State Press Ÿ q |\ 72 No. 69 © C opyrigh t. S tate P ress, 1990 \A/Gdn6sdäy Jsnuäry *17, 1990 Tem pe, A rizona R egents to discuss planned tu itio n hike B y NICO LE CARROLL S ta te Press Out-of-state tuition for ASU and UofA may go up by as much as $1,720 next fall if the Arizona Board of Regents votes Feb. 16 to alter its tuition policy. In addition, in-state tuition will be raised by at least $116, in accordance with Board policy. The Board is planning to hold public hearings on Jan. 25 in the ASU College of Law’s Great Hall to discuss the proposed increases. The process of increasing tuition is always controversial; however,, this round could produce substantial setbacks for some non­ resident students. All students must split the cost of their education with the state. The regents calculate the cost of education for 1989-90 to be $6,828. C u rre n tly , re sid e n t stu d en ts pay 20.5 percent of the cost, or $1,362. Out-ofstate students pay for 82.5 percent of their education, or $5,484. The Board is considering having out-ofstate students pay up to 100 percent of the cost of their education, which the regents calculate will reach $7,204 in 1990-91. Associated Students of ASU President Paul Larson said he is not concerned about the percentages, but is skeptical of the regents’ total cost of education calculation. “The (tuition) numbers are based upon calculating the cost of education,” Larson said. “ That whole method is being questioned — not only by the students, but by the regents.” Larson said the Arizona Students Association will present a new cost of education formula to the regents at the Jan. 25 hearing. “The students will be suggesting an alternative method of calculating the cost of education,” Larson said. “That would make the increase lower.” Odus Elliot, regents associate director of academic affairs, said the Board is considering the non-resident increase in response to community concern about state support for non-tax-paying students. “I think there is a growing concern about the state subsidizing individuals who are not tax-paying citizens in our state system,” Elliot said. “The Board is being responsive to the preference. ” Regent Donald Pitt said he approves of this increase for students who have not yet entered the university system, because they would arrive knowing the full cost of their education. But he said something should be done to buffer the impact of this increase on non-residdnt students who are already established here. / He said the Board should “grandfather,” or exempt, current out-of-state students and instead raise the percentage of the cost of _ « ■ In Tribute Lisa Chow (cen ter, fro n t) leads a group o f dancers In a perform ance o f “ That W hich M ight Have B e e n ," a trib u te to fo u r young bjack g irls killed In th e bom bing o f a Birm ingham , A la., church in 1963. The dance, perform ed Tuesday on th e Student S ervices Law n, w as p art o f a w eek-long cam pus celebration honoring M artin Luther K ing J r. Related sto ry, page 2. T u riiT o T u itio n , page 1 3 . Former trailer tenants file claim Allege ASU permitted raw sewage in park B y HOBART ROWLAND S tate Press J a o rg a tM D o u g la s /S ta te P ress A tto rn ey Raym ond Back stands on th e site o f th e dem olished A pache T ra ile r Park, w hich form er residents claim w as m ism anaged by A SU . B eck is seeking $ 2 0 0,0 0 0 In com pensation fro m th e state on b ehalf o f th e residents. D ial fo r Help; Former tenants of a mobile home park purchased by ASU in 1984 say the University failed to maintain the property’s sewer and water systems, malting conditions at the park unlivable. “I had a pool of sewage in my yard 15 feet by 15 feet, and there was sewage coming in my sink and toilet,” former resident Ashley Wagner said during an interview with 12 other angry mobile home owners, who have filed a claim seeking $200,000 in compensation from the state of Arizona. But ASU officials contend that the park was properly maintained. “The sewer system at thè park was old,” said John Riley, assistant director of purchasing at ASU. “But its maintenance was never neglected.” ASU acquired the Apache Trailer Park, a 2 3/4-acre property in the 700block of Apache Boulevard, six years ago as part of the South Campus expansion project, with plans to build student dormitories on the site. Immediately after obtaining the land, the University notified park residents that they had to move off the property by Aug. 31, 1989. Problems arose last year, when four residents failed to make rental payments, claiming that park conditions had deterioratedDavid May, an ASU alumnus who lived at the park until 1987, said that the whole sewer system needed to be replaced-. “What happened there affected a lot of people,” May said. Theresa Freeman, another tenant, said her children used H e’s Here: N e w A S U P re s id e n t L a ttie C o o r ta k e s in g W illia m S h a tn e r, c h a rg e o f th e U n iv e r­ film s a n e p is o d e in sity, w h ile a la w s u it over his selection Page 16 P eck nam ed fin alist fo r U NM presidency By TENNY TA TUSIAN S tate Press Richard Peck, ASU vice president for academic affairs, is visiting the University of New Mexico today as one of two finalists for UNM’s presidency. Peck was one of 100 nominees for the top UNM position after the search began in July, a member of the New Mexico Board of jp P H IH L Regents said. The two finalists JB P 'Wjfc were announced Jan. 9, and the a B final decision will be announced ; i* . Ip Friday. W “ We were looking for an | ^ lip outstanding academic at a major re se a rc h u n iv ersity ,” said Roberta Cooper Ramo, chair of I the search committee. “We Y H wanted someone who demon­ strated a real commitment to Peck making significant contributions and had a track record in diversification.” Peck returned to his position of provost and vice president for academic affairs Jan. 2, after serving as ASU interim president from June 1989 to Jan. 1. He said he was pleased to be nominated for the UNM presidency but was not confident that the position was his. “It’s flattering, of course, to be nominated, but we have hot reached the end of the road,” said Peck, who plans to accept the position if it is offered to him. “The people who are celebrating my leaving should stop, and those planning my wake should stop.” T u rn to P ec k , p e g # 19. T u rn to P a ik , p a g * 2 t . “ R e s c u e 9 1 1 ," starr­ Tem po. S c o tt T ro y a n o a /S ta te P ress d ra w s to a c lo s e . Page 25 T o d a y ’s w ea th e r: C lo u d y , w ith th u n d e r- Study Guide: show ers lik e ly an d a h ig h In th a m id-SOs. C o lle g e N o te b o o k , a L ow s e x p e c te d m th e m k M O s. ho w -to h e lp m a te for th e A S U s tu d e n t, C la s a lfia d s ........... . .. . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . .. . . . .. . . .. . . . .. 46 d e b u ts in C o lle g e C o lla g a C u lt u r e ......................................... 35 C u ltu re . Page 35 P o K c a R e p o rt..... . .. . . .. . . . .. . . ........................2 0 S p o r ts ............... Page 2 State Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 Kink holiday battle takes shape Today ASU sponsors week of memorial events The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to thé University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the Slate Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. By M ICHELLE HENRY S tate Press While ASU celebrates this week in memory of Martin Luther King Jr., the battle lines are being drawn in a fight to preserve a paid state holiday in hbnor of the stain civil rights leader. Julian Sanders, a Phoenix architect, has teamed up with the Arizona American Italian Club to gather 80,000 signatures to put the question of a King holiday on the November 1990 ballot. The AAIT is upset that the King holiday replaced Columbus Day as a paid state holiday. • This year’s King holiday was canceled Friday after the referendum qualified for the November ballot. Controversy over the King holiday began in 1986, when then-Gov. Evan Mecham rescinded it, drawing angry .criticism from holiday supporters. During a special.session in September 1989, Gov. Rose Mofford and the^tdte Legislature approved the King bill for the third Monday in January. Lawmakers canceled the October Columbus Day to eliininate an additional state paid holiday. But the rollercoaster ride continued when Sanders, a conservative activist and Mecham supporter, spearheaded a petition drive to repeal the holiday. Sanders, a Phoenix architect, is convinced the majority of Arizonans do not want a King holiday. He predicted the King vote will go down by a 2-to-l margin. “People should lode behind the scenes instead of the very superficial side (of King),” Sanders said. “Anyone can write nice (speeches).” The Rev. Warren H. Stewart, pastor of First Institutional Baptist Church, criticized Arizona residents who want the King holiday nullified. “If we have to choose who to honor with a holiday, we need to choose an American,” Stewart said. “Martin was born, lived and died in America,” he said. “Columbus was from Spain and never made it to the continent. Martin fought for the rights of all people; Columbus was part of the slave trade that stole black people and brought them here. If we need to make a choice, I think we need to choose Martin.” Stewart, who recently ended his term as the chairman of the Arizona Martin Luther King Committee, declared that Meetings •Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies will meet at 3 p.m. in the MU Arizona Room. •University Honors College Martin Luther King: Prejudice and Persecution, from 9 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. in the McClintock Hall Honors College Lounge. A variety of films and videos will be shown on the subject of persecution and prejudice. All are welcome. Call 965-6983 for morg details. •Com m unity Health Services Clinic Cholesterol screening program wjth non-fasting fingerstick sample and results in 3 minutes, from 9 a.m . to 2:30 p.m: in the MU N. Pinal Room 215. Cost is $7 per person. •Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Célébration Committee Affirming The Dream — “Tree" Cody, Native-American Flutist Concert at 1 p.m. in the MU Rendezvous Lounge. “Global Vision and Legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.” Presentation by Professor Moses Moore and poetry readings by Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. at 2 p.m. in the MU Fine Arts Lounge. Presentation by Professor Miller and dramatic presentation of selected speeches by Mr. Joseph Rogers. Music by First New Life Baptist Church and concludes with candlelight Ceremony. College of Law, Great Hail at 7 p.m. •Campus Aglow It’s a new age revealed in revelation from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the MU Graham Room 216. Hot Topic! Guys and gals welcome, •Society for Range Management Reno Convention at 1 p.m . in AG, Room 312. •Alpha Lambda Delta The first meeting of 1990 will be at 4:30 in McClintock Hall’s West Seminar Room, in addition to regular business, there will be a “stuffing social” . •ASU Cycling Team will meet at 6 p.m. at the Bike Co-op. •American Humanics Student Association will meet jtt 2:40 p.m. in the Education Building, Roôm 215. S u n d i K je n s ta d /S ta te P ress Anthony A b ril, 5 0 , w raps him self in th e U .S . flag M onday during a Phoenix m arch in honor o f M artin L uther K ing, Jr. A b ril said th a t King deserves a state holiday because he fou gh t fo r the rights o f all m inority groups, n ot ju st blacks. the fight for a holiday is not over, adding that the most important concern now is for people to register and vote in the November election. * T u rn to K in g , page 1 5. ALL YO U CAN EAT SUSHI PIZZA & PUB SU N N Y’S CHALLENGE For $19.50 per Person Sunday - W ednesday 5-6:30 p.m. Welcome Back Student Special S u n n y’s w ill m atch any D om in o’s o ffe r & a c c e p t an y D o m in o ’s co u p o n . L im ite d t im e o ffe r. with A SU I.O. OFF Any Entre Draft Pitcher Sake Bombers California RoIJs Chicken Wings (1 order per person) * 1 .0 0 *1.50 * 2 .0 0 * 2 .0 0 968-6666 W e accept M asterCard, Visa, AmEx * 1 .0 0 ‘ Thrusday Excluded 21st Birthday Special 1301 E. University w/valid driver's license One Large Bottle Beer & One Sake for $1 Hours: 11 a.m.-1 a.m. S un-Thurs 11 a.m .-2 a.iTL Fri-Sun L u n c h - M o n .-F ri. 1 1 :30 a .m .-2 :3 0 p .m . D in n e r - S u n .-T h u rs . 5-10 p .m • F r i.-S a t. 5-11 p .m . U n iv e rs ity ASU 1 4 3 5 E . U n iv e r s ity • T e m p e • 9 6 7 -6 9 1 1 M cK ellip s 3 <0 < 5 tr ■'AC " University J Ö B ro a d w a y " D e li ï ü r y A r e a " ) FREE DELIVERY ASU A R E A - .5 in U n i v e r s i t y P l a z a -= ° V'*1 e«® u 9 6 6 -6 6 6 6 j oo o f f a n y >IZZA/ A t iz o n o B e o th R ESTA U R A N T W o r ld /N a t io n * ’ .. , ì 1;■ .V; ■ V"-.:''- Page 3 Wednesday, January 17,1990 State Press S oviets send rein forcem en ts into A ze rb a ija n 56 people killed in ‘civil war’ MOSCOW (AP) —The Kremlin sent more than 11,000 reinforcements, including Red Army units, to the Caucasus on Tuesday to halt a civil war between Armenians and Azerbaijanis that has killed 56 people. New clashes were reported, and Tass said 2,000 people armed with anti-aircraft guns and other artillery were massing on hills around Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed district that has become a flashpoint for the V io le n c e in the A z e rb a ija n -A rm e n ia A rea UNIONK WttUHl neighboring groups’ ethnic hatreds. Combatants in the region 1,250 miles southeast of Moscow had seized stores of hand grenades, the Interior Ministry said. In Armenia, “demands are being made to arm citizens and send them to NagornoKarabakh,” according to the official Soviet news agency, and the governm ent newspaper Izvestia reported 16 attacks on weapons depots in 24 hours by Armenians hunting for guns. In one raid, 3,000 people stormed a police station in Armenia’s Artash region and automatic weapons, 30 carbines, /27nfies, more than 3,000 cartridges and a grenade-launcher, the newspaper said. “We can’t bring ourselves to pronounce it out loud, but what is happening now in Karabakh, in northern Azerbaijan, can unambiguously be termed a civil war,” correspondent O. Shapovalov wrote in the newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda . “The madness is continuing,” an editor at Arm enia’s official Armenpress news agency said, from Yerevan, the republic’s capital. Gorbachev and the Soviet Presidium declared a state of emergency in the strifetorn m ountain a rea Monday night, empowering the government to deploy units of the Soviet army, navy and KGB to protect lives and guard vital installations such as railroads. Internal security troops already in the region have been incapable of halting the m ost p ro tra cted ethnic conflict in Gorbachev’s nearly five-year tenure as Kremlin leader, said Izvestia Tuesday, to th re a te n his e n tire ca m p aig n for “perestroika,” or economic and social reform. More than 6,000 additional internal security troops were sent Tuesday to reinforce existing Interior M inistry detachments, Tass said. To assist them, more than 5,000 Red army soldiers, who traditionally carry heavier weaponry, also were dispatched, Tass said. Soviet media did not say how many total troops were in the region. R esidents of Y erevan and Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital, said by phone they had seen no sign Tuesday night of the reinforcements’ arrival. The Bush administration supported Gorbachev’s use of troops in the Caucasus and criticized feuding Azerbaijanis and Armenians for “ revisiting old ethnic hatreds.” - “iffiff rACOgniy** right nf-apy. gialp to ensure the safety of its citizens and it ldfks like that’s the primary concern at the News Bill would set drug test rules WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate bill setting federal drug-testing standards for private companies would provide consistency and eliminate lawsuits, supporters including former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said Tuesday, but critics contend it would erode workers’ rights. The bill, sponsored by Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and David Boren, D-Okla., does not require businesses to test employees but gives them the clear right to do so — a provision supporters- said would prevent unwarranted court challenges to drug-testing policies. Hatch said the measure protects the privacy rights by establishing guidelines for circumstances under which businesses can test their workers. But Rep. Don EdWards, D-Calif., chairman of the House Ju diciary subcom m ittee on civil and constitutional rights, called the measure “a horrible invasion of Americans’ rights without probable cause.” The bill might have support when Congress returns next week, Edwards said. Bank forfeits $14 million TAMPA, Fla. (AP) —An international bank pleaded guilty Tuesday to cocaine-related money-laundering charges, agreed to forfeit a record $14 million and to help prosecutors, who say the case has ties to Manuel Noriega. U.S. District Judge W, Terrell Hodges accepted pleas from two divisions of the Luxembourg-based Bank of Credit and Commerce International and found them guilty, but has not set a date for formally imposing the sentence. The plea did not affect co-defendants in the $32 million money-laundering case, including six top BCCI h a n k in g officers and two Colombians whom the government claims were part of the Medellin cocaine cartel. Their cases opened with pretrial motions Tuesday in a trial expected to last five months. Under the agreement signed Tuesday, BCCI, S.A. and BCCI Overseas Ltd. are to forfeit $14 million in assets frozen earlier by the government. Prosecutors claim that represents profits made from the sale of cocaine in American cities and laundered in a series of complicated worldwide banking transactions. A sso ciated P ress photo An old Arm enian w om an, a resident o f Baku, is led to safety in th e dow ntow n area o f th e city Tuesday by tw o S oviet intern al forces sold iers. The c ity lie s been th e scene o f increasing ethnic violen ce. moment,” said White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. The flareup is the most violent between mainly Moslem Azerbaijanis and mostly Christian Armenians since their decadesold feud over Nagorno-Karabakh erupted in bloody clashes two years ago. The region, though predominantly Armenian, has been attached to Azerbaijan since 1923, and the current troubles were sparked by its demand in February 1988 to be annexed by Armenia. The K re m lin e m e rg e n c y d e c re e e m p o w e rs lo c a l o f f ic ia ls to b an dem onstrations and strikes, impose curfews, censor the media, confiscate weapons, disband unofficial organizations and detain people for up to 30 days. Interior Ministry officials said they could not recall such measures being taken in the country •since World War II. T u rn to U n root, £ ag o 1 2 . AT&T outage blamed on computer ‘bug' BEDMINSTER, N.J. (AP) — AT&T blamed,its largest service outage ever on a computer glitch in a new system designed to bolster its long-distance network, and moved quickly Tuesday to make amends with customers. “It was certainly the most far-reaching service problem we’ve ever experienced,” AT&T Chairman Robert E. Allen said. American Telephone & Telegraph Co. discovered the problem about 2:30 p.m. EST Monday, and did not correct it until nine hours later. More than half the. long-distance calls placed on its nationwide network during the trouble did not go through, the company said. AT&T said it traced the glitch to a computer in New York City that helps direct calls through the vast telephone network. Allen said it was not caused by a computer virus or sabotage. The company said the problem stemmed from a bug, or “logic” problem, inadvertently written into the software, or computer program. The problem spread to more than 100 switching centers. First “It was almost like a nightmare waiting to be dreamed,” said AT&T spokesman Burke Stinson. “It was there all the time but the conditions were not right.” In a briefing at the company’s sprawling Network Operations Center in this New York City suburb, Allen announced plans to offer a discount day when all of AT&T’s approximately 80 million customers can make calls at reduced rates. Allen called the plan a small compensation to customers who couldn’t do business or reach friends and relatives during the outage. The company had not decided the discount and date, but Allen said AT&T is filing an emergency petition with the Federal Communications Commission to approve the measure. Other options for compensation áre being reviewed, said Herb Linnen, another company spokesman, but details were not yet available. Allen said he could not estimate losses to AT&T or its customers from the trouble. Airline reservation centers, T u rn to P tio n M , p a g e 1 2 . backs wom en on battlefield WASHINGTON (AP) — Barbara Bush said Tuesday that women should be able to serve in combat as long as they have the physical strength to match their abilities to shoot and fly as well as men. “Certainly, emotionally and mentally they are more than able to compete with a man,” she said in a wide-ranging interview with three reporters. She also said: •Her eyes haven’t improved from the just-completed radiation treatment to combat symptoms of Graves disease, but she is cautiously optimistic. “ Pm so eager to be better that I think I’m better,” she said, acknowledging she still has double vision, especially in the morning. •She doesn’t know why her soaring popularity consistently surpasses Pres­ Bush ident Bush’s own high ratings. “I don’t threaten anyone. Pm just a nice, fat grandmother,” she offered as an explanation. •Her son, Neil Bush, “hasn’t done anything wrong” in his onetime role as a board member of Silverado Savings and Loan. Neil Bush has been questioned by federal regulators about the failed S&L. Asked whether women should serve in combat, as they diet in Panama, Mrs. Bush gave a “qualified yes.” “If I thought a woman physically could pick up someone who was wffunded and carry them to safety, if I thought they could throw a hand grenade as far as a man, then I would say fine.. . They can shoot as well. They can fly as well. The only problem I would have is if it risks somebody else’s life because they couldn’t throw a hand grenade as far or carry (someone).” President Bush has said he would be willing to hear recommendations from the Pentagon about women in combat. The Pentagon’s official policy is that women do not serve in combat roles. Women unexpectedly became involved in combat in Panama. Mrs. Bush said “George doesn’t hide” secrets from her, infinriing the Panama invasion, and that he discusses ideas with her about world affairs. But Mrs. Bush said she knew something was afoot even before the president told her the specifics of the invasion. “It was very d ea r to me that we were having an awful lot of people in the house,” she said. “ I knew pretty clearly that something was happening.” Mrs. Bush said she was surprised at how much she enjoys being first lady. “I thought I’d like it but I never dreamed that I would love it,” she said. She said her most difficult duty was to attend a memorial T u rn to B u to v a , m m t i. i— y E d ito ria l B ankrupt 1990 Challenges ahead for Coor Lattie Coor began his first semester as ASU’s president on Jan. 1, and before the semester is over, he may wish that he’d never left Vermont. Our University is faced with a myriad of problems which, if handled improperly, could relegate ASU to a permanent place in the backwaters of higher education. This means that now is a crucial time in the life of ASU as an institution of higher learning, a time when decisions will be made that will shape the University’s future well into the 21st century. First and foremost, ASU is faced with a dilemma very familiar to most students here — too many expenses and not enough income. ASU is now struggling to adapt to the tremendous growth that began in the 1960s and accelerated sharply in the ’70s and early ’80s -- in retrospect, more growth than was prudent. '•* The challenge for Coor in the ’90s is to find a way to manage this legacy of growth in the face of a tig h ten ed s ta te budget. Unfortunately, toe easiest solution to ASU’s growth problems is to spend more money — money that, as Gov. Medford has already made quite clear, isn’t going to materialize. Everyone knows that the giddy go-go days of unrestrained growth must not return. But what has yet to be decided is how toe University is going to manage the growth that has already occured. Should the University build another branch campus? Should it raise admission standards — excluding m arginal' students to limit enrollment? ASU has wrestled with these questions for many years, and to date, no solution has been reached — but tone for stalling is running out. Coor will need all of his reputed skill as a manager and university advocate to get ASU through toe coming tough budgetary times. But his difficulties won’t stop there. . • Tuition: Always a point of contention, tuition will be an even more volatile issue this year. The proposal now on the table ' would provide for a fair-sized tuition hike for in-state students, and a massive increase for out-of-state students. State P ro » Wednesday. January 17,1990 Obviously the point of increasing tuition is to generate revenue for the University, but the huge increases in out-of-state tuition that the Board of Regents is proposing violates an unw ritten c o n tra c t the University has with its out-of-state students. Luring students here with promises of low tuition and then increasing fees by as much as $1,700 — with no provision for “grandfathering” in toe increase ¥* is like a con man running a bait and switch. • Accreditation problems: P art of the fallout from the unrestrained growth of the past is that some colleges at toe University have run into accreditation problems. In toe case of the business college, toestudent-toteacher ratio was cited as a major problem. The solution: Have fewer students. These students didn’t leave ASU; they just enrolled in other colleges at toe University. This influx of students into other programs is likely to cause a domino effect of accreditation problems University-wide. • Minority issues: The racial incident on Alpha Drive in April 1989 opened wounds within the University community that will take years to heal. Coor’s challenge will be to reach out to minorities and prove to them that he is committed to recruitment and retention — at a time when funding for such efforts is limited. He also must ensure that the minority students who are already here will find an atmosphere that nurtures learning — not racial intolerance and hatred. It is encouraging to note that Coor has a reputation as someone who enjoys pressing the flesh. This is good because it is important that the leader of ASU present an effective defense of educational spending to toe Legislature — a fact that was lost on his predecessor, J. Russell Nelson. , ASU holds a great deal of promise as it enters the last decade of toe 20th century. But if this University is to continue to be an “up-and-coming university,” Lattie Coor will have to deal quickly and effectively with toe above problems. Otherwise, ASU will become nothing more than a huge community college — with a good football team. Welcome Dr. Coor. And good luck; E d u ca tio n re fo rm s co s tly C ody S h e a re r North Am erican Syndicate WASHINGTON — You know the nation’s education system is on the rocks when the secretary of education calls for a revolution throughout the entire educational establishment. W hat p ro m p te d S e c r e ta r y of Education Cavazos’ plea for- help last week was the release of another of these national report cards on schools which showed more pathetic results. Since 1980, for example, toe percentage of nineyear-olds with basic skills dropped from 68 percent to 63 percent. Among 13-yearolds, almost half lacked the skills needed to read at toe eighth-grade level. And for 11th graders, a third could not even Complete a job application correctly. As for keener cerebral skills, the report card found that a majority of America’s students were “dreadfully in a d e q u a te ” in e x p re s s in g and conceiving their own ideas. While some may know how to read and write a simple sentence, few can summarize from materials they’ve read or concoct fresh thoughts. ‘What Cavazos didn't have the guts to say, for obvious reasons, is that he’s part of a team that has only paid lip service to education. ’ “As a nation,” Cavazos declared, “we should be appalled that we have placed our children in such jeopardy. ” .What Cavazos didn’t have the guts to say, for obvious reasons, is that he’s part of a team that has only paid lip service to education. Despite all George Bush’S vows about wanting to be “toe education president,” Bush has not demonstrated a genuine commitment to education. Though state and local governments have the foremost responsibility in s e ttin g e d u c a tio n a l p o licy and administering educational programs, it is up to toe president and the Congress to use their resources to equalize access to schooling and to improve the quality of American education. But during his first year in office, Bush revealed his cautious proposal, just a small amount more than what President Reagan asked for in his last budget. Yet this wasn’t Bush’s only deficiency. As of September, the President had left seven top level education department slots unfilled. All but two positions have recently been announced. The President’s approach to education reforms is anything but deep and there is some history to prove it. During the eight y e a r s of th e R e a g a n -B u s h Administration, education funding fell from 2.3 percent to 1,7 percent of the total federal budget. Furthermore, toe number of poor students receiving federally supported basic skills training slid from 7 million in 1980-81 to 5.7 million in 1988-89, even though the number of children requiring assistance increased to 8.5 million. Is it any wonder that toe average reading proficiency of AfricanAmerican and Hispanic 17-year-olds is roughly the same as that of an average white student of four years younger? Funding questions aside, Cavazos is particularly freaked by the dramatic growth projections in the student p o p u la tio n d u rin g th is d ec ad e. Secondary and elem entary school eprâümènt-will increase by 9 percent. s means oilr country will need at least r a 15 percent mcrease in classroom teachers. If we can’t teach a smaller school population! today, how is toe Xv--eeuntry going to cope in the 1990s? Where will we find the teachers to handle the new instructional toad? Of course, none of this will be easy since toe average school teacher makes $28,584 a yeah'Moreover, being a teacher involves personal risks. Nearly 3 million . students, teachers and others were victims of criminal acts on school campuses in 1987, according to the National School Safety Center (NSSC). And, 6.5 million boys and 3.5 million girls participated in fights on school grounds during toe previous year. If this news isn’t depressing enough, one must wonder how our nation’s youth will compete in the new world order, specifically when it comes to filling hightech jobs. Beginning next year, U. S. colleges and universities will have to graduate twice as many women, five times as many blacks and seven times as many Hispanics into science and engineering careers to fill toe shortages in these careers. Naturally, toe education crisis can be solved if President Bush has the foresight to devote a significant percentage of the so-called peace dividend to education programs. Without such a commitment, one can forget about schools goading the public conscience, fueling a s p ira tio n s o r in sp irin g commonality. The burden lies with toe federal government to provide the funds for hard-pressed school districts to meet the educational requirem ents of their communities. Without a surge in spending, our national security will bë seriously imperiled. At some point, Lauro Cavazos is going to have to do more than call for a rhetorical revolution. Someone, after all, has to lead it. And at this point in his administration, it sure isn’t going to be George Bush, Perhaps some young Democrat will challenge toe president on this issue in 1992. It’s one area in which the president is extremely vulnerable. LETTER POLICY The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing arid major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. * Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tem pe AZ 85287-1502. Opinion State Press Page 5 Wednesday, January 17,1990 Gravy train O strom , Z afra c o llu d e w ith regents fo r fu n d in g o f c lu b D arrin H o ste tle r Editor Look who’s coming to dinner. After years of plotting, dealing and outright lying by backers of ASU’s faculty club, a select group of professors and administrators are finally going to get their elite campus bar/dining hall, to be housed in the historic ASU Fine Arts Annex. At the last meeting of the Arizona Board of Regents on Jan. 5, the Board approved a University request for $1.7 million to get the faculty eatery off the ground. For club supporters, it is indeed a tasty package. Their main course will not only inalude the club, provided by a “loan” from the University, put also a complete selection of savory trimmings — featuring elegant marble floors, decorative ceramic tiles andijetailed wood accents. This delicious deal was arranged by ASU’s Director of Development Lonnie Ostrom, Business Affairs Vice President Victor Zafra and their gang of bottom-line junior executives in the ASU business affairs office, who proclaim that the luxurious club is going to be the greatest boon to ASU faculty since computer-graded testing, and that it will easily support itself financially. But in fact, when you total up the cost of various club feasibility studies conducted by ASU and the total cost of constructing and operating the club, what you’ve got isn’t a boon, but a nearly $2 million boondoggle. “Boondoggle,” though, makes it sound more like a wellintentioned accident. And the faculty club was anything but an accident. The club was artfully handled by Ostrom and Zafra, two of the University’s most powerful administrators, who slowly and deliberately steered the club project through the proper channels, pushing all the right buttons, playing all the right games with all the right officials and lying when necessary to get their little club. And now the taxpayers will get to pick up the check. For Ostrom and Zafra the taste of their successful manipulation must be sweet. For the rest of us, however, the whole thing is unappetizing and leaves a bitter aftertaste. I, for one, am just a little sick to the stomach. ' . ’ • • "♦ -" - ' ASU officials estimate that the budget cuts proposed by Gov. Mofford in her State of the State address last week will require the University to tighten its belt by about $9 million. So white the University braces for a nearly $9 million budget cut — which is going to directly affect the quality of our education —and while students get set to face potentially the largest tuition increase in state history to offset that deficit, ASU is planning to drop nearly $2 million on a bar and grill for a few well-heeled faculty and administrators. And what is worse, the $2 million is only the beginning. All signs indicate that die club will never show a dime of profit. The club will not have enough members to be financially independent and will never repay the money “loaned” to it by ASU, as Ostrom and Zafra claim it will. A quick look at similar clubs in the Pac-10 and around the country reveals only one — UCLA — had a money-making year in 1988. And the Bruin club has been around for 30 years, has 2,500 members and relied on substantial university help until very recently. The rest of the clubs regularly run in the red and require their respective schools fully to support their operations. Why? Because the cost of providing food services ió i a small group of faculty and staff is usually prohibitive. Providing complete meal and bar service for an exclusive group of a few hundred, or even a few thousand, is incredibly expensive, and tte high prices that the food-service industry must charge club members for that service tends to keep other members away. Anyone involved in food-service or catering recognizes this as a basic rule of business. And it will be proven true at ASU, where the university club has fewer members (600) and higher initiation dues ($300) than any other Pac-10 club, all of which will make it the most exclusive— and most expensive — of all. . A feasibility study conducted by a consultant for thè University predicted that the club would be self-supporting— based on a prediction that the club will grow by at least 100 new members annually. A figure which, in light of membership costs, is optimistic to the extreme. In addition to high initiation fees and monthly dues, the club will require members to fork over between $10 and $20-plus for dinner. Few faculty members will be able to afford« this, much less the poorly paid masses of staff members, many of whom are officially below the poverty . level. If the consultant is counting on those janitors who have been denied thie right by ASU to pick up and redeem aluminum cans on campus — in order to earn a few extra bucks a week — to run out and snatch up a pricey University Club membership, they are sadly mistaken. Although technically open to classified staff members, the club will exclude them by simple economics. In addition, the consultant based the membership projections on the record of the Phoenix University Club, a ritzy downtown club open to pretty much anyone who has ever attended college anywhere. This is obviously a much larger pool of potential members to draw on than the limited numbers at ASU — and was a - ridiculous choice for comparison. Of course, the consultant, on Zafra’s orders, never bothered to look at disasterous record of other clubs around the country. Because Zafra knew what the record would show. And that wasn’t part of the plan. • .• STATE PRESS D A R R IN H O S TETLER Editor A sst. M anaging E d ito r — .......S U ZA N N E R O S S C ity E d ito r...... . . . . ...........M IC H E LLE A LLM A N BU R G ESS .... B R IA N TA S S IN A R I ..... .........LYNN VARECK Asst. O pinion E d ito r....................... ............... .. b e n M c C o n n e l l ............ ....... SH A R O N KAN EY Assoc. M agazine E d ito r............... ......... M E G H A LVER SO N Asst. M agazine E d ito r.. .. ... .... M IC H ELLE C R U FF ......... STEV E K R IC U N ........P A U L C O R O .............. ..............S E TH SULKA ..... ...........N IC O L E PER R O N Copy C h ie f . . . . ........ P hoto E d ito f.i,;.« .......,....» ...M .i*....*» ,i.» """S C O T T TRYANOS R E P O R TE R S : G rem lyn B radley, M ike B urgess, N icoie C arroll, K im berly H arris, M ich elle H enry, KeHy J ain , Jennifer K illian , S onja Lew is, D an N ow icki, H obart R ow land, Kevin Staph, Tenny Tatu sian , K ris tie Young. S P O R TS R E P O R TE R S : V ic k i C ulver, M atthew K aster,Larry N e w ell, D an Z eig er. P H O TO G R A PH ER S: Jeo rg etta D ouglas, Jam ie Lytle, Sundi K jenstad, S helli W right. C O P Y E D ITO R S : C harles G ran ie ri, K risten Johnson, JW Tibke. .. .V •• Indeed, there are few people bold or stupid enough to look you in the eye and say that the faculty club even has a chance of being self-supporting, much less of paying back ASU’s investment in the club. And now that the club is a done deal, ASU will be forced to forever subsidize the facility — to the tune of several hundred thousand dollars a year —long after Ostrom and Zafra move on to whatever dark corner of hell is reserved for administrators. But what really is upsetting is not what they did, it’s the way they did it. After years of indifference from ASU administrators and the state Legislature, who have saddled instructors with huge, unwieldy classes and stiffed them with miniscule pay raises, professors at this University deserve a few perks. At first glance, one such perk — the University Club — sounds like a good idea. Give professors and administrators a place to eat together, fraternize, have a drink and talk. Let it be a place to build a sense of community, to discuss University matters — and a place to have fun. They deserve it. Good, except that the club costs too much money —with no guarantee that it won’t cost a lot more money — and comes along at exactly the wrong time. . Ostrom and Zafra understood this. As the state faces a massive budgetary crisis, they knew that the idea of a statesubsidized faculty playpen would never wash with legislators or members of the University community. So they had a ludicrous, superficial study done by a highly paid consultant and portrayed the $1.7 million as a “loan,” to C A R O LYN «HOFIG M anaging E ditor FR E E LA N C E W R ITE R S : H eid i D onat, J ill C hristine H erbranson, C hristopher H orak, D eborah N em ko, Francine S tahl, M ish T ell, K ram er W etzel. C A R TO O N IS T: M ike R itter E D IT O R E M E R IT U S ; M arty Sauerzopf P R O D U C TIO N : Fernando A lvidrez, M artin G axiola, Nancy N ess, M ark N othaft, John R am irez, Lynne S enzek, Eric Zotcavage. >; /'y V A D V E R TIS IN G R E P R E SE N TA TIV E S: Jay EckhardL Dan E llstrom , Lysa Fitzhugh , Jessica Irw in, T ric ia K luter, P au l Lee, K aren Lisiew ski, Brook M ullen, T erri S m ith, C harlotte Tang, R ay Z ickei. The S tate Press is published M onday through F riday during the academ ic year excep t holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s C enter* Room 15, A rizona S tate U niversity, Tem pe, A rizona 8 52 87 . New sroom : (6 0 2 ) 965 -2 29 2 . W e do hot answ er questions o f a general nature. A dvertising and Production: (6 0 2) 965*7572. The S tate P ress is th e only new spaper exclusively published for 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, s ta ff or student body. 'Zaira. ' be paid back by the club — which was “proven” to be a safe financial risk based on the virtually meaningless study. And to top it off, they snuck the $1.7 million club proposal through the Board of Regents while the student body, student government officers and the State Press were conveniently on winter vacation, instead of holding the measure until February or March, as the business affairs office had promised. Thus they effectively completed an end run around students aqd the rest of the University community that clings to the irrational belief that there just might be better uses for taxpayers’ money than the construction of a faculty dining club. A high-priced one, at that, and one that deliberately excludes the largest section of the University community — students. We could conclude from all this that Lonnie Ostrom and Victor Zafra care much more about getting what they want for themselves and their friends than about achieving the University’s mission — to provide an education for students. Or, on a more vulgar level, we could simply conclude that they are selfish, deceitful little weasels. At the very least, we can conclude that their behavior, in a time of statewide financial crisis, invites close scrutiny. It was interesting, and not a little disheartening, to see that no one at the regents meeting when the faculty club was approved voiced any concern about the plan. Not even the student regent, Peggy Stephens, spoke out. But it is doubtful that state legislators, constantly alert to waste at Arizona universities, will also wink at the expenditure. I hope that, as consideration of the University budget approaches this spring, and ASU administrators begin their annual plea for leniency from the budget-cutting axe, legislators take a look at how some of the money they are allocating is being spent. They might be interested to know about the ASU faculty bar and grill. With a little luck, they might even point out to Ostrom and Zafra that it is indiscreet to feast while the rest of the state «suffers though financial famine. I State Press Ijtn iM rv 1 7 1 0 Q 0 ■Page 6 OPEN: Monday thru Friday 7:30 AM -1 0 PM Saturday 9 AM -1 0 PM Sunday 11 AM -1 0 PM Located At 712 S. College Next to College Street Deli 967-4049 Beer and Soda Photo Developing Health & Beauty Aids Compact Discs NEXT TO COLLEGE STREET DELI Sun 11 a m.-10 o m Phone C A M P U S C O R N ER C O U P O N FOUNTAIN »9 ^ COKE 3 9 c 32 0 7 EXPIRES 1-24-90 ;iGAftETTES 2 FOR *2 .7 5 C A M P U S C O R N ER C O U P O N C A M P U S C O R N ER C O U P O N C0KE$1.49 G A T O R A D E 16 OZ. 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U n iv e r s ity M a rtin > u ilf of J * On De r c o n ® itr o re n e w c » s d re a m < fre e d o m K in g » J : d ig n ity lv h o n o re ^rer tnhS ig h ts h te d * u n iv e rs X e n c o u i e v e n ts M a rtin m em ory r o w a tc .v is io n ; on } Î th e C hanne i AFFIRMING THE DREAM ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration Week January 15-19,1990 DAILYEVENTS 10:00 aua. SELECTED KING SPEECHES Broadcast bn Cacly M all 10:00 a.m. SUOEPRESENTATION H ighlighting the Am erican C ivil Rights Movement end International M ovem ents. M em orial Union, Rendezvous Lounge. EXHIBITS “ VnOMOS: A CEIEBRATIOK OFPEACEMAKERS’’ Featured portraits from individuals and organizations who have made outstanding contributions to peace efforts and social change.* Grady Gammage Lobby, Lower Level. MONEENOF COURAGE” Photographs and biographical sketches of 71 extraordinary black women. G rady Garnmage Lobby, Upper Level. "CHINESE DEMOCRACY MOVEMENT" Hayden Library Lobby. Concourse Level. Co-sponsored by the Chinese-Am erican Professionals Association of Arizona. “ NOIE OF THEOLACNPRESSIN THECIVIL RIGHTSMOVEMENT” Stauffer H all. Second Floor. FILM 2:0( - 4:30 p .n. ‘CAY FREEDOM” THURSDAY Noon-2:00 p.m. NMi r RICHARDSONAND IME MORNINGSTARBAND Concert. Cady Mall, Fountain Area. Noott-1A0 p.m. “BLACK WOMENHEROINESOF THECIVIL NIGHTSMOVEMENT” Presention by ASU Professor of History, Dr. Mary Rothschild. Social Science Bldg., Room 101. Co­ sponsored by ASU Women's Studies. 0:30 p.m. CAHOEUBHTCEREMONY Cady Mall, Fountain Area.Co-sponsored by the Multi-Cultural Awareness Board of Associated Students of ASU. ■ 0:00 p.m “RAUL ROBESON" Play. Paul Galvin Playhouse, Russell & Bonita Nelson Fine Arts Complex. $10.00 - general admission; $8.00 - faculty and staff; $5.00 - students and senior citizens. Co-sponsored by the ASU Dept, of Theatre. FRIDAY 1:00 - 2:00 p.m. MARtACHtLOS0IABL0S DEL SOL Concert. Cady Mall, Fountain Area. M em orial U nion Theatre, Lower Level. 2:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY Randall Robinson, Executive Director of Trans-Africa. Education Lecture Hall.. M -M p « . TREECODY, MAUVE-AMERICANFLUTIST Concert. Memorial Union. Rendezvous lounge. 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. “BUBAL WSHNANDLEGACYOF OR. MARTINLUTHERMRS, JR." Presentation by ASU Professor of Religious Studies, Dr. Moses Moore. Followed by POETRY READINGS performed by students from the Campus Chapter of the NAACP and Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Memorial Union, Fine Arts Lounge. Cosponsored by MUAB. 7:00 ■9:00 p.m. ANNUAL BR. KINGCELEBRATIONAT THECOLLEGEOFLAW Keynote presentation by ASU Professor o f English, Dr. Keith Miller. Dramatic presentation of selected King speeches performed by ASU Law School Graduate ('88) Mr. Joseph Rogers, of the Denver law firm of Davis, Graham and Stubbs. Music by First New Life Baptist Church. Program will conclude with a candlelight ceremony. Armstrong Building, Pedrick Great Hall. KEYNOTESPEAKER 0:00 p.m. “RAULROBESON" Final Performance. Paul Galvin Playhouse, Russell & Bonita Nelson Fine Arts Complex. $10.00 - general admission; $8.00 - faculty and staff; $5.00 - students and senior citizens, po-sponsored by the ASU Dept of Theatre. With pa rticu la r appreciation fo r these student organizations: A SASU (Assoc. Students of Arizona State University) B lack Law Students A ssociation D elta Sigm a T h eta Sorority M C AB (Multi-Cultural Awareness Board) M U AB (Memorial Union Activities Board) N A A C P (National Assoc, for the Advancement of Colored People) Sponsored by the ASU Dr. M artin Luther King, Jr. Celebration Committee. Advertising production provided by KAET Channel 8, a p a rt o f Arizona State University. Page 8 State Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 Student finishes studies 3 days before her death f y M IKE BURGESS S tate Press Beverly McKerracher jotted down the note to herself in a spiral notebook: Keep going. It was late November and McKerracher, a 29-year-old ASU student, was losing a 2Vfe year battle with brain cancer. But she wanted to earn her bachelor’s degree in marketing — a goal so important she even deferred undergoing further medical treatment until the semester ended. On Dec. 7, about two weeks after McKerracher scribed the motivational note, she neared her goal when she handed in her final assignment. Three days later, she was admitted to the B arro w ’s N eurological In stitu te at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix, where she lapsed into a coma. McKerracher died on Dec. 15, one week. before graduation, “She thought it (her degree) was a very important goal,” McKerracher’s father, Alvin, said in a recent telephone interview from Belleville, 111. “I think it was her last will and testament.” U n iv e rs ity o ffic ia ls w ill a w a rd McKerracher her degree posthumously, said Lenna Erickson, an assistant to the dean of student life. “It’s pretty heroic,” Erickson said of McKerracher’s efforts. “She was a real determined young woman.” Alvin McKerracher said his daughter began her education at ASU in 1962 and attended classes part time while she worked as an advertising supervisor for a local J. C. Penney catalog outlet. She recently left the job so she could concentrate on school, he said. After the Illinois native was diagnosed with cancer in 1987, she underwent surgery and had routine checkups and radiation treatment, her father said. But last summer the cancer reappeared. Toward the middle of last semester, when her condition worsened, McKerracher’s mother and one of her two sisters traveled-to the Valley to help her make sure she was meeting her graduation requirements. “ T h ey (M c K e r r a c h e r ’s fa m ily ) impressed upon me that this was a very important thing in her life,” said Jan Partin, a College of Business academic adviser who worked with McKerracher’s ■family. ■ Partin and others at ASU said they were inspired by McKerracher’s tenacity. “ I think this is a very amazing accomplishment, ’’ Partin said. “As an adviser, you hear 95 percent of the students you deal with complain (about ASU). “It’s sort of encouraging — here is a person who went out of her way and did it (got her degree) with incredible odds against her,” she said. “I never saw anyone go after (a degree) that badly; She sure is a role model.” Gary Brunswick, a doctoral student who taught McKerracher’s retail management McKerracher class, said he will always remember her accomplishment. “It’ll stick in my mind for quite some time,” Brunswick said. “It makes me think, others too, who have the privilege to meet someone like Beverly, that they have a lot to be thankful for.” “It took a lot of guts,” he said. Those who knew McKerracher said that despite her illness, she did hot want sympathy and told very few people about the cancer. “She tolerated it so well and tried so hard not to let it show,” McKerracher’s sister, Priscilla, said. “Not even many of her friends had any idea she had it.” Priscilla McKerracher described her sister, who enjoyed oil painting and charcoal drawing in addition to outdoor sports, as a person who always tried to keep a positive attitude. As her sister’s condition worsened, Priscilla McKerracher said going to class became McKerracher’s “one focus that kept her going.” She said her sister wanted a degree because “she knew you just couldn’t function in society and be appreciated without a degree.” Priscilla McKerracher said that although her sister died before graduation, she believes McKerracher knew she had accomplished her goal. - “She knew in her heart and mind she had made it.” THE PIPELINE TO THE GOOD LIFE Choosing the good life in El Paso, Texas, means choosing a sunny climate, natural bèauty, and year-round recreation. It means choosing affordable comfort in a stimulating culture. It means working in a gateway to the Great American West. THE PIPELINE TO TOMORROW •At El Paso Natural Gas Company, tomorrow means meeting the demand for clean versatile energy, with one of the country’s largest natural gas transporta­ tion networks. 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Terrace Tempe Baseline & Handy [Pepperwood Plaza] 966-6070 491-3921 P age9 W édnwda^Januag^iJW ftm N M P L - f t fl •€ t € -ft fi t H THE N IT E C L U B K Q W E L C O M E B A C K TO S C H O O L N IG H T B IG F£-!|o>#&G D E A L P A R T Y $ 1 .0 0 DRINKS 8 - 1 0 p .m . 99 ^ ___________________ F R ID A Y S S A T U R D A Y : $ 1 .0 0 DRINKS $ 1 .0 0 DRINKS 8 -1 0 p.m. Live R eggae w ith R H A S T A F A R M E R S SW C SCO TTSDALE & CAM ELBACK 8 -1 0 p.m. fo r Ladies A l= T E R H O U R S Open until 3 :0 0 ROADS • 602$945G 2345 Page 10 Stale Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 Officials re-evaluate use of lobbyists for University By KELLY JA IN S ta te Press * With a new president on board, ASU officials decided not to renew the U niversity’s yearly contract with a Washington, D C., lobbying firm. University officials allowed the contract to expire Dec. 31, 1989, because “the timing was appropriate to re-evaluate it, especially with a new president,” said Brent Brown, vice president for University relations. Associated Students of ASU President Paul Larson agreed. “It doesn’t surprise me, especially with a new president.” Brown said the decision was not connected with the firm’s lobbying ability. S T a d A T s . E . . w P R e E S S s e l l r e C l a s s i f i e d a d v e p l t s ! __________________ - s u take long to complete the evaluation,” he said. Meanwhile, the University is waiting for a summary report from Cassidy regarding its lobbying efforts. Brown said if will take at least a few weeks to receive the summary. Even if Coor ¡decides not to renew the contract with Cassidy, Brown said he believes ASU should have a lobbyist in the nation’s capital. “We need some kind of a presence in Washington, D.C.,” he said. Both UofA and NAU have lobbyists, he said, adding that a university as large as ASU needs a lobbyist. research dollars. ASU falls behind other universities in fe d e ra l funding, acco rd in g to the Department of Education. ASU did not make the list of the top 100 Colleges receiving federal funding for fiscal year 1986, the most recent year for which data are available. The California Institute of Technology, which received nearly $1 billion, topped the list. The UofA ranked 36th. Brown said he is not sure when new ASU President Lattie Coor will evaluate the lobbyist’s efforts and decide whether or not to renew the contract. However, “it won’t He said Cassidy & Associates, the lobbying firm , was instrum ental in obtaining funds for the Goldwater Center for Science and Engineering, adding that ASU generally has been satisfied with the firm’s performance. The ASU Foundation, the main fund­ raising arm of the University, payed the firm $20,000 a month from the time it was hired in 1986 until it secured $25 million in funding for the new science and engineering center a year later from the federal Department of Energy. Most major universities in the country hire lobbyists in Washington to compete for ü , i e i n g j w e d o n ’t; j u s t s e l l ^ _______________ - Only for student American Express”Candmembers. Apply for the American Express* Card. Then get ready to take off. In search o f adventure, action-or just simply to escape. American Express and Northwest Airlines have arranged these extraordinary travel privileges on Northwest-exclusively for student Cardmembers: ■ CERTIFICATES VALID FOR THE PURCHASE $118 ROUNDTRiP t ic k e t s —to many of tw o o f the more than 180 cities in the 48 contig­ uous United States served by Northwest. 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Box 35029, •If you i: Student Marketing, Greensboro, NC 27425. Fare is for roundtrip travel on Northwest Airlines. Tickets must be purchased within 24 hours after making nservations. Fares a n nonrefundableand no itinerar may he made after purchase Seats at this hue a n limited and may not be available when you call. Travel must originate by certifican expiration date and be completed within 60 days o f that date. Travel may not be available between cities to which Northwest does not have published routings. City fuel surcharges not included in f a n from Boston ($2.50), Chicago ($5.00), Denver ($2.00) and Florida cities ($2,00). Certain blackout dates and other restrictions may apply. For complete offer details, call 1-800-942-AMEX. ©1990 American Express Travel Related Services Company, Inc. T H E A M E R IC A N E X P R E S S - C A R D / FOR S T U D E N T S M ORE T H A N EVER. Page 11 Wednesday, January 17,1990 Stats Press University Club funding approved by Board By NICO LE CARROLL S tate Press The Arizona Board of Regents voted unanimously at its January board meeting for initial approval of $1.7 million in ASU investment income to fund the University Club, an on-campus dining facility for faculty and staff members. The Board delayed voting on the controversial proposal in October, claiming the club funding heeded more research. Victor Zafra, vice president for business affairs, said the same consultant who did the initial club research, Pannell Kerr Forster, provided the Board with the new numbers. “They kind of updated their survey,” Z afra said. “ We gave them m ore conservative assumptions.” Of the $1.7 million approved, $885,000 was pre-designated by former ASU president J. Russell Nelson for stabilization of the 82-year-old Fine Arts Annex, the building planned to house the University Club; ‘‘That was already committed to restore a chunk of the exterior,” Zafra said. The remaining $830,500 will be used to redecorate the buiding and to add dining facilities. In addition, parking services will fund $49,100 for a new parking lot and surrounding landscaping. Lonnie O strom , president* of the University Club board of directors, said the club intends to pay back any University capital investments. He said the University Club will turn over membership dues and monthly fees to the University until the debt is erased. The new PKF report shows that this scenario is realistic if the club opens with 600 members and attracts 100 new members each subsequent year for five years. But Associated Students of ASU president Paul Larson said the club is a money-losing venture. “The Board needs to understand this is not going to be a revenue-generating project,” Larson said. “This club is going to lose money every year. It will require a subsidy.” Faculty and staff members must pay a $25 initiation fee, a $300 renovation contribution and $12 each month in membership fees. Community members may join by paying a $200 membership fee and a $300 renovation contribution. Their monthly fees have not yet been determined. The updated club revenue figures in the PKF report are based on the collection of fees year-round, not just during the school year. “If you’re going to be a member, you have to pay for 12 months,” Ostrom said. A t Its m eeting th is m onth, th e A rizona Board o f Regents unanim ously approved funding fo r the controversial U niversity C lub, w hich is planned to be b u ilt in th e fo rm e r Fine A rts Annex. Currently there are 560 members, but Zafra said he’s not concerned about reaching the required membership. “They (the club’s board of directors) think they are reasonably conservative figures,” Zafra said. Ostrom agreed. “I think once it’s up and operating, there will be growth,” Ostrom said. He said the club should be ready for use in thesummer of 1991. The PKF report to the Board failed to compare the ASU University Club to similar projects at other Pac-10 schools. Zafra said this was not an oversight. He said the firm only researched the University Club of Phoenix, a dining facility open to all alumni of any college or university. The club proposal must now go through p ro je c t ap p ro v al from th è B oard. Construction plans have to be finalized and the food contract has to be put out to bid. “It’s not a done deal,” Larson said, “It’s just one step closer.” C om m ittee to lure 1993 S uper B ow l to Sun Devil Stadium By NICO LE CARROLL S tate Proas With resounding approval from the Arizona Board of Regents, a committee formed to lure the 1993 Super Bowl to Sun Devil Stadium will present its proposal to NFL team owners at their March meeting. ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris said staging the event in Tempe would bring money, presitige and publicity to the University . But it could also temporarily take away nearly 5,000 student parking spaces. The committee must supply the NFL with information concerning lodging, transportation facilities, climate, O L D stadium information and auxiliary areas. The NFL would require that Sun Devil Stadium and Parking Lot 59 be available for use by Super Bowl organizers one week before the event. The game would be held during the second week of the spring semester. Harris, also a member of the citizen committee, said he is working toward a solution to the parking problem. “It is a major issue — we have made that emphatically clear,’’ Harris said, ; He said it is not clear whether the NFL will need the Space for an entire week, but it will definitely be indisposed for two or three days. The lot will accommodate 30 to 40 broadcast media semi-trucks, 800 sportswriters and corporate hospitality centers. Ron Kucera, acting assistant director of parking services, said his department was contacted about the pending problem. “We strongly impressed on people who are evaluating (the Super Bowl proposal) the need the University community has for parking in that area,” Kucera said. Harris said the committee is examining several alternatives for displaced students. its ideas include having students park in satellite locations and be bussed to ASU, utilizing empty spaces in campus parking structures and the possible use of parking made available by the City of Tempe’s Rio Salado project. N Page 12 ^ d n e s d a y i J a n u a i ^ I T j j W J K ^ ^ _ _ _ ..S tm tP l««» Unrest_____ C o n tin u ed fro m pag e 3. Gennady G erasim ov, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, denied the decree was a backtracking in Gorbachev’s reforms, which have led to greater openness and liberalization of society since he became Soviet leader in March 1985. “I would not interpret this step as being at odds with glasnost and democracy,” Gerasimov said. “On the contrary, the step opposes anarchy.” In a front-page commentary in Izvestia, Albert Plutnik wrote: “Perestroika has been forced to defend itself. And it’s not its fault if to defend itself and others, it needs the help of emergency measures.” Spokesman Vladimir Yanchenkov of the Interim' Ministry, which is in charge of police affairs, said in Moscow the death toll in the Caucasus had risen from 37 to 56 in Azerbaijan and that 156 people had been injured , Two of the dead were members of law enforcement agencies, he said. Most of the Soviet TV showed Interior Ministry troops firing in the air as they rode in armored personnel carrier through an Azerbaijani village near Nagorno-Karabakh to enforce the emergency decree. The m inistry said the Azerbaijani People’s Front, a grassroots political group that has organized anti-Armenian protests, w a s p r e v e n t i n g a r r i v i n g tro o p reinforcements traveling to battle areas by blocking roads. People’s Front militants even seized four tanks without ammunition from a railway station in Zazaly, the ministry reported. Izvestia said the gang took five soldiers hostage, but later released them and the tanks. A large cache of explosives was discovered in Azerbaijan in railway cars headed for Armenia, Tass said. In Nagorno-Karabakh, about 26,000 people —about a sixth of the population—had been detained and nearly 3,000 firearms and other weapons confiscated since the conflict victims were Armenians, the ministry said. Y anchenkov said au th o rities had recorded 167 “pogroms,” or ethnic attacks, and cases of arson. The violence exploded Saturday night with anti-Armenian riots in Baku. People were burned alive and a witness said women were thrown from windows. Fighting rapidly spread to NagornoKarabakh and nearby areas of Azerbaijan, with the belligerents using helicopters, armored vehicles, machine guns and other arms seized from government arsenals or offered by their compatriots. In the Shaumyan region of Azerbaijan, fighters took an armored personnel carrier and infantry fighting vehicle and seized soldiers as hostages, Komsomolskaya Pravda said. The armored vehicle crushed a police car in a “barbarian slaughter,” the paper said. Some of the fighters were masquerading as soldiers by wearing their uniforms, it said. Phones____ m ym W ir e t e s began, Izvestia said. Azerbaijanis were said Tuesday to be continuing a virtual rail blockade of Armenia’s 3.5 million people, cutting short fuel and other supplies. In Baku, detachment of security troops patrolled the city and armored vehicles moved through the suburbs of the Caspian Sea port, Azerbaijani activist Alesker Siyabov said by telephone. Siyabov, a member of the Azerbaijani People’s F ront, said anti-Arm enian sentiment was still running high in the republic of 6.9 million people. T ass Said 2,000 A rm enians w ere evacuated by ferry and plane from Baku, an oil-producing center of 1.7 million. Of the 220,000 Armenians who lived there before the strife over Nagorno-Karabakh began,’ only a few thousand remain, it said. In February 1988, Azerbaijanis went on an anti-Armenian rampage in the industrial city of Sumgait, near Baku, and 32 people, mostly Armenians, were killed. STA TE D R ESS mm Classified Advert , C o n tin u ed fro m page 3 . telephone marketers and others who depend on telephones were especially affected, officials have said. The failure, however, may have been somewhat muted by the Martin Luther King holiday, which reduced the load of government, business and banking calls. AT&T said about 148 million calls were attempted Monday, compared with about 110 million attempted calls bn a normal day, mainly due to the number of callers who got busy signals or recordings the first time. Company spokesman Gary Morgenstern said AT&T completed about 83 million calls Monday, within the range of 80 million to 85 million calls completed on a normal day, About 35 million of those completed calls went through during the problem period. Allen said he was optimistic the problem would not recur or affect the company’s credibility in its battle to maintain its 70 percent share of the long-distance market. AT&T plans an advertising campaign designed to help show customers it is still “the right choice” in long-distance carriers, Allen said, adding the company plans to contact its large customers to assess the outage’s impact. Eastern Airlines, for example, was still trying to determine how much business it lost when travelers could not get through to its reservation operators. “We estimate we lost many thousands of calls during the outage and thousands of potential bookings,” said Eastern spokeswoman Karen Ceremsack. Neither MCI Communications Corp. nor US Sprint, AT&T’s main competitors, plan to change their marketing strategies to capitalize on AT&T’s problem, spokesmen said. Both reported an increase in calls Monday as customers sought alternatives to AT&T. “It’s an unfortunate situation and not one we’re going to try to take advantage of in that way,” said John Landsberg, a Sprint spokesman at its Kansas City, Mo., headquarters. AT&T said it would investigate the possibility of transferring major customers to competitors during emergencies. On Monday, AT&T operators at first refused to give out access numbers for its customers to use MCI or Sprint due to a company policy, but the policy was abandoned later in the day, AT&T said. Barbara________ Follett’s Gift Shop h as th e y « fl B e st D eals » M s g % S ch o o l S u p plies W e F e a tu re ^ SANFO RD. C?) MPER3MATF ^ ***T Post-i1™ (jggSTMK' FaberCastel' «TDK S H A R P cc SHARP with ^ _ 9 9 SAVE $1 ! 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Aren’t they cute?” she said, waving to a woman from die window of the room where she keeps her clothes, On other subjects, Mrs. Bush said: •She had been “a little testy” about an avalanche of letters saying it’s unsafe for the president!» attend the Feb.45 drug summit in violence-torn Colombia. She said she would prefer the summit be elsewhere, but “I can’t change his mind or make those decisions." •She plans to write a book after leaving the White House based on 30 years of diaries, but says it won’t be a “kiss and tell.” •“A lot of progress is being made” in her war against illiteracy. “But it’s a drop in the bucket.. . . We’re trying to change the whole system.” SAVE $ “| 00 SPIRAL 150 Sheets S O 4 I NOTEBOOK 3 - £ !m - 1 »«so* C o n tin u ed fro n tp a g e 3 . service for the 47 seamen killed in the April 19, 1989, explosion aboard the USS Iowa. I 0M W h ile Q u a n titie s Last VINYmUNG „ 67Sertes BINDER I S T ' $239 OUR EVERYDAY LOWPRICE! C h e c k O ur E veryd a y L ow P ric e s o n • a^Utoifon./' FILLER PAPER • PAPERSMATE* ELECTA POINT • '%/iBUCy74»«* AUTOMATIC KHOL • î EAStpak BACKPACKS ¥ CARDS ¥ G IF T S ¥ D E C O R A T IO N S ¥ PARTY W ARE ¥ G IF T W R A P ¥ S T U F F E D A N IM A L S o p o c ia t p n w » valid through 1/31/90 A.S.U. Memorial Union Lower Level • 966-9188 ............... k Follett’s Gift Shop State Presa JVedo«dS£j«Tuafy17j 1990 Page 13 Tuition C o n tln iM d fro m pag e 1.' C ost in Years EDIn-S tate Tuition E3O u t-of-S tate Tuition BICYCLE LIQUID A TION We Will Not Be Undersoldlll A ll 1 9 8 9 s to c k m u s t g o , m a n y m o d e ls r e d u c e d to s e ll BACK TO SCHOOL IS HERE A s k a b o u t s tu d e n t d is c o u n ts Mountain Bikes fro m * im *5 Ten Speeds fr o m *99 »s I- - ) 9—s—SU-Locks A ll b ic y c le s c o m e fu lly a s s e m b le d only a n d w ith their education they must pay by only 1 percent, which is consistent with current Board policy. But Elliot said he does not think grandfathering is the obvious answer. “It’s up in the air,” Elliot said. “They are exploring the consequences (of grandfathering). We’re looking at the administrative complications that it may create.” Regent A.J. Pfister, chairman of the Regent Resources Committee, which is examing the different tuition options, echoed Elliot’s opinion. “The Board is clearly concerned about them (current non­ residents),” Pfister said. “I’m not sure that leads to the conclusion of grandfathering.” Pitt said extra paperwork should not be a concern in exempting current out-of-state students from a substantial tuition increase. “So far as I’m concerned, it may take a little more administrative work, but the. administrative work is worthwhile,to protect somebody who ¡«'already in place,” Pitt said. Elliot, and Pfister both mentioned establishing a special financial fund for students who demonstrate financial need as an alternative to grandfathering..They both said students who cannot qualify for financial aid would have to assume the full increase. , “Presumably they (non-qualifying out-of-state students) are able to manage the cost increases,” Pitt said. Elliot agreed. “Any time students attend a university, they face the possibility of fees going up,” Elliot said. “That’s a risk anyone would face, particularly one going out of state. There’s no guarantee.” But Larson said he does not believe there will be enough financial aid to help all the affected students. “The Legislature does not feel we should be supporting outof-state students,” Larson said. ‘‘Do you think they’ll provide financial aid just for out-of-state students? That’s ludicrous. “A grandfather to me is the only option.” Currently there are 8,062 full-time non-resident undergraduates and 1,615 full-time non-resident graduate students. Of the undergraduate students, ASU’s Student Financial Assistance Office reports that more than 6,000 do not receive any sort of financial aid. Currently, out-of-state students taking six or fewer credit hours are eligible for in-state tuition rates. All part-time students pay $77 a credit hour. The change under review would make part-time out-of-state students pay $253 for each credit hour. Resident students may also be hit with a large tuition increase. . The Board adopted a policy in 1988 requiring a .5 percent increase in the portion of education costs paid by in-state students each academic year. Based oh this policy, the Board is expected to raise in-state tuition anywhere from $116 to $152 a year. In 1987 in-state tuition was raised $60, and in 1988 it was raised another $82. Last year, due to student protests against a proposed $156 increase, regents settled on a $84 hike. Pitt said he believes the tuition-setting process should be more consistent from year to year. “When somebody enters this system, they ought to have a pretty good idea tuition should go up in certain ranges if the cost of education is up,” Pitt said. “However, if tuition goes up $50 one year, next year $100, and the next year $150, the process should be more refined. It is not a political game. ” Pitt urged the Regents at the Jan. 5 Board meeting to consider the tuition increases carefully. “I think there has to be more integrity to the way we operate,” Pitt said. “We’re reacting instead of leading.” w a r r a n ty . Don’t be misled by Inflated list andsaleprlces. We guarantee the lowest prices on Items^cm comparable make and quaUfyS REMHU.AMIT Ifj T E M P E B IC Y C L E 330 W. University University & Farmer (4 blocks wes 966-6896 •Police Report |•Letters to the Editor ¡•Album/Movie/Concert I Reviews ONLY IN THE STATE PRESS State Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 Page 14 V MUalteSnÈ SubscribeanúSaveupto50 your subscription will include the big Sunday Republic — featuring the state’s largest lisiting of classifieds, Parade magazine, the TV book and cost-cutting coupons. l lubscribe to The Arizona Republic or The Phoenix Gazette and not only will you get up-to-the-minute news, sports, entertainment and career information; but you ’ll save up to 50% over the regular delivery rate. t lake the grade. Subscribe today to The Arizona Republic or The Phoenix Gazette. Hurry, offer ends Feb. 7, 1990. AAnd , rememberj whether you select the morning Republic or afternoon Gazette, N am e_ Date_ Phone. YES! Please begin my subscription as indicated below. Payment is enclosed Delivery A d d re s s . Daily G azette & Sunday R epublic A p t/S p . Billing A d d re s s __ C ity - ; □ S P R IN G S E M E S T E R F O R $ 2 0 A p t/S p . Zip S tä le . S ubscriber Signature G 7 00111 CR02 □ S P R IN G S E M E S T E R F O R $ 2 0 Daily & Sunday Reublic •' R7 00111 CR02 O F F E R E X P IR E S F E B R U A R Y 7 , 1 9 9 0 Delivery will begin promptly upon receipt of payment. Your last delivery will,be May 12. If additional information is needed, please call 257-8300, Mail payment with completed coupon to The Arizona Republic/The Phoenix Gazette, Subscriber Billling, P.O. Box 1950, Phoenix, AZ 85001 FOR OFFICE USE ONLY Account Number OP MES RS GD Contest Code I I RD PRESS I GS TheArizona F q x te /T lie Phoenk Gazete P agc15 Wednesday. January 1 7,1990 State Press S K I W IT » # A IT ­ A N O S T A Y King_______ C o n tin u ed fro m page 1. Pat Quaranta, past president of the AÀIC, said he will work together with King supporters to put an alternative proposal on the ballot allowing both the King and Cohimbus holidays. Organizers of Monday’s downtown march to commemorate King’s birthday believe the King holiday cancellation produced the record turnout of 8,000 who walked 4.5 miles from Eastlake Park on Jefferson Street to the State Capitol. The crowd had swelled to 15,000 people by the end of the march. Strains of “We Shall Overcome,” the “Black National Anthem,” and several other spiritural tunes rang throughout the crowd, as they marched in tribute to King. Political, business and civil rights leaders motivated the racially mixed crowd through speeches as they urged the Legislature to reinstate the Columbus Day Holiday, thus blocking the referendum. , Statewide polls indicate 71 percent of voters would vote to repeal the law that substituted King Day for Columbus Day. King supporters admit Arizona residents must engage in massive public relations and voter registration drives to preserve the King holiday in a statewide election. Arizona is now one of four states without a paid King holiday, although the Arizona Board of Regents declared the day a University holiday in 1988. ASU is sponsoring a week-long series of events that will honor the slain- civil rights leader, who would have been 61- years-old this week. „ Daily events include' broadcasts of se le c te d King sp ee ch es and- slid e presentations highlighting the American and International Civil rights movements. The film “Cry Freedom” will be aired in the M.U. Cinema from 2 to 4:30 p.m. daily. Robert Shafer, co-chair of the ASU Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration 'Committee, said the committee has been working to celebrate the King dream since the University approved the holiday. “So far we have had a good turnout at the various events,” he said. “And we are looking forward to the visit of Dr. Randall Robinson this Thursday. He will be discussing the significance of the King holiday and the situation in South Africa.” " Robinson, executive director of the TransAfrica Association, is the keynote speaker for the tribute to King. He will speak Friday in the Education Lecture Hall at 2 p.m. Paula Me Clain, also co-chair for the MLK committee, said the planning for this year’s activities began in October. She said that although Arizona has been dealt a setback in establishing the holiday, the committee has made great strides to uphold the King dream for the University’s benefit. For further information or a complete list of activities call Shafer at 965-3105. P A R S O N S SCHOOL OF DESIGN S p e cia l Sum m er P rogram s FRANCE WEST A F & ^ W hen you buy your sk i package from AIT Travel - it’s th e sam e a s staying in your hotel for free! 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A IT T ta v e l Name Address The Smart Way to Buy Travel Memorial Union ~ Lower Level What vie serveisy»i. ■ :■-- City ’' ^ A m e r ic a V iè s t , - '__;______ ________ State Phone «‘p-. Zip •■ , ■ CM State Pi— « Wedn«dm^Januafy^^990 Page 16 ‘Rescue 911 ’ re-enacts Tempe man’s suicide attempt By M IKE BURGESS S tate Press Tempe police officer Alison Miller didn’t need to rehearse. “I did the original,” Miller said without a hint of nervousness at her acting debut. Miller, along with fellow officer Steve Sears and several members of the Tempe Fire Department, got a taste of Hollywood last week when they performed the re­ enactment of a bizarre Tempe suicidé rescue that will be featured on “Rescue 911,” a drama-re-creation television show that stars William Shatner. The recreation, which is expected to air in February, chronicles the Dec. 11 rescue of a 42-year-old Tempe man who was found nearly unconscious from carbon-monoxide fumes in the garage of his home, where his car’s engine was running. Officers Miller and Sears, who work out of the department’s South Tempe substation, responded to a call to go to the man’s home after a telemarketer m Tipton, Iowa, randomly dialed his home phone number and heard a disturbing suicide message on his answering machine: The telemarketer, who was making calls for a survey on television viewership, listened to the message which was intended for the man’s estranged wife — and, believing the man was serious, contacted her supervisor. The supervisor then called Tempe police. When the officers arrived, they found the man nearly unconscious. Tempe fire paramedics arrived moments later and transported him to a Mesa hospital, where he wa^ revived. He was later treated at a psychiatric hospital. After his release, the man moved back to his home state of Indiana. “This is a one-in-a-million type of situation,” “Rescue 911” segment Director Greg Goldman said of the show’s decision to do the Tempe rescue story . “I think what we do is uplifting stories — people who sink down then have a second chance. This is the case.” “The man feels there is a reason this happened,” Goldman said. “The reason is suicide is not the way out and he’d like to get that message to anyone if they are contemplating it.” Cam eram an D usty Pow ers o f KD Film s g ets a close-up o f acto r G regory Dee fo r a segm ent o f “ Rescue 9 11” . The segm ent Is a re-enactm ent Of an Tem pe m an’s suicide attem p t by carbonm onoxide poisoning in his garage. N ew fire co d e puts increased re sp o n sib ility on landlords By M IKE BURGESS and HOBART ROW LAND S tate Press Tempe landlords will now be required to install and maintain smoke detectors in all rental homes after Thursday’s Tempe City Council decision to tighten fire-code prevention standards. Council members voted 4-1 to make changes in the city’s fire code that would also make landlrods responsible for installing fresh batteries in the smoke detectors annually. Tempe Fire Department spokesman Russ Wollam said one of the factors that led to the pursuit of the new code was a three-alarm fire at The Villas apartments, 1717 S. Jen Tilly Lane, in April 1988. The apartment complex contained no smoke detectors. The fire, one of the city’s worst in a decade, caused $1 million in damages and left about 22 ASU students homeless. Wollam said the new code will provide an added amount of safety to renters. “They can expect an early notification of a fire and that will increase their chances of surviving,” he said. Wollam said ASU students, will be affected, since college students make up a large part of the apartment renters in the city. Tempe’s previous code required residential buildings constructed since 1983 to have smoke detectors, but older rental homes and apartments were not specifically covered. Last week’s decision will ensure that older units are protected. Wollam said investigators plan to check classified ads and tax rolls to identify rental units that will require alarms under the new ordinance, which will take effect Feb. 15. The city’s new code is the most progressive in the East Valley; Mesa and Chandler fire codes do not require fitting older units with smoke detectors. Fire officials estimate there are 40,000 to 50,000 rental units in Tempe, and 70 percent, of these households already have Ifinc smoke detectors. But national statistics show as many as 50 percent of all smoke detectors don’t work. By requiring landlords to change batteries annually, the city hopes to avoid such dangers. Councilman Bill Ream, who Cast the one vote against the measure, said he believes the new standards place too heavy a burden on landlords. Suzanne Gilstrap, executive director of the Arizona Multihousing Association, argued that revisions requiring landlords to change batteries yearly and keep written maintenance records do not effectively serve the city’s purpose. Tenants, she said, should be responsible for testing and replacing batteries. The city, which before Thursday was operating under regulations of the 1985 fire code, updates its standards every three years, incorporating amendments proposed by the Tempe Fire Marshal. WELCOME BACK PRESENTS: ta v m t $c eatery T U N E S BY WIN A SKI TRIP FOR 2 PLUS GREAT GIVEAWAYS ALL NIGHT LONG!! A .S .U . PARKING-LOT BASH! WED. JAN. 17. 4-1 A.M. 801 E. APACHE Page 17 Wtón«da£J«nua2M7JI990 State Press Reports of major crimes on campus increased in ’89 By M IKE BURGESS S tate Press Sexual assaults reported to ASU police during 1989 may have reached an all-time high as major crimes on campus rose 35 percent last year, according to Police Department statistics. ‘‘There is a crime problem and we have to address it, ” said ASU Police Chief Bill Bess, who took over the University’s top law enforcement spot in December. “The figures speak for themselves.” r Police records show that during 1989, 15 sexual assaults were reported to police — up from the eight reported during the previous year. The jump is an 87.5 percent increase. “I’m very concerned about the increase in rape reports,” Bess said. “One rape is one rape too many.” Bess said most of the incidents were situations w(¡ere alcohol was involved and the victim knew the suspect. He said he did not know if the number of rapes reported last year was the most ever for the University, but Leon Shell, who has been ASU’s dean of student life since 1972, said he cannot think of a year when the number was higher. But while the increase in sexual assaults may seem dramatic, University officials say several factors contribute to the rise. “There’s more of an awareness of the crime of rape,” Bess said. “Secondly, I think: there has been a decrease in tolerance by the victims." Also, officials point to sexual assault awareness programs in campus residence halls and in the greek system. The rape statistics are among eight major crime categoriés that make up the FBI’s annual Uniform Crime Report, for which police departments nationwide voluntarily submit their statistics. The numbers included only crimes reported to police. In addition to rape, assault also showed an increase, rising 28.8 percent. There were 103 assaults on campus in 1989, while 80 occurred the year before. Bess said he believes alcohol played a factor in the majority of assaults on campus. In other violent crime categories, there was one robbery reported at ASU both in 1988 and 1989. There has never been a murder on campus. “I think we’re fortunate,” Bess said of the murder category. In property crimes, police records show that burglary had the most significant percentage increase. Burglary was up 80.6 percent in 1989 with 177 incidents being reported. The previous year 98 incidents were reported. Loss from burglary in 1989 totaled $95,779. Theft, auto theft and arson also increased. There were 1,026 thefts in 1989, up 30 percent from the 789 reported in 1988. The total value of items stole in 1989 was $314,469. Thieves stole 54 vehicles from campus last year a 25.6 percent increase from the previous year. A total of $226,185 worth of vehicles were stolen from campus in 1989. And arson increased slightly in 1989 with six deliberately set fires being reported. There were five arson cases on campus in 1988. Arson accounted for $1,499 worth of damages on campus last year. To combat the increase in crime at ASU, Bess said police A S U 1 9 8 9 C 1988 r i m 1989 % Difference Murder Rape e 1— 8 Jr ASSaUlt 1 , Burglary % Theft \ Auto Theft Arson C rim e Index 4 - 8 5 .0 % 15 Robbery I 80 . : ¡¡¡¡¡i i I "*183 # 2 8 .8 % — I S 7 J + 8 0 .6 % 78ÜM S » l 0 2 6 j * + 3 0 .0 % *Ü S&, X . -.vS ? - * + 2 5 .6 % 5 # + 2 0 .0 % 1024 + 3 5 .0 % f 1382 Source: ABU P olice D epartm ent plan to increase the visibility of officers at known high crime areas on campus in addition to upgrading the department’s crime prevention program. The Police Department recently received ,a $28,000 crime prevention grant from the state Department of Public Safety. Bess said he also would like to see students take a more active role in reporting crimes and working with police. “We have some work to do and we need help,” Bess said. ASU investigation fails to reveal source in sexual assault case By MIKE BURGESS S ta te Press An i n t e r n a l U n iv e r s ity p o lic e investigation has failed to find the police sources who disclosed to the State Press that basketball player Sam Mack was a suspect in a campus sexual assault case, ASU Police Chief Bill Bess said. In addition, Bess said the probe probably will be discontinued. “I don’t know if it is an important thing to pursue,” Bess said. “My opinion is that we have more important things to pursue than this particular situation.! “I wiU look at the information I get and I hope it will be resolved quickly,” he said. The investigation was launched in late November by Deputy Chief Doug Bartosh, who at the time was the department’s acting chief. Bartosh was upset by the sources’ disclosure of Mack’s name because Bartosh believed it could have jeopardized the police departm ent’s investigation. He said disciplinary action would be taken against the sources if they were found. In addition, Bartosh also asked the State Press for the names of the sources, but the newspaper refused. The State Press had quoted unnamed department sources in a November story that reported Mack was a suspect in a sexual assault alleged by an 18-year-old fem ale ASU stu d en t. The incident reportedly occurred Nov. 5 in a room at Mariposa Residence Hall. After the newspaper story, ASU police officially disclosed that Mack, a 19-year-old junior communication major, was a suspect in the case. Mack, who was suspended from the basketball team by Head Coach Bill Frieder, was never arrested in connection with the case, and the Maricopa County attorney’s office later declined to charge Mack because of insufficient evidence. The redshirt forward, who transferred to ASU from Iowa State University^ remains suspended indefinitely by Frieder. :: ' ? .v .V C t ■ State Press Wednesday, January 1 7 ,1 9 9 0 Page 1 8 W ED N ESD A Y $1.00 MONSTER 60 oz. PITCHERS $1.00 MALIBU RUM DRINKS 8:00-10:30pm,., OPEN 8:00 pm i . F R ID A Y A FTER H O U R S Every Friday & Saturday i 25 “ M a il Paym ent & Fo n a to: The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook Student Publications Arizona State U niversity Tem pe, A Z 85287 1502 -a rc a li— (602) 965-6881 F a n i « t ft j m op Hound trip from Phoenix : Q The Son D e vi Spm t Yemfeook _ m M a c k tm k D e a n y imivOTky a co x a t □ d m * ■ u n ia t e » r» u i« B A e i> > ^ . □ a —feVWMCMwti —I D E T R O IT . . . . . . . . $198 B U F FA L O ........... .... $198 O RLA N D O . . . . . . . $196 NEW Y O R K ........... $178 S E A T T L E . . . . . . . . $178 B O S T O N . . . . . . . . $176 C O L O . 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A PA C H E BLVD o n e b lo c k e a s t o f ASU * w / B ik e P u r c h a s e ( e x p . 2 /1 1 /9 0 ) SAHÔ SUN DEVIL STADIUM JANUARY 20 • SAT 7:30 PM A MUD RACING WINTER NATIONALS ★ ROBOSAURUS ★ MONSTER TRUCK CHALLENGE TAURUS, SAMSON, an d SHOW -N-OFF vs. DADDY'S GIRL. THE GENERAL, an d BIGFOOT FASTRAX! TICKETSNOWATASU ACTIVITYCENTER BOXOFFICE ANDALLDILLARD'S OUTLETS ORCHARGE BY PHONE: 965-3434ATTHE BOXOfFICE0R TODILLARD’S: 829-5555 ADULTS-S12 $14 CHILDREN 12 & V0UNGER-S8 RESERVED P i i n i l N PROGRESSIVE MUSIC IN A PROGRESSIVE ATMOSPHERE OPENING JANUARY 25TH EXTR A G O LD E V E R Y C H IL D 12 A N D YO U N G E R WILL R E C E IV E A FRE E S P O R T S WATCH INJURED IN A N ACCIDENT? American Bartenders Schoo YOU SHOULD KNOW YOtjR LEGAL RIGHTS! •E fE E ' Consultation to students and faculty •A uto Accidents •M otorcycle Accidents •B icycle Accidents •W rongful Death •Faulty Products •S lip & Fall •D og Bites •Insurance Disputes: TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 •R E D U C E D p ercentage fees for cases o f clear liability or serious injury •H om e, evening & hospital appointm ents available ' •F U L L O R P A R T -T IM E JOBS ' •F L E X IB L E H O U R S & P E R S O N A L IZ E D T R A IN IN G •S T A R T A N Y D A Y O R E V E N IN G •T E R M S -— ■C O E D CO URSES •S E R V IN G A G E IN A R IZ O N A . IS I9 BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS ' Personal InjuryLawyers ....... VALLE Y W rD t IO B PLACEM ENT ASSISTANCE N A T IO N W ID E ----- ----- l EARN EXTRA MONEY AS S EE N ON T E L E V IS IO N : G all Now! N M ... * ■ ' ' :• : D O N ’T GET HURT TWICE 438-1212 ( 4 6 2 5 S. W endlerDr., Suite III,T em p e) j i m r T Wednesday, January 17,1990 f ii New, efficient cooling system to save University money By KEVIN SHEH S tate Press <. A more efficientair-conditioning system — the largest of its kind in the country — will save the University money but won’t be finished in time to combat the summer heat. The water cooling system, which was developed in 1985, was installed at ASU West two years ago. Construction of the ASU unit, Which began late last semester, is slated for completion in September. A 25-foot deep pit, north of the Student Recreation Complex, will house a 5.5 million-gallon concrete thermal storage unit. Water held in the tank will be cooled at night and used to provide air conditioning on campus during the day. Gerry White, manager of mechanical e n g in e e rin g in th e P la n n in g an d Construction Department, said the purpose of the unit is to save money on University air-conditioning costs. White anticipates that the University will save $1 million a year by using the system. “The total cost of implementing the system will be $5 million,’' he said, adding that 18 percent of the cost will be absorbed by Arizona Public Service. Alan Carroll, director of the ASU Budget Office, said ASU’s utilities bill is currently more than $11 million a year. He said mast' of the bill is p aid through s ta te appropriations. The installation of the thermal energy storage tank allows the University to cool water at night, when electricity is cheaper. Val Peterson, director of ASU’s Physical Plant, said the w ater used for air conditioning is presently cooled by electric chillers located at the central plant east of the old wing of Hayden Library. The drillers are used most during the hot hours of the day. “This (new system) is a proven system, which we know will work,” Peterson said, citing the success of die unit at many other locations throughout the Valley, including ASU West. The eastern end of the construction area was previously an archery practice field. After completion, the area will be covered with 3 feet of dirt and transformed into an intramural field that will be lit for night use. The intramural field will consist of four softball fields and four flag football Helds, according to Gerald Maas, director of recreational sports and student activities. S u m * K ja iM ta d /S ta t* P r a n T his p it north o f th e S tu dent R ecreation Com plex w ill house th e therm al storage u n it o f a w ater co o lin g system , w hich w ill be th e largest o f its kind In th e U nited S tates. N e w KAET-TV p rog ram m ing avail able for visual ly i m paired By SO NJA LEW IS S tate Press ASU’s KAET-TV, Channel 8, will be the first television station in Arizona to introduce enhanced programing for the blind and visually impaired when it airs the season premiere of “American Playhouse” Jan. 24. Richard Nelson’s play, “Sensibility and Sense,” will air at 8 p.m. and is the beginning of free weekly programming that will enable visually impaired people to gain insight to visual aspects of a TV program they usually miss. With Descriptive Video Service, viewers receive brief narrated descriptions of scenery, character movements, costumes, and scene changes that are inserted into the program’s dialogue. Hie insertions will hot interfere with regular programming. “I think for the first time it will allow (visually impaired viewers) to feel the complete picture*” said Barbara Maack, Michael Thomsen, KANT’S manager of education and telecommunications, said the adaptive programming of “American Playhouse” -will open doors for other TV programs. Thomsen said he hopes other public stations In Arizona will follow KAET’s lead and implement DVS. > “Both in terms of the number of stations making use of DVS and the. programs which o|fer DVS, this is just the beginning,” Thomsen said. “Later we hope to increase the service to five hours week and then to 10 hours a week.” ^ DVS is transmitted through the Separate Radio Program channel, a standard feature of most digitally tuned television receivers. It’s usually located behind a small hinged door on the front of the? television. ■v, .$•«>!*’ ♦ * - • creative services manager of KAET. “One blind women was in tears because.she was so moved at being able to experience something like this,’’ Maack said. Working in conjuction with KAET will be ASU Disabled Student Resources, who will inform visually impaired students and the community about obtaining DVS. • Disabled Student Resources will make available information letters in large print for the visually impaired and programming guides in brail for the blind. Daily added that many of his blind or visually impaired students do not watch TV because they cannot understand it in a complete manner, especially in documentaries and films, which are harder to follow thairsiWesns. “I think (DVS) is going to be a great alternative to reading or talk radio,” Daily said. “A look of a person, someone walking away, or scenery is important and (visually impaired viewers) miss out. SHOW US YOUR STUDENT I.D . YOU’LL GET A DINNER ^ Programs that will be accompanies by the DVS service are indicated by a capital “D” in the program guide. TEM PE- M ESA AREA te « Bk ^ For T V sets without the SAP channel, adapters may be purchased at electronic stores. y. ■ ' • i affi, fe :« * % ’ é¿ . . s - ■ *£ Ï Welcome Back, Students! 3 M ile s fro m A S U a n d M e s a C o m m u n ity C o lle g e This year w e’re doing it again! Every S unday (b u t O N L Y on S unday). M ike P uloe o f the S pagh etti Com pany w ill give you one FR E E d in n e r* to r each dinner you order) It’s our 2-for-1 S U N D A Y S TU ­ D E N T S PE C IA L. And it’s good for the w hole school year a t both our Tem po a n d P hoenix locations. Any day erf th e w eek, fo r lunch o r dinner, T h e S pagh etti Com pany is known fo ra g re a t m eal a t an affo rd ab le p rice. B ut the S U N D A Y S TU D E N T S P E C IA L m akes our a lread y te rrific prices e v e n b e tte r! O ur dinners include a fu ll course m eal w ith a ll th e trim m ings — from s ala d to dessert. S o, d o llar fo r do llar, w hen you’re hungry and you need a b reak, you can’t b e at T h e S pagh etti Com pany) E SP E C IA LLY O N S U N D A YS ! W ith 2 d in­ ners fo r th e price o f 11 B ut you M U ST h a ve your student I.D . card w ith you to ta k e arfeantage o f th is o ffer. 15% g ra tu ity added to a * discounted checks (except S enior c itize n discounts). Open at 11 a.m . to 11 p.m . Sundays § p a t < h e t t i G > « a » a n j^ R e s ta u ra n t Phoenix South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak D i Jon, Stuffed Filet o f Sole, Tenderloin, C hicken M arsala, Veal M arsala and orders to go ARB R O T IN C LU D E D In the 2-for-1 special. •H eated pools and spas •Woodbuming fireplaces In selected units •Custom mini blinds •Private patios and balconies •Washers and dryers in selected units •SRP and Mountain Belt service •Cable TV available •RacquetbaH courts •Volleyball and tennis court •Exercise facilities •Club room •Covered parking/carports •Lush landscaping •Qualified family discount Studios, 1,2 A 3 Bedrooms •A ' in Old Town Tempe f ■ A S T M. t Ask about our student discount with this ad Ask about our move-in specials with this ad 150 S. Roosevelt Rd. just south o f Main Street between Price and Dobson 8 9 4 -0 0 0 2 U N IVERSITY 4th Street and Mill 1 966-3848 B B BROADW AY M AM b Im iia r v 1 7 State Press 1 0 O ft students ■y KRISTIE YOUNG State Press Just when you thought it was safe to park at ASU, Parking and Transit Services has teamed up with the ASU Bookstore and designed some new parking regulations. But these new plans are designed to help, not hinder, students frustrated with the parking situation. Ron Kucera, acting assistant director of Parking and Transit Services, came up with a way to ease the pain of the parking nuisance by approving a plan to give dorm students a break. As an effort toward a “kinder, gentler nation” , Kucera incorporated a measure that gave dorm students the liberty to park in the dorm lots from Jan. 8 to Jan. 16 without decals. “The effort was designed to make it easier for dorm students to have a grace period in which to get new their new decals changed,” Kucera said. He said the measure was implemented early this semester to “help students park the way they should and to help them be able to follow regulations later on in the semester.” Also, the ASU Bookstore, in conjunction with Parking Services, has designed a plan to relieve the problem of parking citations given in the metered lot adjacent to the bookstore. The plan will aid patrons of the bookstore in appealing parking citations received in the metered lot due to overtime parking. Jim Selby, assistant director of the ASU Bookstore, said the meters located in Lot 27 next to the bookstore do not give students enough time to make purchases. “The 50-minute time allotment does not allow students to adequately collect all of their books and supplies without having to worry about getting a ticket for overtime parking,” Selby said. During “rush week,” or the first week of every new semester, the bookstore is packed with hundreds of frantic students' hurrying to find their books and supplies. During this time, the cash register lines begin to wind in and out of the narrow aisles. To accommodate the hundreds of patrons, the bookstore hires 60 to 100 temporary employees. This increases the number of staff members, but the inexperience of the temporary employees -slows down store operations. This contributes to the long lines at the registers and sparks the tempers of students waiting in those lines. Selby said students spend from 30 minutes to an hour in register lines. Since the parking meters only allow 50-minute parking, “this becomes a problem.” The new plan calls for a memo attachment to accompany each citation given in LOt 27. Each memo states that although a citation has been given, if may be appealed by presenting the ASU Bookstore sales receipt along with the citation to a University hearing officer within 14 calendar days after issuance. The time of purchases made at the bookstore will be displayed on the .receipt, and if the time on the citation is reasonably near the time on the sales receipt, the ticket may be revoked, “During the days of Jan. 16, 17 and 18, every citation issued in the lot will receive the memo attachment,” Selby said. “We are trying to make it easier on the customer.” Selby said the idea of the memo had been suggested before, but this semester was the first time it is being implemented. If the program is successful, he said it may be repeated in-upcoming semesters. Annabel Geisheimer, a senior marketing major, thought the new policy was a good idea. J u lia Slgwart/State P resa vehicle in a metered parking stall after the “I think it’s fair for both the student and time on the meter has expired.” ASU,” she said. For this violation, 42,897 citations were Tanya Smithson, a sophomore family issued amounting to $428,970. These figures resources and human development major, jumped considerably over the July 1987 to said she couldn’t “believe Parking Services July 1988 number of citations given, which is actually giving the students a break for were 34,227 citations and $342,270. once.” Other frequent violations were parking in Selby said he thought this plan will bring positive student response. ‘‘The bookstore u n a u th o riz e d lo ts an d no v eh icle registration. can’t handle 43,000 students at one time, and The only violation to go down in numbers this (dan should help to ease the tension a was improper decal display, dropping from little.” Although these measures were taken to 5,990 in 1987-88 to 2,358 in 1988-89. Although these numbers seem high, help in student parking, the parking Kucera said he thinks student parking at situation at ASU still seems to be a problem. Between July 1988 and July 1989, 107,350 ASU is improving. “We are trying to implement new parking citations were given. Last semester, $44,352 was collected on 49,289 . programs to aid students in their parking ordeal,” Kucera said. “All we can do is to citations. look for ways to make it easier for students The biggest number of parking violations to park the way they should.” came from overtime parking, or “leaving a z : WHY ATTEND SCOTTSDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE? ~app it M e n t Fdm iLY HOIR CUTTERS * Convenience - approximately 1000 day/night within a short drive. * Affordable tuition - a low “ resident” tuition of $23 per credit hour. * Parking - no hassles, park free. «Small classes - smaller classes mean more individualized attention. ‘ Quality Instruction - highly qualified & experienced faculty. Open Registration for Spring Semester ’90 Now through January 20 Mon.-Thurs. 8 a . m . - 8 p.m. Fri. & Sat. (Jan. 13 & 20) 8 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Classes begin January 22 Register in person at the Admissions O ffice or by phone* ‘ (phone registration for continuing students only) A Perfect Cut Every Time T Designer Perm Special w/coupon Shampoo w /coupon w/the $6.95 CUT N o A ppointm ent N ecessary Evert Bring T h e W hole Family! - Sham poo, C u t & Style Included Long H air Slightly H igher *423-6114 General inform ation 423-6000 Admissions 423-6100 A ctivity Line 423-6156 # Late Registration Jan. 22, 23 & 24 8 a.m. - 8 p.m. Scottsdale Community College 9000 E. Chaparral Rd. at Pima Rd. “ A M arico p a C o m m un ity C o lle g e ” _„ cmenc ra m a r m m c utters _ cmenc FOm ilY HdIR (UTTERS University & Rural Rd. Cornerstone Shopping C enter g lg L 968-8008 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5 Page 33 Wednesday, January 1 7 ,1990 Failed computer consortium due to long-range strategy SA N TA CLA RA, C a lif. (A P ) T he le a d e r s o f U .S . M em ories sa id th è p lan n ed co m p u ter ch ip -m a k in g co n so rtiu m fa ile d b e c a u se th e e le c tr o n ic s in d u stry la c k s a lo n g -term str a te g y to co m p ete w ith J a p a n . “We had an opportunity as a nation and an industry to send a message and we missed it,’’ said Sanford L. Kane, president of the now-defunct joint venture. the U.S. market. H ie co n so rtiu m w a s b orn a t a tim e w h en sh o rt su p p lie s h a d d riv en up th e p r ice o f D R A M s, w h ich sto r e d a ta in a w id e r a n g e o f e le c tr o n ic p ro d u cts and a r e o fte n com p ared to cru d e o il in th e ir im p o rta n ce to in d u stry . S in ce th en , c h ip su p p lies h a v e in c re a se d ‘What happens today does not bode well for an industry that has made a technical decision rather than a tactical one. ' — Sanford L. Kane T h e co m p a n y ’s fa ilu r e se r v e d a blow to p la n s to co n v in c e th e firm to b u ild it s p ro p o sed $1 b illio n p la n t o n a s ite on th e P h o e n ix /T e m p e b ord er a t 48th S tr e et a n d B ro a d w a y R oad . C olorado S p rin g s, C olo., A u stin , T e x a s, an d M id dletow n, N .Y ., w ere a ls o v y in g to a ttr a c t th e co n so rtiu m . U .S . M em o ries h ad p lan n ed to break grou n d on its c h o sen s ite th is m onth . “ It is truly astiarne that the facility plans could not go forward,” said Gov. Rose Mofford in a statement. U .S . M em o ries, fo rm ed s ix m on th s a g o w ith th e h op e o f ex p a n d in g A m erica ’s sm a ll ou tp u t o f d y n a m ic random a c c e s s m em ory c h ip s, o r D R A M s, an n o u n ced M onday it w a s d isso lv in g b e c a u se o f in a d eq u a te fin a n cia l su p p o rt from co m p u ter c o m p a n ies. J a p a n ese co m p a n ies now su p p ly abou t 75 p e r c e n t o f th e m a r k e t, w h ile U .S . m a n u fa ctu rers h a v e le s s th an 10 p ercen t. U .S . M em o ries hop ed to ta k e 25 p ercen t of is coining to the a n d p r ic e s h a v e d ropp ed , in p a rt b eca u se se v e r a l co m p a n ie s, in clu d in g S a m su n g of Sou th K orea, h a v e sta r te d p rod u ction , a n a ly sts sa y . A t a m eetin g in D a lla s on W ednesd ay, m o st o f U .S . M em o ries’ o r ig in a l se v e n in v e sto r s and fo u r p o ten tia l b a ck ers w ere u n w illin g to pu t up en ou gh m o n ey to en a b le th e co n sortiu m to bu ild th e p la n t, K ane told a n ew s c o n fe re n c e. T h e co m p a n ies a lso w ou ld n ot p ro m ise to bu y en o u g h o f its fourm eg a b it D R A M s, h e sa id . -j U -S . co m p a n ies a p p a ren tly no lo n g er th in k th ey h a v e a p rob lem w ith ch ip su p p lie s, K ane sa id . “ W hat h ap p en s to d a y d o es n ot b od e w e ll fo r a n in d u stry th a t h a s m a d e a te ch n ica l d e c isio n ra tn é r th a n a ta c tic a l o n e ,” K áne sa id . W ilfr e d C o r r ig a n , U .S . M e m o r ie s ’ ch a irm a n , sa id th e issu e fo r A m erica n co m p a n ies w a sn ’t sim p ly o n e o f a d eq u a te su p p ly b u t m o re a m a tter o f co n tro l o v e r it. H e g a v e g r u d g in g p r a ise to J a p a n ’s “ co a ch in g a n d q u a rterb a ck in g .” “ Y ou look a t a U .S . la p to p co m p u ter to d a y , a n d th e d isp la y c o m es from J a p a n , th e m em o ry c o m es from J a p a n ,” h e sa id . “ T he co m p u ter h a s sim p ly b eco m e th e g ift b ox in w h ich J a p a n e se p ro d u cts g e t m a iled to th e u se r .” O ne a n a ly st p red icted th e c o lla p se o f th e c o n so rtiu m w o u ld h a v e n o im m ed ia te e ffe c t. “ T h e b ottom lin e is to d a y , th e r e ’s a good su p p ly (o f D R A M s) an d th e p r ic e s a r e low a n d g o in g lo w e r ,” sa id F re d J o n e s o f D a ta q u est in S a n J ó se . T h e co n so rtiu m ’s o r ig in a l in v e sto r s w ere In tern a tio n a l B u sin ess M a ch in es C orp., D ig ita l E q u ip m en t C orp., H ew lett-P a ck a rd C o., In tel C orp., A d van ced M icro D e v ic e s In c ., N a tio n a l S em icon d u ctor C orp. and LSI L o g ic. A lth ou gh U .S . co m p a n ies in se v e r a l in d u str ies h a v e co o p era ted in r e c e n t y e a r s on jo in t r e se a r c h p r o je cts, U .S . M em ories w a s p la n n ed a s th e fir s t co n so rtiu m to m a n u fa ctu re p ro d u cts. U .S . M em o ries o r ig in a lly p la n n ed to p a y fo r th e p la n t w ith $500 m illio n in eq u ity fin a n cin g from c h ip m a k ers a n d u se r s and $500 m illio n in d eb t, w ith fu n d -ra isin g e x p e cte d to b e co m p leted la s t y e a r. T h e co n so rtiu m la te r d ecid ed it w ou ld n eed o n ly $400 m illio n in d eb t an d $350 m illio n in e q u ity :-rri $150 m illio n from in d u stry in v e sto r s an d th e r e s t from o u tsid e b a ck ers. C om puter com p an ies,' h o w ev er, a lso w ou ld h a v e h a d to a g r e e to b u y 75 to 80 p e r ce n t o f th e co n so rtiu m ’s ch ip s. B u t a t th e m e etin g la s t w eek , o n ly IBM a n d D ig ita l m a in ta in e d th e “ m a jo r ” co m m itm en t to th e v en tu re, K an e sa id . K an e d e c lin e d to g iv e d e ta ils o f th e co m m itm en ts fro m in d iv id u a l co m p a n ies, h o w ev er. H e a lso d eclin ed to c r itic iz e in d iv id u a l co m p a n ies fo r th eir d e c isio n s. H e w le t t - P a c k a r d s a id th r o u g h a sp o k esw o m a n th a t it w a s d isa p p o in ted b y U .S . M e m o r ie s ’ a n n o u n c e m e n t a n d e x p r essed su rp rise a t “ th e la ck o f th e su p p ort fo r it am o n g co m p u ter-sy stem s c o m p a n ie s.” ^ A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N IV . FEBRUARY 10-12 TO SHOOT A.S.U. STUDENTS TO APPEAR IN OUR 1991 NATIONAL CALENDAR. IF YOU'VE BEEN TOLD YOU'RE GOOD LOOKING. SEXY. OR OUGHT TO TRY MODELING. THIS IS A PERFECT OPPORTUNITY TO TEST YOUR APTITUDE. TO ARRANGE A FREE TEST SHOOTING. SEND YOUR NAME. ADDRESS. PHONE. AND PHOTOS (2-3. ANY QUALITY) TO: (Z a U n d a n o , A a ttn ie o ,, 6 7 DRUMMOND STREET. CINCINNATI. OH 452IS OR CAIA (513) 825-3766 FOR MORE INFORMATION CO-SPONSORED BY: 'Ttatt+naf Be A Part of America's Hottest Calendar! $ 2 °° Pitchers $1oo well Drinks $160 Bowling/, M o n -T h u rs , 9 p.m -M id n ig h t Hourly R a te s $1.00 Per Game ^ (plus tax ) A vailable , After a hard day hitting the hooks, nothing tastes better than a hot, fvesh, made-to-order Whataburger.. r FREE WHATABURGER®! i i TEI#Ë%ÔWL i i i i L, 1 1 0 0 E. A P A C H E • 9 6 7 -1 6 5 6 Present this coupon when ordering a regular order of fries and a 16 oz. soft drink and get a Whataburger« fre e ! Offer good only at the W hataburger restaurant at 1346 S. Rural. M ay not b e used in conjuction with any other offer. Offer expires January 27, 1990. WHATABURGER O ffe r E xpires Ja n u a ry 27 HOT,FRESHAHDMADETO0RDBI WHADtBURGER. • 1346 & Rural, Tempe «968-2340 State Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 P ag e 3 4 N ew d a y -c a re p o ll to evaluate n e e d s la « Ij “’j £ 1 HI 1 ÜMIB9 1 By KRISTIE YOUNG S tate Press A n in co m p lete 1988 ca m p u s c h ild -ca r e su rv e y is fo r cin g th e U n iv e r sity to p la y ca tch -u p th is se m e ste r w ith a n ew , m ore th orou gh look a t stu d e n t p a ren ts’ ch ild -ca re n eed s. “ T h e (1988) su rv e y d id not a d eq u a tely r e fle c t th e n eed s o f th e stu d e n ts a t A S U ,” sa id L ee E lle n B rig m a n , r esea r ch d ir ec to r in th e O ffice o f Stu d en t A ffa irs. T h e o r ig in a l $16,000 su rv e y w a s con d u cted fo r stu d en t a ffa ir s in D ecem b er 1988 b y th e T u cson A sso c ia tio n fo r C hild C are, w h ich q u estio n ed 664 A SU e m p lo y ee s and 250 fe m a le stu d en ts. B r ig m a n s a id th e f ir s t s u r v e y o n ly r e p r e se n te d u n d erg ra d u a te w om en , “ w h ich o n ly r ep re se n ts 15,000 stu d e n ts o u t o f th e 43,000 th a t a tten d A S U .” M aureen D u a n e, co o rd in a to r fo r c h ild -ca r e r e so u r c e s, sa id th e 1988 su r v e y “ h ad good fa c u lty an d s ta ff rep resen ta tio n , bu t th e stu d e n ts’ n eed s w e re not a d d r e sse d .” 0 to0 4> 0 O ) • !pb■»leptiiojsi C >< W " o (U < 03 C T3 Ü Ë — ■ Ü I N N |_ 7 — £ IN I N U J ^^ N < < cc cc So.E s 1L i o ™TL o f w h a t 's Read the Golden nursing opportunities come with the silver Air Force emblem. Indeed, the Air Force shapes a sophisti­ cated medical environment that helps you learn, advances your education and de­ velops yoUr professionalism to a higher standard. Discover travel, excitem ent.. and the respect you’ll know as an Air Force officer. See why so many outstanding nurs­ ing professionals choose to wear the silver emblem of the Air Force nurse. Gall 'T O D A Y '' section. CD 1 - TSG T JA C Q U IE EM ER SO N C O L L E C T (602) 921-9582 “ Q U A L IFY U P TO A G E 4 7 ” H U) s* “ 3 O ^ > C o ntinued from page 25. Q o C f&b D O M E N IC S w a rm C Y C L IN G STUDENT d is c o u n t . fo r to p se a r c h firm s. „ . . . L arson sa id so m e o f th e a d d itio n a l e x p e n se s d issa p p o in ted h im . “ I’m n o t u n h a p p y w ith th a t to ta l n u m b er,” L a rsen sa id . “ H ie p rob lem is I know it co u ld h a v e b een le s s .” £ N Q (D *65-«« i PITCH-IN g o in g o n ! it is tim e fo r th e B oard to g iv e up th e fig h t. “ It’s g o in g to c o st tw ic e a s m u ch m o n ey ; it’s g o in g to b e d ra g g ed o u t fo r tw o m o re y e a r s ,” L a rso n sa id . “ I th in k (th e r e g e n ts) sh ou ld c u t th e ir lo sse s a n d g e t on w ith it .” A SU P re sid e n t L a ttie C oor — o n ce o n ly a n a p p lica n t him sA lf — sa id r e le a sin g ca n d id a te n a m es is o n ly h a rm fu l in th e v e r y e a r ly sta g e s. “ I th in k a t th e tim e an in d iv id u a l b eco m es a se r io u s ca n d id a te , th e n a m es ca n b e m a d e p u b lic,” C oor sa id . T h e to ta l c o st o f in terv iew in g 236 p r e sid e n tia l h o p efu ls and se le c tin g C oor to p p led $93,600. O f th a t su m , $40,000 w a s p aid d ir e c tly to th e e x e c u tiv e se a r c h firm o f H eid rick an d S tr u g g le s an d th e r e s t w a s in r e la te d e x p e n se s. > L aura A n d erson , a sp o k esw o m a n fo r th e se a r c h firm , sa id its fe e is b a sed on 33 p e r ce n t o f th e v a c a n t p o sitio n ’s h o gin n in g sa la r y . S h e sa id th is am ou n t is sta n d a rd p ro ced u re usman • v A lf t f U i^ U i PROJECT \M S u i t _ _______ __ Maméis cener, This course examines the role and status, both modem and tradi­ tional, of Jewish women in religious, legal, cultural and social areas. Golden opportunities are made of silver. F ir st, a ta b le w a s s e t up a t th e p re -re g istra tio n s ite s to su rv e y stu d en ts w ho a r e p a ren ts. A lso , th e O ffice o f S tu d en t A ffa irs se n t ca rd s in th e m a il en co u ra g in g stu d en t p a ren ts to sen d in th e ca rd to r e c e iv e th eir su rv e y b y m a il. A fin a l e ffo r t w a s m a d e d u rin g o n -lin e r eg istr a tio n , w h en th e su r v e y s w e re co n d u cted a t e a ch o f th e fou r r e g istr a tio n s ite s . SUNKVIL SMRMVtMBMM CWST 394) 6:40-9:30 pm Monday (n . . . cm T h e new su rv e y , con d u cted d u rin g p r e -re g istra tio n , w a s c o m p ile d o f q u e stio n s from stu d e n ts a n d c h ild -ca r e o rg a n iza tio n s. D u an e, a fo rm er c h ild -ca r e c e n te r d irecto r, is r esp o n sib le fo r p rep a rin g th e r e stilts o f th e su rv e y . A rep o rt o f o b je c tiv e s fo r c h ild c a r e a t A SU an d reco m m en d a tio n s to stu d e n ts, fa c u lty and s ta ff w ill b e com p osed b y D u an e an d w ill b e a v a ila b le a t th e en d o f th e fis c a l y e a r a f t e r th e c lo s e o f th is se m e ste r . T he new su rv e y w a s con d u cted th ree d iffe re n t w a y s, “ I am v ery p le a se d w ith th e in p u t from stu d en t p a r e n ts,” D u an e Said. “ T h ere a re stro n g fe e lin g s o u t th e r e, an d I a p p re c ia te th e fa c t th a t th e stu d en ts took th e tim e to le t u s know th eir fe e lin g s o f th e situ a tio n .” WOMEN and JUDAISM A look at the myths and realities of the portrayal of Jewish women in­ cluding the Jewish mother and the Jewish American Princess. “ W e n eed ed new cu rren t d a ta ,” D u a n e sa id . T h is y e a r ’s su rv e y w a s r e v ise d to in clu d e stu d e n ts w ith d ep en d en t ch ild ren . T h e su rv e y w a s con d u cted to d eterm in e th e th e nu m ber o f stu d en t p a ren ts a t A SU a n d to g e t so m e id ea o f th e a g e ra n g e o f th eir ch ild ren . “ W e h ad a lo t o f h e lp from th e r e g istr a r s ,” D u a n e sa id . D u an e sa id th a t a lth o u g h th e r e su lts from th e su r v e y a r e not y e t in and th e to ta l c o st o f th e su rv e y is n o t know n, cu rren t d a ta in d ic a te s th e su rv ey w ill b e b e n e fic ia l to A SU . NOT FOR WOMEN ONLY M O =r £ r N co N 3 < 3 oc = K »FUJI MOUNTAIN BIKE Reg. Price *239" O .c o h - ^ . N £ < O JC <0 5> °CM o O 00 O CO ( / ) (& 6 A rcadia (Road Bike) Sandblaster (1990) Cadenza S uncrest A lum inum M tn. Bike Sundance Fuji (1990) “ M ill Avenue’s Only Bike Shop” 1004 S. Mill Ave., Tempe 967-7700 Reg. *249" *279" *399" *499" *699" *599" *679" NOW! *189“ *249“ *324“ *375“ *449“ *449“ *579“ M on-Thura 9 am -7 pm O P E N 7 D A Y S Fri 9 a m -0 p m A W E E K S at 9 am -5 pm g Sun 1 1 a m -3 p m .3 College Culture State Press W ednK davJanuaryJ^IW O The Usual Suspects Gonzo battles over land F e a r a n d lo a th in g a r e g rip p in g W oody C reek , C olo. H un ter S. T h om p son , th e p ro v erb ia l ch r o n icle r o f th e w eird (w h o se colu m n a p ­ p e a r s in T h e S ta te P r e ss M a g a zin e), is h a v in g ^ r e a l-life H a tfield an d M cC oys d isp u te in W oody C reek , w h ere h e liv e s . T h e d e ta ils o f th e b a ttle a r e rep o rted in th e J a n u a ry -F eb ru a ry issu e o f S m a rt m a g a z in e, o f w h ich T hom pson is a sto ck h o ld er an d e d ito r-a t-la rg e . T h e gon zo jo u r n a list h a s a ru n n in g feu d o v er la n d in W oody C reek w ith F lo y d W atk in s, a fla sh y d ev elo p er from F lo rid a . So in te n se is th e a n im o sity b etw een them th a t th e feu d h a s b een m ark ed b y v a n ­ d a lism , th r e a te n in g ph one c a lls and la te n ig h t sh o tg u n b la sts. T hom p son h im se lf w a s a lm o st in d ic ted fo r an in cid en t in v o lv ­ in g so m e a u to m a tic w ea p o n s, th e m a g a z in e r e p o r ts. T hom p son h a s w r itte n a b ou t th e d isp u te in h is w e ek ly co lu m n , d isg u isin g h im se lf a s a c h a r a c te r n am ed C rom w ell and W atkins a s M cC oy. T h e d isp u te is a t th e p oin t n ow w h ere W atkins h a s p u t B e n g a l tig e r s on h is pro­ p erty an d T h om p son is th in k in g ab ou t pur­ c h a sin g e le p h a n ts. B r e a k in g com a Stmta Press Illu s trs U o n /C h rls to p h s r H orak to m C ruise and M im i Rogers in happier tim es. Cruise, wife splitting In a m o v e th a t’s su re to p le a se w om en e v er y w h e r e, a c to r T om C ru ise and h is a c tr e ss-w ife M im i R o g ers a r e c a llin g it q u its a fte r n e a r ly th r e e y e a r s o f m a rria g e. “ W e h a v e d ecid ed to file fo r d iv o r c e ,” th e co u p le sa id T u esd a y in a jo in t sta te ­ m en t from p u b lic ist A n drea J a ffe . C ru ise, 27, an d R o g ers, 33, w e re m a rried M ay 9 ,1 9 8 7 , w ith a c to r .E m ilio E ste v e z a s b e st m an . “W h ile th e r e h a v e b een v e r y p o s itiv e a sp e c ts to ou r m a r ria g e, th e r e w ere so m e issu e s w h ich co u ld not b e r e so lv e d e v en a fte r w ork in g on th em for a p erio d o f tim e;” th e c o u p le ’s sta te m e n t sa id , w ith ou t ela b o ra tio n . “ T h is h a s b een a tim e w h en I h a v e b een th e fo c u s o f m u ch a tte n tio n ,” C ru ise sa id . “ W hen I w a s a sk ed d ir e c t q u estio n s b y ,th e p r e ss ab ou t m y m a r ria g e, I fe lt th a t to co m p ro m ise ou r p r iv a cy w a s to co m ­ p ro m ise a b a sic tr u st.” Wagner’s music returns G o ttfried W agner, g ra n d so n of G erm an co m p o ser R ich a rd W agner, w ill b e tou rin g Isr a e l w ith h is g r a n d fa th er ’s w ork , e v e n th o u g h it ’s b een co n sid ered ta b o o in th a t co u n try e v e r sin c e it w a s b la red o v e r N azi d e a th ca m p sp e a k e r s d u rin g W orld W ar II. W agn er m a in ta in s th a t e v e n th ou gh th e 19th c en tu r y c o m p o ser w a s a se lf-d e c la r e d a n ti-se m ite , H itle r e x p lo ite d h is m u sic a s a g lo r ific a tio n o f th e m a ste r r a c e . In th e p a st, a ll e ffo r ts to b rea k th e b o y c o tt h a v e b een m e t w ith sto rm y p ro­ te s t, a lth o u g h m a n y I s r a e lis sa y th ey liste n to W agner a t h om e. F o llo w in g a n Isr a e l P h ilh a rm o n ic Or­ c h e str a c o n c e r t, co n d u cto r Z ubin M ehta an n o u n ced a s a n e n c o re th e p relu d e to th e W agn er op era “ T r ista n a n d Is o ld e .’’ In r e sp o n se , th e a u d ien ce c r ie d , “ S h a m e .” A n u sh e r ru sh ed to th e s ta g e , p u lled up h is sh ir t to sh ow N a z i-in flic te d s c a r s and sh o u te d , “ P la y W agner on m y b o d y .” H ow to: Im prove y o u r s tu d y h a b its E d ito r’s note: This is the firs t in an oc­ casional series called “College Notebook. ” The series w ill look a t com­ mon dilem m as students fac e — d ilem ­ m as not necessarily covered by a new spaper (o r by u niversity lite ra tu re , fo r th at m a tte r). The series also w ill look a t people or events th at a re n ’t necessarily earth shattering but s till have a m easurable effect on college life . F o r the series’ debut, w e look a t “How to S t u d y T h e tips presented a re adapted'from “ W here T here’s a W ill, T here’s an A , ’* the videotape b y A SU P ro f. Claude O lney and a re used w ith perm ission. H is sem in ar on developing good study habits is a v a ilib le on audio tape a t the A SU Bookstore fo r $29.95. Videotapes a re av ailab le by phone: 800-225-9500. S o y o u ju st g o t you r rep o rt ca rd for th e fa ll, an d y o u ’r e not e n tir e ly h ap p y. N eed to c h a n g e so m e o f th o se stu d y h a b its? Or d o you fe e l lik e y o u ’v e n ev er r e a lly lea rn ed how to stu d y ? A ll it m a y ta k e to sen d y o u r G PA so a r in g co u ld b e a few sim p le “ tr ic k s ,” a cco rd in g to A SU fin a n c e P ro f. C laudq O ln ey. S in ce 1981 h e ’s b een tea ch in g stu d e n ts how to stu d y . T ry th e se tip s: ► T rea t y o u r c o lle g e ed u ca tio n lik e a b u sin e ss c a r e e r . B e a g g r e s siv e ab ou t g e ttin g w h a t y ou w a n t. U se th e to o ls o f b ig b u sin e ss — c o m p u ters, ty p e w r ite r s, co p y m a ch in es, ta p e rec o rd er s, an d fil­ in g sy ste m s. ► C h oose c o u r se s y o u lik e — y o u ’re m ore lik e ly to su c c e e d in so m eth in g th a t in te r e sts y o u . . ► T a k e d iffic u lt c o u r se s a t a co m m u n i­ ty c o lle g e — y o u r G PA fro m a n o th er sch o o l w on’t tr a n sfe r. O r a u d it d iffic u lt c o u r se s th e fir s t tim e arou n d — y o u ’ll h a v e a b ig h ea d sta r t w h en you ta k e it fo r a g ra d é. ► C heck o u t you r p r o fe sso r s. A good 1 9 9 0 College in g p erso n , ta k e a d v a n ta g e o f th e e a r ly m orn in g h ou rs. D o n ’t le t y o u r frien d s or ro o m m a tes ra zz you fo r stu d y in g a t odd hou rs if th a t’s w h a t b e st fo r you . ► ’T ake w o rth w h ile n o te s. C on cén trate on k e y p o in ts from tex tb o o k s a n d le c ­ tu r e s. A k ey p oin t m a y b e a n a n sw er to a n e x a m q u estio n . E a t w e ll, t o o p ro fesso r c a n m a k e an y. c o u r se in ­ te r e stin g , a n d a b ad in stru cto r c a n ruin a good co u rse. ► R e p rep a red to b a il o u t. D on’t b e a fr a id to drop a c la s s th a t is n ’t w ork in g fo r you . ► D on ’t m iss c la s s — b e on tim e and don’t le a v e e a r ly . S o m e o f th e m o st im ­ p o rta n t in fo rm a tio n c o m es a t th e v ery b eg in in g an d en d . ► S it in th e fro n t row . S tu d en ts in th e fro n t row r e c e iv e m o re a tten tio n and a r e m ore lik e ly to c la r ify q u estio n s th ey h ave. ► A lw a y s d o e x tr a c re d it. E x tr a c re d it is n ’t r e a lly ex tra sin c e e v er y o n e h a s th e op p ortu n ity to d o it, a n d it is o ften th e o n ly d iffe re n c e b etw een a n “ A ” and “ B .” ► P r e -te st y o u r se lf. O btain a ll p rev io u s stu d y g u id e s, q u izzes a n d te s ts a v a ila b le . R a th er th a t ju s t retrea d in g y o u r m a te r ia l, a sk y o u r se lf th e k in d o f q u estio n s th a t a r e lik e ly to a p p ea r on a te s t ► S tu d y in sh o rt b u rsts w ith- b rea k s in b etw een r a th er th a n m ara th o n se ssio n s. T h e fa c ts th a t y o u stu d y fir s t a n d la st w ill b e rem em b ered b e st. S h ort stu d y se ss io n s w ill en su re th a t y o u r co n cen ­ tra tio n is a t its p ea k . V S tu d y a cco rd in g to y o u r b io lo g ic a l c lo c k . I f y o u a r e a “ n ig h to w l,” you r bod y tem p era tu re is p ro b a b ly h ig h est a t n ig h t, so y o u r a b ility to co n c en tra te w ill b e a t its p ea k th en . If y ou a r e a m orn- ASU nutrition professor M elinda M anors says w hat you eat affects your a b ility to concentrate. She o ffers these tip s : w People respond differently to caf­ feine. if you’re not used to caffeine, relying on it to stay awake to study may make you nervous, impare your ability to concentrate, or prohibit you from getting enough sleep. w Don't go to class or an exam on an empty stomach. Glucose, Which is available in sugars and carbohydrates, is the brain's primary energy source. w Good glucose sources include: fresh fruit and vegetables, juices, milk, bread and cereals. w Keep the above-mentioned items on hand as nutritious snacks while studying. If you allow yourself to get hungry while studying, you'll be more likely to grab the first available food, which might coma from a vending machine. m- Make sure your diet is adequate in B vitamins. Although no vitamin can give you energy, the B vitamins are instru­ mental in allowing your body to turn food into energy. Whole grains and lean meats are good sourcespf B vita­ mins. f , Page 36 State I State Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 TO KNOW $4.80 IS TOO MUC SCM SPIRAL NOTEBOOK PAPERMATE WRITE BROS. STICK PENS Wirebound, college ruled, m X 1 m , 70 sheets, (CB1 -5 List Price, 1.39 S a v e 50% Disposable stick ball pen, blue or black, medium or fine pt. List Price, 4.80 69* S a v e 81% 4 subject, 80 sheets, (CB1-2 List Price, 2.49 S a v e 56% J09 3 subject, 120 sheets, (CB1- List Price, 2.19 S a v e 41% P PAPERSMATE EPSON EPSON APEX 1 0 0 /2 0 COMPUTER Single 5.25" floppy drive/20MB hard drive 4.77/10 MHz 8088 microprocessor, Optional 8087 co-processor. Five full size expansion slots, included inside: MS Dos 3.3, Xtree, PFS: first choice, built-in multi-mode graphics (MGA) support for additional RGB color dr TTL monochrome monitor, optional 8087 co­ processor, Epson's one year limited warranty. List Price, 1599.99 ea. S ave 56% SCM LEGAL PADS m EPSON APEX MONOCHROME MONITOR x 11 legal pads pert Top canary paper, 50 sheets per pad. (51683SK) S ave 42% More Than 72,000 entries. (0-671-54262) List P ric e , 1 1 .8 9 /D o z . List Price, 8,95 Save 69% Save 55% Input signal TTL, green phosphor picture, 12" screen, 720 x 350 resolution,, 80 X x 25display 25 display format format. List Price, 149.99 ea. WEBSTER’S NEW WORLD DICTIONARY æ sssg List Price, 32.95 DATAMA ö *8 7 EPSON T -1000 PRINTER 80-column narrow-carnage printer, 9-pin near letter quality print head, prints 180 CPS in draft mode; 30 CPS in near letter quality, easy-to-use SelecType front control panel, standard Epson . Roman and Sans Serif fonts, standard pull tractor and auto single sheet loading feature, 3K buffer, industry standard compatibility, Epson's one year limited warranty. List Price, 299.99 ea. S ave 44% *167 NATIONAL W RING BINDERS iTi \fe rb a tim DATAMAG DISKETTES Certified 100% error free. Double sided, double density or double sided, high density. 525 DSDD, 10/box. (S5302B) (List Price, 10.95/b ox S ave 67% MEAD N0TED00K FILLER PAPER 8% x 11,16# filler paper, leets/ college ruled. 200 sheets/ pack. (17208) U et Price, 2.65 S ave 55%, Brand F la t b a c k , w /p o c k e t s o n in sid e c o v e rs . 6 7 series. List Price, 3.75 119 S ave 72% Camelback Corridor the ■ jf il Mattonai* East PhOenlx/Tempe IN D IA N S C H O O L R D ui >■ < «0 O .P . C l o u Your O ffic e Products W arehouse 43rd Ave. & Indian School 16th S treet & Cam elback 44th Street & Van Buren 1606 E. Camelback Road 222 N. 44th Street 4344 w. Indian School Road 234-CLUB 392-4560 247-3700 5WAYST0PAY9 Page 37 Wednesday, January 17,1990 State Press IICH TO Pinr FOR 790 PENSn ;m spiral O il BOOK pDE¿ jn d , c o lle g e ruled , Vi, 70 s h e e ts , (GB1 -2 4 8 ) rice, 1.39 5 50% °NE ° * Y M EM BERSHIP .V st, 8 0 s h e e ts , (CB1 -2 6 8 ) rice, 2.49 5 56% rnin .. ,JjjP, mm PENTEL “QUICKER CLICKER” AUTOMATIC PENCIL Exclusive “insta feed" barrel lead advance for continuous writing without -interruption. 0.5MM or 0.7MM M fk Voice activated re c o rd in g 2umber redial, control beeperless rerZ%f?mJtUt1° n smart touch screening, sinqle0i,tn o "f flJnctions, call to» saver' 1 year warrant'9' messa9e tope, ct, 12 0 s h e e ts , (CB1 -2 8 9 ) rice, 2.19 5 41% ust Price, 119.99 ea. List Price, 3.79 W S ave 34% • 7 i°hh| FABER CASTELL TEXTUNER S a v e 50% Chisel tip for narrow or bold marks, yellow or pink. (63000) List Price, 3.50 S ave 35% TEXAS INSTRUMENTS “BUSINESS EDGE” FINANCIAL CALCULATOR DAYRUNNER CLASSIC ORGANIZER List P ric e , 6 0 .0 0 3ning vinyl organizer with full year calendar and A-2 tnfo file/direetpry. Pockets for calculator, checkbook, and au a nu p e n . Size business cards. Note pad ahd pen. S ave 33% U$t Price, 55.00 10-digit, operates in 2 different modes. (Financial o r statistical) 8-%*9.101-1599 S ave 27% r. » l SHARP SCIENTIFIC CALCULATOR 01¿.v w 1/00 rhp% H e w l e t t PACKARD 10-digit, 112 functions, memory-safe guard, with text book, batteries and wallet (EL506AB) List P ric e , 3 0 .9 9 amortization, b o n d ^ e ir in f f re9'sters, built-in S ave 52% ¡ r a s " a S ave 28% Central Phoenix M esa/Chandler W est VaHey I l tu c u l OECWb c SOUTHERN AVE. IN D IA N S C H O O L R D . ui >■ > .< to oc r tíBfflSjH ■<- ■. T H O M A S S T . I*l n il M cD O W E LL ST. 0 * C o untry d u b & S outhern C entral & Thom as 4344 W. Indian School Road 1056 S! C ountry C lub Drive 120 West Thomas 247-3700 401-5160 284-CLUB 43rd Ave. & Indian School PERSONAL CHECKS 8am -9p m 9am -5pm N oon-5pm © 1 990The O.P. C lub C orporation P rices shown a re member prices only. Non-m em bers add 10% to m ember price. Prices subject to change at any tim e w ith out notice. The O P. C lub is not responsible fo r typographical „errors. W e have m ade every e ffo rt to ensure that the item s shown are in stock. However w e are not responsible for out of stock item s. t “■OJXBsb I O.P. CLUB CREDIT ‘ OPEN 7 DAYS 5 NIGHTS M o n d ay— F rid ay S atu rd ay S unday ___________ Mb P — j Cash FREE! FUJI 35MM CAMERA With any p u rch ase of $10 or more. Coupon Expires 1/21/90 1 Per Customer. Offer Good While Supplies Last. F ree c a m e ra o ffe r o n ly g o o d at: 1056 S. C o u n try C lu b a n d 222 N. 4 4 th S t. Page 38 S ta te ! Wednesday, January 17,1990 C O M E 6* G E T Y O U R BOOKS! ftA V E ^ ^ .» Q O K S J X u 1 STUDENT N STUDEMT >/ B O O K B O O K R e n t e r 2 CENTER T m. 4 X su > A S ¿1 Í—- F o r y o u r c o n v e n ie n c e . . . ^ The Student Book Center will be open Mon­ day through Thursday early morning to late at night — Friday until 5:30 p.m. And w e’re easy to find, just one block north of campus on Col­ lege Ave. with free parking at rear of building. MasterCard, BankAmericard, Discover, American Express, and personal checks accepted. Ô L a r g e s t s e l e c t io n o f u s e d b o o k s . . B uying used textbooks m akes sen se. It m eans g re a te r saviogs to you, a t a tim e w hen you n eed it m ost. It m ean s e x tra cash to m eet those o th er back to school exp en ses. B ecause o f exten sive buying trips th roughout th e U n ited S ta te s , th e Student~BookC en ter can o ffe r th e A S U stu d en t th e larg est and m ost com plete selectio n of good used textbooks. Used books sell fa st • • H u rry and buy earfy as used books a re alw ays th e first to go. B ut d o n ’t w o rry if you buy th e w rong book, w e will g ladly re­ fu n d you r full p u rch a se price through J a n u ary 31 w h en books a r e re tu rn e d u n d am a g ed w ith your receipt. A L a r g e s t s e l e c t io n o f n e w b o o k s . • F or th o se w ho p refer new textbooks, th e S tu den t Book C enter also m aintain s a larg e inventory o f new books an d study aids. Largest selection o f supplies • . . T h e S tu d e n t B ook C e n te r sells m ore th an just books. T a k e ad van tag e o f o u r fin e selectio n o f q uality school supplies, A S U s h irts , shorts, ja c k e ts , e tc ., F ra te rn ity and S orority g lftw are and m uch m ore, In c lu d in g P hoenix C ard in als m erchandise. B a s e m e n t F u ll o f B o o k s ! U S E D COURSE MAT 117 JUS 100 FAS 332 ACC 211 CIS 200 COMICO ECN111 ECN 112 BLW 305 MGT301 FIN 300 MKT 300 OPM 301 Q BA 221 M G T463 LIA 100 PGS1Ö0 AST 112 O B O O K AUTHO R Keedy Levine Kelly Imdieke O'Leary Devito Miller Miller Bohlman Kreitner Gitman Lusch Fearon Kazmier Hill Pauk Myers 4 Abell B A R G A IN S ! T IT L E Algebra & Trig Criminal Justice in America Sexuality Today Financial Accounting Computers & Information Systems Human Communication Eoon Today Macro View Econ Today Micro View ' Legal Environment of Business Management Principles of Managerial Finance Principles of Marketing Production Operation Management Basic Statistics for Bus. & Econ. Strategic Management How to Study in College Psychology Exploration of the Universe NEW 35.95 36.00 17.95 48.95 33.95 24.50 27.95 27.95 45.50 43.25 47.50 49.50 19.50 29.95 42.50 22.95 36.95 46.25 USED SA VE 8.95 27.00 27.00 9.00 4.45 13.50 12.20 36.75 8.45 25 50 6.10 18.40 6.95 21.00 6.95 21.00 11.35 34.15 32.45 10.80 11.85 35.65 12.35 37.15 4.85 14.65 7.45 22.50 10.60 31.90 5.70 17.25. 9.20 27.75 34.70 ' 11.55 ¿ jíu d e n C ¿B ook* G e n ß r* 704 S. College A ve. 1 Block North of ASU 966-6226 ! Wednesday, January 17,1990 State Press Scottsd ale Détail TH E ' H a v e Y o u r G a r (D e ta ile d b y TPorsche C x p e r ts fy in i£ $5 OFF w ith th is coupon ( P a r t ic ip a t in g S ty lis ts O n ly ) R e g u la r P ric e M en S15 • W o m e n S17 968-5946 709 S. Forest Ave. N o rth o f U n iv e rs ity A v e . O p e n E vening s: W e w i ll: His life was an incredible statement. I've always admired him. R e g u la r P ric e $ 9 9 .9 5 S a v e $ 3 0 .0 0 A S U S p e c ia l $ 6 9 .9 5 • S t e a m c le a n e n g in e • B u ff a n d W a x e x te r io r • D re s s e x te r io r • C le a n in te r io r & tr u n k S c o ttsd a le • P a i n t f e n d e r w e ll s DETAIL *A II M akes and M odels *V an s an d T ru cks S lig h tly H ig h e r F o r a p p o in tm e n t c a ll D w ig h t o r S c o tt a t 9 9 4 -9 1 4 2 6 9 0 5 E. M c D o w e ll (B ehind S co ttsdale Lexus) E xpires M arch 31,1990 M o n-F ri 9-9 ENGINEERING GRADUATES Micro-Ref Has Challenges to M eet Your Abilities. Begin you r c a re e r with a co m p a n y th at offers th e ch a llen g es that y o u ’v e b e e n preparing for— Micro-Rel, a division o f Medtronic, Inc. W e’re industry le a d e rs in th e d evelo p m en t a n d m anufacture o f cu stom IC’s a n d H ybrids utilized in m edical, industrial a n d governm ent applications. To help u s m e e t our am bitious g o a ls for th e future, wé're now seek in g Ç re a t I tedian foocC 894-MAMA 106 E. U n iversity Dr. EVENING SPECIALS Watch for Our Lunch Specials "KILLER CALZONE" 1 4 o z . S o f t D r in k o r D r a ft <£<5 * Ic e C r e a m C o n e ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS. Entry level, rotationál p o sitio n s are n ow avail­ a ble in a range o f exciting specialties. Ify o u ’re a highly m otivated individual drivén to excel­ lence, w e ’d like to s p e a k with you. A t MicroRel, y o u ’ll en jo y a highly co m petitive salary arid co m p reh en sive benefits. For m ore information a b o u t th e ch allen g es a n d rewards with Micro-Rel, or to sch edu le an interview, co n ta ct th e P la cem en t Office. M icro-Rel, 2343 W. 10th Place, Tempe, A Z 85281. 9" PERSONAL PIZZA 1 FREE T O P PIN G 1 4 o z . S o f t D r in k o r D r a ft Jam es S tovall portrays Paul Robeson In th e ASU produc­ tio n “ Paul R obeson.” $240 Ic e C r e a m C o n e SPAGHETTI DINNER W ith S a la d & G a r lic B rea d 1 4 o z . S o f t D r in k o r D r a ft $299 By SHARON KANEY S tate Press Ic e C r e a m C o n e HAM & CHEESE SUB 1 4 o z . S o f t D r in k o r D r a ft ■ On-Cam pus Interview s ■ ■ February 6, 1990 ■ See your Placem ent O ffice today. $ 2 5 9 Ic e C r e a m C o n e BUY A 14" PIZZA i Receive a P itcher o leer or Soda for . . . . £ Includes 2 free Ice C ream Cones An Equal O pportunity Em ployer uk8?b In a Hurry — Gall Ahead' M AZATLAN S P R IN G B R E A K W IT H ’ 9 8 DAYS 7 NIGHTS $195 0 C H A R T E R TRAIN T rip D a te s * 4 A M a rc h 1 6 -2 3 • 4 B M a rc h 1 7 -2 4 • 4 C M a rc h 1 8 -2 5 WHY IS COLLEGE TOURS #1 PR IC ES INCLUDE: • • • • • • • • • • 1 . W e have been sending students to M azatlan fo r 20 years. Round-trip train transportation from Rogale* to Mazatlan Lodging (4 por reom). FREE-NIghtly Cocktail Party COLLEGE TOURS Pacifico T-Shirt D iscount c o u p o n s good for compHmontary drinks, and spoetai deal* at local restaurant*, astaMtahmcnta and COLLEGE TOURS exclusive Chico’* Boacti C Special nddwook. 3-hour, 10-STAR PARTY with FREE drink* and food! Privata night* at Volantino'*, El CM A Frankie Oh's Dicco*. Baal tan contacts for guys and gtrtaFREE TRIP IN 'P I tor the winner! Co-ad tournaments and bench «venta; Volleyball, tug-of-war, kamikaze race. I ratay. baUyflop contata, tha Catamaran Chakanga, COLLEGE TOURS tuba raca lota mom gamaa . . . PIPZES FOR THE WINNERS! AND MUCH, MUCH MORE!! FLY TO MAZATLAN-FROM PHOENIX 2. A ll com petitors try to copy us. 3. T ry as they m ay, they can’t copy som e o f our benefits, Such as • M ore Games • Thousand^ o f D ollars M ore in Prizes • Event cham pionship T-S hirts « G ood Deals A t G ringo Lingo • C hicho’s • P rivate N ights at E l C id • V a lentino's • Frankie O h’s • P ius M uch M orel! AND WE COST LESS —SAVE WITH US— $385 DEPARTURE DATES: FRI., MAR. 16 • SAT., MAR. 2 EXTRA NIGHTS IN MAZATLAN SUN., MAR. 18 NAM E (Last). ADDRESS_ Trip Desired—Train 4AD 4BD 4CG SCHOOL AZ. STATE Options: Train-CentraHy located hotel $20 G Deluxe Hotel $43 □ El Cid Hotel $72 □ 2 per room $43 □ Flight horn Phoenix/MazaHan $385 Frir, March 16-23 O Sat.17-24 □ Sun. 18-25 O Options Fly: Cwttral Hotel $25 □ Deluxe Hotel $60 □ El Cid Hotel $100 □ 2 per room $60 □ Robeson preceded today’s heroes Send a $50 non-refundable deposit to: COLLEGE TOURS 2544 N. 7th St. Phoenix AZ85006 —Phone 271-4553 W hen m o st o f u s th in k ab ou t c iv il r ig h ts a c tiv ists , w e think o f M artin L u th er K in g J r ., J e s s e J a c k so n or M alcolm X . A nd th a t’s a sh a m e b eca u se P a u l R ob eson , a b r illia n t p erfo rm er an d A ll-A m erica n a th le te , w a s a foreru n n er to th em a ll. B u t h e rem a in s la r g e ly a n un su ng h ero . P h illip H a y es D ea n ’s p la y , “ P a u l R o b eso n ,” is o n e o f th e o n ly w o rk s to sin g h is p r a ise s. » “ P a u l R ob eson ” w ill b e p resen ted a t th e P a u l V . G a lv in P la y h o u se J a n . 18 a n d 19 for th r e e p erfo rm a n ces. “ It’s on e o f th e o n ly e x a m p les o f th e fu ll sc o p e o f th e m a n ’s lif e ,” sa y s a c to r J a m e s S to v a ll, w h o p o rtra y s R ob eson . “ T h a t’s w h y th e p ie c e sta n d s o u t.” T h e p la y b e g in s w ith R ob eson ’s a tten d a n ce a s th e on ly b la ck stu d en t a t R u tg ers U n iv e r sity in th e e a r ly ’20s a n d en d s n e a r th e tim e o f h is d ea th — c o v erin g a sp a n o f n e a r ly 60 y e a r s. A fter g ra d u a tin g P h i B eta K ap p a, R ob eson p u rsu ed a la w d e g r ee from C olum b ia U n iv ersity . B u t R o b eso n so o n d isc o v e re d th e le g a l p r o fe ssio n to b e v ir tu a lly e x c lu s iv e o f b la c k s, so h e tu rn ed to a c a r e e r in e n terta in m en t.“ M any bla^k lea d er s w e re a r tis ts ,” D ea n sa id in a r ec en t in terv iew ," n o tin g th a t th e en terta in m en t in d u stry w a s on e o f th e fir s t to a c c e p t b la c k s a s p r o fe ssio n a ls. ~ R o b eso n ’s b r illia n t V ocal c a r e e r took h im to E u ro p e an d in 1934, h e v isite d th e S o v ie t U n ion . R ob eson d ev elo p ed an a ffin ity fo r th e C om m u nist P a r ty b e c a u se o f its co m p lete la c k o f r a c ia l se g r e g a tio n and o p p ressio n . “ H e w a s o n e o f th e fir s t b la ck s to d isc o v e r th a t th e r e a re b la c k s in th e S o v ie t U n io n ,” D ea n sa id . M cC arth yism a n d th e C old W ar v ir tu a lly d estro y ed R o b eso n ’s c a r e e r in th e U n ited S ta te s, a n d h e «Bed in 1976. S to v a ll, w h o sa y s h e is hon ored to p o rtray R ob eson , b eca m e m ore a n d m o re im p r esse d w ith h im a s h e b eg a n to r e se a r c h th e p a rt. “ H e d id p h en o m en a l w ork to o rg a n ize la b o r u n io n s. H e w a s v e r y m u ch a n a c tiv is t,” S to v a ll sa id . “ H is life w a s a n in cred ib le sta te m e n t. I’v e a lw a y s a d m ired h im .” P la y w rig h t D ea n is g u e st-d ir e ctin g th e A SU p rod u ction . C arefu l not to le t th e e sse n c e o f a sin g le lin e b e lo st, D ea n is q u ick to m a k e c e r ta in th a t S to v a ll d o e s n ot drop a sin g le w ord . H e e v en m ou n ts th e sp a r se ly s e t sta g e h im se lf d u rin g r e h e a r sa l to d em o n stra te d a n ce ste p s fo r T h e B la ck B ottom a n d H ie C ake W alk. B u rt W a lla ce, w h o w ill b e a p p ea rin g in th e A SU prod u ction a s R o b eso n ’s p ia n ist, o rig in a ted th e p a rt on B ro a d w a y . “ P a u l R o b eso n ” o r ig in a lly op en ed o n B road w ay 12 y e a rs a g o . B la ck r ig h ts a d v o c a te s, n a m ely fro m R ob eson ’s fa m ily , c a lle d fo r a b o y co tt o f th e p rod u ction , w h ich so o n c lo se d . L a ter m an y a d m itted to n ev er h a v in g r ea d th e sc r ip t o r se e n th e p rod u ction . It w a s r e v iv e d b y J o esp h P a p p tw o y e a r s a g o to c r itic a l a c c la im . “ R o b eso n ” is a co-p rod u ction o f A SU ’s M u lti-E th n ic S e r ie s a n d th e A SU M artin L u th er K in g C eleb ration C o m m ittee. ° D ea n sa id th a t p erfo rm a n ce o p p o rtu n ities fo r m in o r itie s ■~ w ill op en u p w h en p ro d u cers b eg in to m a rk et to m in o rity a u d ien ce s. “ T h ere a r e p len ty o f b la ck p a rts th a t a r e c a s t w h ite ,” h e sa id . “ T h e b ottom lin e is m on ey . T h e c o lo r is green . Com ics State Press Wednesday, January 17,1990 P ageA O ^ by B ill W atterson Calvin and Hobbes Ho bbes , \ better t q l VIHATAMI \ 1OJRVA0MTO GOING TO Ob?/1 PUT OUT THE OH NO.' W DUPLICATE MNDC DUPLICATES ' • ■ Ht .1 V Œ NUMBERS Side by Gary Larson IOC*, HOO HAVE TO STM IN HERE AND 6 E REAL OOTET.' IF W MOW FINDS OUT ABOUT THIS, SHE’LL _ - . ' ---------- S HAVE A W TW > THROUGH S \K ! . \< s"—«------------ - The fa r V , _ 4 S STAI HERE?/ HO NAT. N -I r..T rowET jsi£ Doonesbury MEN, AS PANAMA'S m u peace OFFtcePs, rfLLBeupTO you to MAKB THIS A COUNTRY HUB CAN ALL BB PPOUQ O F! PANAMA'S BeiNS&mONeiAOPe CHANCB TDeMUAWTHeAMeRICAN MOPFL OFVmXFACt. YOU HAVFA FPBBN UeCTBPPPBSIi* NT, YOUHAVB A CONSTITU­ TION, YOU H Ave FOUNDING JWTHBPS... by Mike R itter Ivory Towers W HY WAIT TO BE SAFE? U n iv e r sity W o m e n ’s C lin ic , In c. U n iv ersity W o m e n 's C lin ic h a s sa m e d a y n r n e x t d a y c o n fid e n tia l a p p o in tm e n ts a v a ila b le fo r w o m e n 's h e a lth c a re . *3 5 ANNUAL EXAM w/coupon (includes complete physical, pap smear, anemia test and urine test for protein and sugar BIRTH CONTROL PILLS and INFECTION and SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASE EXAMS ALSO AVAILABLE AT AFFORDABLE PRICES. 2 1 W e s t B a s e lin e R o a d , T e m p e S /W Corner o f B aseline and M ill Phone 8 3 1 -5 5 3 2 E xpires 3 -3 1 TM) THE CORNERS* FO R « P urch ase a n y sm a ll, m e d iu m o r la rg e y o g u rt a n d re c e iv e th e n e xt s m a lle r size fo r F R H . Topping Extra Expires 1/31/90 RICH M O ND , V a. CAP) — T h ere w a s a c a k e , flo w ers, g u e sts , a ju d g e to p erform th e cerem o n y an d th e b rid e w o re a blu e ch iffo n gow n. T h e groom d id n ’t know a n y th in g abou t it. F r a n c e s U p ch u rch , 45, sta g e d th e su rp rise M onday in h e r o ffic e . G room V an ce H elm s, a lso 45, thou ght he w a s co m in g to p ick h er up fo r lu n ch . “ E v e r y w h e r e w e c a lle d ,“ fo r flo w e r s , fo o d , ev ery w h ere — nobody b e lie v e d th a t th e groom d id n ’t know abou t th e w ed d in g. It took a lo t o f ex p la in in g , e sp e c ia lly to th e ju d g e w e a sk ed to p erfo rm th e C erem ony,” U p ch u rch sa id , T h e co u p le h a d p lan n ed to h a v e a b r ief c iv il cerem o n y la te r th is w eek , sa id V an ce. B u t w h en h e o p en ed U p ch u rch ’s o ffic e door, h e w a s g r e e te d b y J u d g e R ob ert J . S m ith , a la r g e crow d o f o th er p eo p le, an d c a m er a s. V a n ce b a ck ed o u t and c lo se d th e door. “ W hen I sa w (th e ju d g e) in th o se b la ck ro b es, th a t w a s w h en I r e a liz e d th a t th is w a s th e r e a l th in g ,” H elm s sa id . “ A re you r ea d y ? ” a sk ed th e ju d g e. “ Y e s ,” H elm s rep lied . “ W e h a v e th e rep u ta tio n s o f b ein g th e d u lle st, m ost r e sp e c ta b le p eo p le y o u k n o w ,- U p ch urch sa id . “ W e’re th e la s t p eo p le y o u w ou ld e x p e c t to do so m eth in g lik e th is .” . HAYDEN'S FERRY R V I ASU’s National Literary Magazine Fall 1989 Now available at: Changing Hands Bookstore Books Etc. ASU Bookstore Student Publications, M atthew s C enter W State Press fraie 41 Wednesday, January 1 7 ,1990 A new era: Frieder, Olson m eet in P ac-10 B y PA U L CORO S ta te P ress F o r th e p a s t se v e n y e a r s , lo ok in g to b a sk e tb a ll to red eem A S U ’s fo o tb a ll te a m ’s d rou gh t a g a in st th e U ofA h a s b een lik e M itch G reen a sk in g M ich a el S p in k s to b e a t u p M ik e T y so n for h im . (h ily o n c e sin c e L u te O lson took o v e r th e p rogram p rior to th e 1983-84 se a so n h a v e th e Sun D e v ils b ea ten th e W ild ca ts (a 1986 70-63 w in a t h o m e ). T h is y e a r w a s to b e d iffe re n t a s round on e o f F ried er v s. O lson r in g s in a t 7 :3 0 to n ig h t a t th e U n iv e r sity A c tiv ity C en ter. Scan Troym a/S taM P rw * Senior point guard M ike Red hair is averaging 5 .9 assists par N o. 23 U ofA (9-3 o v e r a ll, 4-3 P a c-1 0 ) str u g g le d e a r ly w ith lo sse s a t O regon a n d O regon S ta te an d h a s h ad la p se s r e c e n tly . A SU w a s a tea m on th e r is e , w in n in g e ig h t o f nin e g a m e s (lo st to N o. 1 K a n sa s D ec. 22) p rio r to la s t w e ek ’s trip to L os A n g eles. T h a t a ll ch a n g ed w ith 40 se c o n d s rem a in in g in A SU ’s 63-48 w in o v e r W ash in gton a t h o m e; ju n io r gu a rd M att A n derson la n d ed b a d ly a fte r a tw o-h an d ed sla m . A n derson to re th e c a r tila g e in h is rig h t k n ee , p u ttin g h im o u t o f co m m issio n u n til a t le a s t th e F eb . 8 g a m e a g a in st UCLA. “ W e h a v e k in d o f r e g r e sse d d u e to M att’s in ju ry to w h ere w e w e re b a ck in O cto b er-N o v em b er,” H ead C oach B ill F ried er sa id . W ithout th e ir seco n d -lea d in g sc o r er a t 14.2 p o in ts p er g a m e (17.8 in h is la s t fou r g a m e s), th e Sun D e v ils ( 8-6 o v e r a ll, 2-4 P a c-1 0 ) h a v e slo w ed th eir o ffen se to a sn a il’s p a c e . L a st w e e k , th e tea m sc o r ed un d er 60 p o in ts in lo s s e s to 16thra n k ed UCLA (62-53) an d U SC (69-59) a n d sh o t 38 p ercen t from th e fie ld in b oth c o n te sts. A lex A u stin , w h o w a s th e J a n . 9 P a c-1 0 P la y e r o f th e W eek, took 49 sh o ts in th e tw o g a m e s. H e tie d a c a r e e r h ig h w ith 31 p o in ts a t UC LA, b u t m a d e o n ly se v e n o f 25 sh o ts a t USC. “ I th in k A lex tr ie d to d o w a y to o m u ch ,” F r ie d e r sa id . “ H e h a s to u n d ersta n d th a t h e h a s g o t to co n tin u e to p la y th e w a y A lex A u stin w a s p la y in g . H e h a s to h elp u s o u t on th e flo o r to g e t o th er p la y e r s in v o lv ed .” Isa a c A u stin , w h o w a s r ep la c ed in th e sta r tin g lin eu p by E m o ry L ew is, w ill b e in th e fir s t fiv e a g a in a fte r a 15-point, 11 -reb ound p erfo rm a n ce a g a in st th e T ro ja n s. F ried er h a s sa id A SU w ill n eed sco rin g fro m a co m b in a tio n o f p eo p le w ith ou t A n d erson , sta r tin g w ith th e fro n t lin e . In th e b a ck co u rt, fresh m a n B ria n C am per a v e ra g e d n in e p o in ts in h is fir s t tw o sta r ts la s t w eek . P o in t g u a rd M ike R ed h a ir, w h o d ish ed o u t a c a reer-h ig h o f 11 a s s is ts a t U SC , is o n ly a v e r a g in g th r e e sh o ts a g a m e. “ (R ed h a ir) is c a p a b le o f h ittin g (th e 3 -p o in te r ),” F ried er “ I f hfc b a n g s in a co u p le, it w ill r e a lly h elp th e in sid e iun D e v il b ig m en w ill w elco m e a n y h elp th ey ca n g e t a s th e y fa c e a tou gh W ild cat fr o n tlin e to n ig h t, le d b y forw ard Ju d B u ech ler and c en ter B ria n W illia m s. “ B u ech ler is a g r e a t a ll-a ro u n d p la y e r ,” F ried er sa id . “ H e g iv e s you sc o r in g , reb ou n d in g, lea d er sh ip an d d e fe n se . “ W illia m s m ig h t n ot b e up to th eir e x p e cta tio n s y e t, bu t h e ’s s t ill 6-11 jm d v e r y c a p a b le around th e b a sk e t.” 4 U o fA , W htf & sm a rtin g fro m a 73-67 lo ss a t UCLA S atu rd a y , sp o rts a n o n -sla u g h t o f g u a rd s th a t ca n bom b a w a y . M att M u eh leb ach lea d s a b ack co u rt th a t h a s h it o n e-th ird o f its 3-point sh o ts th is se a so n . On d e fe n se , th e W ild ca ts h a v e h eld op p on en ts to 38 p ercen t fie ld -g o a l sh o o tin g . F ried er sa id th ey zon e a lo t, b u t a r e e ffe c tiv e in m ix in g up th e ir d e fe n se s. “ W e h a v e to g e t a g r e a t g a m e from ev ery b o d y in ord er to h a v e a n y k in d o f c h a n c e ,” F ried er sa id . “ A rizon a h a s k in d o f d o m in a ted th is p la c e in a lo t o f th in g s r e c e n tly . B u t th is is not th e tea m it w a s a y e a r o r tw o y e a r s a g o w ith (1988-89 A P P la y e r o f th e Y ea r) S ea n E llio tt.” F ried er sa id h e is str iv in g to d ev elo p a p rogram lik e U ofA ’s , b e c a u se th a t w ou ld m ea n A SU co u ld c o m p ete on a n a tio n a l le v e l. “ I h op e th a t so m ed a y (A SU an d U ofA ) ca n p la y fo r a ch a m p io n sh ip ,” F ried er sa id . “ I th in k th a t w ou ld b e a lo t o f fu n . I t w ou ld b e a g r e a t th in g fo r th e s ta te .” M ea n w h ile, to n ig h t’s r iv a lr y r e v iv a l is ju s t a g a m e b etw een th e P a c-lO 's fo u rth -p la ce an d se v e n th -p la c e te a m s. T h a t w on ’t p rev en t th e UAC from a p o ssib le se ll-o u t thou gh. Scott Troyanoo/Stato Pv m s : Jun ior guard M att A nderson, A SU’s second-leading scorer, w ill' be o u t w ith a knee Infury u n til m id-February. “ I ’m n ot th e ty p e o f g u y th a t is g o in g to b u ild th is g a m e so fa r o u t o f w h a ck and th en b e s o d isa p p o in ted i f it d o esn ’t w ork o u t a n d h a v e th a t ca rr y o v e r to th e te a m ,” F ried er sa id . “ It’s o n ly on e g a m e .” • In T h u rsd a y ’s g a m e a g a in st th e B ru in s, A lex A u stin b e c a m e th e 18th Sun D e v il in h isto ry to sc o r e 1,000 p o in ts in a ca reer. * A SU h a s o n ly on e lo s s a t h o m e th is se a so n , a 65-64 d e fe a t a g a in st B rig h a m Y ou ng on D e c . 5. * T o n ig h t’s g a m e m a rk s th e th ird tim e F ried er w ill a ttem p t to reco rd h is 200th c a r e e r w in . H e w ou ld b eco m e th e 10th a c tiv e co a ch to r ea c h 200 w in s b efo re 100 lo sse s. • S en io r T e r e n c e W h eeler, w h o w a s A S U ’s flo o r lea d er la st se a so n u n til h e su ffer ed lig a m e n t d a m a g e to h is k n ee in th e 11th g a m e , w ill red sh irt th is se a so n . H is k n ee d id n ot h e a l a s q u ick ly a s e x p e cte d . UofA’s W illiam s has long road back By PAUL CORO S ta te P iece A fter n ot p la y in g c o m p e titiv e b a sk etb a ll fo r tw o y e a r s , U ofA ’s B ria n W illia m s w a s e x p e c te d to p a rt T u cso n ’s S a n ta C ruz R iv er. w illia m s is n o t a m ir a c le w ork er an d h e w ill b e th e fir s t to a d m it it. M uch o f th e W ild cat fa ith fu l w a s co u n tin g on th e 6-fo o t-ll, 235-pound c en ter to ste p in fo r 1988-89 A ll-A m erica n A nthony Cook w ith o u t sk ip p in g a b e a t. O n e, n a tio n a l t e le v is io n s p o r t s c a s t e r p r e d ic te d th e so p h o m o re to m a k e fir st-te a m A ll-A m erica . “ T h e fir s t few g a m e s o u t p eo p le w ere e x p e c tin g m ir a c le s from m e ,” W illia m s sa id . “ T h ey h a v e to u n d ersta n d th a t it ta k e s tim e . ‘H t’s a to u g h a d ju stm en t — on e th a t you u n d e re stim a te. Y ou a lw a y s th in k you c a n g o o u t a n d p ick up w h ere y o u le ft o ff, b u t it ta k e s m o re tim e .” W illia m s w a s r ed sh ir ted la st se a so n a fter t r a n s f e r r in g in J u ly 1988 fr o m th e U n iv e r sity o f M a ry la n d . H e sa id th e tr a n sfe r w a s b a sed on h is o v e r a ll d isin te r e st w ith th e co a ch in g o f B ob W ade, w h o h a s s in c e b e e n fire d from th e h e a d p o sitio n . In h is fresh m a n y e a r w ith th e T erra p in s, th e left-h a n d e r ta llie d 12.5 p o in ts an d six reb o u n d s a g a m e w h ile sw a ttin g 36 sh o ts to e a rn A tla n tic C o a st C o n feren ce n ew co m er o f th e y e a r h on ors. “ I t fe e ls k in d o f b iz a r r e ,” W illia m s sa id . “ It se e m s lik e su ch a lo n g tim e a g o . It h a s ta k e n a y e a r o r so to sw itc h m o d es in th e p la y in g s ty lé o f a d iffe r e n t c o n fe re n c e.” P erh a p s W illia m s’ b ig g e st a d ju stm en t to P a c-1 0 b a sk etb a ll h a s c o m e b e c a u se o f th e o ffic ia tin g . In m a n y c a s é s , W illia m s’ in c o n siste n c y th is se a so n m a y b e a ttrib u ted to tro u b le w ith fo u ls. “ T h is c o n feren ce is a lo t d iffe re n t th an w h a t I g o t u sed to ,” W illia m s sa id . “ T he fo u ls c a lle d a r e c a lle d a w a y fro m th e a ctio n a n d th e y h a v e n o e ffe c t o n th e g a m e . T hey c a ll fo u ls so th e g a m e w on ’t b e a s p h y sica l. “^That h u rts W est C oast te a m s w h en th ey tr a v e l e a s t an d e x p e c t to g e t th o se c a lls .”.. A lth o u g h h e h a s n o t m e t sk y -h ig h e x p e c t a t io n s , W illia m s h a s p o s t e d r e sp e c ta b le s ta tis tic s fo r a W ild cat tea m th a t h a s not liv e d up to its b illin g e ith e r . H e is tie d fo r se c o n d o n th e te a m in both sco rin g (1 1 .4 ) and reb ou n d in g (5 .8 ) w ith S ea n R ock s. H e le a d s th e te a m s w ith 20 b lock ed | sh o ts. T h ese n u m b ers a r e e v e n m o re im p r e ssiv e co n sid erin g h e w a s sid e lin e d o v e r th e su m m er w ith a s tr e s s fr a c tu r e in h is le ft fo o t, w h ich k ep t h im from p la y in g in th e W orld U n iv e r sity G am es. “M y g a m e is co m in g a ro u n d ,” W illia m s sa id . “ It’s fin d in g a g r o o v e r ig h t now . G ettin g b ack to a g a m e situ a tio n req u ire s a h ig h le v e l o f e x ec u tio n an d th e p ro w ess to e x c e l.” W illia m s is g r a d u a lly c lim b in g to th o se sta n d a rd s, b u t h e h a s ta lle r p ea k s to con q u er. F ew w ill d isp u te h is p o te n tia l to b e th e m o st d o m in a tin g b ig m a n in th e P ac-10. H e w on’t. “ T h e p o ssib ility is th e r e ,” W illia m s sa id . “ I t’s g o in g to ta k e a lo t o f w ork. B u t I d e fin ite ly e x p e c t to b e to th a t p o in t in th e n ea r fu tu re .” C om ing o u t o f h ig h sc h o o l, T h e S p o rtin g N ew s c a lle d h im th e n a tio n ’s N o . 1 p ro sp ect a t c e n te r . H e w a s a te a m m a te o f U ofA g u a rd M att O thick a s a ju n io r a t B ish o p G orm an H igh in L a s V eg a s, N ev . T h e S a n ta M on ica, C ah f. n a tiv e p o s se sse s a ll th e to o ls to su rp a ss th e sta n d a r d s le ft b y C ook, w ho h e gu a rd ed in p r a c tic e la s t se a so n . H e h a s e x ce p tio n a l sp ee d an d lea p in g a b ility fo r a b ig m a n . P lu s, h e sh o o ts th e b a ll w e ll in sid e and on th e p e r im eter. “ I n eed to d o th in g s sim p ly an d m o re e ffe c tiv e ly ,” W illia m s sa id . “ It’s a m a tter o f b ein g v e r y in te n se .” P a g e 4 2 ______ ! State Press Wednesday, January it , 1990 Ji o n H ti Oougl—flHH P iw Sophom ore o u tfie ld e r Tom ­ m y Adem s elides by th e tag o f Sun D e v il a lu m n u s M ike B eniam in. Sun Devils talented but young ASU pounds alumni team 15-3; Steverson smacks grand slam; Manahan, Helfand 3 hits each By SETH SULKA S tate Press A s th e Sun D e v ils p rep a re fo r th e ir 1990 b a se b a ll se a so n , a la ck o f ta le n t is on e th in g th a t th ey w o n ’t n eed to w o rry a b ou t. A SU h a s s ix p la y e r s on B a se b a ll A m erica ’s A ll-A m erica te a m s an d is ran k ed fifth in th e n a tio n b y th e m a g a zin e. Sun D e v il H ead C oach J im B rock fe e ls th a t h e a c tu a lly h a s se v e n p la y e r s th a t a r e p o ten tia l “ b ig le a g u e ” b a ll p la y e rs. “ It’s k in d o f fun ny how B a se b a ll A m erica c a m e o u t w ith s ix o f o u r p o sitio n p la y e r s lis te d e ith e r on th e fir s t, seco n d , or th ird tea m A ll-A m erica n ,” B rock sa id . “ F u n n y . . . b eca u se th e b e st p ro fessio n a l p r o sp ec t o f th em a ll is T om m y A d am s, a n d h e w a sn ’t on a n y on e o f th e te a m s .” T he lis t in c lu d e s so p h o m o re le ft fie ld e r M ike K elly on th e fir s t te a m ; ju n io r sh o rtsto p A nthony M anahan, sop h om ore th ird b a sem a n J im A u stin , an d fresh m a n c en ter fie ld e r T odd S te v e rso n on th e seco n d te a m ; an d ju n io r seco n d b a sem a n F ern a n d o V in a an d ju n ior c a tc h e r E r ic H elfan d m a d e th e th ir d fe a m . A lth ou gh n on e o f th e A SU p itc h e rs m a d e th e lis ts , B rock fe e ls th a t so p h o m o res K ip Y au ghn a n d S ea n R e e s a r e “ b o a * fid e p r o fe ssio n a l p r o sp e c ts.” B u t th e ta len ted Su n D e v ils w ill h a v e to r e ly on y ou n g an d in e x p e rie n c ed p la y e r s to g u id e th em th rou gh ou t th e se a so n . A SU d o es n ot h a v e a n y se n io r s on th e tea m an d , o f th e 11 ju n io r s, o n ly o n e h a s se e n co n sid e r a b le a c tio n w ith th e tea m . “ O ur e x p e r ie n c e le v e l d e fin ite ly isn ’t th a t o f U SC 's or so m eb o d y lik e th a t,” B rock sa id . “ O b v io u sly th ere a r e so m e c lu b s th a t h a v e g o t so m e se n io r s an d p eo p le w ith tw o o r th ree y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e .” B ro ck sa id h e h o p es to tr y so m e “ d iffe re n t th in g s” th is se a so n w ith h is y ou n g clu b . A lth ou gh h e d o esn ’t n e c e ssa r ily w a n t to ch a n g e th e th in g s h is clu b h a s b een d o in g , h e sa id h e w ou ld lik e to “ g iv e p eo p le a lo t o f in stin c t o p tio n s th a t w e d o n ’t u su a lly d o .” W ith in stin c t o p tio n s, B rock is ta lk in g a b o u t situ a tio n s in v o lv in g p la y e r s ste a lin g b a sé s. “ W e u su a lly tie th em dow n on w h a t th ey ca n a n d c a n ’t d o ,” B ro ck sa id . “ N ow w e a r e sa y in g m a k e it h ap p en . “ O ur in te n t is to g e t e v e r y c o n c e iv a b le tim e th o se p eo p le th a t ca n ru n , ru n n in g .” F o r th e m o st p a r t, B rock sa id h e fe e ls th a t th e Sun D e v ils a r e g o in g to b e str o n g d e fe n siv e ly . ‘‘T h e tw o g u y s u p th e m id d le a r e g o in g to b e o u tsta n d in g ,” B ro ck sa id . “ F ern a n d o is ju s t g r e a t a n d w e th in k H elfan d is a n o u tsta n d in g c a tc h e r .” T h e o u tfie ld is str o n g w ith K elly , w h o B ro ck s a id w ill b e th e b e st d e fe n siv e o u tfie ld er in th e le a g u e , in le ft fie ld and S tev erso n a n d A d am s in c en ter an d r ig h t, r e sp e c tiv e ly . S tev erso n a n d A d a m s a r e fu ll o f p o ten tia l an d sh o u ld h elp th is o u tfie ld b e o n e o f th e str o n g e st in th e co u n try . A SU h a d a c h a n c e to sh o w c a se so m e o f it s ta le n t and in c r e a se d Iru n n in g a tta ck d u rin g its an n u al a lu m n i g a m e S a tu rd a y , w h ich th e Sun D e v ils w o n 15-3. T odd S tev erso n , th e D e v ils’ p rized fresh m a n , sp lit th e g a m e op en w ith h is six th in n in g g ra n d sla m . “ B a sic a lly , I w a s w ork in g on w h a t (H ittin g ) C oach (J e ff) P en tla n d h a s b een w ork in g on w ith u s th e la s t co u p le o f w e e k s,” S tev erso n sa id . “ (R u sty K ilg o ) th rew it o u t o v e r th e p la te an d g o t it up a little b it. A c tu a lly , I d id n ’t h it it on th e fa t p a rt o f th e b a t.” A SU a lso w a s a b le to sh o w o ff so m e o f its sp e e d b y ste a lin g fiv e b a se s. A u stin le d th e w a y w ith tw o s te a ls an d A d am s, H elfan d , an d J o n H a lla n d e a c h sto le o n e b a se. B u t th e Sun D e v ils , w h o fin ish ed la s t se a so n 42-19 an d seco n d in th e S ix -P a c , w ill b e te ste d e a r ly th is se a so n w ith a h e a v y w e ig h t sc h e d u le . A SU w ill fa c e se v e n o f th e ten p itc h e rs th a t w e re lis te d on e a r ly A ll-A m erica te a m s b efo re th e m id d le o f M arch. F o rtu n a te ly , c o n sid erin g th e Su n D e v ils’ y o u th , th e y h a v e so m e d ep th on th e b en ch . D ep en d in g on w hom B ro ck d e c id es to sta r t a t fir s t b a s e an d w h eth er th ey fa c e a rig h t- o r le ft- Jaorgatta Douglas/State Press Junior second basem an Fernando Vina trap s ASU alum nus Joh n Finn in a pickle. h a n d er, ju n io rs B ill F a y sa k , J im H en d erso n , T u ck er H am m agren an d H a lla n d , a lo n g w ith so p h o m o res D a v e R ob son a n d M ike S c ia lo , w ill b e a v a ila b le fo r d u ty . A s fo r r e lie f p itch in g , B ro ck w ill lo o k to ju n io r c o lle g e tr a n sfe r s R u sty S ilc o x an d G ary T a tterso n . F resh m a n T on y P en a w ill b e A SU ’s c lo se r . P en a th rew around 90 m p h la s t fa ll. A lth ou gh h e is o n ly a fresh m a n , B rock fe e ls co n fid en t th a t h e c a n fill th e r o le . “ H e is a v e r y c o m p e titiv e k id and w $ th in k th a t h e c a n c o m e in an d lite r a lly throw th e b a ll b y p e o p le ,” B ro ck sa id . H o w ev er, B ro ck w a rp ed th a t a n y tim e y o u co u n t on a fresh m a n to b e o u t th e r e w h en th e g a m e is on th e lin e , it is a n u n u su a l situ a tio n . DISCOUNT BICYCLE Quality Products — Always Discounted Prices!! YOU CAN SELL YOUR CAMERA with a classified ad! Your new center for quality cycling products at factory outlet prices featuring end of model year closeouts and factory overstocks at unbelievably LOW P R ICES. 15 Matthews Center Basement N ext to ASU at Lemon & Rural (ju st behind C ircle K on Lem on) 965-6731 Back to School Hours: M onday-S aturday 8-8, Sunday 11-5 SAVE new Mountain Bikes fu lly equipped fo r school. U -Lock, w ater b o ttle and cage. $199 assem bly included Expert repairs on all makes! DISCOUNT BICYCLE 966-0842 Page 4 3 W edn es d a y , J a n u a iy 1 7 , 1 9 9 0 S t a u P r e ss DJ ’* AutoService fif ------> Sun Devils bounce back; OIL CHANGE Buy it, sell it, find it, tell it, in State Press Classifieds Includes FREE 7 LUCE & FILTER * 1 4 w We’ll lube your car's chassis and change your oil with up to 5 quarts of premium oil and install a new filter. We then give your car a FREE 7 point safety inspection which includes: tires, exhaust system, battery, belts, hoses, suspension, brakes and fluid levels. Most cars. 1 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 By DAN ZEIGER S tate Press 11 ^ ___ ê A Career in Chiropraetie? h ir o p r a c tic is o n e o f th e w o r ld ’s m o st fu lfillin g p r o fe ssio n s . • • A c c o r d in g to T h e J o b s R a te d A lm a n a c , w om en , a a Ortiz gets 6th straight pin Slate Press Classifieds With coupon (no other discounts) Expires 1-31-90 PH, 731-9056 • 1501 E. Apache B lvd. Tem pe___ _ p r o fe ssio n s , a a fj it is o n e o f th e 1 0 b e s t I t is a p r o fe ssio n th a t is o p e n e q u a lly to m e n a n d It p r o v id e s a n e x c e lle n t in c o m e a n d g r e a t p e r so n a l sa tisfa c tio n , a a I t is a p r o fe s s io n th a t le ts y o u b e y o u r o w n b o s s , a a A n d it is a p r o fe ssio n th a t le ts y o u h e lp p e o p le . I f y o u w o u ld lik e to k n o w m o r e a b o u t a c a r e e r in c h ir o p r a c tic , p le a s e c a ll D r . T e rr y A . R o n d b e r g . H e w ill b e g la d to d isc u s s y o u r fu tu r e in c h iro p ra c tic . fre * n f f h a r w . D r . R o n d b e r g is a lic e n s e d A r iz o n a d o c to r o f c h ir o p r a c tic a n d a n e x p e r ie n c e d c h ir o p r a c tic c a r e e r g u id a n c e c o u n se lo r . Call (602) 899-0882 By C h o ic e . . . N ot By C h a n ce F irae P r e g n a n c y la s t in g • No appointment needed. Immediate results. « a le P r e g n a n c y T w m ln a tlo n • P riv a te, c o n fid e n tia l c o u n s e lin g , • O n e s h o rt visit,. S a tu rd a y & e v e n in g a p p o in tm e n ts • F o llo w -u p a n d R h o g a m in cluded. • T w ilig h t s le e p o p tio n a l • “ M o r­ ning A fte r P ill” a v a ila b le . M rah C o n tro l • Information, counseling, examinations and supplies (including lUDs). Tubal ligations. Cc m p r e h a n c iv e l l c a ltli « c tc a n ln g • Pap smears. Infection exams. Coronary Risk Profiles (cholesterol testing): “ FAMILY PLANNING IN S T IT U T l^ Phoenix 9 9 7 -7 4 8 3 ® § T e m p e 9 6 8 -7 4 7 1 ^ Q 4 2 4 W. Broadway 9 1 0 0 N. 2nd St. I t ’s a lm o s t s h a d e s o f th e 1987-88 ch a m p io n sh ip se a so n fo r th e A SU w r estlin g te a m , a n d H ead C oach B ob b y D o u g la s s till fe e ls h is tea m is r ig h t on sc h e d u le . H ie top-rank ed Su n D e v ils w on e ig h t o f n in e m a tch es in clo b b erin g M organ S ta te 28-3 M onday n ig h t in B a ltim o r e, M d. T he v ic to r y w a s th e ir fir s t m a tch s in c e a seco n d p la c e f in is h in th e N a tio n a l T e a m C h am p ion sh ip S a tu rd a y . A ll-A m erica n T hom O rtiz (142 p ou nd s) sc o r e d h is six th c o n se c u tiv e p in fa il v icto r y b y d e fe a tin g J a y B a r rien ta s a t 6:37, and W ayne M cM inn (134 p o u n d s), fillin g in fo r a n in ju red A ndy M cN au ghton , a cq u ired Ids fir s t c o lle g ia te w in w ith a n 8-7 d e c isio n o v er D esm o n d M addox. Z eke J o n e s (118 p o u n d s), Sh aw n C h arles (126 p o u n d s), T ow n send S a u n d ers (150 p o u n d s), D a n S t. Joh n (167 p o u n d s), D oug E ck h a rd t (177 p ou n d s) an d R e x H olm an (190 pou n d s) a lso reco rd ed v ic to r ie s a s A SU im p ro v ed its reco rd to 10 -1 - 1 . “ W e’re h a v in g a te r r ific se a so n ,” D o u g la s sa id , “ and I th in k w e h a v e th e p o ten tia l fo r g r e a tn e ss .” A t th e N a tio n a l T eam C h am pionship in H am pton, V a . la s t w eek en d , th e Sim D e v il te a m w a s run n er-u p a s a r e su lt o f a 24-19 lo s s to N o. 2 O klahom a S ta te in th e fin a ls . T hom O rtiz, th e n a tio n ’s secon d -ran k ed 142-pounder, ca p tu red th e tou rn a m en t’s m o st o u tsta n d in g w r e s tle r a w a r d b y w in n in g a ll fo u r o f h is m a tc h e s, b u t in ju ries p la g u ed A SU . T h e Sun D e v ils w e re w ith ou t th e se r v ic e s o f M cN au ghton , ra n k ed N o. 4 n a tio n a lly a t 134 p o u n d s , a n d h e a v y w e ig h t M ik e A n d erson , w h o sc o r ed th e v ic to r y th a t g a v e A SU a 20-15 w in o v e r th e C ow boys a y e a r ago. D o u g la s s a id h e i s h o p e fu l t h a t M cN au ghton a n d A n derson c a n retu rn in th e n ea r fu tu re , b u t th e ir sta tu s rem a in s a d ayb y -d a y situ a tio n . D e s p it e th e lin e u p c h a n g e s , A S U d isp la y ed its d ep th b y a d v a n cin g to th e ch a m p io n sh ip w ith a d e fe a t o f L ock H aven , P a . in th e o p en in g round, 22-19. T h e v icto ry m ark ed D o u g la s’ 200th c a r e e r v icto r y a t A SU . “ I fe lt w e w e re lu ck y to b e a t L ock H aven , b u t w e c a m e b a c k w ith a s tr o n g p erfo rm a n ce a g a in st P en h S ta te ,” D o u g la s sa id . T h é Sun D e v ils o u sted th e nin th -ran ked N itta n y L ion s 25-12 in th e q u a rterfin a ls b e fo re d ra w in g w ith N o. 4 N eb ra sk a 18-18 in th e se m i-fin a ls. A SU a d v a n ced to th e fin a ls b y a tie-b rea k in g m eth od , w h ich took q u ite a w h ile, “ O hr tea m h a d to w a it a n h ou r fo r th e d e c isio n a g a in st N eb ra sk a ,” D o u g la s sa id , “ a n d it e m o tio n a lly d r a in e d u s fo r O klahom a S ta te .” S o d id a h e c tic tr a v e l sc h e d u le th a t sa w th e te a m g o fro m E v a n sto n , HI: t o T em p e to H am pton in th e la s t tw o w e ek s. Ortiz “ T h e tr a v e l took a w a y ste a m ,” D o u g la s sa id . so m e o f our T’was a very productive holiday season for the Sun Devils, featuring impressive first-place finishes a t the Midlands Invitational in Evanston, and the Takedown II Duals,m Tempe.. , A SiJ w a s fir s t o u t of 42 te a m s in th e M id lan d s In v ita tio n a l w ith 110.25 p o in ts. J o n e s, M cN au ghton , O rtiz, R a y M iller (158 pou n d s) a n d S t. J oh n fin ish ed fir s t in th eir r e sp e c tiv e w e ig h t c la s s e s . M cN au gh ton w a s n a m ed th e in v ita tio n a l’s m o st ou sta n d in g w r e stle r , an d S t. J oh n ’s , now o n ly 11 v ic to r ie s sh o rt o f M ike D a v ie s’ sch o o l reco rd o f 136 w in s, r e c e iv e d th e A rt C raft “ C ham pion o f C h am p ion s” aw a rd . T he b ig g e st su rp rise o f th e T akedow n II D u a ls c a m e w h en L ib erty U n iv e r sity ’s C raig H o lid a y en d ed S t. J o h n ’s w in n in g str e a k a t 49 c o n se c u tiv e m a tc h e s b y m u sterin g a 4-4 tie . H o w ev er, th e tw o -tim e A ll-A m erica n , w ho d e fe a te d N eb ra sk a ’s D a n H a rriso n in th e D u a ls’ ch am p io n sh ip m a tch , s t ill ow n s a str in g o f 55 u n b ea ten m a tch es. The Sun Devils earned the team championship by topping the Cornhuskers 21-16. “ T h e k ey to th e T est o f ou r se a so n is how ou r p erso n n el fe e ls ,” D o u g la s sa id . “ I fe e l w e a r e in a v e r y good situ a tio n . T in s y e a r ’s te a m is o n e o f th e b e st w e ’v e e v e r h ad ." A SU retu rn s, to a c tio n on J a n . 26 a g a in st O hio S ta te a n d P u rd u e in C olum b us, O hio. Womens golf returns to action By KRIS TIM M O NS S tate Press A lthou gh it is pou rin g r a in in S a n tee, C a lif., th e A SU w o m en s g o lf te a m ’s h op es fo r a fir st-p la c e fin ish in th e Y am ah a H olid ay C la ssic w ill n ot d am p en . T h e th ird -ra n k ed g o lf tea m is in S ou th ern C al th is w eek fo r th e 54-hole c la s s ic , w h ich is h o sted b y U SC , a fte r n e a r ly a tw o m onth h ia tu s. T h e Sun D e v ils w on th is e v e n t la s t y e a r b y e ig h t str o k e s o v e r seco n d p la c e N ew M exico S ta te a s th r e e Sun D e v ils , P e a r l Sin n (th ir d ), L yn n e M ik u las (s ix th ), an d M issy F a rr (s e v e n th ), fin ish ed a m o n g th e th e top WILDERNESS 10. To order o life-size poster of Jim Morrison, frH out the coupon below ond mail to: Vintage B o o b , Dept. IVKCW, 28-2; 201 lo s t 50th S t., New Y o r k K .Y . 10022 Please enclose o check or money order for $2.85 fa cover postage and handling. S tre e t C o lle g e Bp S ta te CHy -j # * f P u b lic a t io n w h e r e y o u s o w th is o d B 0 0 K ¡¡¡¡¡I ’ ff? J o in in g M ik u la s a n d F a r r o n th e tr a v e llin g sq u a d a r e se n io r A m y F ru h w irth a n d fresh m en B ra n d ie B u rton an d T ricia K onz. , x B u rton , w h o le a d s th e n a tio n w ith a stro k e a v e r a g e o f 72.06, w ill b e p la y in g in h er fir s t tou rn a m en t sin c e u n d erg o in g k n ee surgeary in N o vem b er. P rio r to h e r su r g e r y , B urton w on a ll th ree to u rn a m en ts sh e e n te re d in th e fa ll. H er la te s t v ic to r y w a s a n in e-stro k e a d v a n ta g e a t th e UCLA D e se r t C la ssic o n N ov. 22. “ S h e (B u rto n ) is s t ill tr y in g to co m e h a rk ” sa id H ead C oach L ind a V o llsted t, a d d in g th a t B u rton is m o re co n cern ed w ith how th e te a m fin ish e s r a th e r th a n h er ow n in d iv id u a l p erfo rm a n ce. Overall, Vollstedt said she is pleased with the way the team has been playing and feels that each of her players is capable of finishing in the top 10. According to Vollstedt, ASU has a good short game and all of the players are goo<| putters. O ver th e b rea k , th e Sun D evils m a d e sw in g c h a n g e s to im p ro v e .th eir lo n g g a m e an d V o llsted t fe e ls th a t th e ir g a m e s a r e .sta rtin g to com e- togeth er;, M ;] A lthough sh e is g e n e r a lly p le a se d w ith th e te a m ’s p erfo rm a n ce, V o llsted t sa id th e r e is s t ill room fo r im p ro v em en t. , “They (the team) need to gel and play consistent for three rounds,” she said. V o lls te d t e x p e c ts th e to u g h e s t’ competition to come fro m . UCLA and Auburn in toe Holiday Classic. The ll-tehm field includes ASU, Auburn, Central Florida, Cal State Long Beach, UCLA, New Mexico State, Pepperdine, San D ieg o S t a t e , S o u th e rn Cal, U S. International, and Washington. A fter th is w e ek ’s to u rn a m en t, th e Sun D e v ils w ilE n o t co m p ete u n til F e b . 12-14 in th e C h ris J o h n so n In v ita tio n a l in T u scon . -f ' ■;; ;;0: i i ^ M M ^^*— ^SSw3fi- M en’s tennis opens season Spo,tShorts By VIC K I CULVER S ta te Press W ith th e r eg u la r se a so n sta r tin g a t 1:30 p .m . to d a y a g a in st th e U n iv e r sity o f W ash in gton a t th e W hitem an T en n is C en ter, i t m a y se e m odd th a t H ead C oach L ou B elk en h a s not e v e n fille d a ll th e te a m ’s sta r tin g p o sitio n s. OKLAHOM A CITY (A P ) — M arie G a rn er o f U SC w a s nairwrf w in n er o f th e fou rth an n u al J im T h orp e A w ard for th e n a tio n ’s b e st c o lle g ia te d e fe n siv e b a ck , o ffic ia ls an n ou n ced M onday ev en in g . C a rrier a n d th e o th er fin a lis ts, N a th a n L aD u k e o f A SU an d T odd L ygh t o f N o tre D a m e w ere in O klahom a C ity fo r th e b an q u et sp o n so red b y th e J im T horpe A th letic C lub. L aD u ke sa id b e w a s su rp rised to b e in th e ru n n in g fo r th e a w a rd n am ed fo r fo rm er O lym p ian J im T horpe. “ It’s go o d to know p eo p le a r e w a tch in g o th er th in g s,” sa id L aD u k e, a 5-foot-10 fr e e sa fe ty . Sun D e v il fo o tb a ll h a s la n d ed fou r ju n io r c o lle g e tr a n sfe r s. T h ey a r e e x p e c te d to sta r t c la s s e s a t A SU to d a y in o rd er to b e e lig ib le fo r sp rin g p r a c tic e . T h e fou r a r e runn ing b a ck L eon ard R u sse ll (6-foot-3, 225 pou n d s) fro m M ount San A n tonio C o lleg e in W alnut, C a lif., fu llb a c k G in o V a lp red o ( 6-fo o t-l, 215 p ou n d s) fro m B a k e r sfie ld (C a lif.) C o lle g e , o ffe n siv e lin em a n B ob R ob ertson (6-foot-4, 275 p ou n d s) from C errito s C o lleg e in N orw alk , C a lif., a n d o u tsid e lin eb a ck er G avin H ill (fr-foot-4, 230 p o u n d sffr o m A m erica n R iv e r C o lleg e in S a cra m en to , C a lif. . T h e Sun D e v ils h a v e a lso r e c e iv e d a n o ra l co m m itm en t from M arti S m ith (fr-foot-4, 315 p o u n d s), a n o ffe n siv e ta c k le from A lham b ra H igh . C h ris W ein ke, o n e o f th e m o st h ig h ly -to u ted q u a rterb a ck s e v e r to b e r ec ru ite d b y A SU , v isite d th e ca m p u s o v er th e w eek en d . T h e 6-foot-4, 205-pound S t. P a u l, M inn, n a tiv e is a lso a b a se b a ll stan d ou t a n d w a n t to p la y both sp o rts. T he Sun D e v ils b e a t ou t m an y p ow ers for th e e a rly v is it from S u p er P re p ’s to p -ra ted q u a rterb a ck . There are so many factors involved in choosing this season’s top six seeds that Head Coach Lou Belken has decided to wait and see how players fare at today’s season opener. ex p erim en tin g th is su m m er, O liver sa id h e a n d B elk en h a v e foun d a d e fin ite c h e m istry b etw een G yetk o a n d L o m ick y , w h o w on th e Ic e V o lley s to u rn a m en t in M ilw au k ee e a r lie r in th e se a so n . The rest of the partnerships have not yet been chosen. “ I th in k th ey a r e o n e o f th e b e st (d o u b les) te a m s in th e c o u n tr y ,” O liver sa id . “ T h ey r e a lly co m p lem en t e a ch oth er w e ll.” B elk en sa id to d a y ’s m a tch a g a in st th e H u sk ies sh ou ld p ro v e to b e a good te s t fo r fillin g th e str a y p o sitio n s, b eca u se A s o f n o w , B elk en sa id h e is c e r ta in o f h is to p tw o se e d s — o f th e h ig h c o m p etitio n b etw een th e tw o te a m s. N o . 1 B ria n G yetk o an d N o . 2 D a v id L o m ic k y . T h e rem a in in g 1 “ W ash in gton is g o in g to b e -a go o d te a m ,” B elk en sa id . fo u r p o sitio n s, fo r w h ich J o e l F in n ig a n , D a n iel M artin g, “ T h ey h a v e th e b e st p ro g ra m th ey h a v e e v e r h a d .” C ra ig P u r c e ll a n d B rad W illia m s a r e v y in g , a r e u p in th e a ir . T h e top tw o p la y e r s fo r th e H u sk ies, B elk en s a id , a r e A aron “ (A sid e fro m G yetk o a n d L o m ick y ,) th e r e st o f th e lin eu p in v o lv e s a lo t o f flu c tu a tio n ,” B elk en sa id . “ B rad W illia m s is G ro ss an d C het C rile. G ro ss is new to th e UW a fter lik e th e w ild c a rd in a p o k er hand — w e d on ’t know how good tr a n sfe rr in g fro m th e U n iv e r sity o f T e x a s, an d C rile is a fresh m a n . h e is g o in g to b e .” W illia m s, w h o w a s red sh irted la s t y e a r du e to a tr a n sfe r D u rin g w in ter b rea k , th e S u n D e v ils w e re in v o lv ed in th e a n d d id n o t p a r ticip a te in th e te a m ’s fa ll se a so n b e c a u se of M ilw au k ee C la ssic in M ilw au k ee, W is. G yetk o a d v a n ced to th e fin a ls o f th a t to u rn a m en t, a t w h ich p o in t h e w a s d efea ted h is in v o lv em en t w ith th e Su n D e v il fo o tb a ll te a m , h a s b een b y U SC ’s N o. 1 se e d B yron B la ck . p r a c tic in g fo r o n ly tw o w eek s. A ssista n t T en n is C oach F ord O liv er sa id a lth o u g h h e and T h e d o u b les tea m o f G yetk o an d L om ick y m a d e it to theB elk en kn ow w h a t W illia m s is c a p a b le o f from w a tch in g h im se m i-fin a ls, M artin g to th e round o f 16, F in n ig a n to th e th ird p la y a t th e U n iv e r sity o f A rk a n sa s in 1988, th ey w ou ld lik e to round an d W illia m s to th e seco n d round. s e e h im co m p e te in a fe w A SU m a tch es to g e t a b e tter fe e l for A lso o v e r th e v a c a tio n , L om ick y w on th e N a tio n a l A m ateu r w h ich se e d h e sh o u ld o ccu p y . In d oors in B a ltim o r e, M d. “ W e’v e s e e n h im p la y b u t not r e a lly c o m p e te ,” O liv er sa id . B elk en sa id h e fe e ls co n fid en t ab o u t th e p r o g r ess h is tea m “ I t’s n ot fa ir to ju d g e h im o n ly from th e (la s t) tou rn am en t. h a s m a d e a lre a d y th is se a so n . W e know h e is v e r y ta le n te d w ith a lo t o f p o te n tia l.” “ It’s ju st a co n tin u a tio n o f w h a t w e sta r te d la s t y e a r — w e A n other a sp e c t o f co m p etitio n th a t is up in th e a ir fo r th e a r e m a tu rin g a s a te a m .” Su n D e v ils a t th is p o in t is th e d o u b les te a m s. A fter r When Icall Mom, she either wants to talk art or football. Usually football? M d F o e ls w a s n am ed A SU ’s d e fe n siv e co o rd in a to r F rid a y . F o e ls h a s co a ch ed o u tsid e lin eb a ck er s a n d d e fe n siv e en d s a t th e U n iv e r sity o f T e n n e ssee fo r th e p a st s ix y e a r s . H e h a s c o a c hed n in e y e a r s w ith L a rry M a rm ie, th e Sun D e v ils’ h ea d co a ch . T h e 46-year-old co a ch ed on n in e bow l te a m s in th e 1980s. WT; F o rm er A SU p u n te r/k ic k e r S te v e R a u sch h a s b een d en ied rea d m issio n fo r th e sp rin g se m e ste r . R a u sch w a s su sp en d ed la s t y e a r a fte r a d istu rb a n ce o u tsid e a fr a te r n ity h o u se. T h e 1988 D ob son H igh S ch ool g ra d u a te w ill p rob ab ly co n tin u e to a tten d M esa C om m unity C o lleg e a n d re-en ro ll a t A SU in th e faU. ASSOCIATED PRESS COLLEGE BASKETBALL POLL T hs top 25 in The Asaocialed Press college basketball poS, w ith first-p la ce votes in parentheses, records through Jan.15, to ta l points based on 25-24-23-22-21-20-19-18-1716-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 and last week’s ranking: PTS. 1,549 1,517 1,420 1,341 1,296 1,222 1,203 1,132 995 988 956 906 843 647 584 583 466 396 370 307 291 277 273 217 167 RECORD 16- 0 13- 6 12- 0 1 5 -1 1 2 -2 12- 2 12- 2 , 12- 2 10- 3 1 2 -2 1 1 -1 1 2 -2 10- 2 12- 2 14- 3 11- 2 1 1 -1 12- 2 12- 3 1 2 -1 11- 3 1 0 -3 9- 3 11- 2 12- 3 1. Kansas (46) Z Georgetown (15) 3. O klahom a (1) 4. M issouri (1) 5- Syracuse 6. M ichigan 7. Illin o is 8. Duke 9. Nevada-Las Vegas 10. Louisville 11. G eorgia Tech 12. Arkaneas 13. Louisiana S tate 14. Indiana 15. St. John's 16. UCLA 17. LaS alle 18. Oregon S tate 19, N . C arolina St. 20. Xavier. Ohio 21. Loyola Marymount 22. Minneeota 23. Arizona 24. Purdue 25. Alabama PREV 1 2 4 5 6 3 8 10 7 11 9 12 14 13 15 19 21 22 17 25 23 * 16 18 V. r 24 Go ahead, call her up and let her know the score. A 10-minute ooast-to-coast call, dialed direct anytime, any day with AI&T, costs less than 13.00.*And w ith fast connectioas and immedi­ ate credit few wrong numbers, how can you miss? Rw more information on AT&TLons D istance Service, and products like the AT&TCard, call 1 8 0 0 525-795* Ext. KXX S d d applicable taxes and surcharges. Pac-10 PAC-10 GAMES GB L Pet 5 0 1.000 S 0 1.000 .000 2 3 2 4 3 571 2 2 3 .400 3 Ik 2 4 2 4 333 3% 1 2 .333 3 .200 ;4 1 4 1 V * ’ 200 4 W Dragon Stats UCLA CaMomia Arizona Dragon Artoona State svasnmgnn Stanford Washington State Southern Cal >A 1— -Ll^rUnn TO N IG H T’S SCHEDULE Arizona at Arizona Stats, 7:30 p.m. i i ALL GAMES w L Pd M l 12 2 11 2 m 750 12 4 9 3 750 7 7 500 • • 471 .500 7 7 9 3 750 .467 ■ 7 8 .500 6 6 JacquelineReinhard ArizonaStateUniversity Classof 1991 AlkT The right choice. Wednesday, January 1 7 ,1990 Page 45 Lomax calls it quits after battle with arthritic hip By THE ASSO CIATED PRESS P h o e n ix C a r d in a ls q u a rte r b a c k N e il L o m a x , w h o s a t o u t la s t se a so n w ith d e g e n e r a tiv e a r th r itis in h is le ft h ip , an n ou n ced h is r etire m en t fro m th e N F L T u esd a y . “ I’v e b een v e r y fru stra ted th a t I co u ld n ’t p la y . I w a n ted to ste p a w a y fro m th e g a m e a n d n o t h an g o n ,” L om ax sa id a t a n ew s c o n fe re n c e. “ I d on ’t w a n t to b e a bu rd en . I c a n g o forw ard a n d g o on w ith th e r e s t o f m y lif e .” H ie C a rd in a ls s a id th e 31-year-old h a s b e e n o ffered se v e r a l p o sitio n s w ith in th e o rg a n iza tio n b u t h a sn ’t d ecid ed to ta k e a n y th in g y e t. L o m a x sa id h e fir s t w a n ts to h a v e h ip im p la n t su rg e r y , p o ssib ly w ith in th e n e x t m on th . L o m a x , a P ro B o w l se le c tio n in 1984 and 1987, h a s b een lim p in g n o tic ea b ly sin c e la te in th e 1988 se a so n a lth o u g h h e p a sse d for 3,395 y a r d s a n d 20 tou ch d ow n s. A fter h e str u g g le d through tra in in g ca m p m F la g s ta ff la s t su m m er, th e C ard in als p la c ed L om ax on th e N F L ’s in ju red -reserv e lis t o n A ug. 29, m a k in g h im in e lig ib le fo r th e e n tir e 1989 se a so n . B u t L o m a x an n ou n ced th en th a t h e w ou ld k e e p w ork in g o u t w ith th e te a m and co n tin u e to g o th rou gh d a ily r eh a b ilita tio n fo r h is h ip in h o p es o f m a k in g a co m eb a ck in 1990. “ I r e a lly d id w a n t to p la y . I w a n ted to e a rn m y k e e p , so to sp ea k . B u t I ju s t c a n ’t p la y a n y m o re. I th ou gh t a m ir a c le w ou ld h ap p en . It d id n ’t h a p p en .” T h e 6-foot-3,215-p ou n d L om ax W as sa ck ed 359 tim e s in h is e ig h t-y e a r c a r e e r — in clu d in g 46 in 1988 — an d sa id th e co n tin u a l pou n d in g fin a lly took its to ll. H e sa id h e fir s t h u rt h is h ip in a 1982 g a m e a t S t. L ou is a g a in st th e N ew Y ork G ia n ts w h en h e w a s h it w ith a c lip -lik e ta c k le on a ta to c M id P r a ttp iio io Phoenix C ardinals q uarterback N eil Lom ax announced his retirem ent yesterday a t an afternoon press conference, Lom ax sat out last season w ith an arth ritic le ft hip . 4 om e o u t o f L fo u r sriei v e a J tine S ) t o t e P r e s s . m Thefrien dly m ini-storage people FREE EXCELLENT BICYCLES 644-1233 _____ Q <¿3Ë b*. NO H A S S LE S Just pick up the phone! A f T C O M P U T E R IZ E D G A T E S Y S T E M A F in e S e l e c t io n o f Q u a l it y U s e d C l o t h in g . A n t iq u e s . C o l l e c t ib l e s , a n d J e w e l r y Ra r e D e a l s at R o a r in g G o o d P r i c e s S to r a g e In ilB Mo n . - S a t R.V. A N D C O M M ER C IA L V E H IC L E S P A C E S SPA CE! FR O M 25 SQ . FT. T O I “ o v e r h a u l "k 400 S Q . FT. O F S T O R A G E T off“ ' 9 0 f " U a I U 3 PUT US TO THE TEST. H A Y D E N 'S FERRY w HAYDEN’S FERRY REVIEW is accepting applications for the Fall 1990 and Spring 1991 editorial staff. Applications available at Student Publications, Room C325 in the Language and Literature Building, or Room 102 in the Art Building. A PP L I C A T I ON D E AD L I N E : January 31, 1990 For more information contact Salima Keegan, 965-1243 S S A T • P S A T • S A T • A C H IE V E M E N T S • A C T • LS A T • G M A T • G R E • M C A T • D A T • G R E • PSYC H • GRE BIO • O A T • TO E FL • N M B • NDB • NCLEX-RN • MSKP • FMGEM S • FLEX • C G F N S • C PA » BAR EX AM • N T E If y o u have to ta ke o n e o f th e se te sts, ta k e K a p la n firs t. O u r stu d e n ts g e t th e h ig h e s t s c o re s. W e’ve p ro v e n It to o v e r o n e m illio n stu d e n ts. L e t u s p ro ve It to you . -FAST 3 N r. l> rvto m o r as volume perm it*. 110, 126. 35mm or disc full fram e C-41 color print film. Coupon must accompany orddr (no reproductions). Not good on reprint orders or any other coupon/ofter/ discount. Disc and 4” may be longer. 1KAPLAN E n ro ll in n e x t te s t a n d g e t th e n e x t tw o , te s t d a te s F R E E . 987-2967 rmoffr POSTERS n i” _ J IS M 36 exp 35mm S R G -36100 W hile Supply Lasts L C ornerstone M all (914 E ^U niversity) . 968-0027 3228 S M ill 966-6836 1739 E Broadway 967-7590 5,110 S. R ural 930 W Broadw ay... .......... 968-8593 1840 E. W arner .. I COUPON GOOD TfiRU 5-31-90 | FILM SATE L is t $5.51 20 x 30 color poster. From , 35mm neg. S orry No cropping Good Thru L _ ” ” / (N E A R P IC -N -S A V E ) 9 6 8 -6 0 7 4 F a jita Prim a™ W here fast and fresh make the difference Fajitas — B e e f o r Chicken ONLY «Strips of marinated b e e f of chicken served in a flour tortilla with sour cream and grilled onions, tomatoes and green chiles: Served with prima salsa & fresh fried tortilla chips. CO AQ .W * none a C ornerstone T a k e K a p la n o r T a k e Y o u r C h a n c e s FOTO 2 .9 9 4 .9 9 15/24 exp. 4 .9 9 6.9 9 6 .9 9 8.99 36 exp J3t 10 a .m . - 6 p .m . 9 2 1 S M il l . T e m p e T em pe C enter to m e r 4 Limit one coupon per customer Expires January 31, 1990 90 4 ______ i 839-6834 820-7154 I S E L F SEG 30 STOP BY FOR DETAILS ! I f I I VALUABLE COUPON G=0©[MHE O F T In iG Ì - M M I R * 12 exp ....... U n iv e r s ity i\ 235 W. FIR S T S TR EET TEM N o w $ 1 4 .9 5 , R e g . $ 2 4 .9 5 j N o w $ 4 9 .9 5 , R e g . $ 6 9 .9 5 O ffe r e x p ire s F e b . 2 8 , 1 9 9 0 L R A R E L IO N R E S A L E A rizona _ J 0 % Student_piscount__ __________ "T U N Ë -Ü P $Ï0 OFF- sc r a m b le a n d fe ll h ard to B u sch S ta d iu m ’s a r tific ia l tu rf. L om ax w a s d ia g n o sed la s t y e a r a s h a v in g a r th r itic o ste o p o r o sis an d se v e r a l d o cto rs to ld h im h e n e e d s a to ta l h ip r ep la c em e n t w ith in 10 y e a r s . T h ey a ls o sa id h e r isk ed p erm a n en t d a m a g e — e v e n p a r a ly sis — if h e co n tin u ed to p la y . L om ax sig n e d a fo u r-y ea r g u a ra n teed c o n tr a c t w o rth $5.7 m illio n w ith th e C ard in als in M arch 1988 w h en th e tea m m o v ed from S t. L o u is to P h o en ix , H e ea rn ed $1.3 m illio n th is se a so n e v e n th rou gh h e d id n ’t p la y a dow n a n d w a s sch ed u led to e a rn $1.4 m illio n th is y e a r a n d $1.5 m illio n in 1991. ' L om ax’s a g e n t L eig h S tein b erg s a id th e co n tr a ct w a s fu lly g u a ra n teed in a c a s e o f a c a r e e r -e n d in g in ju ry a n d th a t L o m a x a c c e p t e d a $ 2 .6 5 m illio n lu m p -s u m se ttle m e n t fro m th e C a rd in a ls. S tein b erg sa id th e te a m a lso is o b lig a ted to p a y fo r th e c a r e o f L o m a x ’s h ip fo r th e r e st o f h is life . “ A co n tr a ct c a n ’t do a n y th in g fo r m y h ip ,” L om ax sa id . “ I ’d lo v e to g iv e it a ll b a d e fo r a n ew h ip .” C ard in al ow n er B ill B id w ill sa id L om ax “ is o n e o f th e g r e a t p la y e rs in th e h isto r y o f th is fr a n c h ise , a n d i t ’s r eg r eta b le h is c a r e e r h a s b een c u t sh o rt b y h is h ip co n d itio n .” A secon d -rou n d d ra ft p ick fro n t P o rtla n d S ta te in 1981, L om ax co m p leted 1,818 o f 5,153 p a s se s fo r 22,771 y a r d s a n d 136 tou ch d ow n s w ith 90 in te rc ep tio n s in h is pro c a re er - H e a lso ru sh ed 222 tim e s for 967 y a rd s an d 10 T D s. In th e C ard in al reco rd b ook s, L om ax o n ly tr a ils J im H a rt, w h o w a s 2,590 o f 5,096 fo r 34,639 yardjs an d 209 tou ch d ow n s from 1966-83. In 1984, L om ax co m p leted 61.6 p e r ce n t o f h is p a sse s (345 o f 560) a n d th rew fo r 4,614 y a r d s — th e fifth -h ig h e st sin g le -se a so n to ta l in le a g u e h isto r y . LEMON • FAX SERVICE 968 - 0270 • LASER TYPESETTING • MACINTOSH SYSTEM • LAMINATING • PRINTING EXTENDED EVENING HOURS TO SERVE YOU BETTER ! 1032 S. TER R A C E RD. SU ITE 1 968 - 7771 MON - FRI 8 T O 8 SAT - 1 0 T O 4 Wednesday. January 1? ,1990 Classifieds 1. Announcem ents 2. Autos lo r Sale 3 Trucks fo r Sale 4. M otorcycles fo r Sale 5. B icycles fo r Sale 6. Furniture for Sale 7. T ickets fo r Sale 8. M iscellaneous fo r Sale 9. Com puters 10. Real Estate fo r Sale 1 1 . Apartm ents fo r Rent 12. Townhom es/Condos 13. Homes for Rent 14. Rental Sharing 15. Roomm ate Services 16 Business O pportunities 17. H elp W anted 18. Instruction 19. Jew elry 20. Free Loet/Found 21. On-Cam pus 22. Personals 23. Pets 24. R estaurants/Bars 25. Services 26. Transportation 27. Travel 28. Typing/W ord Processing 15 words or less: $3.00 per day fo r 1-4 days $2.75 per day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 per day to r 10 <►days 15* each additional w ord The firs t 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. In P erson: Cash. Check (w ith guarantee card), VISA o r M asterCard. W e’re located in the low er level o f M atthews C enter, room 46H. O ffice hours are 8 a.m .-5 p.m . M on.-Fri. MSA 29 W anted 30. Adoptions 31. M iscellaneous 965-6731 ■ tí . ® -H " V ^ ÌAn$m -i,A First Aid for a Battered Budget in State Press Classified Ads 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 You can also place your ad at the N orth MU Inform ation Desk (fa ll and spring sem esters only), between the hours of 9 a m .-2.30 p.m . M on.:Fri. copy subm itted. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE MOVING, M UST se ll! 1987 Jeep W ran­ gler, 5-speed, 4 cylinder, 28,000/m iles. A ir-conditioning/heat. P erfect Condition, $7,000 941-2042 B u > ¡ I. s e ll it . fin d ¡ I. lu ll it. S u it e P r e s s C la s s ifie d s 100 MODELS C a rs te n MOTORCYCLES In s titu te , 3345 S. R u ral Rd. 491-0449 1987 HONDA E lite 150 low m ilage, sky blue, recently tuned up. Purchased for $2,300, you can drive it away fo r $1,350. O rig in a l ow ner rare ly used if. C all 967-1010 day or 731-3519 night. Ask for M ichael. HONDA ELITE S cooter 1987 80cc. Runs great re liable transportation. $475/offer Call Eileen 8206486. 10 speed INTRODUCTION TO th e I Ching-Chinese book o f oracles and wisdom . January 20, 2-5, $15. C laire Lenorm and, 945-9572. TA I CHI C huan-C hiriese exercise for health and m editation, January 24th, 7pm , $25/m onth. C laire Lenorm and, 945-9572. FURNITURE CUSTOM M ADE-/Queen size futon couch, o nly ten m onths o k t, excellent condition, $200- C all 967-0955. FULL SIZE bed $125. W ater bed $180. W ith accessories. M icarowave stand $15. Tandum B icycle brand new $200. P ull-out couch to bed $150. Susan 968-1013. GREEN/GOLD 7’ couch. G ood condition, $75 967-4441.968-4191. R ED U C E YO UR S TU D E N T B O D IE S . They’ve been spotted all over. In three different sizes. Lots of delicious flavors. And over 21^ different toppings. From fresh straw-,! berries to crush­ ed brownies. It’s Pfenguilfe Place®Frozen yogurt. As rich as ice cream. with only lk the calories. tSy So you can y get a large. — ^.'■.Without get' I ting larger. ZFQRT T fo ri /la rg e y o g u rt. B u t to keep F enguiriis ' fro m becom ing an endangered species, o n ly one coupon p e r custom er. P enguins kw e to tra v e l in p a irs . So you s p rin g ie r the fir s t, and w e il.tre d t you to th e second. S m a ll, m ediu m o r VBTriflWCAIORIEHtOZBI YOGURT H ayden Square • 3rd & Mill 966-4414 ___2rV^p_ Display Advertising 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 Classified Advertising 96 5-6 731 W AREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49. chairs from $14, com puter tables from $39, file s , bookcases and m ore. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th Street (Vir m ile south o f Broadway). M ondayFriday. 9-5, Saturday 10-2. 437-2224. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AU TH E N ITC PER SO N ALIZED s tre e t signs: W ithout the hassle!! O nly $19.95. W e’H p rin t “ alm ost’’ anything. O rder yours today best tim e 6am to 4pm . Visa/ M astercard accepted. 1-800-5264)670. HIGH Q UALITY never used, extra firm q u a lity beauty rest tw in m attress and boxspring. Paid $400, w ill negotiate. 246-66134. V i t i v « (602) 731-9004 1 blk. east of M cClintock S tate Press E rro rs : Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. C all 965-6731 w ith any corrections b e fo re noon. The State Press is only responsible fo r the firs t day th e ad runs in correctly. C orrected ads w ill be extended one day. Changes called in after the firs t day w ill hot qua lify fo r a m ake-good. .j' C ustom er E rro rs: C orrections m ust be made before noon. Com pensation w ill not be given fo r custom er error. APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedroom s. W alk to ASU, pool, laundry room . 1 block south o f U niversity on 8th stree t. Cape Cod Apartm ents. 968-5238 fo r special. STAFF, FACULTY, graduate students: move in special, bea utiful rem odeled apartm ents. G reat location, W estridge Apartm ents, 894-6468. STUDIO AND 2 bedroom apartm ents. 6643 E. Cheerylynn, S cottsdale. C all Sammy, 994-9242 o r Pueblo 992-RENT. APARTMENT HOMES: S tu d io s & 1 b e d r o o m s a v a ila b le in a s m ä l l , p e a c e fu l c o m m u n ity in N o rth Tem pe. FREE u t i lit i e s , F R E E b a s ic c a b le ! C a ll for s p e c ia ls . P ro Im age Com puters 1000 E. A pache #119 T e m p e , 9 2 1 -1 1 2 9 l a m p l ig h t e r 946-5523 S u p e r Q u ie t REAL ESTATE Faculty/Staff/Graduate Students 3 BEDROOM 2 bath apartm ent, covered parkin g, m odern appliances, laundry h o o k -u p s . 949 S o u th M c C lin to c k . (betw een Apache / U niversity). Jess Sotom ayer, 897-0516. Lovely 1 & 2 bedroom a p a r t m e n t s . A II amenities. Plus beautiful pool and co vered parking. ASU -1 block why rent? $3,500 buys quiet, dea n m obile hom e. S ell when done. 997-6421 CUSTOM HOME, perfect fo r faculty convenient to ASU. N orth/South expo­ s u re ; p a rk -lik e y a ra . M any unique features. 2300 square feet. $127,900. O w ner, 897-9654. ____________ EASY TO own 2 bedroom condo; 13th and H ardy, tik e new, furnished. No qualifying, assum e $567/m onth; $2000 down. O wner 921-1438. FURNISHED 2 bedroom m obile hom e,. 1 block from ASU. $160 space rent includes w ater and yard m aintenance. $4,500. 894-9787. ________ . GEORGEOUS 2 suite townhom e at Broad­ way and M ill, a ll appliances stay, 2-car garage, firepla ce in M aster bedroom . $105,000. Blue R ibbon R ealty, Linda G rale 263-9696. O NLY $100 down fo r beautiful Papago Park V illage 2 bedroom , 2 bath u nit w ith va u lte d c e ilin g . Save $28,000, only $55,000! W hy rent th is sem ester? G reg, R ealty E xecutives, 941-7705. ZERO DOWN No q u a lify Papago II. 2 b e d ro o m 2 b a th w a s h e r, d ry te r, dishw asher, com pactor, fans stay. 1100 p lus foot. Roomm ate. M any m ore! B ill R ider R ealty. 730-8899 B ig P rice R eduction MOTORCYCLES Liner ads m ust be canceled before noon, 1 day p rio r to publication. No refunds w ill be given. H u ffy , MOUNTAIN BIKES tw o Yellow Hussy M ountain S torm w ith w a ter bottles. $125/each and Blue Schw inn 10-speed $85. 945-6360 o r 377-7554. State Press COMMODORE 64 keyboard and disk d rive $150 or best o ffe r. G all 829-6624. 640K FROM $4¿9 MEN’S 10-SPEED, S abring, Shim ano shifters, Apex A lloy cranks. Excellent condition. New grips, tuned. $75/firm . 941-0939 KK) MODELS wanted fo r hairshow at the C arsten Institute, 3345 South R ural Rd. 491-0449. State Press Classified Advertising AT 286-12 1MB RAM HD/FD Com plete System $995 AT 386-16 SX Com plete 1395. Lektronics A rizona 827-0688. 835-0379. A fte r 5pm. M iss an issue of the S ta te P re s s? C om e down to the basem ent of M atthew s C enter. If we s till have w hat you need, it’s yours! HOW TO CORRECT O R CANCEL YO UR AD : SU BLEASE TW O bedroom 1 bath, $435/m onth. W alk to ASU. Available anytim e 894-0021. COMPUTERS M o n ito r, K e y b o a rd , F D D rive B IK E -W O M A N ’ S 2^-Restaurants/Bars 25 Services 26. Transportation 27. Travel 28. Typing/W ord Processing 29. Wanted 30. Adoptions 31. M iscetoneous 32. Music 33. Tutors 34. Photography LIKE,NEW - Less then 1 year old use. 13” RCA color TV’s w ith headphones and rem ote, o riginal p rice $300 now $150 each. RCA VCR’s w ith rem ote a ll standard features, original p rice $385. Now $175 each. Light w eight over stuffed upholsr tered chairs $75. Desk height tables 30x60 $40. Speno chairs w ith pneum atic lift $45. 2 and 3 draw er file cabinets $25. Stools $10 C all 835-9080 anytim e. IB M -C o m p a tib le C o m p u te rs BICYCLES 1985 HONDA E lite 150, good condition, blue. M ust s e ll, $1,000 or take over $60/m onth. 967-2087. 23. Pets C lassified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m .). A d v e rtis in g P o lic y : The State Press reserves the rig h t to e d it o r reject any advertising BUY. SELL, o r Trade. Sm art shoppers know about C lothes P eddler. G reat clothes brands you know. A good place to sell is also a great place to buy! Clothes P eddler, 1126 N orth Scottsdale Road (By D rug Em porium ). W a n te d fo r h a ir s h o w a t th e C lassified lin e r ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). Ads may run fo r any length of tim e. Canceled ads w ill be credited to your account. S orry, no refunds. B y Phone: 965-6731 Paym ent w ith VISA/M C only. $6 m inim um on a ll phone orders. AUTOMOBILES INITATIO N THROUGH the Trot-the W est­ e rn M ystica l tra d itio n . Janu ary 22, $28/m onth. C laire Lenorm and, 945-9572. 18. Instruction 19. Jewelry 20. Free Lost/Found 21. OrvCampus 22. Personals By M ail: Send, your ad (w ith paym ent) to: State Press C lassifieds M atthews C enter, Rm 15 Tem po, AZ 85287-1502 ANNOUNCEMENTS FREE G IFT ju st fo r c a llin g . Plus raise up to $1,700 in only 1Ò days. S tudents groups, fra ts, sororities needed fo r m arketing proje ct on cam pus. For details plus your fr e e g if t , g ro u p o f fic e r s c a ll 1-800-765-8472 E xt 50. 1. Announcements 2. Autos for Sate 3. Trucks tor Sale 4. M otorcades for Sale 5. Blendes for Sole 6. furniture tor 7. tickets fo r Sale 8. M iscellaneous fo r Sale 9. Computers 10. Real Estate fo r Sale 11. Apartm ents fo r Rent 12. Townhomes/ Condos for Rent 13. Homes for Rent 14. Rental Sharing 15. Roommate Services 16. Business O pportunities .17. H elp Wanted W HEN W ILL YOUR AD RUN? H O W T O PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: LINER AD RATES: CLASSIFICATIO NS: MOTORCYCLES on 4 bedroom house. C lose to A S U . Now $77,900. Custom home. Call Roma Realty • 968-6890 ALL CYCLE SALES INC. • Used M otorcycle/ATV Sales • Complete Accessories Showroom fo r Touring, Street ATV, Jet Ski • Complete Service Department Close to ASU Hidden Glenn 818 W . 3rd St , Tempe (Hardy & 2nd Street) 968-8183 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS 2 BEDROOM condo 15 m inutes ASU fire p la c e he a te d p o o l $ 4 4 8 /m o n th 265-2066. 2 BEDROOM 1 bath townhouse 924 square feet, w asher/dryer included. Near 48th Street/and Broadway. $375 per m onth. Call835-7S62. 2 FEMALE needed to share 2 bedroom 2 bath Condo near ASU. 892-3497. ASU -1 block why rent? $3,500 buys quiet, dea n m obile hom e. S ell when done. 997-6421 CLEAN MODERN one bedroom condo d o se to M all, A lbertson's, Busline. Close to ASU, $290. 898-3734. CONDO, UNIVERSITY and South R iver Road. 1100 square feet. 2 bedroom s, 2 baths, refrig era tor. Stove, dishwasher, m icrowave, w asher/dryer, ceilin g fans, firepla ce, swim m ing pool, cofered parking. Available now. 983-4039. HOT DEAL! Any part o f tow n you w ant to live in , we have condos. Two bedroom , d ining room , new ly rem odeled, neatly decorated. P rivate parking at your fron t door, private patio. M ove-in special: $325 per m onth. W ith student ID, one m onth free . 2654)470,921-1100. LU X U R Y TO W N H O M ES, 2 and 3 bedroom s. W asher/dryer. % m ile to ASU, Pools, Tennis courts. 967-4908. APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM fenced yard 1 m ile ASU pet o k $345/m onth 265-2066. A S U A R E A 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th , $ 3 5 0 /m o n th p lu s e le c tric ity . A ircond itioning, ja cq u izzi.ln o pets, deposit. -4789. SPECIAL $100 o ff m ove-in. Charm ing Cape Cod near ASU, 2 bedroom 11A bath, firepla ce, pod ,re frig e ra to r, $450/m onth, Desert W ide P roperties 838-6631. TW O BEDROOM, 1V i bath 7 m inutes form ASU tease or se ll. 947-8101, 948-8503. 1 8 4 8 E .iJ m v e f s it y # 1 0 7 T e m p e , A riz o n a 8 5 2 8 1 ASU AREA. Studios. 1. 2, and 3 bedroom apartm ents fo r re n t. $260 and up. 966-8838. TW O BEDROOM 2 bath condo w ith w a s h e r/d ry e r, fire p la c e n e a r ASU $550/m onth. C all Paul 994-9582 iiÉMWïtff RENTAL SHARING AAA NEED m ale room m ate to share 2 bedroom apartm ent 5 blocks from ASU. W asher/D ryer in u n it fu lly furnished in­ clu d in g bedroom fu rn itu re and appliances, $220/m onth. M att 967-6429 COZY LO FT in resort condo- quiet, profes­ sio nal environm ent near Fiesta M all, $225, Vfe u tilie s. 461-1023. FEMALE NO N-sm oker room ate to share 2 bedroom /2 bath condo. F ully furnished. $210 plus Vb u tilitie s 894-6189 FEMALE TO share 3 bedroom house 1 block from cam pus. Fireplace, pool, m icrowave w a sher/dryer/large yard. Share w ith fem ale law student and young m ale professional. $275/m onth plus Vs u tilitie s 966-9407. LOS PRADOS room w ith own bath in three bedroom tow nhouse w ith everything $275 966-2Y31 E rik. M ALE/FEMALE needed to share two bedroom 2-bath apartm ent, Broadw ay and M cC lintock. $250/m onth and u tilitie s . Ken 967-2498 NEAR HAYDEN & Cametback $150 M o n th ly, in c lu d e s u tilitie s even ings 946-9493. NEED FEMALE, nonsm oker room m ate im m ediately 2 bedroom apartm ent, 14 m ile from cam pus. $227.50 plus Vk e le ctr­ ic . Can Kim a t 9666851. NEED PLACE to liv e prefer fem ales S p a n i s h speaking w ould be great! P rice ra n g e $ 1 0 0 -$ 3 0 0 i n c l u d i n g / u t i l t i e s . C ontact N atalie, M onday-Friday, 2-7pm Sunday. 12-5pm a t 236-5782 Ext.12. RESORT SPLIT le ve l cbndo near Fiesta MaH, heated pools, tennis, rachetbaH, and m ore. M aster bedroom adjacent bath $295., lo ft $225 plus u titflie s . 461-1023 ROOM FOR re n t in 4 bedroom house w ith poo l, dishw asher, storage room , good neighborhood. Baseline and M cC lintock. M ale/fem ale, nonsm oker. $180 plus 14 u tilitie s . 836-7336. SHARE APARTMENT. Own bedroom , 2 m inutes w alk from cam pus, fu lly furn­ ished, $200 m onth plus V i e lectric $100 deposit, ohe, m aybe tw o room m ates, 1019 E ast Lem on S treet, contact Raphael 965-2735 or M anager A pt 124. SHARE HOUSE, Fem ale only, north Tem po. 3 bedroom , 2 bath, large pool and yard, laundry $250, u tilitie s included. 946-3499. N o drugs SHARE LARGE 4 bedroom house w ith 2 others. 4th bedroom a study. Large kitch­ en, cable T.V ., 216 bath, pool. $250/m onth plus V* u tilitie s . C all Dave at 967-1787. TW O BEDROOM 2 bath townhouse, m ale/ fem ale, fireplace. $250. Nonsm oker. Near ASU. 829-4909 Yousayit, welldisplay itl Only in State Press Classifieds. HELP WANTED Page,47 Wednesday, January 17,1990 State fre ts BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ^ I NEED five people in my organization im m ediately! M ust be w illin g to m ake a com m itm ent. Free tra in in g .1 2 -1 5 hours per week. Com m ission. Send Resume to: P.O .Box 1652, Mesa, Arizona 85211. UNIVERSITY OFFICE spaces, 400 square feet and up spaces available. Com er o f Apache and Rural. P roject m anagement division of incom ing calls. Free u tilitie s and use o f FAX and copy m achines. Sign lease by January 31 arid only pay $1 per square foot fo r January’s rent. Sign up for 800 square feet, get a m onth’s free rent. 921-9344/921-1100. HELP WANTED AAA FUN! P rivate com pany w ith restaraunt accounts. G reat personality, aggres­ sive, neat apperance. 21-30 years. Even­ ings and weekends. 966-7006. AAA MARKETING research assistant O pinion researh . Advancem ent opportu­ n ité s . E v e n in g s /w e e d e n d s . S usan 687-4441 BABYSITTER NEEDED fo r 2 sm all child­ ren in Northeast Scottsdale. MondayW e d n e s d a y - F r id a y a f t e r noons. Transportation required. 860-1942. BASEUNE/HARDY HIRING aH positions no experience necessary delivery drivers, P izza m akers, w aitress/counter help. Parttim e evenings. C all anytim e ask fo r Mana­ ger 120-9282. CAFETERIA W ORKERS, experienced for la rge m anufacturing com pany. Part-tim e long-term positions available. Hours: 5:30 th ru 9:30 pm. $5.45/hour. Tempo locations (bike distance from ASU). No fee, local, w eekly pay. Apply 9-11 o r 1-3, TAD Tem poraries 3923 S. M cC lintock, No.401, Tem pe. Equal opportunity em ployer. CHILDCARE AND general assistarice, part-tim e fle xib le . V icin ity o f C entral and G lendale in Phoenix. 943-8892. COMPETITIVE SW IMW EAR store needs part-tim e help. M onday-Friday, 10-2 or 2-6. C all 264-7774 between 10-6 to schedule interview . COMPUTER ASSISTANT for m ailing lis t program , Lotus 1-2*3, and data entry of fin e art slides in to data base. Flexible part-tim e, $5/hour. Scottsdale and Cam elback Road. 941-0572. COMPUTER W HIZ fo r Tem pe m arket research firm . (Basic, D-Base, Harvard G raphics, SPSS). Also data entry person$4-$8/hour 967-4441. CORK’N CLEAVER accepting applicaations for: lunch w aitress and lunch hostess. W ill tra in , S hort shifts. Conve­ nient hours. Fun atm osphere. Concern w ith appearance, re lia b ility and personali­ ty are im portant. Apply in person, MondayFriday, 2-5 pm o r by appointm ent. 5101 N orth 44th S treet. (44th and Cametback). 952-0585 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED COOK ANO drivers needed fo r ASU Pizza parlor. FuH/Part tim e. 968-4292 a fte r 3pm. GROUP HOMES. C reative, hardw orking and responsible s ta ff needed fo r part-tim e evening o r weekend sh ifts in group hom es fo r m e n ta lly /p h y s ic a lly handicapped. $ 4 .5 9 -$ 4 .9 0 /h o u r. K e vin o r K a th y, 894-2355 o r apply at 1822 W est 3rd S treet, Tem pe. EOE. PERSONAL CARE attendants- to assist disabled students w ith personal care and/or d aily liv in g needs. Experience preferred but not required. 12 hours of tra in in g w ill be provided. C ontact Disabled S tudent Resources at 965-1234. Ask for Jim Hemauer. W ANTED: SHALIM AR C ountry C lub needs weekend help w ith clothing se lls in our busy g o lf shop. Also daytim e happy wagon hostess. M ust be 19 years old. A pply In person. 2032 East G olf, north of Southern between M cC lintock and P rice in Tem pe. GYMNASTICS COACH Needed. S treet., Thomas evening 946-9493. REAL ESTATE o ffice in Soottdale needs part-tim e help M onday-Friday 8-noon. Light typing, phones. C all between 1-5 at 951-9159. Ask fo r Lisa. JEWELRY COUNSELORS FOR boy’s cam p in M aine. O penings in m ost activities (W SI, te n n is, b a ske tb a ll, lacrosse, s a ilin g , dram a, m usic etc.) Upper classm en preferred. W rite: Camp Cedar, 1758 Beacon S treet, P.O. Box 9, B rookline, MA. 02146 or c a ll 617-277-8080. ★ EXTRA MONEY* Is nice, but you can help people too: 40th MALE/FEMALE needed to share tw o bedroom 2-bath apartm ent, Broadway and M cC lintock. $250/m onth and u tilitie s . Ken 967-2498 Earn $120% a m onth Safer, fa s te r plasm a donation a t A B I C enters due to au tom ated procedure. $5 bonus to now donors on first donation with this a d . A sk a b o u t a d d itio n a l bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). University Plasma Center Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tempe 968-6139 CRISIS INTERVENTION S ta ff- P art-/ T im e. O n -ca ll ba sis. T ranspo rtation required. M onday-Friday, days/evenings. Training provided. C enter A gainst Sexual Assault 956-1163. CURRENTLY SEEKING enthusiastic and personable in dividuals fo r the follow ing positions: R etail cle rks, fu ll and part-tim e m orn ings. E x c e lle n t o p p o rtu n ity fo r grow th-oriented, am bitious people. Apply in person, 6107 N orth Scottsdale Road, H ilton V illage. EARN UP to $1500 weekly a ffixin g peel and stick labels to envelopes no experience. Free inform ation send self addressed stam ped envelope TO: U.S. H. Assoc. P ;0 . Box 87766 Canton, M ich 48187-9998.________ ___ ____________ . MANUFACTURES W AREHOUSE. Flexi­ ble hours: $4.50 per hour. 968-5002. MESA PERSONAL in ju ry law office seeks new s ta ff m ember. In ita l dutie s prim arily reception w ith objective to tra in as pre­ litig a tio n legal assistant. Send resum e to: 1201 Alm a School! No.7950, Mesa 85210 MOTHER’S HELPER needed im m ediate­ ly , Ahwatukee. Non-sm oker. Afternoons, Evenings, flexible hours. Own transporta­ tion. References rerquired. C all M ary Ann, m ornings, 759-5388. NEED M OTIVATED person to w ork poolside at area resorts sellin g suncare and sun wear. F ull/part-tim e available. Own transportation required.941-2751 ★ FREE HAIRCUTS ★ M odels needed for creative “ h and s-o n ” training at Adam Pink S a Ion's advance workshop. Tuesday night at 6 p.m. Must call for an appointment. 491-2660 EASY W ORK! E xcellent pay! Assem ble products a t hom e. C a ll fo r inform ation. 504-641-8003 E xt. 7836 ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN, fuH o r parttim e. 1 year engineering or technology. Some experience required . 956-8200 LAW OFFICE on-site b illin g assistant, com ptuer lite ra te accounting student; experienced, aggressive in dividuale; b ill­ ing, collections, bookkeeping. P art-tim e 1 day/week o r 2 h alf days. Downtown Phoenix $10/hour plus bonus. 252-2020 1-3pm . A FREE GIFT JU ST FOR CALLING PLUS $ 1 .7 0 0 R A IS E IN UP TO ONLY 10 DAYS. S tu d e n t g ro u p s , f r e t s and s o r o r itie s needed m a r k e tin g p r o je c t fo r on c am p u s . For details plus your FREE GIFT. Group o ffic e rs call 1 -8 0 0 -7 6 5 .8 4 7 2 Ext. 5 0 . NEW HOTDOG restaraunt, across from Sky H arbor. P art-tim e weekday lunches. $4/hour. 244-1022. PARADISE VALLEY group home serving 4 a u tis tic individuals needs sta ff who are skille d in o r m otivated to team sign language. Kevin 894-2355 o r apply at 1822 W est. 3rd S treet. Tem pe. PART-TIME ART o r M edia student w ith PC experiece to assist in set-up and genera­ tion o f various advertising and prom otion m aterials fo r large Paradise Valley restar­ aunt opportunity fo r a w ide range o f hands on experience fo r a ll types of M edia applications. Pendleton’s, 840-4650 (John o r C huck.) SOUTHW ESTERN COMPANY now in ter­ view ing fo r Sum m er week in sales and b u s in e s s m a n a g e m e n t . M a k e $1,762/m onth. C ollege c re d it, and excel­ le n t resum e experience. C all 222-8106. SPORTS M INDED Individuals, Top Gun Prom otions is h irin g im m ediately. $8 to $10 hourly. F lexible schedule. STOCKYARDS RESTARAUNT now h iring fu ll-tim e , rib and lin e cooks, lunch w itresses and hostesses. A pply in person 10-11:30am and a fte r 1:30pm . 500I East W ashington. STUDENT JO BS: Full-tim e, $300/week, P a rt-tim e , $15 0/w eek. O penings in Custom er Service and R etail. Scholar­ ships a va ila b le . C a ll 9am to 5pm . 838-2633. Located in Tem pe. STUDENTS W ANTED to hand o u t sam ples o f le cture notes in fro n t of auditorium s on cam pus. W e schedule you to w ork in between your classes. $3.00 for 15 m inutes w ork. Apply in person a t the ASU B o okstore se rv ic e co u n te r or 965-4169 fo r inform ation. SUMMER JO B: C ounselors- boys cam p, W e ste rn M a s s a c h u s e tts /g irls cam p, M aine. Top salary, room /board/laundry. Travel allow ance. M ust love kids and have skid in one o f the follow ing activities: A rchery, A rts and C ra fts, Baseball, B a s k e tb a ll, B ic y c lin g , C h eerlead ing, Dance, Dram a, Drum s, Fencing, G olf, G uitar, G ym nastics, Hockey, Horseback, Karate, Lacrosse, N ature, Nurses, Photo­ graphy, Piano, R adio, R ocketry, Ropes, S ailboarding, S a iling, Scuba, Soccer, Tennis, Track, W SI, W aterski, W eights, W ood. Men c a ll o r w rite: Camp W inadu, 5 G len Lane, M am aroneck, New York 10543, (914) 381-5983. W omen c a ll or w rite: Camp Vega, P.O , Box 1771, D uxbury, M aine 02332, (617) 934-6536. TALL FEMALE (5’10“ or ta lle r) to dispaly w earable art. (Designer qua lity). Part-tim e, S c o tts d a le ' a n d C a m e lb a ck R oad. 941-0572. W E HAVE JOBS P A R T-TIM E W ORK fle x ib le h o u rs, 5/hours, Call C om m erical P roperties Inc. 968-2301. •$5.50/per hour guaranteed •24-hrs per week •Evenings •W eekly pay •Bonus •Cornerstone Mall location PART-TIM E W ORK to do business surveys. Excellent com m issions. C a ll fo r d e ta ils : 423-7767. A dvance E nergy System s. PART-TIME GENERAL o ffice help A pply at 2125 South 48th S treet No. 107, Tem pe, 9-4. 9 6 1 -4 4 5 7 TMI would like to wish a warm W ELCO M E BACK PERSONALS ’ T H a and N a ts ra l Sculptured N a il S tro n g b o n d in g m ade w ith fiberglass resins. Doesn't yellow dr turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. Full set $25 * Fills $18 Cactus N rril Com pany Scottsdale 423 -5 5 04 TRANSPORTATION AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to m ost m ajor citie s. G as allow ances available. 21 o r older. C all 279-2000, then 4530. TRAVEL SKI UTAH, fu lly furnished condo at base of m ountain. 20 m inutes to 7 m ajor resorts. Sleeps 6, firepla ce, jacquzzi. G reat loca­ tio n . AH dates available, $700/week or $120 a night. C all (801) 261-& «3. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING (ABS) YOUR word processing profession­ als. Student discounts, pick-up and deliv­ ery. Phone Lori, 963-2096. ASU AREA. Typing, w ord processing, e diting. Fast, accurate. C all anytim e. Prices com petitive, negotiable. 968-2186. PAPER, RESUMES, le tte rs, transcribing, e d itin g , m a ilin g s . G ra m m a r/sp e llin g checks. C ollege graduate usint IBM com puter. 964-0994» REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your papers th a t “ profession al" look. M acin­ tosh and Laser prin t. Susan, 946-1500. RESUMES, COVER le tte rs, term papers, custom w ritin g . Reasonable prices. C all 839-3305, 8-5 pm . LOVING COUPLE lo oking for newborn baby to adopt. P lease c a ll co lle ct. 209-226-0567. PHOTOGRAPHY JASON SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks M odels', actors’, and a rtists’ , portfolios. Reasonable. 990-1818. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS Footlong Sub Buy One Get One •Friendly Supporting Mgt. «Pleasant Atmosphere «Contests, incentives B uy a n y foo tlong s u b o r reg . s a la d plus a 2 2 o z. s o ft d rin k a n d re c e iv e a s u b o r s ala d o f e q u a l o r le s s e r p ric e for F R E E , T h is c o u p o n v a lid o n ly a t 4 E a s t 1 0th S tre e t, T e m p e . N E C o rn e r o f 1 0 th S t. & M ill A v e ., T e m p e C e n te r N o t v a lid w ith o th e r c o u p o n s o r d iscou nts. If in terested in working in for th e nation ’s largest, m o st rapid­ ly growing telem arketing com panies, co n ta ct Laura: 9 6 7 -0 0 6 6 A SOFT touch electrolysis offers perm a­ nent h a ir rem oval and perm anently applied eyeliner, Hpliner, eyebrows. Free/ in tia i treatm ent. 829-7829. ADOPTION - IF you are considering adoption, I am a sin gle m an finan cially secure who wiH be a caring and devoted parent, you w ill always have a place in th is childs life Please call Bernie collect so we m ay ta lk . 415-641-8760. C onfidential expenses paid as legal. FOR: •B O O K S •TUITION •RENT *EXTRACURRICULARS •Flexible Scheduling •D a y & Evening Hours •N o Cold Calling 10 YEARS experience professional house­ cleaning. D etail cleaning, laundry, ovens, etc. Sandy. 964-7815. • ADOPTION extra M O N E Y We provide: $5.50/Hour Guaranteed Plus SERVICES W ORD PROCESSING—$1.50 p e r page. Resumes & e d iting available. R eliable. C a ll 921-3770 evening» 8 weekend». to all ASU students N eed CASH FOR gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. Mid, Suite 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. 829-7213 j j O ne coupon p e r purchase vSUBUIRV Expires J-31-90 -------------- 4 Statel Wednesday, January 17,1990 Students & Faculty S*^After Holidays S A f |P P OFF Selected Merchandise ,,V e» s t r f All Fiesta Bowl Merchandise T-Shirts • Hats • Sweatshirts $ 2 00 O F F A N Y Sale-Priced Garment, | I Void w /o the r offers. One coupon per custom er. Exp. 1-31 -90. | lo c a te d In the C ornerstone MaM RuraJ $ U niversity • Tempe