pared their roster to 14 players by cutting forwards Shelton Jones and Mike Whitmarsh. They need to waive two more players by Wednesday night to avoid having to pay those players for the opener. The Indiana Pacers waived guards Mark Wade and Everette Stephens and forward Anthony Frederick. The Miami Heat waived forward Sylvester Gray and center John Shasky, both of whom played for the team last season. The Heat also cut rookie free agent guard Kenny Drummond in reducing their roster to 13 players. The Chicago Bulls waived three rookies to trim their roster to 13 players. Matt Brust of St. John’s, Mike Doktorczyk of Califomia-Irvine and Adrian McKinnon of North Carolina Central were cut. The Bulls will reach the 12-man limit for their season opener Friday night when they place rookie Jeff Sanders on the disabled list. Sanders has a foot injury and is not expected to play until December. The Cleveland Cavaliers waived forward Ron Grandison and guard Craig Neal. C O M P U T ER IZED G A T E S Y S TEM S tO R .V .A N D C O M M E R C I A L V E H IC L E S P A C E S ia ( je IlU lS A*)*« A S P A C E ! F R O M 25 S Q . FT. T O 400 S Q . FT. O F S T O R A G E 9 0 f " 'U & lU ^ 3 5 W ^ R R S T S T R E E T T E M P y f ■""TO W """ R o cky M o u n ta in W indow tin t WINDOW TINTING O FFER EN D S 11-17-89 WITH A N Y VEH ICLE TINTED $20 OFF! W E DO S E A M L E S S WINDOWSI • F U L L V E H IC LE TINTING FR O M $50 •5 Y E A R A N D LIFETIM E W A R R A N T Y •WINDSHIELD REPAIR • D A S H M A T S A V A IL A B L E 2033 W . University______ 2855 S. Alm a S choo l SW C o rn e r D o b so n & U n iv e rsity S E C o rn e r 833-8256 730-1699 i— — Understanding "JT l j H C r D I I PD I I rC* A THURSDAY N O O N BIBLE P mm ■ ■ Sponsor: Place: Time: Subject: Speaker: ■■■ FELLO W SH IP C hristian Students Fellow ship (CSF) M em orial Union Bldg, (check for room below ) Thursdays - 12:30-1:30 p.m . The G ospel o f M atthew B ill Freem an o f “ M inistry o f the W ord’ ’ radio broadcast heard tw ice d a lly on KH EP AM 1280 (10:30 a.m . & 6:00 p.m .) ■ All are welcome! Fall S em ester — T h e G o sp el o f Matthew (Chapters 1-17) — Part I Date Subject Sept. 7 W ho is Jésus C h rist? Sept. 14 . The M o s t Im p o rta n t Issu e in Y our L ife Sept. 21 H o w to E xp e rie n ce G enuine H a ppin ess Sept. 28 L iv in g a P e rfe ct L ife Oct. 5 H o w to S im p lify L ife Oct. 12 S o lv in g th e P roblem o f S e lf D e ce p tio n Oct. 19 S o lvin g L ife ’s G re a te st P roblem s Oct. 26 The B e s t W ay to L ive th e C h ristia n L ife Nov. 2 K n o w in g W hat’s in Y our H e a rt Nov. 9 W hy A ll th e C o n fu sio n in C h ris tia n ity ? Nov. 16 W ho A re th e R e a l F o llo w e rs o f Jesu s? Nov. 30 H o w to D isce rn th e True C h u rch Dec. 7 The V isio n o f th e K ingdom o f G od Dec. 14 Q u e stio n s a n d R e view Chapters in Matthew Room In M.U. 1-2 3-4 5:1-16 5:17-48 6 7 8-9 10-12 13:1-23 13:24-52 14-15 16 17 1-17 Apache Mohave Apache Apache Apache Apache Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Apache Apache Apache Apache Apache Apache Christian Students Fellowship State Press Classifieds J-m & S . ---services your service! C .A .R .P . Meeting Tonight What do you do C H ands BOOKSTORE h a n g in g Browse through our 3 floors of: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette • Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text' books» please) we pay 30% o f our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. w hen a dose friend b e tra y s you or w hen a p erso n h u r ts you b y a n insensitive com m ent? M ost of u s w ould eith er la s h b a c k o r silently sever th a t re la tio n sh ip . To forgive a n d forget is a v irtu e w hich h a s faded w ith tim e. Contrary to po p u lar belllef, all b ro k e n re la tio n sh ip s c a n b e m ended: A lthough it is one of th e m o st difficult th in g s to do in th e world. At least one of two people m u s t h av e a stro n g desire to re b u ild th e ir re la tio n sh ip . T h at p e rso n 's sin cere effort to ch ange c a n m elt th e o th er p e rso n 's h e a rt to forgive. Box 66 - c/o Student Life, MU-48 Arizona State University - Tem pe, A Z 85287 For information, call (602) 948-4488 WeYe at 7:30 MU Yavapai T h e Path From Hate to Lo v e P rin c ip le s for re la tio n sh ip 1. Mato a ommittment Resolve to love th ro u g h good a n d h a r d tim es. 2. Practice self-control Show in n e r stre n g th a n d h u m ility even w h e n you feel com pletely ju stifie d to com plain or retaliate. 3 . Love your enemy Be active a n d co m p assio n ate a s a p a re n t for a n im m a tu re child. 4. Overcome negative concepts Give m ore m ateria l gifts th a n expected. T he greater th e sacrifice, th e g reater th e value. M ore Info Contact C A R P 966-3877 How do you stim u la te th e o th er p erso n 's co m p assio n ? S ince h a te ca n n o t b e legislated o u t of society; Only u n co n d itio n al sacrificial love c a n e ra s e h ate. D iscrim ination a n d o th er form s o fb ig o try a re th e gross en d p ro d u c ts of ignorance or sm all m in d s. T h e p a th to re b u ild frie n d sh ip is p arallel to th a t of estab lish in g h arm o n y a m o n g different cu ltu re s a n d races. T he sa m e p rin cip les w hich ap p ly to couples also apply on a b ro a d e r level to n a tio n s a n d th e world. T he h u m a n h e a rt is in d u ced by th e these p rin cip les, re g ard less of color, g en d er or c o u n try of origin. No 14 _________________________________________ n ir - T I ! # a a e a i3 l^ ^ ^ i S S i S l i ? S l S y ii.îÜ 2 £ Mullins’ paralysis not connected with 1988 injury OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — The temporary paralysis sustained by Mississippi’s Roy Lee “Chuckie” Mullins in 1988 has no connection with the injury that has paralyzed him from the neck down, a trainer for the football team said. After the 1968 incident, Mullins was tested and X-rayed by doctors and given clearance to resume practice when there were no signs of serious injury. On Saturday, Mullins, a 6-foot, 170-pound backup defensive back, was hurt when he tackled a Vanderbilt receiver to break up a pass play. He fractured the third, fourth, fifth and sixth vertebrae of his neck when he took a blow on the top of his head. “The overall incidence of recovery for this is not good,” said Clarence Watridge, one of two surgeons who operated for five hours Monday on the redshirt freshman from Russellville, Ala. Watridge and fellow surgeon Marvin Leventhal operated on Mullins at Baptist Memorial Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., to realign his twisted spine and fuse the broken vetebrae. On Tuesday, doctors perform ed a tracheotomy on the player, which involves creating an opening into the windpipe through the neck. Officials say the surgery will help Mullins’ body handle secretions and prevent infection. Hospital officials said Wednesday that Mullins has been on a respirator since the tracheotomy. Ole Miss has set up a trust fund to help provide lifetime care for Mullins. “Chuckie will require lifetime care, and n eith er insurance, sta te nor federal programs will provide for all of his needs,” Mississippi Chancellor Gerald Turner said. “Alumni and friends from throughout the nation have expressed a desire to help this outstanding young man. The Roy Lee ‘Chuckie’ Mullins Trust Fund has been established to provide such assistance.” NCAA officials say contributors can give as much as they want to the fund. Leventhal, regarding the 1988 incident, said Tuesday he would have advised Mullins to quit football. “I would tell any athlete that after having such an episode,” Leventhal said. Rebel trainer Leroy Mullins said that in his opinion there is “absolutely no way” the incidents are related. Carver Phillips, who became thé player’s guardian after Mullin’s parents died when he was 12, said he tried to persuade Mullins to quit after being told of the 1968 injury. “It scared me,” Phillips said. “Chuckie told me he was scared too, when it happened. But he loved football too much. It was his life. He didn’t think he could live without it and beloved the physical part of the game.” Leventhal said Mullins told him about the earlier injury during a pre-operation interview. Leventhal said the information had no bearing on the surgery. He also said he saw nothing during the surgery that would relate the two incidents. Leroy Mullins said in the 1988 scrimmage that the defensive back got hit “and we got to him on the field in an instant.” “He told us he had numbness in his hands, but he could grip my hand. We were getting ready to transport him (to a hospital), to get him up the same way we did Saturday (on a stretcher) when all of a sudden he regained his feeling. “We saw no potential risk in his returning to practice, especially after putting him through the teste,” the trainer said. ," SURG1TCC, INC. DIRECT ORDER SAVINGS ON RANDOLPH ENGINEERING' SUNGLASSES D on't b e fooled by in ferio r im ports and im itations. These are All-Am erican, made to U.S.Military Specifications | Try State P re ss C la ssifie d A dvertising b efore y o u reach the end of your rope. . ■ ■ ■ ■ M axim um U V Protection (98-100% ) B locks direct arid reflected glare Prem ium Rx quality m etal fram es O phthalm ic, high-perform ance glass lenses ■ Precision-m ade entirely in the U .S A 1 ■ Lifetim e warranty on joint separation ■ Free crush-resistant carry case Style A (Large) ■' Only $29.50 $55.00 m il SPEC S-2S96 23K Gold PlateFrame.'' 58mm Gwy 3 Lenses. 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COMPATABtLITY FACTORS Of Arizona. If you have any information on this service, please call David at 921-2676. Need info for journalism prefect. FASHION MODELS needed. C all Linda at (602) 242-7679 for more information. HANG-GLIDE! Our gently sloping man­ made training hill. Safe and exciting. Fly all day. Windsports 897-7121. HARVARD BUSINESS School wants you! Proven tecniques for acceptance to a top ranked MBA program. For more inforination, send self-addressed stamped enve­ lope to: Business Success, Department 103, P.O; Box 1044, Orem , Utah 84059-1044. - LOVE TO dance? Hate the bar scene? You’ll love the All Singles Dances, every Friday and Saturday at better valley Hotels. Recorded information 946-4086. S T U F F IT at A rizon a S to r a g e In n s 5'xlO Vto 10'x20' F ro m $ 1 2 & u p CIo m to ASU 20% DISCOUNT NO W C a ll H e le n k 967-0210 TUCSON SAHUARO High School Home­ coming, November 3, 1989, 7:30 pm. A ll Alumni Welcome. AUTOMOBILES 1979 RED 924-Porsche, Sebring-racing engine, 5-speed, excellent condition good m ileage. Blaupunkt AM/FM cassette stereo CaH 966-3839. 1979 RED 924-Porsche, Sebring-racing engine, 5-speed, excellent condition good m ileage. Blaupunkt AM/FM cassette stereo. Call 966-3839 1979 MUSTANG, great AM/FM stereo. New battery, must sed. Leaving town. $1,295. Call Lori, 345-8709. 1960 MGB Roadster, maroon, black top and interior. Mint. 35,000 m iles, $3,500. 991-0329. 1980 SUBARU DL. blue, looks great, excellent mileage, runs perfect. Must sell. $1,450 Call 990-8045. 1962 280ZX, new paint, tires, all power options. 5-speed, mint condition, $4,450. Lance, 829-8769. 1984 PONTIAC Sunbird, turbo, fuel injected, new transmission, new interior, low m iles. $3,400 negotiable. 274-2467. 1984 VB Cabriolet, W olfsburg edition, air conditioning, 5-speed. 54,000 miles, new tires, dean. $6900. 967-2647. j f t* ■a0* G ig a n t ic K e d s S a le ! A ll K e d s C h a m p io n s ! $ 1 9 .9 9 580 S C o lle g e . S u ite 101 U n iv e rsity T o w e rs C e n te r A c ro s s from S u n D ev il S ta d iu m 968-4940 1964 VW Cabriolet, Wolfsburg edition, air conditioning, 5-speed. 54,000 miles, new tires, dean $6900. 967-2647. 1986 PONTIAC Fiero, black, T-top, V6, fu e l in je cte d , 24,000 m ile s, airconditioning, AM/FM, mint condition, two year warranty, very fast. Asking $8,000 negotiable. C all Matt, 967-3946. ANNOUNCEMENTS MEED SLO TM iSr CASH? Buy S^Sell . .T ra d e T ta Hottest W ears •Benetton C.C's Closet C lassics 4 9 1 -2 Ì8 9 S tu den ts — Alum ni Sun D evil logo plus you r nam e on dial. 2 4 K gold p lated o r silve r. S eiko m ovem ent. M ad e in U S A . 5 -6 w eek delivery. Sen d $ 7 2 .5 0 (cash o r m oney-order] to: H & B Enterprises 2933 8. Country Club Way Tempe, AZ 85282 AUTO INSURANCE. Low rates, monthly payments, near ASU. Free quotations, call Phoenix Insurance Agency, 829-3070. BEAUTIFUL 1982 tan Cadillac Cimarron. Runs like new! Loaded, one of the few 5-speeds left! Must sell! $4,150 or best offer! 921-4026. CHEVY CAPRICE Classic, 1979. A real gem, runs great, moving to Japan in 6 weeks. Must seK! $900/offer. 968-1807. TRUCKS 1 ROUNDTRIP Ticket from Phoenix to New York City, 11/9, return 11/14. Must sell!! $150/best offer. Please call Jeff at 921-8133. MOTORCYCLES 1984 KAWASAKI GPZ 750, top condition! Corbin seat, fairing, custom grips, supertrapp $2,000/best offer. Chris- 464-2514. 1988 HONDA Hurricane 600. Black and grey, flawless condition. 2,200 miles, $3,700. Ron, 838-6977. '85 HONDA Elite 250. Runs great. $750. Must sell. 276-7886, B ill, leave message. HONDA ELITE 150 scooter, excellent condition, 4,000 miles, 1986. $900. Rick, 273-0833. HONDA INTERCEPTOR 500, 1985 looks good, runs great, low m iles 1,200 or best. C all Chris at 921-8624. BICYCLES BENOTTO 800 12-speed. Shimano aero components, ' mavic strapless pedate. Great shape! $300 John 820-5282. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 2 YAM AHA 3-way acoustic suspension speakers, $150. Raleigh ladies 10-speed, $150. 1 Kenmore m icrow ave,' $75. 956-5458 2 ROUND trip tickets, Phoenix to New York City. 11/3-11/6, both $300.926-2024, leave message. FOR SALE: 2 tickets to New Jersey. Leave 2:10, arrive Newark 11:41 on 21 Novem­ ber. Only $97. Call 894-9607, ask for Scott. MUST SELL, plane ticket to England, round trip, 12/23 to 1/8. $580/offer. 439-8630. COMPUTERS IBM COMPATABLE PCXT, 640K ram. hard disk, m onitor; 101 keyboard, M SPO S. 8800/best offer 730-1422 TURBO /XT Com puter—512K, Am ber monitor, Graphics, keyboard, 12-month warranty...Only $489! Pro Image Compu­ ter. 921-1129. REAL ESTATE 2 BEDROOM condos, Papago Park Village, $575 to $700/month. Bob Bullock, Realty Executives, 998-2992. VERY LOW down, beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath Tempe townhome. Too many extras. No qualifying, must see! 966-6310. READ THIS! Available now in Tempe are surrealist artist Mark Whitcombe’s limited edition etchings for a fraction of their current New York City’s Madison Avenue gallery prices. Before you buy another gift for your sweetheart, the coming holidays, or your own art collection, first see this intriguing artwork. You will be glad you did. fo r terrific savings, call Bruce, 921-4232. U N B ELIE V A B LE!! NO RM AL looking sunglasses that allow you to see behind. Ideal for riding bicycle. Send $9 95 to the Juggernaut Company, 1309 East North­ ern, suite 904, Phoenix, Arizona 85020. 2 BEDROOM 4-plex available how, $249 Furniture available. 966-5596. 3 BED RO O M , 2 bath apartm ents, $325-$435/month. Chris, 638-2646. Red Carpet-Weary, 968-3414. A S U A R E A 2 bedroom , 2 berth, $340/m onth plus e le ctricity . A irconditioning, jacquizzi, no pets, deposit. 967-4789. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. W alk to ASU, pool, laundry room. 1 block south of University on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special. I’LL PAY half your deposit arid $200 rent rebate. 926 East Spence. 968-5630. FEM ALE ROOMMATE to share beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Close to ASU. Fireplace, security, pool, washer/dryer. $235/month, own room. 966-3051 FEM ALE ROOMMATE needed: Steadily employed non-smoker. $225/month. Call 420-0221, leave number, press no. key. LARGE 2 bedroom, own room/bath. Poof covered parking, ail amenities. Very clean and roomy with vaulted ceilings. $250 plus VS SRP. 1 m ile to ASU, College and Broadway. M ichael, 967-3741, leave message. FURNITURE M ALE/FEM ALE ROOMMATE needed in house. $250 plus V i utilities. Brand new home, very very clean. Must see! 892-0492. W ASHER. DRYER. Fridge, Sofa. Prefer to sell all at one time. Best offer. Eric. 784-8922. MALE/FEM ALE roommate wanted, Ques­ ta Vida, furnished condo, all amenities, responsible atmosphere. $275/month. V2 utilities. 967-3677. •Newly redecorated •Vertical blinds •Designer carpet •4 sparkling pools •Laundry facilities •Great for rental sharing •Walk to ASU •1st Months Rent $ 99 967-0489 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES IF YOU are looking for an opportunity that w ill allow you to earn an exceptional large income while helping people call T.J., 821-9481, Fendy, 431-1134 HOMES FOR RENT FEM ALE NON-SMOKER own room/bath at Quadrangles by December 1 or Spring semester $250/month plus utilities. Call Teresa 921-3523. me fountains 1028 E. Orange HAYDEN SQUARE deluxe condo. 3 bedroom tri-level. Available January 1. Reserve now. 940-0518. FEM ALE NO NSM O KER to share 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Own room/bath. Nicely furnished, washer/dryer. $210 plus % utilities. Lynn, 894-8189. HOWARD THE DOC’S CHALLENGE: If you’ re lo o kin g for an apartm ent an d brigh t en ough to beep m y pager, m y sp e c ia l o ffer is f o r y o u A S U stu den ts an d facu lty... CA LL 1-800-SKY-PAGE F o llo w in s tru c tio n s . T h e P .I.N . # is 86014. Open D aily 9 to 5 Utilities Included BEAUTIFUL3 bedroom, 2 bath Townhouse. Refrigerator, microwave, ceiling fans, fu ll-size w asher/dryer. Indoor raquetball/weight room, sauna. $500 for 2 months, $675 thereafter. 991-5735. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, very nice apartment, washer/dryer, microwave, many extras. Private room, private bath, $275/month plus Va utilities. Share bath, $225/month. Serious, responsible non-smoker. Carl, 820-5799. U P TO one month free! One, two bedrooms, $330 to $400. Sunrise Apart­ ments, 1014 East Spence, 968-6947. (plus deposits) 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath townhome, has everything, including ppol. 483-7903. RENTAL SHARING MOTOROLA CELLU LAR phone. Strong 3 watt signal includes factory warranty. 940-0518. APARTMENTS 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath townhouse. Near ASU. $700/month. Chris, 838-2646, Red Carpet-Weary, 968-3414. DESIGNER W ATCHES and hand bags, $50. AN styles (replicas). Christm as gifts, discounts. Tom, 631-0424. HEW LETT PACKARD HP285 scientific calculator. New, a ll manuals, $125. 820-5525. ROOMMATE NEEDED, own room/bath. Papago Park 1, $250/month, Va utilities. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, washer/dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, pool. Close to ASU at Papago Park Village, Curry/ College. Ready to move in. $600/month. CaH Phil or Patty at 671-5550, 947-7132. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath house. $495/month. Chris, 838-2646, Red Carpet-Weary, 968-3414. HEW LETT PACKARD programmable financial business calculator. Brand new, HP-12C. 966-2281. NON-SMOKING ROOMMATE wanted for 2,000 square feet house. Washer/dryer, microwave, etc. $210/month plus utilities. 838-6743. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS ALPINE 73B5, pullout in box. Paid $550; $275. Raleigh Technium aluminum framenew. $300. 966-9963. H ERPES. SHINGLES, cold sore “break out elemination” tape. Proven effective. Confidential. For more information, Reve’ Center, Box 40781, Tempe, Arizona 85274. NICE TOWNHOUSE, 3 bedroom, ASU close. $180 plus W utilities. Pool, laundry. Available now. 438-1160. O NE BEDROOM furnished, $230 plus utilities, pool laundry facilities. Studio, $250 including utilities. Rental sharing, $210 including utilities, furnished,, colored T.V. 1339 South Sunset Drive (one block west of Rural, one block South of Apache), apartment 9, or 1527 Eash Hudson Drive (2 blocks West of McClintock, block South of Apache). HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Honeywell in Phoenix F a c il it a t o r f o r QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROCESS Honeywell’s Commercial Flight Systems Qroup in Phoenix is the world leader in the development of completely integrated air* craft cockpits. O ur continuing growth has created a need for part* time quality improvement facilitators. In this position you will be responsible for facilitating quality groups, coaching and consulting with team leaders, attending quality meetings, and providing post-meeting assessments to management. T his position is contract part-time (approximately 30 hours per week). To qualify, you must have a master's degree or be in the process of obtaining one and have more than three years of experience in team-building processes. You Should also have industry experience and a strong background in organiza­ tional development. Knowledge of the Crosby Process and Standup training experience are pluses* To apply, send your resume to Marianne Woloszczuk, Honeywell, Commercial Flight Systems Croup* Professional Employment, RO. Box 21111 (SP-Q104), M/S I-17C, Phoenix, AZ 85036. Honeywell H f L P I N„G t O L . C O N T R O l Y O l R WO RL D Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer TUtMdafc Noveinbt r g,198gii äÜEäSSSä £ 2 2 ^ HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED FREE LOST/EOUND PETS AAAA RESEARCH interviewers for Tempo Marketing research firm. Absolutely no sales. Flexible evening/weekend hours. Start at $4/hour. Rapid raises. O 'Neil Associates- Susan. 967-4441. GREAT OPPORTUNITY for a graduate student to help run a sm all but growing management consulting firm in Chandler. Hours flexible, 10-20 hours/week. Skills required: Word Perfect, and general office skills. Basic bookkeeping helpful. Duties: sem inar preparation, telephone, billings, bookings, typing, travel arrangements, and office organization. Wages commen­ surate with experience. Call Lenora B illin g s-H a rris, E x ce l Developm ent Systems, 963-4540 and/or send resume to P.O. Box 1002, Tempe, Arizona 85280. PART-TIME COOK Tempe. 884-5338. LO ST KEYS on large silver ring. 10/27 near Rural and Vista Dei Cerro, (white truck). Please call 350-0531. TWO FERRETS, two cages plus supplies. Lovable and adorable, $100. 820-5525. APPLICATIONS NOW being received, piano player (m usical technology), female vocalist (Spanish speaking skill helpful), male vocalist, for jazz Musical, part-time employment immediately. By mail P.O. Box 39713, Phoenix, Arizona 85069. BE ON T.V. Many needed for commer­ cials. Now hiring a ll ages. Casting informa­ tion: (615) 779-7111, ext. T-130. DOCKTOR PET Center, Los Arcos Mall, Scottsdale now hiring for animal care 2 weekday mornings, 2 weekday evenings. Also part-time sales persons needed. Please bring resume. No phone calls please. DRAFTING STUDENT: Bishop LO F G lass Center’s is looking for a drafting student to sketch several schem atic drawings: Paym ent dep en ds on experien ce. Contact: Steve Nelson, 267-0561 between 7:30-4:30. EARN EXTRA money. Arizona Conces­ sions needs out-going sales, people to fill souvenir concession boothes for the next two ASU football games. Please apply at the Team Shop, ICA Building, ASU Stadium 941-0400. EXPLO SIVE CALIFORNIA Company look­ ing for people in Arizona. Earn substantial part-time, full-tim e income. People desir­ ing sales position and entrepreneurial minded preferred. C all 963-5539 or 391-1851: F B ID A Y /R E C E P T IO N IS T for audio Company. Secretarial, data entry skills a must 969-8660. FULL/PART TIME. Needs management for growing company No experience, will train. Hours to fit your schedule. Call 897-2819 Bén. FULL-TIM E SECRETARY/reception. Must have excellent typing, phone, and other office skills. B ring resume to 222 South 52nd Street, Tempe. Pierson Construc­ tion, 966-4424. JANITORIAL PART-TIME evenings, flexi­ ble hours, Friday-Saturday nights, off!! Bonuses and advancement! Scottsdale and Mesa locations. C all 945-4994 ★ EXTRA MONEY* Is nice, but you can help people too: Earn $120 + a month S A FE R . FA ST E R PLA SM A D O N A T IO N O N L Y A T A B I G E N T E R S D U E T O A U T O M A T E D P R O C E D U R E $5 b on u s to new don o rs on first don ation w ith th is ad. A sk about a d d itio n a l b on u ses. (M ondayS aturday). University Plasma Center A sso cia te d B io scie n ce . Inc. 1015 S R u ra l Rd Tem pe 968-6139 Preschool West, PART-TIME, FULL-TIME, MHI Avenue T-shirt is looking for a few good people. Must work Christmas break, have retail experience and wiHing to work hard. Apply in person between 10-4, Monday-Friday at 11 East 5th Street. Flexible hours. Cruise Shi|i Jobs HIRING Men - Women, Summer/ Year Round. PHOTOGRAPHERS. TOUR GUIDES. RECREATION PERSONNEL. Excellent pay plus FREE travel. Caribbean, Hawaii, Bahamas, South Pacific. Mexico. CALL NOW! Call refundable. 1 -206-736-0775, Ext. G00 N. PART-TIME. LARGEST company of its kind in the Southwest. Afternoon and evening shifts available. Pleasant working conditions. C all Mr. Wellington at 381-0477. RED ROBIN now hiring experienced line pantry pre positions. Apply at 1539 North Scottsdale Road, Monday-Friday, 9 am-11 am, 2 pm-4 pm. R E S T A U R A N T D E LIV E R Y d riv e rs needed, South Scottsdale location. Flexi­ ble hours after 11 am. 423-0095. LOOKING FOR someone who enjoys variety, including computer work, light warehouse packaging and delivering materials. 3 m iles from campus. Part-time 4-5 hours daily Monday-Friday. $5/hour for the right friendly and ready-to-go individu­ al! C all Wendi at Total Fulfillm ent, 731-9225 NEED W AITRESS part-time. Excellent money, days, 24th Street and Thomas. 957-7262, 230-8414. NEW HÓTDOG resta raunt across from Sky Harbor Airport- weekday lunch hours. 244-1022 . ON-CAMPUS SALES Rep. We are looking for an entrepreneur-type,, responsible student interested in making money sell­ ing Ray-Ban Sunglasses. Only energetic, serious applicants send resume to: Kevin Green Solar Specs Company, 1173A Second Avenue, Suite 155, New York, New York 10021. O VERSEAS JOBS.$900-$2,000/month. Summer, year round. AH countries. All fields. Free information. Write U C, PO Box 52-AZ03, Corona Del Mar, California 92625 TELEM AR KETIN G PART-TIM E An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is accep­ tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r waitress positions. Apply in person after 2 pm 1660 S. Alma School Rd. Mesa SPO RTS MINDED Individuals: Top Gun Promotions is hiring immediately, 8 to 10 enthusiastic, motivated individuals for their Tempe office. $8 to $10 Hourly. 921-8282. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring dinner hostess' and lunch waitresses. Apply in person, 5001 East Washington. STUDENT JO BS. Full-tim e, $300/week; part-tim e, $150/week. O penings in customer service and retail. Scholarships available. Call 10 am to 3 pm 242-9677. Failure Analysis Associates. Failure Analysis Associates. Inc- a national engi­ neering and scientific consulting firm that spe­ cializes in the analysis and prevention of engi­ neering system and product failures, is seeking engineers with outstanding acdemic and profes­ sional credentials for three openings in our Pho­ enix, Test and Engineering Center. Our center is a 160 acre proving ground with extensive fabrica­ tion, vehicle preparation, instrumentation, data acquisition, and data reduction capabilities. These facilities provide the capability for design­ ing and conducting a broad range of tests that support our engineering services. Our present openings are for two Mechanical Engineers and an Instrumentation Engineer. Failure Analysis Associates, Inc., offers a com­ pensation and benefits package that exceeds industry standards, including three weeks vaca­ tion, a company-funded pension, and medical, dental, and life insurance. A Failure Analysis Asso­ ciates. Inc., representative will be on campus Tues­ day. November 7. If you are interested in talking to us please contact Career Services at 965-2350. ASU MEN: TKE is having mid-semester rush! Events planned all week. Call the house 968-2662, or Rush chairman Matt Bianci 921-2027. ATO BRIAN- I really had a great time Tuesday! Thanks. SK Christina. CO M E JOIN the men of Sigma Alpha Mu for a Pre-rush dinner tonight. Meet the Sammy’s at 7 pm at our house (1134 East Spence). Information, Scott, 844-9746. DTO’S GET psyched for softbaH toum. Think 1st place. You’re awesome. Love your Tripelta Coaches. TOP WAGES •Temporary •Permanent •Full Time •Part Time 966-0709 SUMMER JO BS outdoors, over 5,000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews. Send stamp for free details. 113 East Wyoming, KalispeH, MT 59901. THE VINE Tavern is taking applications for ftoormen and cooks, part-time/fuH-time. R eferences requested. A pply 11-4 Monday-Friday, 801 E. Apache. VALET PARKING attendents, day shifts 11:00am-3:00pm and 11:00am-5:00pm. Night shifts 5:30pm to dose. Full-time and part-time. Must work holiday season and must have dean driving record. C all for appointment 861-9384. American Valet and Lim osina Company Incorporated. WAITER/WAITRESS and hostess needed immediately for part-time employment. Apply in person, Chopandaz, comer of Scottsdale Road and McKeHips. JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 ¡5. MiU, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. CASH PAID, jewelry of aH kinds, induding gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 9 21S. MiU Ave, Tempe Center. 968-6074. FREE LOST/EOUND HELP! LO ST keys on Nissan key chain. Outside of Valley Art Theaters. Please turn into ASU lost and found! E L E C T R O L Y S IS -P E R M A N E N T h a ir removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. C all for more informa­ tion, 969-6954. FR€€ RENTAL SERVICE Apartment Anders Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 N.W. Phoenix 841-5055 FULL SET $25.00 Reg. 145.00 SM00THC0AT INTERESTED IN joining a Fraternity? Now here is your chance!! C all 844-9746.. • Fills without nipping, without fill lines, without nail damage. JOHN GERRICK! I want to get in touch with you about publishing your stories. Please contact me at 965-2292 or 966-0350 if you are interested. Thanks, Scott Socket. • You have the flexibility of wear­ ing your nail naturally, no polish, only buffed to a shine, w ill never yellow or become brittle like acrilic. KIMO, W HERE did you disappear to? Give me a call- I'm listed in Mesa. Your old soc bud, AR. • Smooth coat flexes with your natural nail to prevent lifting / will hot pull away from edges, even after extended wear/m ade with strong bonding fiberglass resins. LAMBDA CHI Kelly, could I pass up the opportunity to embarrass you?! Happy Birthday sweetheart! Love Bonehead. P.S. At least I didn’t write how old you are today! CACTUS NAIL COMPANY Scottsdale M ARK COLLINS-1 never knew being open minded could be so fun, Thanks for Sunday! -J. ROB- IF you don’t slap me, I won’t slap you back. But if you were to kiss me...- SAM M Y'S: PRE-RUSH dinner at 7 pm tonight! Get ready for a great time! A il rushes welcome. For more information call Scott, 844-9746. SAM E W EEK PAY ATTENTION FRATERNITIES, sororities! Throw your next social gathering with Eclipse D.J. productions. Very reason­ able. 461-3655. I LOVE you Zungie. SAM M Y’S CRUZ- Your big big bro’s initials are the reverse of a popular wine cooler. Who can it be? -Your big bro. for dependable receptionists, clerical, or data entry personnel. SERVICES is designed to create a very thin and natural sculptured nail, also perfect for natural nail overlays. SA E’S- O N LY two more days- you guys are set! The trophy’s sweet, it’s yours we’ll bet!! Your coaches. JOBS AVAILABLE NOW Equal Opportunity Employer AEPI KEN, one year six months- I love you. Here's looking at the rest of our lives! Love, Sara. HEY CALHOON, yes this one's for you! Happy 21st, lets rage this weekend! Love Antonia. •Flexible part-time & full-time positions •$8.75 per hour (avg. earnings) Call Sarah 967-0066 (After 11 a.m.) AAA ATTENTION: Men of ASU. The men of Sigm a Alpha Mu are having an informal Pre-rush dinner tonight. Meet at the Sammy house (1134 East Spence)- at 7 pm. For m ore inform ation- Scott, 844-9746. GOOD LUCK to the Sigma Nu team on Saturday! Deltaluv, your coaches. Supplement Your Income or Work Your Way Through College •Day & Night Positions Available •Close to A SU PERSONALS WANTED- A good home for a great cat. Neutered male, 6 years, extrem ely mellow. Has shots. 893-9412 evenings. SEXY SW IMM ER Geoff Brisbin: Good luck with that awesome stroke of yours this weekend! I’ll be watching you. From an anteater lover. SHOW YOUR spirit! Come to the Hom e­ coming Ball November 9th at Tempo Mission Palm s from 9 pm to 1 am. This year’s salute to Hollywood is something you don't want to m iss! Tickets are only <5. • ; . ; : • SIGMA NU Softball team: get ready to win the TriDelt SoftbaH Tourney! DeltaLuv, your coaches. 423-5504 TRANSPORTATION AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances avaHable. 21 or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. TRAVEL CO LLEGE TOURS, spring break 1990. Mazatlan, $179. Includes Hotel and trans­ portation. Andrew, 784-0649. FLY ANYTIME continental USA $350 roundtrip. Leave todayl NW USA $250! Alaska-five weeks notice $450. Other destinations. We also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. FLY FOR less, discount travel. Domestic and international, package tours to the Holy Land/lsrael. 491-0501. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.25/PAGE. Advanced, reliable typing, letter- quality printer, spelling. Rick,834-9279. SIGMA NU Whitofeet, in black and white, it is dear the tradition lives on...and in the end the best chapter w ill shine in the archive of history. The ATO Blackfeet. $1,50 AAA Word Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation. APA specialization. Marion 839-4269. TKE’S, MAKE room for that trophyf! Tridelt Softball Tourney is only two days away!! Prepare to dominate! Love, your coaches! $1.65 AND up. Professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Bob or Claudia, 964-6012. TRIDELTA CH ER R YL Ricketts- Holy Heatwave, what day is today? Go ahead, ya big killer, drink! Drink! Happy 2111 Your roomie (Just wait tH Saturday)!)' $19.95 RESUM E Special, 1 page compu­ ter typeset, laser printout with 20 white bond copies or 10 copies on select resume papers. AH 814x11” . Dr, Copy, 1032 South T errace. C a ll 433-4688 for weekly specials. YOU DON’T , want to m iss this year’s salute to Hollywood-Premiere ‘89! Tickets only $5! November 9th 9 pm to 1 am at Tempe Mission Palm s. Music by Ritual. RESTAURANTS/ BARS FOR LADIES ONLY T h e “New" Beverly G rill and Bodacious Productions need y o u , O p p o rtu n ity a w aits som eone a s Beverly G rill hosts the “ B o d a cio u s Pro­ d u c tio n s M o d e l S e a r c h ,” Starting Thursd ay, O ctober 19th and ending with the finals on Thursday, N ov­ em ber 16th. Register early for com petition slot. W inner will appear on the cover of “W here It’s Hot." Can 894-0635 81/PAGE DOUBLE-SPACED, $2 single­ spaced. Fast turnaround. ASU student. WordPerfect. Laser. Transcription. Free pickup/delivery. Training also. Margaret, 833-2133. $2.00/PAGE. Quick turnaround. Call Bob, 839-3305 AAA QUALITY typing/word processing. $ 1 .50. C all Linda, 962-8075. ACCEN TS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read. editing, aH included. Quick turn­ around. CaH 894-6074. A KINKO’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, flyers. Self-serve Macintosh also. 933 East University. C all 966-2035, or 960 West University, Call 921-0168. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fasti accurate., C all anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING FLYING FINGERS offers typeset quality with a Mac II and laser printer. CaH Susan, 945-1500. LETTER PER FECT Word Processing. $1.75/page. Spellcheck, grammar, punc­ tuation included; test and reliable. Call Lauri, 899-1236. NEED PERSO NAL computer to type free? Trade computer time for your typing skills. 967-6369, John. PROFESSIONAL TYPING, $1.50 page, Baseline/Alma School in Mesa, editing service available. Call 897-1038. PROFESSIONAL W ORDPROCESSING of anything you need. Fast, accurate, reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. Central Phoenix, 274-5531. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria l services. 23 years experience. Student discount. Southwest comer, M iller and Chaparral, 994-8145. WORD PROCESSING, Spellcheck. Fast, accurate service. Southern and Price vicinity. Phyllis, 820-7715. WORD PROCESSING for your typing needs. Fast tUraround. Close to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne, 966-2825. WORD PRO CESSING—$1.50 per page. Resumes, design, editing, & laser printing available. Cali 92Í-3770 evenings & weekends Ci& WANTED WANTED DEDICATED lady softball play­ ers. Legue play one night weekly (Mesa), tournaments onece monthly. AA competi­ tion. Contact Ed Sweeney, 963-9419. W ILL PAY big $$ for ASU- U of A Football game. Need 4 tickets together. CaH Richard, 965-8297 or 784-4724. ADOPTION LOVING SOUTHERN California couple (College Professor and Engineer) looking for baby to adopt. Financially secure, active, love children and animals. Friends, laughter, warmth to share with baby. We can help with expenses. C all collect, Joe and Mary, (619) 943-7016, P R E G N A N T A D O PT IO N . A re you piregnant and considering adoption? Beware of "desperate,” pleading couples who may make false promisee. Ask your­ self why are they so desperate? Were they rejected by other adoption agencies? Do you know where you are calling when you call "collect” and how that state’s adop­ tion laws may vary from Arizona’s laws? Avoid legal com plications or even a disruption of the adoption by dealing with competent professionals who know and understand foe adoption laws. With South­ west Adoption Center, if you would like, you can choose the fam ily and even meet them, and be reassured that they are qualified to provide a loving, caring home for a child. Get the facta from a licensed adoption agency-Southwest Adoption Center, Inc. We can provide professional and confidential help with housing, counseling and m edical arrangements. For help, call Southwest Adoption Center, Inc. 234-Baby. WANTED, BABY to love. Loving couple wish to share, their life and love with newborn. C all Karen and Dan at 994-4181. W E KNOW adoption is not an easy choice. But if you have made that choice, please choose us to give your baby a lifetime of love, happiness, and security. We, in turn, will help your child to understand and respect this difficult decision. Expenses paid. CaU Rhea and Roger collect, (914) 639-9158. MUSIC EQUIPMENT SALE: guitar amps, digital delay, power amp, wireless. Rock bottom prices. Leave message, 784-8073. TUTORS ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. Eight years professional writing experience, ASU English degree. Rates negotiable. 829-6712. W ANTED AN upper-division Sociology majoy to help me with Soc 101 paper. Call Jeff at 894-6628. PHOTOGRAPHY JASO N SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks C om m ercial Ph otography M o dels’ , actors’, and artists’, portfolios. Profession­ al work. Reasonable rates. 946-2475. PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY is out of fashion. Today, we want fashion photogra­ phy in our portraits. Custom Fashion Photography by appointment. You keep the negative. Prices start at $60. Call Pictu res Photography in Tempo at 968-8610. im Page 16 State Prêts Thursda^NojSSSiLil^i November 8th • At the tent by the fountain Register to Win a Free Macintosh SE* •• Join us at the tent by the fountain W ednesday,November 8th, 9 to 3:30 and experience the Apple M acintosh™ personal computer first hand. •• Representatives from Apple Computer and major software vendors w ill be available to answer questions. •• Special Holiday Bundles make it easier than ever to own a M acintosh. WITH SPECIAL GUEST FLESH FOR LULU MESA AMPHITHEATRE NOVEMBER 11, 7:30 PM ALSO ON SALE: 12/3 - GEORGE THOROGOOD - SYMPHONY HALL \v - o s o * » v ***<> Tickets available at all Dillard’s, Zia Records and the Mesa Community Box Office. * Macintosh SE includes 2 internal 800K floppy disk drives and 1 Apple Keyboard m O N CAM PUS Kimo Ford Embry-Riddle University The Fords have always driven Xfolkswagens. Ask Kimo Ford why he bought a Volkswagen and get ready for some family history. "Everyone in my fam ily has driven a Volkswagen at one tim e or another. M y dad had a Microbus in the Sixties. M y mom and sister both drove Beetles. And my brother, who's also a student, drives an '8 3 Volkswagen Rabbit. "So when I saved enough money to buy a car there was only one logical choice. A Volkswagen. M y car's a '7 9 Rabbit. W ith 1 4 5 ,0 0 0 miles on it. Ten years old and all those miles and it's still running great. "If you ask me, it's the perfect student's car. Good on gas. Fun to drive. And big enough to carry four friends." Even so, Kimo is already thinking about his next car. Another Volkswagen? "Absolutely. A GTI. W hite. Gotta have white." /S3h \fs tim e to th in k a b o u t NAolkswagen again. If you drive a Volkswagen and would like to be featured in an ad, send your story and a photo to: VolkswagenTestimonials 18? S. W oodward, Suite 2 0 0 • Birmingham, M l 4800 9