StcfetC C opyright. S tate Press, 1969, Tem pe, A rizona W ednesday, Novem ber 8 ,1 9 8 9 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 7 2 No. 51 Athlete investigated in assault, sources say By MIKE BURGESS Stale Press ©Copyright 1989, State Press University police are investigating an ASU basketball player in connection with the sexual assault of a female student that occurred early Sunday in a room at Mariposa Residence Hall, police sources said. A departm ent source said the suspect under investigation is Iowa State University transfer Sam Mack. The source also said ASU Head Basketball Coach Bill Frieder telephoned police and told them that the alleged incident was a basketball m atter, not a police m atter. No arrests have been made in the case, police said. ASU officers were told about Frieder’s call during Tuesday morning roll call, the source said. “ I did call them (police),” Frieder said Tuesday night. “ When someone called me about a possible problem, I called them .” Another departm ent source said ASU police Were gathering information about Mack, who was acquitted in July of armed robbery and kidnapping charges in connection with the March holdup of an Ames, Iowa, Burger King. Mack, 19, was shot twice by police as he left the restaurant and was arrested along with former ISU football player Levin White, who also was shot. Mack’s attorneys convinced Story County jurors that he was coerced into the robbery by White, who pleaded guilty to first-degree robbery and is serving a 25-year sentence. Meanwhile, KCCI-TV in Des Moines, Iowa, reported Tuesday night that ASU police requested information from Ames police about Mack. Acting ASU Police Chief Doug Bartosh said police have a suspect in the case but would not say if it was Mack. When asked Tuesday if he had been contacted by ASU police, Mack said, “I don’t know what you are talking about.” The junior communications majors who is ineligible to play for ASU this season because of his transfer, was the Sun Devils’ leading scorer during the team ’s first preseason scrimmage. Frieder would not say who told him about the incident and added that police would not provide him with any information. He also said he did not try to sway police into not investigating the m atter. “I might have told them if a police Mack m atter involved a basketball player, it’s a basketball m atter,” Frieder said. “When I get all the facts, l am going to deal with it. “If one of my players did something wrong, it is not going to be tolerated.” T u rn to A w w H , page Controversy over cross nothing new to campus By NICKI CARROLL State Press In 1948, Arizona State College had 4,000 students, a dress code on Sundays and a large controversy over a little chapel on the edge of campus. Currently at ASU, 46,000 students make the campus the fifth largest in the United States, skirts below the knee are obsolete and a large controversy over a little chapel has the campus in a tizzy. Again. Today, the issue of whether the cross should remain atop Danforth Chapel will have its day in court — literally, with a suit filed recently by the Arizona Civil Liberties Union. But 40 years ago, a concerned student — with a hacksaw — handled the controversy more personally: The roots of the cross debate reach back to the years before construction began on the chapel. On Feb. 1, 1945, William Danforth, founder and chairman of the board of the Ralston Purina company, was asked by his friend W illiam Hutchins, an English professor at Arizona State College, to donate money to start a college chapel fund. S ta to P r a t i p h o to Controversy about the cross stop Dsnforth Chapel has bean long-standing. ! u m c n tu im j Îb u rsü û ÿ h y i Z iU á u m í ' Q iam hers m m m Signing in: It’s pens over swords in the stir over a proposed supermarket, and every signature counts. Page 8 Danforth had helped other colleges around the country build m editation chapels. He spent his winters at the San Marcos hotel in Chandler and took an avid interest in the ASC project. On March 13, he made an offer of $5,000 to th en -P resid en t G rady G am m age to establish a nondenominational campus chapel. The money was given on the conditions that a painting of Christ be hung in die chapel, that the structure be called the Danforth Chapel and that an inscription furnished by D anforth be displayed somewhere in the building. Three days later, the Student Religious Council, consisting of m ultifaith student religous group leaders, accepted the gift and formed a chapel committee to raise funds for the new building. The total cost for the project was estim ated at $15,000. Chapel committee members aggressively set out to make up the $10,000 difference. They shined shoes, held campus carnivals and solicited campus organizations for donations. Their two-year efforts, combined with faculty, alumni and community donations, raised $6,812.58. By December 1946, the chapel site had been selected, architect Harold Eckman had finished prelim inary drawings, and construction plans were approved. A Phoenix building firm , Lescher and Mahoney, presented blueprints — which included a copper-covered wooden cross — to the committee, on Dec. 12,1946. Not until May 5,1947, did anyone bring up the idea that the cross discriminated against non-Christians who might want to use the chapel. According to Ronald Wyllys, Religious C ouncil p re s id e n t a t th e tim e , a representative from the Hillel Jewish Student Center asked that the cross not be placed on the chapel. Wyllys said the council overwhelmingly approved the suggestion. “Plans were being m ade with the understanding of all of us on the Student Religious Council that the chapel was to be nondenominational,” said Wyllys, now the 59-year-old dean of the graduate school of information and library sciences at the University of Texas in Austin. ASC Comptroller Gilbert Cady was then in Jo ck P .M l.y J r./S ta te P tO w Steve Tseffos, a representative of the chairman of the Tempo Sports Authority baseball committee, addressed the Associated Students of ASU Sonata meeting Tuesday night. Tseffos said e measure condemning a proposed professional ball park on University grounds would be premature because the prefect is still in the “ fact-finding” stages. The Senate, however, approved the resolution opposing the stadium. ASASU Senate rejects planned baseball park By MARK CRISMON State Press The Associa ted Students of ASU Senate passed a resolution Tuesday opposing the construction of a baseball park at thé University, despite objections from a group seeking to bring a stadium to Tempe. The resolution, which passed 14-6, sta te s th at ASU “should be dedi­ cated to the pursuit of a c a d e m i c excellence.” It also claim s that the proposed site could be put to “uses of greater c o n c e rn to th e Larson students,” and the stadium will “likely complicate traffic and create considerable amounts of noise and light polution. “The addition of another professional sports facility is not conducive to the p r e s e r v a tio n of th e a c a d e m ic environment and reputation we (ASU) seek to promote.” Steve Tseffos, representing John Benton, the chairman of the Tempe Sports Authority’s baseball committee, told the Senate the resolution was prem ature. He asked that a vote on the resolution be delayed until after a proposal for the stadium was presented to die University. He said there is a tremendous amount of m isinform ation surrounding the committee’s efforts and thinks the S e n a te s h o u ld b e “ g a th e r in g in fo rm atio n ” th a t w ill allow an “informed decision” to be made.” He asked that the committee be given “a chance to solve parking and traffic concerns and any other problems you (the Senate) m ight foresee before T u rn to 8 ta d lu m , p ig s 6 . T u rn to C ro w , pogo 1 0 . Say, George: The ASU Theater production of Steinbeck’s ‘O f Mice and Men' shines. Review. Page 15 Aching to Be Tops: Stanford’s football team gives arms and legs for a No. 1 spot — of sorts. Page 17 T o d a y 's w s a th s r. M o s tly s u n n y , w ith m orn­ in g w in d s fro m th s s s s t an d a h ig h n e a r 8 0 . T o n ig h t s h o u ld bis d s a r, w ith a lo w In th s m id 5 0 s . C la s s M a d s ........................................................... ....21 C o lla g e C u ltu re ............... . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. ...........,.*1 8 C o m ic s ...............:....,^ ..,.. . .. . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . .. . . is PoH cs R « p o v tM .......» ;...> .,..i......M. t. . N. . . , . . . . . , | S p o rts ......... 7. State Press Wednesday. November a 1989 T oday the MU Apache Room. New members are encouraged to stop by. •P e l Chi — N ational Honor S ociety In Psychology will meet at 4 p.m . in the Psychology Building, Room B-147. Robert Egly, academic adviser, will answer questions about graduate school. Also the film “Eye of the Storm” will be shown. •R eal E state A ssociation — Rho Epsilon will meet at 6 p.m. in BA, Room 217. Art Cunningham from Sunbelt Holdings will Speak on real estate development and Gateway Center — their project on 44th Street and Van Buren Street. •S o ciety o f M anufacturing Engineers will meet at 5 p.m. in TC, Room 118C. W ill discuss money-making possibilities and hava some pizza and Coke. •S o ciety o f H ispanic Professional Engineers will meet at 5 p.m. in ERC, Room 490. Yearbook photo will be taken at 4:30 p.m. by the Hayden Library Lighthouse. Afterwards there will be a barbecue and a volleyball game in the courtyard. •B ahai Club will have a deepening/fireside meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU. Check monitors for room number. •C am pus Aglow will meet at 12:40 p.m . in the MU Graham Room. Excellent speaker on healing for broken and sexual relationships — Part II. Learn the real meaning of love. The Today section la a daily calendar o f event« happening a t ASU that la preaented as a service to the U niversity com m unity. Any cam pus d u b o r organization can subm it entries fo r publication to the S tale Press, located In the basem ent of M atthew s C enter, Room 15. Entries m ust be legible, are sub|ect to editing fo r content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, th e Stole Press cannot guarantee publication. D eadline fo r th e entries is 1 p.m , th e previous business day. •C hess Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the M U , Room 209. •T h e Com m uter Club “The Job Hunt: Making Ends M eet" at 11:30 a.m . in the Student Services Building, first-floor amphitheater. Need part-time or seasonal employment? Let Student Employment and Career Services help you find your way through the employment maze. Job opportunities and ideas will be offered. M eetings •A SU Precision Flight Team will m eet at 7 p.m. at Smiley’s on the com er of Rural Road and Apache Boulevard. Also, pictures will be taken at 4 p.m. in front of Hayden Library. •A SU G lobal W arm ing C onference “ Energy, Civilization and the Future" from 11:40 a m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Farmer Education Building, Room 202. •A SU GO Club will m eet at 7 p.m. in the MU. Check monitors for room number. W e will cover club promotions, beginners instructions and games. •A SU S ki Devils will be signing up new members and accepting deposits for the Thanksgiving Utah trip from 10:30 a m. to 1:45 p.m. at our booth on the comer of Palm Walk and Tyler Mall. T-shirts also will be available. •A lpha Kappa D elta — Sociology Honorary Fall initiation at 12:40 p.m. in the Social Sciences Building, Room 318. D r. Julia C urry-Rodriquez discusses “ Passion in Sociological Research.” •A SU Travel and Tourism Students Association will meet at 1:45 p.m . in the Nursing Building, Room 11. Everyone welcome. Yearbook pictures will be taken at 1:50 p.m. sharp. Please attend. •A lpha Lambda D elta will meet at 4:30 p.m. at McClintock Hall, second floor library. The head of Career Services will be speaking with special emphasis towards sophomores. •G reek W eek Com m ittee first meeting to begin planning for Greek W eek 1990 at 9:30 p.m. in the Palo Verde Main Cafeteria. •H ispanic Business S tudents Association will meet at 3:30 p.m. in BAC, Room 218. For all members. •In vestm ent Club at ASU will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the MU. Check monitor for room number. Interested in learning about the stock market? Please join us at our weekly meetings. All are welcome. •Japan Association will meet at 7 p.m. in the Student Services Building, auditorium on the first floor. Will discuss planning for Thanksgiving trip and home stay program. •Lesbian and Gay Academ ic Union will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. A representative from Olivia Records will be present to discuss recent lesbian music. •M U A B Film C om m ittee will be showing the film “th e Naked Gun" at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the MUAB theater in the lower level of the MU. Admission is $1. •M U A B G allery Com m ittee will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Apache Room. •M U A B Entertainm ent Com m ittee will meet at 1 p.m . in •S tu d en t Group o f CODAHP (Codependency fo r Helping Professionals) will have regular weekly meeting following the 12-step format at 11:40 a.m . in the M U , Room 209. •U n ited Cam pus C hristian M inistry will meet at 5:30 p.m, at the University Presbyterian Church on College Avenue and Alameda Drive. Dinner, Bible study, fellowship, singing. •U niversity Fencers C lub will m eet at 7:30 p.m . in the Student Recreation Complex, Small Gym B. •W om en’s Studies Student Association^ will have an important meeting to choose logo entry winner at noon in the Social Sciences Building, Room 104. •W om en Law Students Association will be having a canned food drive for the homeless to benefit all major food banks in the Phoenix area. W e will be accepting donations every day this week until 4 p.m. at the Law College Rotunda, east campus at McAllister Avenue and Terrace Road. The State Press Magazine A W EEKL Y COLLEGE TOWN g y o g |p £ p E 4 fip W estern S lates SKI UTAH $199 includes video bus, luxury hotel, all lift tickets, parties & all the beer you can drink!! CLUB M EETINGS EVERY THURSDAY 7 P .M . A T ( s JOURNAL SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR STUDENTS, STAFF & FACULTY Computerized Vehicle Alignment * P IZZA & PUB M ) 1301 E. University (N ext to Beauvais) EVERYONE WELCOME!! •C h e c k o n ly i _____________ •F ro n t w heel alignm ent referen cin g th ru st lin e _ •F o u r w heel a lig n , w ith m echanical rear w heel a d j_ •R o a d test ei N o v e m b e r 2 2 -2 6 . 1 989 F O R IN F O C A L L : S T E V E O ..................... K R I S T A ....................... J E F F O .......................... H O T L IN E ................... SKI U TA H 1ST C LA S S 9 6 6 -5 7 5 8 9 9 1 -8 3 9 6 9 6 6 -2 3 0 4 9 6 6 -3 8 9 0 nmiee Nation Nation’ss *1 #1 Test test Prep Centers {b m b n LSAT GMAT PRO FESSIO NAL C EN TER S 969-8953 w ith A S U S K I-D E V IL S !! P I $2900 I 13900 1 I Mmm « I M i M | B Computerized Spin Balance & Rotation 1 •C o m p u terized spin balance lance a ll fo u r w heels h e e ls ] «R o tate fo u r tire s «C heck a ir pressure fo r p roper in fla tio n «Free safety check | Oil-Lube-Filter INCLUDES: •U p to 5 qts. oil •C h a s sis lube •O il filte r •3 0 w eight oil •Labor $ j2 " ADO $2 FOR 15/40 OIL MOST CARS ANO LIGHT TRUCKS C all lo r appt. Expires 12-31-89. M M Ì COUPON î COUPON’S Ski U T A H S5C D E P O S I T S D U E : T H U R S D A Y , N O V . 9 T H !! SKI U T A H with A S U , NAU, U N L V, & SDSUM *14*» MOST CARS AND LIG HT TRUCKS C all for appt. Expires 12-31-8 T H A N K S G IV IN G W E E K E N D COUPON »■■■ " t •P u ll a ll 4 w h e e ls a n d In sp e ct 22°° $ MOS T CARS AND LIG HT TRUCKS 50 c a s e s o f b e e r p e r b u s !! PARTY SATURDAY P ic k u p M a p at M e e tin g SKI PRO OFFERS FREE HOT WAX w/SKI DEVIL VIPCARO & DISCOUNTS ON SKI TUNING Check out the Valley’s Best Ski Shop 1457 W. Southern, Mess, 962-6910 101 S. Hayden at 1st 829-7400 2077 S. Hardy S o u th o f 8 to g $ tfa iy 967*8758 p 2 B Southern a t Mill 1 894-0799 1507 S. Country Club Mesa, North of Superstition Freeway S H H o lM S a tlP Pasc3 World/Nation Virginia elects 1st black governor; Dinkins becom es m ayor of NYC (AP) — L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia, the grandson of slaves, clung to a slender lead Tuesday over J. Marshall Coleman in his bid to become the nation’s first elected black governor. Democratic Rep. Jam es Florio won the New Jersey governorship handily, ending eight years of Republican control. Democrat David Dinkins moved ahead in his drive for distinction as New York City’s first black mayor, the third high profile race of off-year elections enlivened by the combustible mix of race and abortion. The three TV networks said he would win, based on interviews with voters leaving their polling places. In the sole congressional seat on the ballot, early returns from Texas put Houston City Councilman Anthony Hall and state Sen. Craig Washington far out front in an 11-Way race to succeed the late Rep. Mickey Leland. Neither Democrat was gaining SOpercent of the vote needed to avoid a run-off. With 98 percent of the Virginia precincts counted, Wilder held a lead of less than 5,300 votes in a long count. Democratic National Chairman Ron Brown claimed victory for Wilder and Dinkins as well as Florio, and GOP chairm an Lee Atwater did not dispute him. Atwater said abortion “made a difference” for the pro-choice Democratic candidates in all three races but said the results would have no bearing on the 1990 elections, with 34 Senate seats, 36 governorships and all 435 House seats on the ballot. With 98 percent of Hie Virginia precincts counted, Lt. Gov. Wilder had 874,013 votes or 50 percent. His Republican rival, Coleman, had 868,734 votes or 50 percent. In New York’s race, with 86 percent of the precincts counted, Dinkins had 770,796 votes or 50 percent and Republican Rudolph Giuliani had 733,260 votes or 48 percent. Dinkins, the 62-year-old Manhattan borough president, ran as the man who could bring racial harmony to the nation’s largest city. Giuliani, 45 and a former U. S. attorney making his first try for elective office, hammered away ai his rival’s transfer of stock to a son and his failure to file income-tax returns for four years two decades ago. amend the deal. A final vote on the plan was delayed until this morning by congressional action to increase the government’s debt ceiling. Because of the delay, it was unclear whether several GOP senators said to be mulling amendments, would honor the adm inistration’s request, delivered in a letter to the Senate from Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole. It appeared, however, that at least one amendment would be offered, a proposal by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, to exempt sm all businesses from the increase in the minimum wage. The amendment, if offered, was expected to fail. Talks on raising the debt limit dragged on throughout the day, and Tuesday evening it was announced the minimumwage vote Would be today. The legislation, as it now stands, would increase the hourly minimum wage from $3.35 to $3.80 next April 1 and to $4.25 a year later. It also would create a new, subminimum “training wage” for workers 16-19 years old new to the job market. All workers in that age group could be paid the subminimum for their first three months and for another three months if enrolled in approved training programs. President Aquino defends record on human rights in Philippines OTTAWA (AP) — President Corazon Aquino of the Philippines on Tuesday defended her government’s record on human rights, saying she was personally committed because she had been a victim of abuses. Speaking with reporters following a meeting with Prim e Minister Brian Mulroney, she said, “I would like to tell you that having been a victim of human rights abuses myself, I am certainly committed. In fact I have stated throughout my administration that we will not tolerate any violations of human rights.” * Her husband, Benigno Aquino, was shot to death in 1983 at the Manila airport when he returned from self-exile in the United States to campaign against President Ferdinand Marcos. Mrs. Aquino became president after Marcos was ousted in a military-civilian uprising in February 1986. Several human rights groups claim Mrs. Aquino’s Adm instration urges no changes government has failed to control arm y and param ilitary to w age bill; vote delayed groups that the groups say violate rights in the fight against WASHINGTON (AP) The Bush administration urged Communist rebels. Mrs. Aquino is on a four-day visit to Canada and then will Republican senators Tuesday not to underm ine a Compromise to increase the minimum wage by seeking to go to the United States for four days. A SU VS S TA N FO R D ASU student tickets are now available for o n ly $ 8 , with student guest tickets only $16.00. Remember: Two weeks ASU meets U of A in the biggest game of the year. Tickets are go­ ing fast, so get yours today! Custom s Service probing trouble w ith drug surveillance planes WASHINGTON (AP) — The Customs Service is investigating whether its supervisors at a vital drug surveillance center covered up problems with high-tech radar planes, mid a House member said Tuesday he’ll seek congressional hearings “to get to the bottom of this.” The Surveillance Support C rater operates seven detection aircraft, including two four-engine Lockheed P-3 Orions that were turned into state-of-the-art airborne early warning (AEW) planes for the drug war. The aircraft were outfitted with computer systems and ultra-modern graphic displays to locate drug smuggler planes — which are estim ated by the government to carry about half the cocaine reaching the United States. The first P-3 AEW, which arrived in June 1988 a t a cost of $27 million, has been plagued by electronic and mechanical problems that seriously compromise its ability to find and track drug-smuggling aircraft, according to Customs Service documents. Deficiencies have included an unreliable computer system that has trouble locating and tracking smugglers; faulty on­ board communications for the crew and a problem with a spinning, m etal radar dome, according to the documents, most of which were written by crew members. Rep. Glenn English, D-Okla., a Government Operations Committee member who has conducted numerous hearings on the customs program for interdicting airborne drug smugglers, said he would request hearings by the full committee. Postal Service to. begin testing self-adhesive stam ps in 15 cities WASHINGTON (AP) —The U. S. Postal Service is about to begin testing peel-and-stick postage stam ps in 15 cities, including Phoenix, but buyers will have to pay extra for the convenience^ Eighteen of the 25-cent stamps will be sold in a sheet that folds into a booklet. The price will be $5,50 cents more than the face value of the stamps. “It is expected to appeal to consumers willing to pay extra for a deluxe product,” the Postal Service said in announcing the test marketing program. The stamp, which displays artwork of an eagle and shield, will go on sale fra the first time Friday at a stamp show in Virginia Beach, Va. Opinion S tate Press Wednesday, November 8,1989 ESLÍ. University Club Regents’ request for further study ignored by ASU Lynn Vavreck Editorial Asst. The sign outside of the Fine Arts Annex reads “University Club.” A bit premature for a project that has yet to gain funding from the Arizona Board of Regents. What makes the University Club backers so sure that the project will receive funding the next time it goes before the Board? They are willing to lie to get it, that’s what. At the September Board meeting, several regents requested more detailed financial information about the dining facility before allocating funds. The proposed funding is from the investment fund — a collection of revenues off items like parking decals and book store sales — money generated by students. Vice President for Business Affairs Victor Zafra said after the regents meeting that the next step would be to hire a consultant to study the economic issues of the club. But this is not happening. John Haldane, acting assistant to the vice president, is in charge of collecting information for this project. He said the University is not employing a consultant and will use data that is six months old when it presents the issue to the regents’ resources committee in January. The study Haldane was referring to was performed by a certified public accountant who works for the University Club of Phoenix, hardly a fair comparison to the proposed ASU dub. It is doubtful that this is what the regents had in mind when they asked to see more data that was less generic. It seems there are a lot of things the regents don’t know about ASU and the University Club. For example, Regent Donald P itt compared the faculty’s need for a University Club to the students’ need for the new Student Recreation Complex. Has Regent P itt completely forgotten that ASU students paid for every penny of that rec center? Maybe this shows how much attention Regent P itt is paying to Arizona State University. If tbe faculty and staff want or need a fine dining facility as badly as the students wanted or needed a rec center, then let them raise all the money to build and operate the facility. The only sim ilarity between these two projects is that both are underfunded, but Regent P itt probably didn’t know that either. But we can’t blame the regents for information that is not accurately presented to them. That is why it is critical for the University to hire a consultant, someone in food services or the restaurant business, like they said they would, to determine whether or not the club can be selfsustaining. If the University really wants or needs this club so badly, then you would think they would anxiously do another study to prove the feasibility of the d u b to the regents. But just the opposite is true. By not doing a complete and recent study, the University is proving another, more subtle point. They want the club built, and they don’t care how or who pays for it. M ‘A real study might prove that the University Club could never make enough money to pay the students back the money it “borrowed. ” ’ What would be the harm in conducting another study? A study done this time by someone fam iliar with the area of food services? The harm is that maybe a real study will prove that the University Club can not be profitable on this campus. After all, university clubs all over the country are failing miserably. A real study might prove that the University Club could never make enough money to pay the students back the money it “borrowed.” What would be even worse than using student dollars to build this club would be getting the approval to use those dollars through deception and trickery. The University promised the regents it would bring them more information, less generic information, and Vice President Zafra said the next logical step would be to hire a consultant to do the research. Unless the University follows through on this and does another study of the financing possibilities, it has lied. The fact that they are so sure this funding request will pass at the next regents’ meeting is.ridiculous. What do the clubbackers know that nobody else does? Is there some secret population of faculty and staff that will emerge from nowhere to patronize this club during winter and sum m er off-seasons? Is there ample parking around the facility that nobody else knows about? Are there enough patrons willing to pay $25 a plate for dinner, plus an initiation fee, plus a monthly fee, plus a tip? Why is everyone concerned about these questions except the University Club Board of Directors? It seems all they’re worried about is sneaking by the Board of Regents with old and generic information and being the first people to dine in the new elegant restaurant. The University Club is a fine idea; funding it with student dollars that will never be paid back is not. If the University can prove that the club could make enough money to pay back the students, plus interest, then the idea should be considered. But without even making an honest attem pt to prove the club can m ake it, the University is admitting that it can’t. It’s time for physical plant to take down that sign. One hopes the Board of Regents will agree. Letters Drinking and driving 'MCmyis,Me m cmowTHetowacer,.. newmu* venm wetwkin6,hke?' Editor:., On Friday, Oct. 13, a group of ASU students were together in one apartm ent listening to music, talking and drinking beer. Around 11 p.m., there was a knock at the door and two Mesa police officers were invited into the apartm ent. Without any warning, the officers told everyone that the party was over and that they were all to go home. Considering the party occurred more than two miles from the ASU campus, it is hard to believe those officers thought everyone at the party lived close enough to walk home. In light of the problems our society has with people who drink and drive, it is very hard to understand how a person in a position of authority, and especially a police officer, could tell a group of students who have been drinking to go home. While the officers didnot mean to let anyone drive while drunk (as there was a third officer waiting in the parking lot), their actions are not excused. There must be a better way to educate people about the dangers of drinking and driving than to scare them into doing it and then arrest them for it. Diane Marie Montecucco Junior, Bioengineering STATE PRESS D A R R IN H O S TETLER E ditor C A R O LYN H O FIG M anaging E ditor C ity E ditor................ ..... ......... ...M A R T Y SA U E R ZO P F A sst. C ity E d ito r ....^ .« .,,.,.:....................T Y R O N E M E IG H A N O pinion E d ito r....... ......... ........B R IA N TA S S IN A R I M agazine E d ito r............ ......... ......BEN M cC O N N ELL Assoc. M agazine E d ito r..... . .. .. . . M A TTH E W LIN D E N B U R G A sst. M agazine E d ito r............ ........ ....... M EG HALVERSO N Listings E d i t o r . ' , M IC H E LLE C R U FF N ew s E d ito r............................... ......... .........S U Z A N N E RO SS S ports E d ito r.....> .r ...........i..;..:.......,........;....G A R Y JACKSO N A sst. S ports E d i t o r . , . . . ^ . , . . . . . . . . j . P A U L C O RO Copy C h ie f.................................... .=?............ .M IC H E LLE ALLM AN A sst. Copy C h ie f................. .................W E N D Y S TR O D E P h q lo ....... .J A C K BEA SLEY R E P O R TER S: M ike Burgess, N icki C a rro ll, M ark Crism on, E lis e E isberry, K im berly H arris, M ich elle H enry, A driane H opkins, K elly J a in , J o ie Ann La PoUa, S onja Lew is, K elly P earce, Tenny T atusian. S P O R TS R E P O R TE R S : V icki C ulver, Jo el H orn, Torn! M cE lroy, Larry N ew ell, K eith R osenhagen. P H O TO G R A PH ER S: Jam ie O 'M ah oney, S cott Troyanos. Lytle, Sundi K jenstad, B rian C O P Y E D ITO R S : KeHy E ttenborough, N icole P erron. M A G A ZIN E STA FF: Scott S ocket. FR E E LA N C E W R ITE R S : S haron K aney, F rancine S ta h l, M ish T e ll, R ichard V ig il. C A R TO O N IS T: M ike R itter E D ITO R IA L A S S T.: Lynn V avreck . P R O D U C TIO N : D aniel D onley, S teve K ricun, Nancy Ness, M ark N othaft, D eborah P rew itt, Lynne S en zek, Jason S ilver, E ric Zotcavage. A D V E R TIS IN G R E P R E S E N TA T IV E S : Frank C ulver, Jay Eckhardt, D an EKstrom , Lysa Fitzhugh , Lisa H orn, John Leathers, P au l L ee, K aren Lisiew ski, Brook M ullen, T e rri S m ith , Ray Z ickel. T he S ta te P ress is published M onday through F rid ay during the academ ic year excep t holidays and exam periods, a t M atthew s C en ter, Room 15, A rizona S ta te U niversity, Tem po, A rizona 8 52 87 . New sroom : (6 0 2 ) 9 65 -2 29 2 . W e do not answ er questions o f a general nature. A dvertising and Production: (6 0 2 ) 9 65-7572. The S ta te P ress is th e only new spaper exclusively published fo r and circulated on th e A S U cam pus. T h e news and view s published in this new spaper a re not necessarily those o f the A S U adm inistration, facu lty, sta ff or student body. Opinion «H H N w Wednesday, November 8j, 1989 P age? Perestroika Soviet economy in worse shape than previously thought C od y Shearer North American Syndicate WASHINGTON — A friend recently returned from the Soviet Union with this startling revelation. The large miners’ strike that took place several months ago in Siberia was not triggered by an appalling lack of safety standards. The uprising was touched off by a lack of soap. It turns out for months prior to the strike, there had been no soap to use around the mines or to buy in the nearest town. As a result of an increasingly free press, news is leaking out that suggest the Soviet Union is and always has been a backward Third World country. The evidence indicates, for example, that millions of Russians have not eaten m eat in 10 years. Moreover, Soviet citizens cannot feed or house themselves and make nothing that the rest of the world wants to buy. There are other explanations for unhappiness in the Soviet Union. Consider the environment Last year, heavy Soviet industry discharged 40 million tons of poisonous chemicals into tiie atmosphere. And of the 158 environmental clean-up projects ordered at the beginning of the year, only 10 have begun. The Soviet Union is fast transforming itself into a potential ecological wasteland. The latest anxieties about the environment have been set off by reports that much of the scarce food supplies around the country are laced with poisonous pesticides. Horror stories are plentiful that suggest sausage-makers, for example, meet production quotas by twice boiling rejected products. ‘As a result of an increasingly free press, news is leaking out that suggest the Soviet Union is and always has been a backward Third World country. ’ Mikhail Gorbachev returned home from Finland the other day and was confronted with grim news that the Russian economy has grown worse — if that’s possible — during the past three months. In the face of a mounting $143 billion deficit, production has dropped dramatically and food supplies in many areas are declining rapidly. And food distribution conditions aren’t much better Approximately 176,000 containers and 22,000 railway vans, containing food and other goods, are stuck in depots. In addition to these nightmares, Gorbachev must preside over a corrupt bureacratic structure that services favoritism and exploitation. As much as he might like to balance certain aspects of Soviet life, he can’t abolish the special roads in Moscow and other favors that are reserved for party bosses. While official Washington ventures private wagers on Gorbachev’s ability to hold his crippling nation together and survive politically, the Soviet leader finds himself with the inevitable task of slowly abandoning the Soviet economic system. He knows he must make rapid progress toward a free m arket, private property and the sale of unprofitable state enterprises. Perhaps, the December summit with Bush will help him in this regard. Gorbachev’s foremost challenge is the attitudes of the Soviet people. Most of them, after all, are indifferent and skeptical after decades of fear, regulations and a lack of any personal responsibility. His immediate goal must be to fire their imaginations and forge a definition of purpose. In learning more and more about the real Soviet Union, one has to wonder how a government of nearly 300 million people managed to claim a standard of living that 99 percent of them don’t enjoy or could ever aspire to? How is it that U. S. public officials never gave the American people an accurate assessment of Soviet limitations? Why did Washington spend so much of the taxpayers’ money defending itself against a particularly regressive Third World nation? The FBI has been conducting a top-secret investigation in recent months to determine if a former National Security Administration (NSA) employee has assisted Gén. Manuel Noriega jam U. S. technological hardware. Frustrated by Panam a’s new jamming capabilities, Washington has been unable to obtain the kind'of raw intelligence it once used to track every step Noreiga took. At present, no U. S. intelligence renegades have been nabbed. It appears as if Noriega has taken advantage of highly sophisticated East German assistance to skirt the long arm s of the U. S. intelligence community. It’s difficult to believe in this day that a nation would conduct a war on abortion and contraception, but that is what is happening in Ireland. Last week, for instance, Cosmopolitan magazine was forbidden by Ireland’s Office of Censorship of Publications from carrying advertisements for abortion agencies in other countries. (Abortions are permitted in every European Community nation except Ireland and Belgium.) Moreover, Irish authorities are now prosecuting those who sell condoms. The penalty for doing so is comparable with those arrested for drug dealing. • •■/ • | For the first time ever, investment by foreigners in the United States exceeded investment abroad by Americans in 1988, according to the Securities Industry Association. Foreign direct investment in the United States totaled $328.9 billion, compared with $326.9 billion invested by Americans in overseas nations. Regardless of this news, the total value of foreign assets held by U. S. investors is still twice the value of U. S. assets owned by foreigners. W h y B u sh m a y b e s tu c k w ith Q u a y le in ’9 4 Jeff G reenfield Universal Press Syndicate NEW YORK — A new California poll Says that President Bush is doing well among that state’s citizens, but that only 22 percent rate Vice President Dan Quayle’s performance in office as good or excellent; fully 31 percent rate him as “pom” or “very pom.” Those are rem arkably grim numbers given the relative contentment with the way things are going in the country. Veteran sleuth Jack Anderson goes on national television to report that there is already talk within the White House and the Cabinet of replacing Quayle with HUD Secretary Jack Kemp come 1992. There are three lessons to be learned from this: First, on a slow news days, anything can make the papers. Second, even in an age of “manufactured consent,” when every official above the level of dog catcher has professional media advisers, it is not always easy to change a public perception — even with the resource of tiie rice presidency at hand to do so. Dan Quayle stumbled onto the national stage last August in New Orleans when, as the surprise choice of George Bush for vice president, be gave a disasterous press conference in front of approximately 6 million reporters (OK, maybe it was a few thousand). He got a tremendous boost when — by accident or by design — he held a free-forall news conference in Huntington, Ind., just after his nomination in which the press looked like a bunch of sharks. Clearly, the country, in general, was disposed to give the young man another chance. Instead, Sen. Quayle proceeded to go out and earn the bum rap with so many insertions of foot in mouth that, in the last days of the campaign, he was reduced to appearing before groups of Mouseketeers in the rem otes ranges of the W asatch M ountains. The slogan of the Bush campaign seemed to be: “Keep this man off the tube!” The real shocker for m e, however, came a fte r the in auguration, in p o litical journalism, the pendulum effect is very powerful; as soon as the pack has moved to one judgment (“Quayle’s a moron” ), there is an inevitable corrective movement (‘‘Hey, Quayle’s OK” ). In fact, I was certain that a half-dozen or so serious speeches, combined with some self-effacin g hum or, would quickly rehabilitate the vice president. It hasn’t happened yet. Why? In the first place, there is a powerful constituency that needs Dan Quayle as a target: not the Democrats but America’s professional comedians. There is no way that Jay Leno, who coined the classic line about the movie of Quayle’s life — “Full Dinner Jacket” — would let so juicy a punch line go quietly. Nor would Johnny Carson nor would David Letterman. Without inflating this beyond its natural borders, the constant use of a public figure as a source of humor imposes a substantial handicap on anyone trying to look good. ‘Such critical rigor suggests that Mr. Quayle still finds himself inthe cross hairs o f the national media. ’ M ore im p o rta n t, Q uayle h im self continues to cooperate. Hé has appeared before sm all groups of journalists and been given good m arte — only to go before the United Negro College Fund and, attempting to echo its slogan that “a mind is a terrible thing to waste,” observed “What a terrible thing it is to lose one’s mind —or not to have a mind at all.” He goes to observe the Bay area earthquake and gets into a nasty political spitting contest with the mayor of San Francisco, and then describes the plight of the victims as “heart-rendering.” It is, in my view, significant that the last national figure to be caught in every mangling of the English language was Ted Kennedy, in the first, worst days of his 1980 run for the D em ocratic Presidential nomination. Such critical rigor suggests that Mr. Quayle still finds himself in the cross hairs of the national media. And what of the third lesson? That is yet to be played out, but it is connected with the fact that dumping vice presidents is a lot easier talked about than done. Franklin Roosevelt got rid of John Nance Garner in 1940 because Garner actively tried to deny Roosevelt a third term ; he was h political enemy. Henry Wallace was dumped in 1944 because party leaders simply could not tolerate the idea of a radical one heartbeat away from the White House — especially given FDR’s health. And in 1976, Nelson Rockefeller was “volunteered” out of office as the price of getting conservative support for President Ford in his nomination fight against Ronald Reagan. Dan Quayle, however, remains George Bush’s personal decision. How does he dump him without appearing to concede bad judgment in tiie first place? Unless it locks like a factor that will cost him the White House, don’t sta rt calling the moving van yet. State Pres« Wednesday, November 8,1989 Page 6 Stadium ___ C onM nuad tro m p a g * 1 . coming out with a blanket resolution against the stadium ." “We invite you to participate in this project by assigning a committee or liaison that we can work with to keep the Senate abreast of our progress and ensure that your important input is heard,” Tseffos said. Tam i W illingham , ASASU vice president for campus affairs, said the Senate’s resolution is an effort to act pro­ actively rather than reactively. ASASU President Paul Larson echoed the Senate’s view. “Hie campus of ASU or any other campus is a wholly inappropriate place for it (the stadium ),” he said. But Larson said he would like to see a baseball team “somewhere in the state of Arizona.” Larson said he thinks the m ajority of the Tempe City Council is in favor of the stadium being built at the proposed site, which is in Lot 59, just west of Packard Stadium. Before a stadium can be built, it first must be approved by the University and Haircuts Reg. $17.00 SAVE $¡3.00 Includes Shampoo & Conditioner (W ith Coupon) . Perms $5.00 Off Regular $10.00 Off Spiral Wraps • •• •• In clu d es S h a m p o o . C o n d itio n er & C ut One Coupon W ith Coupon fo r F la t Time Customers Only C ello p h a n e . . . 1 . . . . . . - w $ H ig h lig h ts . . . . . . . . . . . S W ith C o u p o n fo r F irst T im e C u sto m ers O n ly O ne C o u p o n SECorner Rural &University SffV€ 30% U N IV C R S IT V T 'S A N D S W € A T S •O FflCIRl LOGOS •H O T N€UU DCSIGNS INCLUDING N€ON / I - Mo 933 E. University PIZZA / IBRAtUS NO Servici Cell For Appointment O N » | •<. O nly at 8 94 -1 2 34 the University and the students could be examined objectively. The proposed stadium will be an open baseball-only facility that will be used stric tly for professional baseball. Packard Stadium still will remain home to the ASU baseball team. Allan Barfield, a College of Law senator Who voted against the resolution, said the stadium could be advantageous to the campus. “Nobody ever wants anything good for a community if it’s right next door,” he said. $1400 D on’t read this unless... you want all you can eat pizza, salad, & pasta buffet. Everyday. Lunch 11 -2 only $339 Dinner 5-8 only $ 3 " then the Arizona Board of Regents, Larson added. “If and when a proposal is made to the University, a referendum would be an appropriate method to articulate the students’ view point,” he said. Tseffos said after the vote he was “truly disappointed.” “I applaud the senators Who had the good sense to hold off on this until more information is known,” he said. “The reso lu tio n is d é trim è n ta l to the democratic process.” Tseffos said if the Senate had waited to see a proposal, the possible benefits to | Coma by today and check o ut a ll o f our m m s tu ff! • 1 9 9 0 Gary Larson Calendars •Thanksgiving Cards •F o s s il W atches •L e a th e r Backpacks Curwar alone CAMMJIITCSk 829-939! Y o u ’v e s e e n o u r n a m e . . . m e e t th e f a c e . now Stanley H . Kaplan, founder of Stanley H . Kaplan Educational Centers, is coming to ASU. Mr. Kaplan is the forefather o f standardized test preparation. H is wealth o f American education and testing knowledge spans over 50 years. Everyone is welcome to attend this infor­ mative presentation o f The ABC’s of the graduate and law school educational system. W e d n e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 15 6:30-7:30 p.m ., T h e G reat H all, C ollege o f Law Introductory remarks by Fausto Ramos P a c if ic £ y e s & T s J T h e C c d ijo r n ta A t ti tu d e Director of Admissions, College of Law [HAD THRU 11/12/89 iftrldg. Mall th Avanue k Thomas 878-8807 Towar Plata 58th Street k Thomas 844-8118 Chrlstown Mall 19th Ava. 8 Bethany Home 485-8848 Tam pa Corner­ stone Ctr. 725 S. Rural Rd. 000*9500 For more information call 967-2967 W edne£a^N ov«nbe^J98^ S tate Press READ A ssault with IT ¿SSL C o n tin u ed fro n t p a g i 1. STATE PRESS and CLASSIFIEDS REAP THE BENEFITS Athletic Director Charles Harris said he was informed Tuesday by ASU police that an ASU athlete was under investigation. He said police always notify his office about any incidents involving athletes on Campus. The incident occurred between 12:30 and 12:50 a ,m. Sunday in a Mariposa room rented by two ASU basketball players. The 18-year-old victim reported the incident late Monday 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 F lo w e r s STATE PRESS Classified Advertising H la c a r te l$5 on cut ft stufi 11 sr I—lomecoming . . . 3 Ç w eeiteçrrt lo o ser $ 7 .Q 5 4-14- Ç. Mill Ave., 5 uite117/Tempe. A 7 Ô52Ô2 OFF M EDIUM PIZZA FR E E D E L IV E R Y 9 2 1 -2 2 2 2 \ W ith F rie s $200 (w ith th is ad ) O p e n t ill M id n ig h t F ri & S a t t ill 2 a .m . M-F 8 9 .m .-8 0.HL, SOL 8 0.m .-5 P.RI. E n riro s 11 - I 6-88 P h o n e 9 6 6 -6 T 8 9 ia u r n t & e a tm j O FF LARGE P IZZA F o rest I U n iv ersity * 9 6 6 - 5 4 6 2 1 D o zen R o y « $ 3 2 .Ç 5 PORKY PIG MELT $300 in Arches Plaza • next to ozzle s I 5 ingle R o se $ 3 .5 0 Ifiite V Humons Hair Studio without ijour covçaqe. ft Godfather’s Pizza- G roo mnhn q ^ ^ Jon t be Cöiugrvfc íT night, Jones said. Police said the victim was convinced by friends to report the incident. According to the police report, the victim was “frightened” by the suspect because he was “a big and overpowering type of guy. Also because she knew of his past record.” Mack, a basketball standout at Iowa State, transferred to ASU this sem ester after he was acquitted. # Big MadSandwich © 1 9 8 8 M c D o n a ld 's C o rp o ra tio n C a sh v a lu t* 17 2 0 o f 1 c e n t GOOD TIME. GREAT TASTE; f M c D o n a ld fl • ■« $395 Good Only At $ 2 0 0 DRAFTS Valid until December 1989 1 Big Mac per coupon 1031 E. Apache PITCHERS RURAL & APACHE J S a y G ood -B ye To Y ou r G la sse s. A lt e r R a d ia l K e r a to to m y Do You Qualifyf o r International? i CHEMISTS, w LIFE SOENTISTS, CHEMICAL ENGINEERS . . . H i e W o r ld is Y o u rs ! ...iE lM u n d o e s T u y o ! ...L e M o n d e e s t à \b u s ! ...D ie V it ìt is t D e in ! ...wmmMM Return Home with an Exciting Career Ahead of You! Procter & Gamble has several entry-level product and process development openings for BS. MS or PnD Chemists, u fe Scientists and Chemical Engineers in Asia. Europe, Mexico and South America. To readily qualify, you m ust be bilingual' (including English) and possess appropriate Citizenship. Immigration Visa, or w ork Permit from one or more of the following countries: A u stria , Belgium >, B razil. Chile. Colum bia, any. iH' olland. D enm ark. E gypt, France, G erm any, " Ireland, Ita ly, Japan, Lebanon, M exkq, N etherlands, Peru, P ortugal, P uerto Rico, S a u d i A rabia, Spain, U nited Kingdom and Venezuela. Procter & Gamble total sales are over 20 billion dollars world-wide Major product categories include beauty care, beverage, detergent, fabric care, food, health care, household care, paper, and pharmaceutical consumer products. Our technically-based corporation spent over 600 million dollars in research and product development last year. We offer a stimulating environment for personal and professional growth, highly competitive salaries, and excellent benefits package including pension, health care and paid relocation. If interested, send vour resume, including country qualifications and language fluencies, to: F.O. Schulz, jr. International Openings The Procter & Gamble Company Ivorydale Technical Center (# JUAS) Spring Grove Ave. and June St. Cincinnati. OH 45217 PROCTER & GAMBLE AnEqualOpportunityEmployer A tte n d our inform ative FREE RADIAL KERATOTOMY SEMINAR a n d learn th e fa cts a b o u t RK Radial K eratotom y (RK) is a p r o v e n o u tp a tie n t p r o c e d u r e to c o r re c t n ea rsig h ted n ess. You'll s e e step-by-step, th e p ro cess o f RK A n o p hthalm ologist a n d a p a s t RK p a tie n t will a n sw e r all o f yo u r q u estio n s. A nd... you'll r e c e iv e h a n d o u ts , refresh m en ts a n d c o st inform ation Sem inars a re h e ld 7:00pm-8:30pm. CALL 957-6799 TODAY. R eservations a re re q u e ste d Monday, November 13 .C rescent Hotel West Dunlap & 1-17 Tuesday, November 14. Gary Hail Eye Surgery Institute 2501 N. 32nd Street W ednesday, November IS . Mesa Hilton Pavilion AlmaSchool &Superstition Frwy. G a r y H a ll E v e S u r g e r y I N S T I T U T E p c . 2501 N . 3 2 N D S T ., P H O E N IX 9 5 7 -6 7 9 9 ■ TO LL FREE (tN A Z .) 1 -8 0 0 -7 2 2 -6 7 9 9 C HA NDLER 8 99-1818 ■ GLENDALE 8 4 2 -1 0 0 0 a CASA G RAND E 8 3 6 -8 7 7 3 . Residents cite reasons for opposition to supermarket By JOiE ANN LaPOLLA State Press A Tempe residents group opposed to the construction of a supermarket on the corner of Rural Road and Southern Avenue said Tuesday it has collected more than 1,800 signatures. The group, armed with picket signs and wearing bright pink hearts that represented the “heart of Tempe,’’ held a press conference in front of City Council chambers late Tuesday morning. However, the Tempe School District has obtained about 1,200 signatures supporting the proposed Smith’s supermarket, said Augie Orci, the superintendent of District No. 3. “The reason (for the support) is the lease of property to Smith’s will generate about $220,000 per year for the school district,” Orci said. Councilman Bill Ream said the district collected the signatures in the past two weeks. The school district has leased the propert to Smith’s, which will be the largest supermarket in Tempe, for the next 50 years. Orci said the total revenue gained from the lease will add about $19 million to the district’s budget. “Rural and Southern are at the heart of Tempe, so please don’t ruin it with a grocery store,” said Mario Martinez, an ASU computer programmer, who led the petition drive and past protests. The Tempe City Council is expected to vote Thursday night on the re zoning of the land for the com m ercial purpose of constructing a supermarket. T h e A The council was supposed to vote on the measure at its Oct. 19 meeting that was packed with citizens, but the vote was delayed because three-fourths of the council was not present. That number is needed to pither pass or reject the measure. The group believes that a supermarket will increase the already heavy traffic flow a t the corner and add to overcongestion of the neighborhood, said Martinez, who has conducted a financial analysis of the proposal. In addition, Martinez said Smith’s will fall short of the city’s projected tax revenue goal. However, Ream rejects the group’s analysis, which claimed that the market will have to gross $55 million a year in order to generate the necessary revenue. “There is no way you can make it (the supermarket) work with the way they came up with that,” Ream said, referring to the formula used to calculate the necessary revenue. > ' (Shy Harris; a member of the group opposedTothe supermarket, said it is “more than a neighborhood issue, it is an infill issue.” “Infill becomes a key issue in the rest of Tempe’s life,*’ Harris said. “They take public land and put it to commercial use without an increase in taxes — there is no benefit.” Ream said he supports the measure, but that the council is just voting on the zoning of the property not the “extraneous” m atters that the group cited. “It is not the City Council’s job to weigh impacts of zoning,” Ream said. “All other St a te W E K K I. V P J ac k B f k y J r./S ta te P ress Mario Martinoz (left), an unidentified petitioner and Garry Smith represent the “ heart of Tempo," a group opposing the construction of s supermarket on the comer of Rural Road and Southern Avenue. things are extraneous. Economic things are not to be considered in land use. “We (get the) request to zone land, (the other item s) are valuable but not relevant to the zoning decision,” Orci said the district leased the property because of the state’s lack of funding for public education. “The Legislature has not m et the needs of public education in this state,” Orci said. “The need (for revenue) is so great that we will lease or sell surplus property.” ress C O L LE G E M TO W \ But Jalm a Hunsinger, a 20-year Tempe resident and member of the group, said the issue is about preserving the “quality of life” in Tempe not the funding of education. Both Ream and Orci countered the group’s argument that the supermarket would increase the traffic flow. “Traffic is a big problem at that intersection, but the traffic problem at peak hours will not be affected at all,” Ream said. “The other times traffic will remain heavy, (anyway).” a g a z in e J O UR N A L IFC a n d PANHELLENICCOUNCIL Congratulates the T 9 ¡9 0 G re ^ Steering Committee Co-Chairman Co-Chairman Greek Sing Greek Sing Greek Games Greek Games Opening Ceremonies Closing Ceremonies Greek Events Treasurer Secretary Publicity Advertising Booklet Debbie Zeschke riB Scott Oshman a k p . Tracy Orrick nB Mike Moore z Steve Diltz ^ Jennifer Makoff a Mindy Nelson x q Penny Cigoyaxq Michelle Wackeen a A n ALL GREEKSis Don't forget the first Greek Week Committee meeting tonight at p.m. in the P.V. Main cafeteria! 9:30 WrtnodayjNoywriberSjJVS^ State Press ASU Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents that occurred between 7 a.m. Monday and 7 a.m. Tuesday: •A University employee driving an ASU truck hit a guard rail in Sun Devil Stadium causing $600 damage to the vehicle. •A thief stole $60 in cash from a student’s unlocked room in Manzanita Residence Hall. The student left the room because a fire alarm was set off, police said. •A thief stole a student’s bicycle, valued at $50, from the east practice fields where it was locked to itself with a Unlock. •A student was arrested and charged With driving with a suspended driver’s license after he was pulled over for speeding near Sixth Street and Stadium Drive. •A vandal cut a 1-inch circle in the vinyl convertible top of a student’s car while it was parked in Area 63 between 2 a.m. and 4 psaèl Tempe Police Report p.m. Saturday, causing $1,500 in damage. •A thief stole a student’s purse from her room at Palo Verde Main Residence Hall between 11:05 and 11:40 a.m. Monday. •A thief stole a student’s bicycle, valued at $240, from the north side of Hayden Hall between 7 and 7:45 p.m. Sunday. •A student was arrested and charged with driving with a suspended driver’s license near First Street and Rural Road after he was pulled over for driving with expired license plates. •A vandal, standing in the back yard of Kappa Sigma, 402 Adelphi Drive, threw fruit, breaking three windows at Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, 406 Adelphi Drive. Tempe police reported the following incidents that occurred between 7 a.m. Monday and 7 a.m . Tuesday: •Two thieves stole a television set, a 12-pack of beer and biscuits from an apartm ent at Palm Villa, 1140 E. Orange Street. Police arrested two neighbors after they entered the nearby apartm ent and found them drinking beer, eating biscuits and watching Monday Night Football. •A woman woke up from her nap and found her 6-year-old son hanging from a curtain cord in a bedroom. He was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital and then transported to Good Sam aritan Hospital in Mesa where he was pronounced dead on arrival. •A 24-vear-old student was arrested after Compiled by State Press reporter Termy Tatusian. 829-7131 NWatHK SAINT AUGUSTINE’S C A M P U S M IN IST R Y (O ne cou po n p e r p e rson w ith th is ad ) N.E. Corner of College and Broadway, Tempe EUCHARIST r2 for 1 TANS ■ O' Compiled by State Press reporter Teimy Tatusian. EPISCOPAL CHURCH HAIR DESIGN £4* he stole a Compact disc from a student’s room at The Towers, 525 S. Forest Ave. The victim chased the suspect and held him until police arrived. •A 40-year-old man was arrested after police saw him steal three cartons of cigarettes from the Circle K at 1101 S. Rural Road. The suspect ran from police, and a police dog found him in a dumpster in an apartm ent complex north of the convenience m art. •A 35-year-old woman was arrested and charged with criminal trespassing at the Holiday Inn, 915 E. Apache Blvd., after she refused to leave the lobby and said she wanted to go back home to Thailand. 12:15 WEDNESDAYS M O ff With T his Ad D A N F O R T H C H A PEL CANTERBURY FELLOWSHIP 5:30 THURSDAYS For I W and Bible Study (F irs t T im e C lients, P articip ating S tylists O n ly.) 1414 S. McAllister Avenue N ext to B eauvais SAINT AUGUSTINES HOLY EUCHARIST 11 a m. Sunday POTLUCK A FELLOWSHIP FOLLOWING SERVICE 829-1737 O pen 7 D ays A W eek Uferdone i\A v a n ta g e 2 8 6 ^ VOLKSWAGEN *1295 1 4 9 9 East C am elback Road Phoenix, A rizona _ Includes 40MB tllill 1 Welcome to Phoenix’s Finest (¡Mj) Dealership! A v a n ta g e X T OIL CHANGE WITH FILTER •Include« 4 q u a rts of oil a n d g e n u in e VW factory oil filter •C o m p lete under-the-hood check o f a ll belts, hoses, a n d ilu ild levels Many ASU Professors own an Avantage. Gat one for lessl Includes floppy drive, keyboard, and monitor. D iesels a n d T urboe slig h tly h ig h e r Offer expires December 31, 1989. Pleas» present coupon prior to service. Not valid with other advertiser^pecials.^^ ^ ^m m m SERVICE BONDS CERTIFICATE EPSON Equity LT Laptop Offer expires December 31, 1989. Please present coupon prior to eervice. N ot valid with other advertised specials. | FUEL INJECTION CLEANING SEAVICE SPECIAL First Choice -W ord Procaaalng -Database . . . -Spreadsheet A RQ •Com m unications •G raphics -Free "Quicken" 10 P o in t S a f e t y I n s p e c tio n Lim ited Time O nly Offer expires D ecem ber 31, 1989 C a ll N o w F or A n A ppointm ent 2 6 5 -6 6 0 0 iI P hoenix l6 3 2 E .O u m lb a c k R d . L a 'sÉaTi $49 Write BetterWithout Cheatingl G at Rlghtw rfter and turn In batta r papara. — ^— - ‘" J~ gram m ar, r ¡Don, and „ ____ W orks w ith m oat w ord proceaaoral Turbo C 2.0 O S Your choice or Turbo Pascal 5.0 NOW $3 4 95 ^ Offer expires D ecem ber 31, 1989. Please present coupon prior to service. N ot valid with other advertised specials. S ervice C oupons good th ru 12/31/89 KXP1180 RightWriter Borland l\irb o Languages S ervice in c lu d e s in jecto r cleaner, fu el sy stem ad d itiv e a n d lab o r. -G E N U IN I VO LK SW A G EN PA RTS S SER VIC E P e rfe c t fo r p a p ere and p ro g ra m M ating a. In d u d a a tra c to r e M e llo n k e d e a n d fro n t s e le c ta b le ty p e s ty le *. $100 Indudss: K apro rdM ,cesso 6o4n0ito K,r.r,last R e b a te 10ey rebluoÄ 5^* d riv e ,free. 640K,10mhz,battery DOS, BasicAX powered,dualdrives, andDOSinabattory poweredpackage! $4 4 9 5 (®) KEEP A GREAT THING GOING Ver» $ -| NEW! *6 9 9 Final Cost ’ •In s ta ll new ep a rk p lu g s • A d ju st c a rb u re a to r/e le c tro n ic fuel injectio n to id le specificatio n s w h ere •C h e c k tim in g a d d ig n itio n system s a p p lic a b le •V isu ally in sp e c t PCV, a ir filter a n d fu el filter 5-Cyl. 4-cyl. I Panason D&oe» m Equity 1 h T mT ; ~ > $ 3 4 9 5 *639 Fall Rebatos! Compiete ! ¡ r a n T r a f o p sn c u u ] llb a ra ry , a t th e A S U gam e, anyw here! T h is 7 pound w o nder runs 1000’s o f PC so ftw are prog ram s. C om as D ot M a(torre trix P rin te r^ O n a S erv ice P u rc h a se of $ 2 0 .0 0 to $ 4 9 .9 9 $ 5 0 .0 0 to $ 9 9 .9 9 $ 1 0 0 .0 0 a n d o v er Offer expires December 31,1989. Redeemable only at this dealership. Notappbcabfe to previous charges or old accounts. Not applicable to previously established discounts or special prides. Only on certificate per Repair Order or parts invoice. Not redeemable.for cash. _ _ _ _ _ ■ •■ -• • __ • .. — ^ — ^ , — _ mm —^ " 1101110,011110 1 *499 $ 1 3 95 V alue: $500 $ 1 5 .0 0 $ 2 5 .0 0 D o y o u r hom ew ork at CARDINAL 1200 Baud Sürst Choice Version 3.02 « Internal Modem ^ Get On-line Instead Of In-line. 2400 Baud *99 e Wet 11 ntock 35th Avs. & North o o PUTER SYSTEM S CENTER Get the 286 machine tnafs priced right includes 40Mb liard disk, Monochrome Monitor, 640K, etd. keyboard, 1.2mb drive and more. TOSHIBA T1000 LAPTOP Page 10 Wednesday, November 8 ,1989 Stale P rm C ro ss____ C o n U m n d fro m p a g e 1 . charge of coordinating the development of the building, and co n stru ctio n was progressing rapidly. “ When th e building w as n earing completion, there was a cross on top,” W yllys s a id . “ We p e titio n e d th e administration of the University to have the cross removed. “Nothing happened for several months. We got more and more concerned over it.” According to a letter sent by Gammage to a disgruntled alumnus, William Daws, the cross was never taken out of the original blueprints even though the Religious Council had voted for its removal. The letter states that Cady “failed to communicate this action (the plan to keep the cross off the building) to the foreman who was supervising the day labor of the erection of the chapel. Consequently, he followed the blueprints.” A note in the hies of the 1948 Religious Council said that when the cross arrived on campus, Cady asked Mildred Sayre, dean of women students, what should be done with it. The note states, “Dean Sayre replied that it was voted not to be put on.” However, Cady allowed the workmen to place the cross on the cupola of the chapel. Gammage further defended Cady in the letter to Daws, “After the cross was ereéted, it seemed the finest architectural feature of the whole building. I asked for it to remain there until further consideration was given the m atter.” Gammage went on to say the executive committee of the Arizona Board of Regents felt the same way. The letter said one member of the Board claim «! that no objection would come from the Jewish people and that he personally would see the local rabbi if it did. No mention was made of the Student Religious Council’s original vote. Wyllys said the council inundated the administration with requests to remove the cross, but a week before the formal dedication of the chapel, the symbol had still the cross. toe m atter to President Gammage. Very quietly the cross was placed on “I think he (Grimes) is sincere in feeling Danforth’s cupola “on a tem porary basis for that m y actions have been ‘those of a the holidays,” according to a letter from dictator’, since I, according to him, dictated and ASC dean who was a friend of Cady’s. the cross be re-established,” Cady wrote to No newspaper carried the story, and no Gammage on Jan. 22, 1953. “But so far he student religious groups protested. It doesn’t realize that he’s attempting to seemed as though no one noticed the new dictate its removal. ” symbol on campus. Cady said he volunteered his plans to Except for Dean J. 0. Grimes. anyone who was interested and was not G rim e s w a s th e d e a n o f th e trying to force anything on anyone. correspondence school for ASC. He “If this course of action is construed to be championed a one-man fight to remove the f the actions of a dictator, I’d like to submit cross — but it was only on paper. that I am at least a considerate, democratic, On Jan. 10,1953, Cady’s temporary action cooperative type of a dictator,” the letter had not yet been removed. Grimes wrote his said. “Ike’s in toe White House, God’s in his friend with a suggestion to solve the heaven, if we can get Him back in toe problem. chapel, everything is bound to be rosy.” “To me the answer is clear,” Grimes said Cady’s wish was granted, and toe cross in the letter. “Put no symbol on top of or on remained until toe issue grew cold. the exterior of the chapel. It is dedicated to It was 36 years later before toe issue was all who worship a Supreme Being. Why formally raised again. should toe m ajority insist on a symbolism In the spring of 1989, ASU Professor that is offensive to minorities? Randell Helms introduced a measure into “Therefore, let’s saw off toe cross from toe Faculty Senate asking for the removal of the cross. The faculty approved the motion. th at yankee-cheese-box-on-a-raft once The action was echoed by the Associated again, and let it stay sawed off for good this tim e.” Students of ASU Senate and toe ASU His first memo did not generate any Interfaito Council. response, so he took his case to toe Rev. The ASU administration chose to leave Charles Crouch, coordinator of religious the cross up and let toe courts decide the activities for ASC. issue. In a letter dated Jan. 21, 1953, Grimes A lawsuit filed by the Arizona Civil states, “A number of the students feel that a Liberties Union against toe University policy has been forced upon them without asking for toe removal of toe symbol will their consideration or approval.” make sure the issue is heard by the legal He went on to say that neither toe system. Religious Council nor toe administration The legal decision on toe Danforth cross is had approved Cady’s actions. drawing near, and now, just as in 1948, the “Policy-making is the function of the cross is being debated in all corners of toe Administrative Council, not of any one campus. individual,” Grimes said in the letter. “It Ronald Wyllys said he is happy to see toe seems the drive is now to make the issue, which he set fire to decades ago, has temporary, permanent. been rekindled. “I think just what I thought 40 years ago,” “Suppression or totalitarian methods never furthered the cause of religion on any Wyllys said. “It’s inappropriate for a chapel on a public university to have a specific campus elsewhere-” This letter got Cady’s attention. He took religious symbol on it.” not been removed. “We felt it would be inappropriate for the chapel to be dedicated with a cross,” Wyllys said. The i7-year-old math student decided to do something about it. “One Saturday morning about 10 a.m ., I b o rro w ed a ta ll la d d e r from th e maintenance departm ent,” Wyllys said. “I climbed up on top of the building with a hacksaw and cut the cross off. “I remember waving at people from the top of the chapel.” Wyllys said he' put the cross in the janitors’ closet of the chapel and waited for the inevitable. On Monday morning, it came. “I got an oral scolding from President Gammage when he called me into his office,” Wyllys said. “I didn’t try to hide the fact. I was rather proud of it.” Wyllys said that with only four days to go until the dedication ceremonies, the campus adm inistration Was frantic. Some officials called for Gammage to fire Wyllys’ father, R. K. Wyllys, who was the head of the history department. “ To President Gammage’s credit, he didn’t do it,” Wyllys said. The Rev. Frederick Barnhill, a speaker at the dedication, said the cross removal didn’t hamper but heightened the ceremony. “I didn’t think it belonged,” said Barnhill, now the 82-year-old priest of All Saints Episcopalian Church. “ The Danforth Chapel was not meant to be a Christian chapel. “The meditation chapel gives you a place to drop in and practice religion no m atter what your faith.” After the dedication, the cross issue was ignored for almost five years. In the fall of 1952, Cady formed a committee to refurbish the chapel. On Nov, 13, he held a meeting to go oyer the redecorating plans. They included new furnishings, painting the walls, putting in stain-glass windows — and re-establishing • “ Join us at the tent by the fountain Wednesday, Novem ber 8th, from 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 (and special prices, too!) make it easier than ever to own a M acintosh. TODAY • At the tent by the fountain • Register to Win a Free Macintosh SE* * Macintosh SE includes 2 internal 800K floppy disk drives and 1 Apple Keyboard ASASU Senate votes to preserve historic buildings By MARTY SAUERZOPF State Prase The Associated Students of ASU Senate overwhelmingly approved a resolution Tuesday night in support of preserving West and Dixie Gammage halls, which are in danger of being destroyed to make way for Phase II of the Hayden Library expansion. The resolution, which states the two buildings have “significant value to past, present and future students at this institution,” passed 17-3. The measure was introduced by College of Engineering Sen. Jam es Shirley, chairman of the University Affairs Committee. “West Hall is one of the few historic buildings left at Arizona State,” Shirley said, adding that this resolution reaffirmed a sim ilar measure passed by the Senate in May 1988 Shirley said he could not find a copy of last year’s resolution in the ASASU records. The Senate amended the resolution to include Dixie om e o u t o f Gammage Hall, which is attached to the west side of West Bob Carroll, from the School of Social Work, which is Hall, because senators said they felt both buildings had housed in West Hall, voted against the measure because he historical significance for the University. said he had been informed that the school would be getting a College of Education Sen. Anne Borchardt said: “I couldn’t new building within the next six years. see tearing down West Hall and leaving Dixie Gammage. If Carroll said he could not reveal where he heard the one should stay, both should stay.” information but assured the Senate that it was on the She added that the University should make better use of the “highest authority.” buildings it already has, “instead of knocking everything Social work Sen. Nancy Mork said she was “adamantly down and getting bigger and bigger.” opposed” to the destruction of the building because it Sen. Chris Stiles from the College of Liberal Arts and provided the relatively sm all college with a place for Sciences agreed, saying, “We need to pay tribute to the students to meet. ^ historical aspects we already have.” There are currently 272 undergraduate and 430 graduate Phase II of the Hayden Library expansion is scheduled for students enrolled in the School of Social Work. development in 1991 or 1992. Phase I of the expansion, the “I’m opposed to building another library,” Mork said, Hayden Underground Building, was completed earlier this adding that she felt the University should spend its money on projects other than new buildings. year. West Hall, located across West Lawn from the library, is The resolution passed by last year’s Senate stated that the the last remaining building of what used to be the “quad,” ASU administration “should not pursue a goal of capital consisting of North, South, East and West halls. expansion at the expense of effective education.” LJO U T Ç hell ... r e a d th e j t ^ t e P veçç. r T | e In te rn a tio n a l A d van tag e -L E A R N § Basic Spanish, French, Arabic, Japanese, or Russian in just'ajb ed is! New intensive conversational courses. Day and Evening Classes THE ALEXANDRO V INSTITUTE „ 947-0404 By Appointment Onfy \ l J You’ve Got W hat It Takes! BLOOD PLASMA Your blood plasm a goes to accident and burn victim s and is used fo r hem ophiliacs who w ould otherw ise suffer from uncontrolled bleeding. You áre a life-saving source . . . It’s healthful, safe and easy. Plus your can earn $115 plus a month. Enjoy watching m ovies w hile you donate. PLEASE C ’MON IN TODAY AND PICK UP YOUR $5 BONUS BY MENTIONING THIS AD INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? YOU SHOULD KN O W YOUR LÉGAL RIGHTS! •F R 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 BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS P erson al Injury Lawyers DON T GET HURT TWICE 1 2 1 2 43§ (4 6 2 5 S. W endlerD r.,Suite I I I , Tempe) (Now D onors O nly) (May N ot Bo U sod W ith O thor B onusos) TEMPE PLASMA . 933 E. University ■■ _ _ 894-1338 ‘ HOURS M on-Thur 8 am -6 pm fhs s a t a a m -* pm Page 18 State Preis W edn«da£N ow m ber^22£ State secretary speaks on voter registration R ws By KELLY JAIN State Press Arizona Secretary of State Jim Shumway, speaking to about 25 students a t an ASU Young Democrats meeting Tuesday, said Arizona desperately needs to cut its voter registration period to 30 days before/the election. The current voter registration period is 50 days. Shumway said registering 30 days before the election would allow more people to vote because many change addresses. “Twenty-seven percent of Arizona’s population will change addresses in any given year,” he said. Secondly, people get more interested in the issues and are more inclined to register to vote as the election day comes closer, he said. V The 30-day registration bill will be proposed to the state Legislature in November, Shumway said. “ I think it will pass (nextrsesSion),” he said. Currently, the U. S. House of Representatives is considering a 30-day voter registration bill that would allow the shorter cutoff “in any and every case throughout the United States,” he said. The national legislation also proposes voter registration by mail, which means registration forms could be picked up at any public location and mailed, Shumway said. In addition, the legislation proposes agency-based registration, which means any government agency providing licensing would be required to provide voter registration forms. “That makes the whole registration voter process accessible to almost anyone, anywhere a t any time without making virtually any effort to get out there and do it,” Shumway said. rC D K SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR1 STUDENTS WHO NEED mCC MONEYFORCOURSE Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. • We have a data bank o f over 200,000 lu tin g s of scholarships, fellowships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding. • Many scholarships ate given to students based on th eir academ ic interests, career plans, fam ily heritage and place of residence. • There's money available for students who have been newspaper car­ riers, grocery clerks, cheerleaders, non-smokers . . etc. • Results GUARANTEED. CALL ANYTIME For A Free Brochure (800)346-6401 J i ] S p o rts E n te r ta in m e n t d v ertisin g » t^ o to g r a p h y e v i e w §5^ ^ ie n t n o ^T Shum way In February, Shumway wiU have worked in the secretary of state’s office for 10 years. He was appointed as Arizona’s 14th secretary of state in April 1988 after Gov. Rose Mofford took over after the impeachment of Evan Mecham. Shumway grew up in Tempe, graduated from Tempe High School and later attended ASU. Shumway began his career in 1961 with the Maricopa County Election Department. state press FULL SALON SERVICES READ IT Allure College o f Beauty o ffe rs com plete salon services fo r men, wom en and children. Services include haircuts, facials, perm s, m anicures, w axing and m orel All services are perform ed toy stu d en ts under e xp e rt supervision o f licensed in stru cto rs. •_ - and Halrcut $4.50 Perni $15.00 Manicure $4.50 Pedicure $8.00 M a tlsF a d a l $12.00 CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT! REAP... BRING IN THIS AO AND RECEIVE 1 0% OFF ANY SERVICE the benefits with C A R E E R C O LLEG E O F B E A U T Y 7730 E. M cDowell, S cottsdale F ountain Plaza » Fry’s C enter M-F 9:30a.m .-8 p m .; Sat 9:30 a.m .-5 p.m . State Press C lassifieds. (exp. 11-30-89) 9 4 9 -7 5 5 7 SPECIAL STUDENT FARES R o u n d tr ip fr o m CHICAGO. . . ....... .......$218 fK)RTLAND.......:J.........$198 ST. LOUIS.... ................ $158 MIAMI........ ................... $216 SEATTLE...... ..$218 DENVER........................$198 COLORADO SPRINGS.8198 SAN FRANCISCO...........$110 BOSTON.... ...................$248 P h o e n ix KANSAS CITY...............$148 MINNEAPOLIS..............$258 DALLAS...................... ...$114 ATLANTA.......................$238 NEW ORLEANS....... ......$198 i NEW YORK .............,....$208i ORLANDO......................$218 HOUSTON...................... $178 CLEVELAND........ . $228 Other Cities Available ■ B IL L A V E N U E T R A V E L L ittle Caesars P izza Through the Month o f O ctober T W O M E D IU M P IZ Z A S with cheese and 1 topping 966-6500 RESTRICTIONS APPLY. SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY. NICK’S KICKS PRODUCTIONS JARUG PROMOTIONS ASIAN READER THAI NEWSPAPER „ PRESENTS i (g n a t No Coupon Necessary Two Campus Locations To Serve You • , VALUABLE COUPON 1 W O L A R G E P IZ Z A S with cheese and 1 topping* • N.E. Corner Hardy and University .. ... 966-3181 • S.E. Corner Southern and M cC lintock......... 897-8114 I N T E R N A T IO N A L M U A Y T H A I K I C K B O X IN G ________ FIRST TIM E IN PHOENIX, AZ S A T . N O V /1 1 , 1 8 8 9 , 7 :0 0 P .M . PRIDE PAVILION 5220 W. Indian School Road (51st Ave.) Phoenix Tel. (602) 247-8326 For Ticket Info: 894-6778, Tempe 866-7042, Phoenix Phone Ahead for"Extra Quick*' Service Group Discounts Available YOUR CHOKE: • PIZZA!PIZZA’ • PanlPan!” • One o f Each! Extra toppm $s available a t ad d itio n al cost Valid only w ith coupon a t p articip atin s little Caesars ‘ Excludes e xtra cheese Expires 11-22-89 IQ 1 « 1 9 8 9 L ittle C aesar E n te rp ris e s, Inc 8 6 1 -2 2 1 2 ^ O pen Sunday - Thursday 11 A M -1 1 PM Friday — Saturday 11 A M - 1 PM ★ Page 13 Wednwday, November 8,1989 S tate Press ★ ★ LIM ITE D EN G A G EM EN T N O V . 8-11 ★ ★ ★ \f-' e lio « ' xoàv ^ H o ^ eC ° (GL\ ARRrriATFDmSTaDENTR o F » A R I Z O N A » S T A T E » UN I V E R S l T Y ^leratonTempe Kflsskxi Palms Hotel 60 EAST 5TH STREET, TEMPE. ARIZONA State Press Wedne^a^NovemberS^JW^ Page 14 Liberal Arts college elects new executive council members By KIMBERLY HARRIS State Praaa The College af Liberal Arts and Sciences selected its executive council members in an election held Tuesday. The newly elected officers are starting over because the council was inadequate last year, said Chris Styles, an Associated Students of ASU senator from the college. “Last year we had people that were elected for offices to put on their resumes,” he said, adding that the previous m em bers did not follow through with their ideas. “Eventually, the leadership vaporized.” The executive council is the representative of the college on campus and serves as a liaison between liberal arts students and ASASU. Walter Richter, who was elected president of the council in a run-off election with Justin Plummer, said he is prepared for the challenges and is ready to involve liberal arts students in the council’s decisions. Richter said one of his main objectives as president is “to be as easily accessible to the students as possible.” He added that he would like the programming of the council to benefit various groups on campus — not just liberal arts students. Other officers elected to council Tuesday were Lionel Estrada, executive vice president; Angela Barone, activities vice president; Gary Starikoff, public-relations vice president; Greg Edgar, treasurer; Jennie Lemon, faculty liaison ; and Bob Johnson, parliam entarian. Richter, who is also president of ASU’s Young Democrats, said his new role on the council will not interfere with his current duties. Johnson, who is president of the Arizona chapter of the Young Democrats, said there is no conflict of interest between the two groups, which are unrelated. The council will plan different events such as guest speakers and fund-raising concerts, Richter said. Richter and Estrada previously worked together as president and vice president, respectively, of Associated Students of Scottsdale Community College. “All of our council members have a lot of experience,” Richter said. the State Press will be on the stands when you get to campus. Rest easy... ; $2.00 oft MAJOR IN I Grease 'n Go's Valvollne Lube, Oil ft J Filter Service a P IZ Z A | 1355 S. McClintock | Tempe, 894-27S8 G o o d o n ly w ith c o u p o n . N o t v a lid w ith I Minor in Economics. At Domino’s Pizza you get the freshest custom made pizza at fantastic prices. Use the coupons below for even better savings. Call Domino’s Pizza today. PROFESSOR NOID® ■ V Valvoline P eo p le, w ho ¿ n o w u s e V alvolm e! OLD CHICAGO 5 3 0 , W. B r o a d w a y , T e m p e 9 2 1 - 9 4 3 V W ednesday College ID 2 for 1 Entree f e K U A fter 5 p.m . Featuring: Deep Dish Pizza, Fresh Pasta & Sauce Bar, a Selection of 115 Beers, Sports Tavern with 8 TVs, Salads, Sandwiches, Pasta Specialities WEEKEND SPECIALS V A LID AT A S U /T E M P E LO C A TIO N O NLY. N o c o u p o n n e c e s s a ry , ju s t a s k fo r th e w e e k e n d s p e c ia l. FRIDAY THURSDAY Original Extra-large one-item pizza and 4 Cokes « ONLY Original Medium two-item pizza ONLY $6.25 V a lid a ll day T h u rsd a y. N o c o u p o n ne ce ssa ry. ' d d itio n a l ite m s a v a ila b le to r 8 5 * e a ch * $9.99 V a lid a ll d a y F rid a y. N o c o u p o n ne ce ssa ry. ALL WEEK MIXED DOUBLES ANYONE? O n e M e d iu m C h e e s e P an P izza end AUTOGRAPHING O n e M e d iu m O rig in a l C h e e s e P izza $9.88 MarshalTrimble A d d itio n a l ite m s a re a v a ila b le f o ( $ i .2 5 e a c h fo r b o th p iz z a s . S u b je c t to a ll ap p lic a b le state and lo ca l taxes. A d d itio n a l ite m s a v a ila b le to r $1.25 e a ch . best-selling Arizonrauthor and humorist will be signing copies of his books, including the just-published ARIZONA: A CAVALCADE OF HISTORY THE PIZZA PEOPLE OF ASU River B ottom HOURS: 968-5555 11:00am -1 :30am Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 am -2:30am F ri.-S at. O u r d riv e is carry less th an $20.00. Lim ited d e live ry area to in au ra safety. © 1989 D om ino's P izza. 903 S. Rural Rd. 901 S. Mill Ave. (Tempo Center) ! $1.25” ] ! $1.00 $6.99 $ 9 .9 9 BOOKS, ETC. S o u th e r n ONLY $9.99 + tax for ONLY $6.99 -t- tax for an $1.25 OFF any Original $1.00 OFF any Medium an O riginal Extra-large one-item pizza and four Coke« One coupon per pizza. Not valid with any other offers or specials. Expires: 12-15-89 O riginal Medium two-item pizza and two Cokes. One coupon per pizza. Not valid with any other offers or specials. Expires: 12-15-89 Extra-large one or more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. Not valid with any other offers or specials. Expires: 12-15-89 Pan or O riginal one or mpre item pizza. One coupon per pizza. Not valid with any other offers or specials. Expires: 12-15-89 Saturday, Nov. 11 1-3 p.m. ’ Requests for autographed books may be made in advance and picked up at your convenience P ■ ttfr * wt 1«1 9 IS P TRP R■ ~ ■- 1— t~ mt *“ ^ J | 129 — S TP R B J^&JbjBct to all applicable state & local B ; " ■ ^ In c lu d e s all appicabto state ft^ocal t f t x j | w ,r n J^jncludes ad appficabto «tata ft local Ub l j NO W HÌRINCfÄT9Ö3 S."RURAL- 96Ï-5555 | Call 967-1111 for more details College Culture S U rtt N u Wednesday, November 8,1989 The Usual Suspects P ageJ^ C lassic Visiting the colony ASU V ‘O f M ice and M en’ aim s at th e heart IN HONG KONG Prince Charles and Princess Diana got an extravagant col­ onial welcome Tuesday as they began their visit to the British territory that has been shaken by the approach of Chinese rule in 1997. A 21-gun salute reverberated over Hong Kong’s famed harbor as the couple stepped off their plane to be greeted by Gov. Sir David Wilson and his wife. H ie welcome came despite a flare-up of anti-British sentiment this summer, when London made clear it will permit only a fraction of Hong Kong’s 5.7 million people to settle in Britain after the communist Chinese take over, Charles and Diana then boarded the governor’s yacht for the short trip across the harbor for an arrival ceremony that in­ cluded brightly colored lasers flashing across the sky, a variety show and a tradi­ tional Chinese fan dance. By SHARON KANEY State Press I Dafoe at Auschwitz ACTOR WILLEM DAFOE says he can­ not identify with the Greek prizefighter he plays in “Triumph of the Spirit,” an Auschwitz prisoner who survived the camp by fighting other inmates to death. He told Model magazine for its December issue that he met Salamo Arouch, the man the movie is based on, and found him to be different from the character he played. “The Salamo I know is not the Salamo of our story. To presume there’s any way you Can understand what people felt (in Auschwitz) is a little ludicrous. I just con­ fronted the action in the story,” he said. Dafoe, who played Jesus in “The Last Temptation of Christ” and a righteous FBI agent in “Mississippi Burning,” said Arouch cried when he returned to the camp in which his family died. The movie was filmed there. “ He told me that when he Survived the camps he felt like life was a gift, so I think he’s been devoted to the earthly pleasures ever since. He’s a successful businessman, and he’s proud of that,” Dafoe said. Oprah’s Place TALK SHOW STAR Oprah Winfrey will star in and co-produce a new half-hour ABC series, “Brewster Place,” based on her miniseries about black urban life in the late 1960s, ABC said Tuesday. The network said the new show, to prem iere in the spring next year, will begin production in March in Chicago, where she tapes her syndicated talk show. ABC said she will continue that weekday series. Keep the day job, chairman REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMIT­ TEE chairman Lee Atwater is shedding his chores long enough to play guitar and sing on a blues album with B. B. King, Isaac Hayes, Billy Preston and other artists. Atwater has slipped into Nashville about four times since September to work on the album on the Curb Records label, said record producer Fred Vail. “ I’m talking about long days, I’m talk­ ing about 10 to 14 hours in the studio,” Vail said. The album is expected to be finished by January. Atwater, campaign manager for Presi­ dent Bush in 1968, performed at the in­ augural ball and co-wrote one of the songs on the album with King. “He knows a great deal about this music, and he respects it totally,” Vail said. “He knows infinite details about old music and old records. When it comes to R & B, Lee is untouchable.” Still, Vail said, Atwater might do well to keep his day job. “He’s a good player but obviously he’s not B. B. King.” Blues guitarist King is best known for his hit single “The Thrill Is Gone.” . .. . t can be considered a triumph on both counts, “Of Mice and Men” proves to be a touching bit of theater, gracing the stage as both the first “home-grown” theater production to hit the Paul V. Galvin Playhouse, and as the last directoral effort by longtime faculty member Jam es Yeater. The play, which remains quite true to the John Steinbeck novel, follows the path of two m igrant farm hands who travel to the Salinas Valley in the 1930s. It is the story of two very different men whose symbiotic friendship stems from not-so-different needs. The dim-witted Lenny (Eddie Wedell) needs George (John Sankovich) to look after him. George needs someone to believe in his dreams, and Lenny fills that spot. It is a perfect symbiosis until Lenny unwittingly runs them into trouble. “Of Mice and Men” is a fairly low-key story that aims at the heart more than the head. And this production strikes home. Sankovich gives a strong performance, which (thankful­ ly) bears no resemblance to his most recent role in “Big River.’’ Wedell seems to perform, though, with a few too many remnants (particularly his manner of speech) of his lead role in “The Foreigner.” The acting, as a whole, is convincing and touching. Many of the cast seem to run into trouble with their dialects, and have minor diction and volume problems now and then. Performance highlights are manifested, rather, on the physical plane. Whether as jaunty farm workers, a suspicious boss, or a sensuous wife, the actors prove themselves to be comfortable and well-focused on stage. Yeater’s staging and David Barker’s fight choreography provide the well-honed vehicles for these talented performers. Eddie Wedell etera as Lennle In ASU Theatre’s “Of Mice end Men.’*:.;;''' The lofty bunk house &pd barn sets by Jeffrey Thomson are impressive. The river bank set seems too narrow and something the actors almost have to work around rather than on, but toe use of toe hydraulic lift in toe orchestra pit to raise and lower thé set is ingenious. Some beautiful sunset back-lighting, by Marc Riske, completes toe picture. Craig Everett’s sound effects are wonderfully real and subtle — they don’t blare at you from mysterious speakers somewhére in the house, like many ill-mannered effects do. All told, this production of “Of Mice and Men” is nothing new and nothing that will completely knock your socks off. But it’s every bit worth it’s weight. What it is is a classic treatm ent of a classic work that will forever remain a valuable piece of Americana. Bidding farewell to an ASU institution Yeater told him they’d be opening a brand-new theater in a few years. “I have drawings here that were shown to me by Dr. Gammage, who was the University president then,” Yeater n Thursday, ASU performed its first production in one insaid. “Grady Gammage was to be the cornerstone of a b stitution and will soon bid farewell to another. complex,” hie said. The proposed facility was to include ■ “Of Mice and Men,” by John Steinbeck, was toe first theater classrooms, music rooms and an outdoor band W ASU theater departm ent production to grace toe stage of shell, among other things. Yeater said that as the Universi­ the Paul V. Galvin Playhouse. ty began its rapid growth, space become sparse, and plans The show’s director, theater professor Jam es Yeater, for a theater complex were pushed aside. - will be retiring this sem ester after 31 years with the “It was frustrating. It has token a long, long time,” department. “The faculty perceives him as a m ainstay for the depart- Yeater said of acquiring the Galvin, which he calls an » ment, and he is,” said department chair Lin Wright. “He’s (hirivaled facility. “Of Mice and Men” is toe first theater production at toe Galvin that has not been imported by an been here from the begining.” outside organization. In fact, he has — there’s no one on toe faculty who has Yeater directed “Of Mice and Men” at the Lyceum in been with toe departm ent longer. 1965. “It was one of the first shows we did a t the Lyceum,” Don Doyle, who’s been with the departm ent 28 years, is he said. “It’S toe only show I’ve come back to. This is kind toe next runner-up. “I was a student here just after Jim Yeater came. I had him as an adviser. He directed me in a of the end of toe begining.” Although facility and staff were scarce in the early days, play. It was the first Shakespeare he had done here,” Yeater said,that the departm ent managed to produce as Doyle said. many shows per season as it does now. “We lived hand to Doyle described Yeater as the foundation of toe theater mouth. You got one play up and geared up for the next department. “It is his root that is down there and is the one,” he said. deepest,” he said. Doyle said that Yeater did much of the technical design­ Indeed, Yeater has witnessed more growth in toe depart­ ment than anyone. When Yeater came to ASU, upon receiv­ ing at that time. “He was a wonderful designer. We built toe sets in the basement of toe Lyceum: We had to build ing his doctorate at toe University of Illinois, toé theater them in sm all enough pieces to carry up toe stairs,” Doyle departm ent was combined with the departm ent of speech. said. “Carolyn Yeater usedxto wash toe costumes in her “I was the second person with a theater specialty. For home.” quite a few years it was a two-person departm ent,” he Yeater estim ated that he has directed approximately 60 said. productions at ASU and has acted in dose to 100, both on Frank (“Uncle Frank” ) Byers was the other theater campus and off. specialist at the time. “We gradually eased in faculty. Theater facilities and technical staff are not the only There was no support staff so we did all of our own things Yeater has watched grow over the years. “When I technical work,” Yeater said. first came here we had two students who majored with a n “When we first came we could seat about 60 people in emphasis in theater,” he said. Now the department is home folding chairs,” Yeater said of ASU’s all-purpose to more than 200 undergraduates and 35 graduate students. auditorium which housed plays, music concerts and even womens basketball games. “Then the plaster fell off of the The departm ent has gone from offering a combined degree in speech and theater to fine arts specialties in graduate balcony, and they condemned it. They came and closed it and undergraduate levels. “We’re pretty well on our way to down in one day. offering a doctorate. We’re now one of the larger theater “Until the completion of the Galvin, all of our other departm ents in the country,” Yeater said. theaters have been hand-me-downs,” he said. What is now Doyle said that Yeater’s retirem ent represents a loss to the Lyceum Theater originally was a boiler room for toe the department. “It’s a shame for the department to lose University. “Then it was used as a kind of (student) union an older person like Jim because he has so much building. After World War II it got turned into all kinds of knowledge. Students will not have the advantage of his things, psychology, education, student records,” he said. Gradually, as those departments found other homes around knowledge anymore,” hnsaid. Yeater said he hasn’t quite determined what he will do campus, toe theater department acquired the building and after retirem ent. “I may continue, now and then, to do bad it remodeled. some teaching because it’s been so rewarding,” he said. Don Dqyje remembers that when the Lyceum opened, By SHARON KANEY State Press M ■ V Comics by Bill Watterson The fa r Side Calvin and Mobbes by Garry Trudeau D oonesbury iju s r u m r m UHBRB THBHGU, TALK, MR.BILL. NO TOUCHING, NOPUFFING, IStOBAR! HAVE YOU BeeNfi'vB GONGTHROUGH 30L0LLYP0PS m rrm by Gary Larson m m m c is s 3 Ottonici# Features OW buied by U ngam i Prate Syndicate i I M S READING ASOVJT WOW COOUTlESS SPEOES ARE. BEIHG PUSHED TOWARD EXTINCTION 81 MAWS DESTRUCTION OF FORESTS. HI, BILLY BOY! SORRY I'M LAW' Statt P ita Wednesday, November 8,1989 P a g e iô ^ ITS OKAY, BABY. IFIT GOBROUGH, I'MHBRB FOR YOU. \ FOR YOU! otaumt by Mike Ritter Ivory Towers WHY PAY MORE? EXPERT REPAIRSOn ALL MAKES D IS C O U N T B IC Y C L E Your Fam ily H air Salon next to ASU at Lemon & Rural just behind Circle K on Lemon WALK-INS WELCOME CUT SPEC IA L $ jd a AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (A P)—An Air Force Academy cheerleader was kicked off the squad for swinging a chicken by its head during halftime at a football game against Army, officials said. H ie cadet, who wasn’t identified, also was ordered by the school to perform 100 hours of public service at the Humane Society* said academy spokesman Col. Mike Wallace on Monday. Officials at the academy and the Humane Society said Monday they received several calls from spectators, faculty members and cadets about m istreatm ent of the birds. The chickens were released on the field by West Point cadets during halftime events before 52,000 spectators. Both are “alive and scratching around the back yard” of the academy’s game warden until a home can be found for them, Wallace said. 9 6 6 -0 8 4 2 PERM S P E C IA L $ 2 4 5 0 R eg. *27“ In c lu d e s P ro fe s s io n a l In c lu d e s C u t & S ty le C u t a n d F ree S h a m p o o ! AN A D D ITIO N A L $20 o ff any SALE B IC YCLE T im e R e g u la r $ 2 9 .9 5 J $ 1 4 .9 5 4 8 T -0 4 7 0 a atom 149 5 N . H a y d e n R d ., S te . D 8 (Across from W orld G ym ) i id c TUNE-UPS p lu s p a rts E xp. D ec. 3 1 , 1989 w ith th is c o u p o n Appearing Phil in The Located at the entrance of the Wed. Nov. 1 2 -1 Thirteen meats and three c fresh daily bread have made favorite for over 17 years. It s a steal - 50« o ff o f Schloizsky's small O riginal sand­ wich and 75« on a medium or tegular O riginal sandwich P Small Original 501 Not valid with any other otter, j Expiraa. Nov. 14,1989 (SclilotzsKy’s ) Medium ! Original Sandwich«« Soupa * Salad» Tetnpe Village Square Corner o f Priest and Southern Tempe Center 18 E. IÒDI Street Tempe 2 (Back of Tetnpe Center) 968-0056 „ OFF Not Valid with any I other offer. Expires Nov. 14,1989 | Sports fû ts P lW S S ___________________ ________________________________________ Wednesday, November 8 , 1 9 8 9 Stanford takes first in Pac-10 By JOEL HORN State Presa Here’s a new statistic for you: The Stanford University football team is the most injured squad in the Pac-10, according to the San Jose Mercury News. The Cardinal has started 43 different student-athletes this season. “We don’t get any badges for that, I guarantee you,’’ Stanford Head Coach Dennis Green said. The Cardinal (2-4 Pac-10, 2-7 overall) faces ASU (2-2-1,5-3-1) at 7 p.m. Saturday at Sun Devil Stadium. G reen , who w as h ead co ach a t Northwestern in 1981-85, was named Big Ten Coach of the Year in 1982. He is in his first year as Stanford’s head coach but Was a Cardinal assistant in 1977,1978 and 1980. “ Stanford has an extrem ely strong tradition,” he said. “I think we have the capability to recruit some of the finest players in the country.” In the 1970s, the Cardinal compiled a 70-40-4 overall record, including four bowl appearances. In the 1980s, Stanford is 43-64-2 as has played in only one postseason game Scott — the 1986 Gator Bowl. “We’re optimistic about the future,” Green said. “We had a fine recruiting class last year, and we think we will this year.” The Cardinal’s top 1989 recruit was Bob Whitfield, a 6-foot-7,300-pound offensive left tackle. He chose Stanford over Michigan, Notre Dame, UCLA and Miami (Fla.)'. “Bob’s playing real well,” Green said. “He has played every down of every game — that’s adm irable.” The Cardinal has rushed for only 612 yards on 289 carries, averaging only 2.1 yards-per-carry and 68 yards-per-game — last in the Pac-10. Junior fullback Jon Volpe, a 1986 graduate of Tucson’s Amphitheatre High School, rushed for 1,027 yards in 1968 and was. named All-Pac-10. He had arthroscopic knee surgery eárlier this fall and has been limited to 120 yards. “1 think any team expects its best players to be there,” Green said. “Jon is a tough, hard-nosed player that has had bad luck this year.” Junior tailback Charlie Young, who played slotback and was Stanford’s leading Volpe ___________ Fggg_17 for injuries receiver with 43 catches last season, has been slow to recover from offseason arthroscopic knee surgery and has not played this year. In addition, redshirt freshman tailback Jay Jay Lasley and senior fullback Scott Eschelman have spent time on the shelf due to injuries this fall. Redshirt freshman tailb ack G alen F o ster, a converted cornerback, and sophom ore fullback Tommy Vardell will start against the Sun Devils. Six-foot-6 junior split end Ed McCaffrey leads the Cardinal in receiving, with 45 receptions for 756 yards (a 16.8-yard average) and four touchdowns. Junior quarterback Brian Johnson, who has completed 65 of 108 passes for 749 yards and two touchdowns, will start Saturday. He has shared playing tim e with redshirt freshman Steve Smith, who has thrown for 1,347 yards, seven touchdowns and nine interceptions — the only interceptions Stanford signal-callers have thrown allyear. The Cardinal is 0-7 in games Smith has started. , “We maybe asked (Smith) to do too much,” Green said. Junior left inside linebacker Jono Tunney is the Stanford leader in tackles, with 86 (54 unassisted), and quarterback sacks, with five for 37 yards .in losses. Outside linebacker Rob Hinckley, a 1988 secondteam All-American, has been injured. But the senior has returned to the lineup, and Green said he is playing well. The Cardinal’s secondary is one of the most experienced, talented groups in the P ac-10. S en io r stro n g s a fe ty Rob Englehardt is second on the team in tackles, with 66, and junior free safety Kevin Scott is third, with 57. Scott, who graduated from St. Mary’s High School in Phoenix in 1987, was moved Green from co rn erb ack and h as 13 pass deflections. “Kevin is playing some solid football,” Green said. “We think he’s one of the top defensive backs in the conference.” Left defensive tackle Lester Archambeau, a preseason All-American selection, has been playing with a banged-up knee. The ^foot-5,260-pound senior ranks fourth on the team in tackles, with 52, and has four tackles for 17 yards in losses. Sophomore right cornerback Albert Richardson has three interceptions and senior left cornerback Alan Grant, a secondteam All-Pac-10 pick in 1988, has six pass deflections and 38 tackles. Stanford, which has scored only 19 points in the first quarter this season, upset UCLA, 17-14, last week in Palo Alto. Green said defeating the Bruins — and having some healthy bodies will enable the Cardinal to perform well in their final two games. “We’re hoping it will take some pressure off of us,” he said. B ad m in to n ’s R eid y re a d y fo r w o rld w id e w ins By MONIQUE HEBERT Contributing writer Last week, it was Moscow. After Christmas, it’s England. Then Austria, possibly Tokyo. But, best of all is Barcelona, Spain. These destinations are not usually part of an ASU sophomore’s extracurricular activities. But they are for Tom Reidy, an ASU badminton player who is winning his way to the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. “I like winning,” Reidy said. “It really bothers me when I lose to guys that I should beat. I wanted to win so bad at the Olympic Festival.” And he did win. During the July competition in Stillwater, Okla., Reidy captured two gold medals in the mens singles and doubles competition. “The Olympic Festival is an indicator of who is eligible for the real Olympics,” ASU badminton Coach Guy Chadwick said. “And Tom is a number one contender.” As a result, he is a member of the U. S. Olympic Team, a squad of 32 men and women chosen by the United States Badminton Association. “Hie cream of the U. S. team goes to international tournaments,” Reidy said. Last week, Reidy and three team m ates flew to Moscow for a tournament. It was the second time he competed in Russia. Reidy and athletes from 42 countries will compete in an Austrian tournament in February. The finalists will fly to Tokyo to compete for the Thomas Cup, which is equivalent of tennis’ Davis Cup. “The traveling is hell,” the sophomore said. “People don’t understand when I tell them that, but all I see are stadiums and gyms.” However, Reidy is not a stranger to world travel. Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., his Irish parents moved to Limerick, Ireland, when he was 6 years old. He was introduced to badminton a year later. Reidy said that if he had stayed in Brooklyn, he would not be playing badminton today. “Kids here (United States) pick up baseball or football,” Reidy said. “Back there (Ireland), kids either start kicking a soccer ball around or they play badminton. In Ireland, badminton is as big as football is out here.” From the beginning, Reidy was a champion player in his age group. He said that he was offered several contracts to play professionally after graduating from high school in 1986. Instead, Reidy took toe Summer off to visit relatives in New York. Ted Helweg, then president of the U.S.B.A., convinced him to stay in America, Reidy said. “At first, I was shocked at how complacent the U. S. is about badminton,” Reidy said. “So I didn’t play much. I bummed around for a year and played soccer with the L.A. Heat.” The L.A. Heat is a Los Angeles soccer team which includes such notable players as rock singer Rod Stewart. Reidy said Martin French, the current U.S.B.A. president, restored his interest in badminton. > A second incentive to play, Reidy said, was the fact that badminton became an Olympic sport in January. In toe 1988 Olympics, badminton was played as an exhibition sport. In toe fall of 1988 Reidy enrolled at ASU, but could not participate in badminton because of his professional status as a soccer player. “I came to ASU because it’s the only m ajor university that has a scholarship program for badminton,” the 20-year-old physical education m ajor said. Reidy was cleared to play this season and Chadwick said he has performed well for the Sun Devils. “ He won firs t place in mens singles and doubles a t toe St. Louis Classic,” Chadwick said. “ Reidy has taken over toe number one spot on toe team .” ASU volleyball to change lineup By VICKI CULVER State Press In a final attem pt at seasonal success, the ASU volleyball team is changing its lineup for the third tim e this season. After losing to Washington State and Washington last weekend, Sun Devil Coach Patti Snyder said she needs to try something new with the current combinations. The plan, Snyder said, consists of putting the two best players, Mindy Gowell and Noelle Fridrich, on the left side to hit. The change will mean giving freshman Jennifer Helfrich full setting responsibility. “We’re trying to give people playing time for next year,” Snyder said. “ (Ex-setter) Noelle is one of our best hitters and the best athlete on the team , but it’s time to give Jennifer Helfrich that chance.” Against Washington State, ASU was defeated 11-15, 15-13, 15-11, 12-15, 15-5. Although the Cougars are the Pac-10 last place team, Snyder said they played like a far more talented one. “They played outstanding,” Snyder said. “Neither our record nor their record is indicative of actual talent. I think that was more of an incentive for Washington State.” One of the factors which sparked the loss, Snyder said, was the Cougar fans. “They had a nice full gym, and the fans got crazy,” she said. “On the road we don’t have more than 10 fans clapping for us and it’s hard to get our adrenalin going.” The long travel, Snyder said, was not a factor in the loss because it allowed a lot of time for relaxation. She said using travel as an excuse for losing is a poor scapegoat. On Saturday, ASU lost to UW, 9-15,15-5, 17-15, 15-3. Snyder said the Huskies’ setter Melinda Beckenhauer dom inated that match. “She had our blockers guessing where she was going to hit,” Snyder said. “She set the middle on us like no one I have ever seen. “Over and over again she gave our hitters some great swings. She was the absolute difference in the m atch.” With only four games left in the season, Snyder said the 12-16 Sun Devils are going to focus on individual improvement. She Said even if ASU was to win its next four victories, the team ’s chance of making it to the NCAAs is nil. “It has been really trying for the team ,” she said. “We are capable of playing some good volleyball —we’ve proven that, but it’s kind of like a catch-22 —we’re searching for the perfect lineup, so it’s hard to hone in on consistency.” B e rg Pase 18 S tate P reis Wedn«da£N2^®¡¡¡*2£l¿J22¿ TONIGHT SuncH K je n s ta d /S ta te P ress The Sig Alph Lions intramural flag football team: (Bottom row, left to right) Steve Dark, Rob Slat­ tery, Rick Landry, Ted Petersen. (Top row, left to right) Jason Radovan, Tim Booker, Scott McRoberts, Jim Klrke, Jonathon Dice. (Not pictured) John Bridgeford, Dan S uddell. ASU’s Sig Alph Lions to play for national championship in Bayou “After what happened last year, a lot of people came together and kind of brought the fraternity back together,” he said referring to an attack made on two black students by members of the SAE fraternity last semester. The SAE members mistook the students for suspects in an earlier argument with an SAE member and a female student. The attack ignited a series of civil rights protests across the ASU campus. “There was so much turmoil going on at that time,” Landry said. “At a time when it would have been easy to fall apart, the house as a whole has now come together to work as a team .” The Lions and their fellow SAE fraternity members hope to raise as much as $4,000 through fund raising events and family and corporate donations. “The team is having a couple of car washes along with one single big event with the whole fraternity to raise $1,000,” he said, By KEITH ROSENHAGEN State Press 00 PITCHERS till 11:00 PM (then $2.00 for the rest of the night) DRINKS till 11:00 PM ANY COIN ANY DRINK THIS SUNDAY 90 M IN U T E S O F A N Y C O IN p £ The Sig Alph Lions will be the sole flag football team representing ASU in the N atio n al C o lleg iate F la g F o o tb all Championship Dec. 28-31 in New Orleans. This competition, sponsored by the USF&G, is an event that allows the best intram ural flag football team s from colleges around the country to compete in New Orleans the week before the Sugar Bowl. However, these teams are doing a lot more than merely playing another flag football game. All proceeds from the tournament will be contributed to the Miami Project/M arc Buoniconti fund to cure paralysis. The Lions are excited to play in the USF&G Flag Football Championship and it has also offered their fraternity, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, a chance to join together once again, said Rick Landry, the team captain. T u rn to In tra m u ra l« , p a g e 19. For the big story see P&G ad in ISTS, today's Æ Ê k CHEM LIFE SCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS paper CHEMICAL ...TheWorldisVburs! J H from 8 - 9 :3 0 PM its ANY COIN ANY DRINK. Then join Max for after hours till 3:0 0 AM AND EXPLORE OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT ...LeMondeestàVtous! ...DieW* ist Dein! ...WKiBOM)! PROCTERft GAMBLE rr WORLD THE N1 This week we're conducting our Graduate School Seminar at all of our 135 Centers nationwide. MBA/GMAT FOR SALE! H a P |i R o un d trip fro m L os A ng e les 9 1 9 E a s t A p a c h e B lv d . (6 0 2 ) 9 2 1 -9 7 7 6 San Francisco Honolulu New York Costa Rica London Tahiti Rio Auckland Nairobi Johannesburg $ St $ M* $ 998 $ 370 $ 4M $ *59 $ ISO SIM S $1979 $1369 Restrictions apply. Add-on fares available to L A . W e ll do everything by m ailll CaH for FREE student travel catalog! Council Travel 14515 VENTURA BID «250 SHERMAN OAKS, CA 91403 800-888-8786 Graduate Admission Seminar C H ands BOOKSTORE hanging Browse through our 3 floors of: • New & Used Books * • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette * S e ll o r T ra d e your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 Mill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 D isco v er h o w S ta n ley H . K ap lan can h e lp y o u sc o re y o u r b e s t o n th e G M A T an d look y o u r b e st o n y o u r b u sin e ss sch o o l a p p li­ c a tio n . Thursday November 16 6 p.m. 1000 E. Apache Blvd. S uite 219 • Tem pe Call us to d a y to re s e rv e a se a t: 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 • STANLEYH. KAPLAN ■SmTake Kaplan OrTakeYourOunc es Page 19 Wednesday, November 8,1989 Intramurals raise money for cause By KEITH ROSENHAGEN State Press ASU intram ural flag football’s one goal this November is to raise funds for the USF&G drive to cure paralysis. The same cause collected over $4,000 from ASU last year, said Bob Gildersleeve, assistant director of intram ural sports and officiating. “We’ve been in the top 10 among fundraisers in the last two years,” Gildersleeve said. “Our realistic goal is to be the school who raises the most amount of funds.” Those participating in the fundraiser are flag football team s, students involved in other intram ural sports and other special events sponsored by the Student Recreation Complex. “ik e USF&G Flag Football Tournament is a special tournam ent offered because football is so popular,” Gildersleeve said. Another special event will be the aerobic exercise-a-thon to be held Sunday, Nov. 12 from 2 to 5 p.m. in the red gym at the rec center. , , The aerobics-a-thon will include direction from eight different instructors as well as prizes and raffles. Three passes (worth $15 each) will be given away to the top three fundraisers for their next aerobics session. Those interested must pick up pledge sheets in the lower level of the rec center. Gildersleeve said there will be a “Touchdown Ceremony” in late November to recognize all pledge contributors. Anyone who raises $25 or more will be awarded with a T-shirt inscribed with the USF&G logo. The top fund-raising flag football team in the country will be awarded an all-expense paid trip to New Orleans to watch the Sugar Bowl, Gildersleeve said. Intramurals SK I WITH AIT— AND STA Y . C o n tin u e d fro m page 1 8. He added that he was not sure what the event will be, but the creative effort the team and SAE members are putting out is impressive. “At the beginning of the (qualifying) tournament we watched a few films on paralysis,” he said “We were really shocked that the most prominant figures hit with paralysis were college-age students.” The films brought home the message of what the USF&G fund raiser is all about, he said. “It made us feel lik e‘hey, les, fast service. C all: 1-800-323-8113, e xt. $ 80 0 to $ 2 ,0 0 0 cred it lin e. U se our G old 2 33 . (A Z-C A N ). C ard fo r C hristm as. N o credit check, everyone approved. F re e catalog. 24 M O DEL SEARCH M a g a z in e --F re e hours. 1 -8 00-638-3302. (A Z-G A N ). screening 3 89-6618. A LPH A ZE TA presents Lecture S eries ’89 N E E D C R E D IT? F S U G old C ard. $15 00 Novem ber 9 , A G 150. 12:30 pm ., C onnie plus cred it lin e. Cash advance a vailab le. Cow an, V N B V .P . Agioan division. 4 pm ., No Jam es P atterson U S D A M arket S ervice. S ecured, unsecured V IS A /M C . A s seen on Everyone w elcom e. T V . 1 -6 02-420-1486. (A Z-C A N ). A TTE N TIO N P A R E N TS ) Teach your child to read anything. M oney-back guarantee! w ill house s it or ren t furnished apartm ent S elf-addressed stam ped envelope for fre e in Tem po January and February. House inform ation or $ 25 fo r com plete m aterials. exchange possible. C a ll Novem ber 6 -8 , Jea n ie 942 -8 43 0 evenings. E lle r, P .O . B ox 2 5 , A rlington, A rizona 8 53 22 . (A Z-C A N ). Imagine. C H R IS T IA N secu rity dep o sit. No turndow ns. R E TIR E D U S U couple frorft Logan, U tah S A FA R I R E S O R T, S cottsdala/C am elback ID IO T -Y E A H you, fo e one w ho forgot th e R oad, offers $ 49 S undevil R ate to r ASU special day. It’s not too la te . S end a fan s. C a ll, 945 4)72 1 . balloon boquet. 2 73 -9 71 0 . S IL V E R LAKE C arriage presents Rom an­ FA S H IO N M O D E LS needed. C a ll Linda a t tic C arriag e R ides in O ld Tow n S cottsdale/ (6 0 2 ) 2 42 -7 87 9 fo r m ore inform ation. E xclusive 5th A venue. $ 2 5 /2 , $ 3 0 /4 . 3 81-0576. H A N G -G LID E! O ur g en tly sloping m an­ m ade train in g h ill. S afe and exciting. Fly a ll day. W indsports 897 -7 12 1 . AUTOMOBILES Imagine a state law that drives pregnant teenagers away from safe, confidential medical H AR VA RD B U S IN E S S School w ants you! care. Proven tecniques fo r accep tan ce to a top 1980 M Q B R oadster, m aroon, black top ranked M BA program . For m ore inform er and in terio r. M in t. 3 5 ,0 0 0 m iles, $ 3,5 00 . tio n , send self-addressed stam ped enve­ 9 91-0329. Imagine a state law that makes abortion impossible for many pregnant girls and forces them lope to: B usiness S uccess, D epartm ent into teenage motherhood. 8 4059-1044. Imagine a state law that devastates the future of young women by stunting their education $ 1 0 0 fo r 1 hour. H illary , 9 21-2269. 103, P .O . Box 1044, O rem . U tah 1984 M U STA N G LX , g reat shape, m ust sell as soon as possible $ 38 00 /o ffer. 3 50-0428. and career opportunities. H O T A IR B alloon rid es, $ 60 to r Vz hour, or LIFE IN S U R A N C E id ea l fo r students. Term life insurance a t reasonable rates. C a ll M anny Ellsw orth, 2 75-3410, Stop imagining. liM [ S \\\| P a re n ta l co n sen t o r n otification s ta tu te en jo in ed P a re n ta l c o n se n t o r n otification sta tu te n o t generaS y enfo rced These law s are real. The Am erican Civil Liberties Union fights laws that violate a teenager's right to privacy and equality - laws that violate a teenager's right to choose betw een childbirth and abortion. Im agine the difference w e can m ake with your help. W rite us. A C LU R e p ro d u c tiv e F reed o m P ro je c t, 1 3 2 W est 4 3 rd S tre e t, N ew Y o rk , N Y 10036 conditioning, red d o th in terio r w ith v elv e ­ teen s ea t covers and m atching dash m at, top rack w ith tilt steering. S harp lookingll N eed som eone to take over paym ents w ith tran sfer o f ow nership. C a li 9 66-2449 a fte r T h o rb e c k e ’s Gym 966-6621 |^ $ 1 2 per month plus $50 one­ tim e m em ber­ ship fee. BSSSSSSá P a re n ta l c o re e n ! o r n o tificatio n sta tu te enfo rced 1988 R E D Chevy m ini-blazer, g reat A M / FM sterio w ith high qu ality sound, cool a ir 3pm . *71 B U G , excellen t in terio r/exterio r. G ood tires, r e b u ilt engine/low miles. $ 2 ,2 0 0 /o ffe r. 966 -5 62 1 . ’84 FO R D Tem j>o G L, 4-door, autom atic transm ission, 48K m iles. Asking $ 2 ,4 0 0 . 921 -2 62 4 , leave m essage. Page 22 SM lPlW Wednesday, November ft 1989 MOTORCYCLES MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ________ 1981 H O N D A C M 400. V ery low m iles. E xcellent condition. M any extra». M uet H E R P E S , S H IN G LE S , cold sore "b reak eeHl $47S /b— t o ffe r. 829 -9 01 7 out d o m in atio n " tap e. P roven effective. 1986 HO NDA Inte rcep to r. I need m oney quick, asking $ 18 00 or m ake m e an o ffer. C hrte, hom e 8 94 -8 45 2 , w ork 921-3486. APARTMENTS S EE K IN G PEO PLE: ta k e over deposit fre e , tw o bedroom , tw o bath, fo r spring sem ester. W alk to cam pus. 9 66-8033. w ork unsupervised. H onest and depend­ leg e n d ...G eronim o, W arshieW , Lightning, evening hostess. WiH tra in . Apply in ab le . $3.75/h o u r. A ble to w ork Tuesday, self- person, M onday-Friday, 2-5 pm or by W ednesday, and Thursday, 11 am to 6 pm . A pply in person a t P layer's C hoice in the C ornerstone M all. appointm ent: 5101 N orth 44th S tre et (44th a ll catalog. M atthew N o zie , P .0 , Box 642, and C am eiback). 952 -0 58 5 . P ersonality Fo rt A pache, A rizona 8 59 26 . Discount for A S U studente. an d Arizona u tilitie s . 1 /10th m ile from ASU. 9 8 6 8 7 0 4 .____________________ . bedroom s, $ 3 3 0 to $ 4 0 0 . S unrise A part­ R O S SIG N O L S K IS and poles bindings, TO one m onth fre e! O n e, tw o m ents, 1014 E a s t S pence, 9 6 6 6 9 4 7 . V IO E O S FO R S ale - Factory n e w -1 7,000 M ust SSM. 2 78-7886, BIN, leave m essage. plus title s , m ost under $ 2 0 - Kids videoe- C Y C LE /SC O O TE R Insu rance. Low rages , R eleases- m onthly paym ents , n e ar A S U . F ree quota­ P erfect G ifts- tions, c all P hoenix Insurance Agency, 1-800-V ID E O -29, (A Z-C A N ). Features- C la s s ic s - S p o rts - E ducationd F ree and catalo g . T o ll-free, 8 29-3070. COMPUTERS TOWNHOMES / CONDOS__________ B ED R O O M , 2 b ath, C R U IS E S H IP jobs. A ll positions available. 2 44-1022. P A R T-TIM E . M A KE $ 75 0 this w eekend! G uaranteed book 381 -0 47 7 . gives instructions. R eceive free inform ation, w rite: N o£ie P ublications, Box M IN IB U N D C LE A N IN G system . Com m er­ ASU c ia l, P ark V illag e, C urry/ re s id e n tia l. T u rn k e y includes W ashW agon, equipm ent, train ­ CaN P hil or P atty a t 6 71 -5 55 0 , 9 47-7132. in g , advertising, support, protected te rrit­ 6 0 2 -4 4 6 0 4 3 2 . (A z-C an). P A R TN E R S H IP : O W N a part o f a travel agency. As little as $ 3 ,5 0 0 . Num erous 2 O R 3 bedroom condo in Q uesta V id a. benefits, discounts, train in g , and much W asher/D ryer. $575/m onth. C all Rose, m ore. 602 -9 47 -8 8 77 . (A Z-C A N ). 9 6 4 -7 81 2 o r 8 3 6 0 5 0 0 . ution m onitor, 2 0 m egabite harddisk, m ath M S /m ouse 1200-m odem , T .C . T IR E D O F w orking fo r som eone else? HAYDEN SQ U A R E delu xe condo. P A R T-TIM E , FLE X IB LE hours. $5/hour. M aking phone calte/no selling. Com pany Eggington’s Com m ercial P roperties, In c. 9 6 6 2 3 0 1 . fra n c h is e C olleg e. Ready to m ove in . $60Q /m onth. w asher/dryer. $500/m onth. 9 6 6 0 9 6 2 . 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 . Alm a School Rd. Mesa O w n your ow n business w ith breakthrough Turbo-C , M S -C . AN w ith original boxes, bedroom tri-le ve l. A vailab le January 1. n a il product! Earn up to $50K a yea r, w ith D E LIV E R Y PEO PLE needed, ow n Irene- m anuals, disks. Also P C T001S Dbase III R eserve now. 9 4 6 0 5 1 8 . under portation, part-tim e. E arn up to $10/hour. $200 investm ent. C a ll D enei, 8 31-5366. P ER SO N A L CARE attendants- to assist disabled students an d /o r d aily w ith living personal care needs. Experience preferred byt not required. 12 hours o f trainin g w ill be provided. C ontact Disabled S tudent Resourced a t 9 6 6 1 2 3 4 . Ask for Jim H em auer. R E D R O B IN now hiring experienced lin e pantry pre positions. Apply a t 1539 North S cottsdale Road, M onday-Friday, 9 am -11 am , 2 pm -4 pm . 3 plus Q basic plus e xtra 20 m egabite hard­ A fternoon and evening shifts availab le. P leasant w orking conditions. C a ll M r. W ellington at refrig erato r, dishw asher, pool. C lose to a t P apago LAR G E S T com pany o f its kind in th e Southw est. w asher/dryer, ity a s d e a r as a laser p rinter. $400/o ffer. coprocessor, N BN HO TDO G restaraunt across from Apply now fo r sum m er jobs. 5 82-5352, ext. C 4. in te rio r condition, near A S U . Pool» yard, A T& T 6300 C om puter S ystem , high resol­ a re Sky H arbor A irport- w eekday lunch hours. 2 45 37 , Tem ps, A rizona 85285-4537. 2 2 B ED R O O M 2 bath condo, excellent 491 -9 21 2 a p p e a ra n c e wiH allow you to earn a n e xcep tio n al large ory. $ 9 ,5 0 0 com plete. Shade Show er, 2 4-P IN LQ Toshiba P 321S L P rinter. Q ual­ w ith 8 21 -9 48 1 , Fendy, 4 31-1134. N ew H istorical- c o n ce rn im portant. IF Y O U art* looking fo r a n opportunity that incom e w hile helping people c a ll T .J ., too. Just like new ! O nly used tw ice! $ 20 0 or best offer! C a ll 968-2475. s ize s , CLEA VER envelope fo r free Tem ps, A dult a addressed stam ped 4 07 81 , 9 67-1875. ’8 6 H O N D A E lite 2 5 0 Runs greet. $ 75 0. G AM E R O O M attendant, m ust be ab le to Wear square fe e t, pool, laundry. $ 47 5, includes Box UP takes. 844-8236 accepting applica­ T-SHIRTS: C enter, 852 74 . grey, flaw teee conditio n . 2 ,2 0 0 $ 3 ,7 0 0 . R on, 838 -8 87 7 .________ *82 Y AM AH A 186. R ed , like new , w as in C O R K 'N tions fo r evening cocktail w aitress and APACHE (A livem u th erfo rya). M A R Y KAY C osm etics. A ll products 3 0% sto rag e, 9 00 m iles . Im m aculale. First $ 375 HELP WANTED S PA C IO U S 2 bedroom , 2 b ath , over 1,000 o ff. Sun E ssentials 4 0 % o ff. C all now. - HELP WANTED C onfidential. For m ore inform ation, R evs’ 1988 H O N D A H urricane 6 00 . Black and m iles, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 9 21-7827. disk, $85 0/o ffe r. 9 66-7120. IB M C O M PA TA B LE X T-turbo , 640K , TU R N -K E Y HOMES FOR RENT 20M B , 5W D D , m onitor, p rinter, m odem softw are, gam e board, m ore. $ 1, 100/o ffe r. 9 90-2495. P ER FEC T S tu d e n ts /fac u ity 5 .0 , o n ly. o n ly $135. S p ecial o rder. Professional Im age Com puters 1000 E. Apache S uite 119> 9 21-1129. V E N D IN G business. E X C E LLE N T PAY! Hom ew orkers needed! O ur directory has over 8 0 com panies who in stall- do firs t food o rd e r- toad m achines. need assem blers, w holesalers, distribu­ SM ALL 2 bedroom house, 5 blocks from C om plete start-up m anual provided with tors. S end S .A .S .E . to: D irecto ry, P .O . Box -cam pus. G raduate couple preferred. No o n-site trainin g. W e w ork fo r your success. 2 68 6, H untington, W V 2 5 7 2 6 2 6 8 6 . (A ZC A N ). Locations pets. $400, w ater paid . 9 67-4059. W ORD We advise on th e w quipm ent- locate and guaranteed. 1 -8 0 6 8 3 6 2 2 4 6 , e x t. 63. Call Investm ent ing fo r people in A rizona. Earn substantial part-tim e, fu ll-tim e incom e. P eople desir­ JOBS AVAILABLE NOW ing for dependable receptionists, clerical, or data entry personnel sales position and entrepreneurial m inded ■3 BLO CKS to ASU. G raduate student REAL ESTATE p re fe rre d . C a ll 9665539 or 3 91-1851. w ants quiet C hristian room ates. Large, lovely hom e, 2 bedroom s available now. 2 B ED R O O M condos, Papago P ark S h are bath, 2 separate BICYCLES V illa g e. $575 to $700/m onth. Bob Bullock, R ealty E xecutives, 9 96-2992. $175/m onth W to % leave m essage. B E N O TTO 8 00 12-speed. Shim ano aero B AR G A IN P R IC E ! 3 D E P E N D A B LE com ponents, phone F E M A LE $ 2 1 7 plus % utilities. Q u iet com plex, convenient location. A vailable im m ediate­ B IK E S , W H Y pay m ore? M oving super FU R N IS H E D 2 bedroom m obile hom e. 1 ly. H eather, 9 21-8419. s ale, block bikes, new bikes. ’8 8 -’89 m odels. Discount for cash. B icycle S tore, 1034 E ast Lem on 9 66-6070. to ASU, low lo t rent. FE M A LE bedroom patio hom e. Assum e, no qualifying, 9Vfe% FHA loan. CaN FURNITURE E velyn, 831 -1 15 2 , W ym an sleeper sofa, $ 10 0; upholstered chairs, $ 12 each; rocking c h air, $20; program m ­ able phone, $25. 968 -1 68 8 . fo r a u d io to sh are fa s t grow ing com pany. No experience, w ill 2 tra in . Hours to fit your schedule. C all 4 64 -8 54 6 , ask for Ben. N icely furnished, w asher/dryer. $ 21 0 plus S A N TA ’S A N D Photo helpers fo r Park Vs u tilities. Lynn, 8 94-8189. G O V E R N M E N T JO B S! Now hiring in your FEM ALE N O N -SM O K ER own room /bath area , both skilled and unskilled. For a a t Q uadrangles by D ecem ber 1 or Spring current list of jobs and application, call O N LY $100 down for "T h e Com m ons on sem ester $250/m dnth plus u tilities. C all (6 1 5 ) 3 8 6 2 6 2 7 e xt. P 50 6 . (A Z-C A N ) Lem on". 2 bedroom , 2 bath unit overlook­ T eresa 921-3523. IN S TR U C TO R S N E E D E D , T a p and Jazz ing pool. S ave over $ 3 0 ,0 0 0 - only $ 47,000! W alk to cam pus. G reg , R ealty Executives, FE M A LE 4 23-3605. bed room /bath apartm ent. O wn room /bath, NO NSM O KER to sh are 2 dance, self-defense, gym coach. Tow er P laza M a ll, 9 4 6 9 4 9 3 . W O R LD W ID E selection o f vacation prop­ A vailable im m ediately! M ichelle, 897 -2 99 4 LIK E M O V IES ? S ee a ll you w ant for free erties . R eceive $ 2 on aU inquiries. C all or N ancy, 8294)969. w hen you join the C in e’ C apri staff. Now R esorts R esale today N ational D e ce m b e r 1-305-771-6296. (A Z-C A N ) 22n d , 1989. $175 C a ll hiring 1-800-826-7844, 1 W A Y ticket to P alm B each, Florida for 1-800-826-1847 in Florida or Thanksgiving w eekend. $ 50 each. CaN Elyssa a t 9 67-4815. scheduling m akes th is job perfect for students. 2 32 3 E ast C am eiback Road. APARTMENTS FEM A LE RO O M M A TE needed for spring. N on-sm oker. $ 25 0 plus % u tilities. Furn­ Furniture available. 9 66-5596. G in a, 731-4751. B EA U TIFU L LAR G E 1 and 2 bedroom s. FEM A LE C lose to ASU w ith m icrow ave, ceNing fans, basic c ab le, pool, d u b house and m uch share R O U N D TR IP to Los A ngeles. Leave Novem ber 10, return Novem ber 13. CaN m ore. Rancho Las P alm as, 1249 E ast 9 21-2261. M d o d i, 784-9040. S pence: 829 -9 60 7 for special. TW O R O U N D -TR IP tickets, Phoenix to B EA U TIFU L LAR G E 1 and 2 bedroom s. B aseline and 1-10. $ 1 0 0 m onth plus Providence, W a lk to A S U , p ool, laundry room . 1 block u tilities . Len, 4 3 6 9 7 1 7 ,1 2 -5 . and return. 12/21 and 1 /1 0 . $236/o ffer. large w asher/dryer. FEM ALE R .L. Leave il/1 7 , return south o f U niversity on 8 th street. 1 1/2 5. $ 175 each. 257 -6 25 8 . A-1 ’S U S E D m obile hom e s ale!! Pacem ak­ TAK E over 2-bedroom $160 condo. plus 14 Pool, u tilities . . lease, no depoeits. $219 each, 2 bedroom , 1 bath. w anted. House FEM ALE RO O M M A TE needed to share 2 A D M IS S IO N S A S S IS T A N T , p art-tim e; 2 6 3 0 hours p er w eek, $5.5 0/h o u r. Typing, apartm ent. N o n s m o k e r, not A vailable a lle rg ic to 1 2/2 0. c a te . $240/m onth. 967-6859 M A LE/FEM A LE R O O M M A TE needed in I’LL P A Y h a lf your deposit and $ 20 0 rent house. $250 plus 16 utilities. Brand new rebate. 9 26 E ast S pence. 968-5630. hom e, very v ery c le a n . M ust 8 92-0492. O N E B ED R O O M furnished, $230 plus u tilities , pool laundry fa c ilitie s. S tudio, $ 25 0 induding u tilities . R ental -sharing, 2 ,0 0 0 square fe e t house. W asher/dryer, $ 21 0 induding u tilities , furnished ,, colored T .V . 1339 South Sunset D rive (one block m icrow ave, e tc . $210/m onth plus u tilities. 8366743. w est o f R ural, one block S outh o f A pache), apartm ent 9 . R O O M FO R ren t, own b ath . N orth M esa. F re e statew ide de liv ery . 1-800-647-0818. A-1 M obile Hom es. (A Z-C A N ). CALC U LA TO R , C A S IO F X 795P . Alph- num eric, 18k m em ory. Like new . P aid N O N -SM O K IN G R O O M M A TE w anted for P refer nonsm oker, no pets. $2S0/m onth, includes u tilities , 4 61-6174. $ 1 2 0 , $70 /b es t o ffer. W as, 3 46-2594. R O O M M A TE N E E D E D . Large 3 bedroom D E S IG N E R W A TC H E S and hand bags. $ 60 . AN stylss (re p lic a s). C hristm as gifts, a t Sand Tropez. Fem ale p referred, caN John, 994-8406 o r 921 -1 19 6 . discounts. Tom , 6 31 -0 42 4 , RO O M M A TE FR E E N A IL dem onstration of a new n atural naN bonding product you can do a t ish skills required. T ri-C ity M ail- Lam son Junior C olleg e. C all 8 9 6 7 0 0 0 , ask for Jennifer. ★ EXTRA M O N EY* bedroom , 1 b a th ...$ 8 ,8 0 0 . Centurion 2 bedroom , 2 b a th ...$ 9 ,9 0 0 ! O ver 5 0 to phoning, som e com puter plus good Engl­ see! bedroom , 2 b a th ...$ 9 ,4 0 0 . Fleetw ood 3 chooee w ith financing as $99/dow n O AC. w ork in th e ir hom e. A pply. C hariin-Stone C orporation, room 3 7 5 , P .0 , Box 925, C larksville, T N 37041. (A Z-C A N ). E l D iab lo Apartm ents. 967 -7 72 7 . e r 2 bedroom , 1 b a th ...$ 3 ,9 0 0 . LaS alle 2 $ 2 .0 0 0 M O N TH LY possible for m en and w om en w illing to do assem bly o r office R O O M M A TE N E E D E D fo r 3 bedroom Is n ice, but you can h elp people too: Earn $120+ a month Safer, faster plasm a donation a t A B I Centers due to autom ated procedure. $5 bonus to new donors on firs t donation w ith this a d . A s k a b o u t a d d itio n a l bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). 968-6139 house near Los Arcos M a ll. $200/m onth G O LF C LU B S. W Haon X P 300 m atched le t E xcellen t condition. $12S /bsst offer. W es, H E R ITA G E B U ILD IN G S : T apered I-B eam , FIN A L 3 days to Join P residential Found­ com pany. G reat m oney opportunity. CaH 2862806 neer stam ped construction prints, 3 ,0 0 0 s ta n d a rd s iz e s , 40x60x12 $ 6 ,2 7 5 ; b r o 30x40x10 5 0x 75 x 12 $ 1 3 ,8 9 5 . c h u t e s C a ll t o $ 3 .4 6 5 ; $ 9 ,1 8 6 ; fo r fre e d a y . 18 0 0 -6 4 6 6 8 5 S .(A Z -C A N ). ' student screen and supervise high school foreign exchange students and host fam ilies. incom e. Call 1 -8 0 6 S IB U N G . (A Z-C A N ). STATE PRESS C lm W Irt Advertising... A P P LY N O W , choice positions available fo r drivers plus counter help. E arn up to $8/h o u r a t Sam m y B 's P izza . 9 45-8850. bolt-up construction s te el buildings, engi­ I» IN TE R C U LTU R A L exchange needs responsible people to ers C lub and b e on ground floor o f new 3 45 -2 59 4 . 60x100x14 A M ER IC A N Supplem ental 3-P W , 1 ,3 ,5 w oods. B ag included. FO R O NLY $ 10 0, you can p lace you classified advertising (up to 2 5 w ords; $4 C U R R E N TLY S E E K IN G enthusiastic and eac h additional w ord) in 5 6 new spapers personable individuals for the follow ing reaching nearly 6 5 0 ,0 0 0 readers around A rizona. To learn m ore about the A rizona C lassified A dvertising N etw ork, contact positions: R etail c lerks, fu ll and part-tim e m ornings; b aker’s assistant, part-tim e your local new spaper, o r caN A rizona grow th-oriented, am bitious people. Apply N swap a p e r $ A sso ciation, 277-3600.(A Z-C A N ). sary. E xcellent chance for grow th. Apply in person, Financial Associates, 9832 North H ayden R oad, S u ite 106. STO C K YA R D S R E S TA U R A N T now hiring din n er hostess’ arid lunch w aitresses. Apply in person, 5001 E ast W ashington. S U B S TITU TE TE A C H E R S needed by R E P , country club atm o­ tion required (B .S ; d egree in any area or sphere, g re at opportunity. C a ll 3 9 6 2 1 0 0 , com pletion of Teach er Education Prog­ betw een 5 and 9 pm . Ask to r S cott or C hris. ram ). If interested, contact C arol m o rn in g s. E x c e lle n t o p p o rtu n ity fo r in person, 6 10 7 N orth S cottsdale R oad, H ilton V illag e. at P ersonnel D epartm ent, M P S 8 9 6 7 7 2 3 . W ith fle xib le hours? O ffering valuable training and business experience? Interested in free use o f a personal com puter? Are you a sophomore o r above? Full-tim e student? Com puter fam iliar? W ith a t least a B average? If a ll your answers are •‘yes” , you’vem ade the grade! Manpower needs you as a COLLEGIATE REP to prom ote the sales o f the IBM Personal System/2 on campus. For an appointm ent call today at: $5.50 PER HOUR GUARANTEED ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ■ Part-time jobs: • 24-hrs per week • Evening hours • Weekly pay • Cornerstone Mall location 9668797 MANPOWER C all today , 968-4457 TEMPORARY SERVICES TALENT TREE plus u tilities. CaN 9 47-6688. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Typing, U niversity Plasm a C en ter w ith acrylics or glue-ons! N o m ore high inform ation, caN D e n e i, 831 -5 36 6 . S E C R E T A R Y /R E C E P T IO N IS T . organizational, and phone skills neces­ Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. R ural Rd. Tempo hom e in m inutes! N o m ore destroyed nails costs fo r fid-ins an d repairs! For m ore Christm as. Instant prom otions. 9 21-7363. Looking fo r a jo b w ith great pay — and com m issions? HELP WANTED Vi bedroom D E S PE R A TE!!! non-sm oker to C ape Cod A partm ents. 968 -5 23 8 fo r special. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE_________ RO O M M A TE C entral M ail photo operation . C ar neces­ sary. Thanksgiving through M esa P ublic Schools. S u b stitu te certifica­ M A R K ETIN G ished, own room and b ath. C all D e b b ie/ CaM co llect. 515 -2 77 -8 9 01 . Flexible bedroom , 2 bath condo. C lose to A S U . 2 B EDRO O M 4-p lex ava ila b le now, $ 2 4 9 . PLANE TIC K E T. P hoenix- D es M oines positions. FEM A LE RO O M M A TE to share b eautiful 3 $235/m onth, own room . 9 6 6 3 0 5 1 . 2 R O U N D trip tickets, Phoenix to LA, fo r a ll s ta ff F ireplace, security, p ool, w asher/dryer. 7 84-8220. 966-0709 FU LL/P A R T-TIM E m arketing m anager for NO NSM O KER $260/m onth plus !£ u tilities . Close to A S U . TICKETS •Tem porary •Perm anent •F u ll Time •P art Time m ust. 969-8660 R eal E state. Q U E E N -S IZE FU T O N w ith fram , $125; TOP WAGES SAME WEEK PAY d e ta ils . Com pany. S ecretarial, d ata en try skills a bedroom /2 bath condo. O w n room /bath. 3 hiring. A m azing re v e a ls F R ID A Y /R E C E P T IO N IS T $ 4,5 00 . 644-0686. G O R G EO U S m e ss ag e is y e a r. non-sm oker, share 2 bedroom , 1% bath apartm ent. used per 6 0 2 -4 2 6 1 9 9 2 . bedroom , double R eal E state. pedals. G O VERNM EN T $ 1 6 ,5 0 6 8 6 2 ,0 0 0 re c o rd e d garage, spa. E velyn, 8 31 -1 15 2 , W ym an strapless FE D E R A L lin es. u tilities. 967 -4 26 7 G rea t shape! $ 30 0 John 8 20-5282. m avic TEM PO RARIES E X P LO S IV E C A LIFO R N IA Com pany look­ required 5K -50K . (A Z-C A N ). RENTAL SHARING Currently-Recruiting for MCI Telecom m unications Part-time, 5 p.m.-9:30 p.m. full-time, 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. •Tuition Reimbursement •Medical Benefits •Career Opportunities v ; J t •Full Paid Training Whether you are seeking a career or working your way through school, MCI and Talent Tree can help you achieve your goal. Call today! 955-6874 State Freu Page 23 INSTRUCTION HELP WANTED PERSONALS PERSONALS S TU D E N T JO B S. F u ll-tim # , $300/w eek; B ECO M E A P ara leg a l, nationally accre­ B LO N D IE , G LAD you'd be around another W H ITE -F E E T: p a rt-tim e , in d ited , attorney instructed, hom e study, sem ester! First lady? N o problem ! I love w ss hardly a "crushing d e fe a t.” S tudents custom er service and re ta il. Scholarships established 1976. F inancial a id , fre e cata­ you, B ean. usually availab le. Cad 10 am to 3 pm 2 42-9677. log 1-800-869-2555, S outhern C areer Insti­ $ 1 5 0 /w e e k . O p en in g s tu te , draw er 2 15 8, B oca R aton, Florida SU M M ER JO B S outdoors, over 5 ,0 0 0 334 27 (A Z-C A N ). C A N D E E, Y IP P E E -K I-Y E A H ! Thanks for nights victory fe e t. "H e y , good luck to you.” around. C a ll 8 94 -6 07 4 . pay fo r th e ir education, but D O N ’T forget th e G reek w eek AFFO RD ABLE W ORD processing. 34 years experience. Term papers, resum es, C O N G R A TU LA TIO N S T O ad new P anhel- Com m ittee M eeting tonight in P V M ain JEWELRY len ic exec. W e 're M l looking forw ard to the cafeteria a t 9:30) upcom ing year. A -Phi. books, theses. 4 64-9064. A TH E TEM PE YM CA gym nastics center is K IN K O ’S Incom e taxes. Donna, grade. g irl’s gym nastics C A SH FO R gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue coach's. C a ll 8 9 4 -2 09 0 or apply a t 2420B Jew elers, 4 14 S . M id, S uite 101 , Tem pe. tow er on m aintaining C hi O m ega excel­ Kinko’s typesets papers, resum es, flyers. 9 68-5967. S elf-serve W est 14th S tre et, Tem po. lence as Panhedenies new est president. Y our sisters love you and a re proud o f you! U n iversity. C all 9 66 -2 03 5 , o r 9 60 W est T H E V IN E Tavern is takin g applications for CASH P A ID , jew elry o f a ll kinds, including floorm en and cooks, part-tim e/fuH -tim e. g old, s terlin g , gem s, p earls, antiques, etc. D ELTA S IG Kirk 2 ap p , congrats on order R e fe re n c e s R are Lion, 921 S . M ill A ve, Tem po C enter. o f O m ega and IF C S ecretary. I’m proud of re q u e s te d . A p p ly 1 1 -4 11:00am -3:00pm and 11:00am -5:00pm . N ight shifts 5:30pm to d o s e . FuH -tim eand part-tim e. M ust work holiday season and m ust have d e a n drivin g record. C all for app d n tm en t 861 -9 38 4 . Am erican V alet FREE LOST/FOUND a re interested in R ushing an off-cam pus processing. house, B eta T h eta P i. Cad 9 67-8385. 9 45-5744, E N G LISH W R ITIN G Handbook found in G IN A N D S pam , so w e ask ourselves, A S U A R EA . Typing, w ord processing, room w hen can a B etty be a G uido? W hen she ed itin g . LLB 245. C om e by before 9:15 PETS PAPPA S, H appy 2 3rd , you are Hom ecom ing gam e th is w eekend! Party! U s C alifornia girls, love Tracy. H O M E C O M IN G ‘89-A salu te to w ood! C om e see the crow ning o f A S U 's. A D P IS , S O R R Y I couldn’t be w ith you at 1 am a t Sheraton Tem pe M ission Palm s! R e tre a t. M y thoughts w ere w ith you. How W A IT E R /W A im E S S And hostess needed w as th at bus ride? P i \u v and M ine! The H U G E S P R IN G Rush D inner a t the new ly im m ediately for p art-tim e P res. acquired em ploym ent. A E P I D U C K M A S TE R - Y ou've S cottsdale Road and McKeMips. envelope to: su ite 110Q , Brooklyn, N Y 11235. (a z ' W O RK IN beautiful C olorado m ountains this sum m er a t C heley C olorado Cam ps sum m er program . C ooks, R .N .’s , drivers, o ffic e , w ranglers, nanny, kitchen, riding, h ik in g , b a c k p a c k in g , s p o rts , got the c ra fts : com e to the G reek w eek com m ittee 80206. in e, Lynn, and A li- thanks for a ll your help this w eekend. A -P H I T R IS H Y W ishy- you’re too cool! I’m INSTRUCTION P alo V erde B each. S ee a ir bands and lip so glad you’re around to brighten up my day! K risti. certification w orkshop by N ational A erobics Training A TO K E N , no special occassion babe- Association. W eekend o f D ecem ber 1, Just w anted to say I love you. Love ADPI M esa . 963-9415 T ift W A N TE D - G O O D hom e for g reat c at. 6 9 45 -1 50 0 . ly m ellow lap fien d . 8 9 3 -9 41 2 evenings. L E TTE R MISCELLANEOUS Q U A L IT Y w ord processing. E xperienced w ith M LA , A P A , graduate $ 1 0 -8 66 0 W E EK LY/up m ailing circulars! school, m anuscripts. K athy, 830 -8 78 3 . Rush self-addressed stam ped envelope: RESTAURANTS/ BARS P R O FES S IO N A L T Y P IN G , $ 1 .5 0 p ag e, B aseline/A lm a School in M esa, editing service availab le. CaH 8 97-1038. B A N K R U PTC Y $ 9 5 . Stops garnishm ents, W A ITR E S S /C A S H IE R , p art-tim e. Apply in P R O FES S IO N A L W O R D PR O C ES S IN G o f person a t P ete’s 19th T e e , 1405 N orth M ill anythin g law s u its, collectors. C om plete preparation o f a ll leg al docum ents. N o extra fe e -fo r Avenue (Roding H ills G o lf Course). re as o n a b le . you n e ed . F a s t, S a tis fa c tio n SERVICES a cc u rate, g u a ran tee d . years experience. Legal secretary. High qu ality, reasonable ra tes . 9 63-5650. RESUM ES. KALANI- S U R P R IZE D ? (Thanks, M arc!) sw eetie? S end a balloon boquét instead. Anyw ay, H appy 19th, congrats oh cheer! S ongbird, B rother, M om , plus M arc. 2 73-9710. KAPPA M EG AN C B lackfoot W hitefoot P rin t, 4 37-3364. T Y P IN G and w ord processing cheap! F re e pick-up and deliv­ h a ir ery. S h elly, 8 99-4816. w ill be a night to rem em ber, R .S . not a S tudent discount. C a ll fo r m ore inform a­ W ORD snew . tion, 9 69-6954. needs. Fast turaround. C lose to A S U . P R O C E SS IN G for your typing $ 1 .2 5 /u p . Transcription availab le. Roxan­ ne, 9 66-2825. m ee r c n t a i SERVICE w eekend. Love, D aryl. KAREN "L E E ” B rogan- Let’s w ork on those hair flip s tonite! Lone. Apartment Anders C O N N E LL: B K E , hom ecom ing, w eek. Hom ecom ing wid be g reat. Love, gam e. 894-1391 m e. N eed 4 tickets together. C all ADOPTION Supplement Your Income or Work Your Way Through College P R E M IER E '8 9 - This year’s 3rd annual D O N ’T LE T som eone e ls e steal your te rrific k te a -S e n d a balloon boquet today. P A Y O F F your bills a rid reduce your m onthly paym ents w ith a hom eow ners c red it history. W orldw yn A cceptance. M B 6011. 494 -0 02 9 . (A Z-C A N ) CLASSIFIEDS WORK DRUM M ER W A N TED . K a leid o sco p e G roove. CaH G eoff, 8 94-8708. AAA D R IV E A W A Y . F ree cars to m ost m ajor cities. G as allow ances availab le. 21 (A -238). (A Z-C A N ). or older. CaH‘279 -2 00 0 , then 4 53 0. A D O P T IO N : C a ll Todd a t 8 38 -7 33 6 . baby a loving secure hom e. C all our attom eey, Linda, co llect 408-288-7100. SUCCESSFUL m a tu re PHOTOGRAPHY JA S O N S IL V E R /K ID -M A N Photow orks ritual at professional surrounded by a big strong C o m m e rc ia l Tem pe M ission P alm s Nov.Oth 9pm to happy fam ily desires to adopt a newborn actors’ , and artists’, portfolios. Profession­ baby. A ll expenses p aid . C onfid ential. C all a l w ork! R easonable ra tes . 9 46-2475. Hom ecom ing B all! Featuring 1am . T ickets on sale for $ 5 on the m all! •D ay & Night Positions Available TRANSPORTATION have a fam ily o f our ow n. W e w ill give your T ri-D e lt Softbad! You guys a re the greatest!! Luv, your coaches. funds since 19S 3.(A Z-C A N ) and w ritten exam s for th is course a t A S U . A D O P TIO N . P LEA SE give us a chance to and heart. M iss ya! Love, Squaw . P IK E S - C O N G R A TU LA TIO N S on w inning M et ropolltan . 1 -8 00-541-0775. W e buy w ith our own N E E D H ELP w ith A C C 212? I have taught P IK E , M ARK Arsh, keep m e in your head TELEMARKETING PART-TIME o r m ortgage, do yourself a favor by calling TUTORS 841-5055 m uch. B ee. : ' :$ R ichard, 9 65 -8 29 7 or 7 84-4724. N.W. Phoenix I love you very '■ • B E FO R E Y O U sefl your d eed or trust, note MUSIC WANTED W ILL PA Y big $ $ for A S U - U o f A Football Tempe/Mesa d irector, stud! P lease don’t h air out this A lternatives, In c , 1-800-444-7435. (A Z- consolidation loan. C a ll regardless o f past rem oval. R em ove unw anted hair forever. KAPPA S IG M A M ark J . I m issed you this children o r property. W ills $45 . Legal 2 73 -9 71 0 . P R O F E S S IO N A L E L E C T R O L Y S IS -P E R M A N E N T B everly HHIs, C A 9 02 11 . W ash in g to n O rig in al your job search. C a ll M argie a t R apid TIR E D O F spending lots o f $ $ $ on your D ept. A N -7C C -G , 2 56 S outh Robertson, CAN) P R O FES S IO N A L W O R D processing, 10 P R O FE S S IO N A L H appy Thanksgiving. HELP WANTED C alifornia couple new born. C all K aren and D an a t 9 94-4181. years, neutered m ale. Has shots, extrem e­ PEA: S U R P R IS E !! (I can ta k e a h in t.) HELP WANTED LO V IN G S O U TH E R N (C o lleg e P rofessor and E ngineer) looking FLY IN G F IN G E R S o ffers typeset quality perform ances. It’s th e next best thing to K E V IN e v e n in g s w ith a M a c II and las e r p rin ter. C all Susan, A TTE N TIO N FR A TE R N ITIE S , sororities! Throw your next social gathering w ith P resident F ratern al for A -P H I’S C A M ILLE. K risten , C athy, C hrist­ c o lle c t, w ish to share th e ir life and love w ith C entral P hoenix, 2 74-5531. being fam ous fo r. W ith Tone-def, live. le tte r to C heley C olorado Cam ps, Box M a r g a re t, P rices com petitive, negotiable. 9 66-2186. to you! Lee. A-Phi c a ll W A N TE D , BABY to lo ve. Loving couple accurate. C hi house th is F riday to a party ASU is proud anxious to adopt. E xpenses paid. P lease C a ll anytim e. F ast, typesetting give you the added edge jh your special child. Loving C alifornia couple laug hter, w arm th to sh are w ith baby. W e can help w ith expenses. CaH collect, Joe typed files com bined w ith professional Love, P alm activ e , love children and anim als. Friends, able. 461-3655 V ice N u rsery, C a ll Jessie, E clipse D .J . productions. V ery reason­ am azing us w ith ad your spirit! Congratula­ S U N L IT Springs re trea t, sum m ers a t beach aw ait N eed it fast? reality! W eber- you’d never stop (A Z-Q A N ). typing/w ord JIL L "L O N E ” H egedus- W oo w oo, here’s A -P H I PAM or D A ve co llect, anytim e! 9 14-833-3019. E X P E R IE N C E D m eeting in PV M ain c afete ria a t 9:30! sisters. 3 03-377-3616. for typing. C a ll ALL G R EEK S are invited at the Lam bda Interview s on cam pus D ecem ber 10. Send IN S TR U C T O R S 7 • w ith som e o f the best faked m usical Panhedenic. A ER O B IC 12. ALL G REEK S: Tonight is the night! P lease 70th sum m er! M ust be a t least 19 to apply. Col or ado C a ll 967-8385. IT ’S T O N IG H T .. M ock Rock! 8 pm on the tions on De nver , H ouse. w hen can a Jew not close a deal? The Tru e M aster. counselors. Cam pers ag e 9 -1 7. Room and board, cash salary, tra ve l .allow ance. O ur <6525, 8 20 -3 37 9 . sync artists kick-off A S U ’s Hom ecom ing G ibson H om e W orks, 1405 A venue 2 , ). Cad looks and you’ve got the m oves. B ut since W O RK A T hom e. $ 1 ,0 0 0 a w eek. Send can B eta Com e e a t w ith us on S unday, Novem ber Apply in person, C hopandaz, corner of stam ped m ale/fom ale. Holly­ King and queen on Novem ber 9th , 9 pm to 997-1124 self-addressed BLACK LAB puppies, pure bred, regis­ tered , new Panhedenic T reasurer. I knew you could do it! Y ou’v em a d e us all very proud! P i luv, The P rez. hom e and a d o s e caring fam ily. Legal, co n fid en tial, expenses p a id . CaH M ichelle and M ary, (6 1 9 ) 9 43 -7 01 6 ; w eeks old. getting old! A re you G reek? o r Italian? A D P I M aria, congrats on being elected the in ten t. W e w ill g ive a c h ild a loving, secure for baby to adopt. Financially secure, has a rod o f pennies! W haaa! The G uido HEY m arried, 818 -3 40 -7 1 65 . (A Z-C A N ). A P A /M LA PERSONALS Earn monthly income plus usage fees on financial package. Serious inquiries o n l y ! . E ast U niversity, C a ll 921 -0 16 8 . m en. SALES REP NEEDED 9 33 FR E E S PR IN G Rush D inner fo r those who Tuesday and Thursday to claim . and Lim oaine Com pany Incorporated. also. A LW A Y S A VAILABLE Susan a t 8 33 -0 37 3 . 9 68-6074. M onday-Friday, 801 E . A pache. M acintosh you. Luv ya, M ary. V A LE T P A R K IN G a tte n d e e s , day shifts happily anything els e in th e w orld, to adopt ah A D O P T IO N : pap er m akes th e C O N G R A TU LA TIO N S T O Jennife H igh­ hiring for boys and YOUNG professional couple, w ishes, m ore than M onday’s football lesson is on th e B lack- ZZZ crew s. Send stam p fo r fre e d etails. 113 A D O P TIO N : A C C EN TS IN Typing. S p e te h e c k , proof­ read , ed itin g , a ll included. Q uick turn­ Duo on Saturday! I had a blast. Love, W ild. openings! N ational parks, forests, fire E ast W yom ing, KalispeN, M T 59901. SUNDAY ADOPTION TYPING/WORD PROCESSING D on’t m iss this yea r's production! TRAVEL P h o to g ra p h y M o d e ls ', c o lle ct 212 -2 43 -8 1 25 . (A Z-C A N ). P O R TR A IT P H O TO G R A PH Y is out of •Flexible part-time & full-time positions P R E M IÈR E ’8 9 have a g reat tim e a t A S U 's FLY A D O P TIO N : LO V IN G fin an cially secure fashion. Today, w e w ant fashion photogra­ 3rd annual Hom ecom ing. D ance to m usic roundtrip. Leave today! N W USA $250! couple phy in our p o rtraits. Custom •$8 .7 5 per hour (avg. earnings) by ritual from 9pm to 1am a t Tem pe A la s k a -fiv e w eeks notice $ 45 0. O ther happiness, security, p riveleg e. G ive usaH P hotography by appointm ent. You keep M ission Palm s N ovem ber 9th! Tickets $5. destinations- W e also buy transferable a th e negative. P rices s ta rt a t $ 60 . C all coupons! 9 66-7283. Expenses •Close to ASU A N Y TIM E continental USA $350 S A M M Y ’S U N C LE M orty: W hen’s our next FLY FO R less, discount tra ve l. Dom estic softball practice? S igned Pro. desire happier new born, offering fu tu re. L egal, paid , love, confidential. Call eollect- P ic tu re s P hoto g rap h y in Fashion Tem p e 201-3 77 -5 3 50 ; (A Z-C A N ). 968 -8 61 0 . TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING at and internatio nal, package tours to the S C O TT, Y O U ’R E m y positive tip . Love Call Sarah 967-0066 (After 11 a. m.) Equal O pportunity Employer E ARN UP T O $400 No experience required Need extra money? But also time to study or just to relax? Males 19-45 in good health needed to participate in pharmaceutical studies. Each study includes a physical and is fully monitored and explained. Most pharmaceuticals are already on the market. When you aren’t needed for study procedures, you’re free to study, relax, or even sleep. H oly L an d /lsrael. 4 91 -0 50 1 . flig h t 2 3 . P .S . you have a cute butt. IO W A H O LID A Y S . If you’ll pull our tra ile r, (N a-N a) w e’ll pay fo r your trip! 319 -3 77 -0 7 29 . SIG KA P C O LO N EL F e d ler, congrats on Panhedenic S ec. Y ou’re aw esom e! W e got the seeds! G ina "O w l” . S K I U TA H , fu lly furnished condo a t base o f S IG M A KAPPA M ichelle: If you w ant it, tio n . A ll dates a va ila b le , $700/w eek or you got it!! O nly a t th e P oints in tw o d ays... $120 a night. C a ll (8 0 1 ) 2 61-5543. SM ERKA: Y O U a re a goodlooking g a l, and S P E N D 8 w eeks in S pain, Spring 1990. I ’m a goodlooking g a l too! Love, your S hare Am erican culture w ith teachers and room ie. students. C ontact Internatio nal Internship m ountain. 2 0 m inutes to 7 m ajor resorts, S leeps 6 , fire p la c e, jac q u zzi. G reat loca­ Program s. 1-800-869-7056 for details. TH E HO R N M A N is throw ing another party, TTP O TH 3. S aturday, Novem ber S TU D Y IN Japan tt\is sum m er. Learn 18, 8 pm , a t his p lace. If he w ants you about Japanese cu ltu re, business and th ere, you know w ho h é is. society. Live w ith a host fam ily. O ther special features. C a ll Internatio nal Intern­ T O M Y Boy. H oping you m ake it through ship Program s, 1-800-869-7056 fo r d etails. We help you with : • writing • editing • layout • design • typesetting • paper & color selection • printing 2 7 4 -8 1 8 0 Thankyou! It’s nice to know there are TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING people like Springston. $ 1 .5 0 AAA W ord P rocessing/Laser p rinter. T O T H E nice person w ho returned m y gray bookbag on Friday: Thankyou, Thankyou. you in th e w orld. SERVICES Tim SERVICES 3 4 years experience. Theses, dissertation, TR A C Y SABEL- T o nite is th e night, The a ll wid be falling! APA sp ecializatio n . M arion 8 39-4269. $ 1 .6 5 A N D up. P rofessional w ord proces­ sor and form er E nglish teach er. Laser T R I-D E L T ’S: M E U S S A , Tracey. Frances­ p rinter. Bob or C lau d ia, 9 64-6012. $ 1 9 .9 5 R E S U M E S p ecial, 1 page com pu­ M ercy! te r typeset, laser printout w ith 2 0 w hite bond copies o r 10 copies on select resum e Novem ber TO ttv Buy your balloons on C ady M ad by the fountain. O ne d o llar per papers. A ll 8Vbx11” . D r. Copy, 1032 South T e rra c e . C a ll 4 3 3 -4 6 8 8 fo r w ee k ly specials. balloon. P rizes for balloons traveling the farthest! $2.00/P A G E . OIRSTEN INSTITUTE OF HAIR AND BEAUTY EU R OP E AN a re " D " best coaches. N ext year, No T R I S IG M A Badoon Ascension Friday, Q uick turnaround. C all Bob, 8 39-3305. “In a world of questions, Harris answers" u p d atin g an old resum é, C re a tif S trateg ies can h elp you d esig n th e perfect resum é. you and m e in LA. Fun th a t yu deserve. c a, The m en of Sigm a A lpha M u think you Harris Laboratories, Inc. W h e th e r yo u 're startin g from scratch or this w eek because w hen F riday com es it's D ash is a calling, no doubt by m kfnite, w e Call the volunteer recruiting office for a study to fit your schedule. Jo b -W in n in g R esum és W H ITE FE E D (P A N S Y FE E T) your pledges a re battered , abused and beaten soon AAA Q U A LITY typing/w ord processing. your house wid be the sam e. $ 1 .5 0 . C a li Linda, 962 -8 07 5 . TECHNIQ UE CUT & STYLE . . . . . . . . . . . . *6°° PERMS/HIGHUGHTS... . . . *16°° and up CO LO RS.... ......... .... $11°° and up MANICURE/PED . . . . W ^ 50 ALL WORK DONE BY STUDENTS 3345 S. RURAL RD. TEMPE 491-0449 Page 2 4 NIMnada^No¥nnbw¿JW 9 State Piata