State Press f S Copyright, state Press, 1990 Tempe, Arizona . Vol. 72 No. 71 y Arizona State University’s Morning Daily " . . : ~ ' '. .■ Friday, January 19,1990 Tuition hearing room may exclude students B y N IC O LE C A R R O L L State P re ss g w ii « ivyniuwgww n o ia ’Bone to be Wild BUI G ille n p la y s h is trom bone w ith the jazz band “ S m a ll P au l and th e D rivin g W h eel" on C a dy M all T h u rsd a y afterno on. T h e b an d appeared a s part o f th e w eek-long celeb ratio n in h o n o r o f M artin Lu th er K in g , J r. Mofford pulls out of governor’s race From Staff and W ire Reports P H O E N IX — Gov. Rose M offord announced Thursday that she w ill not be a candidate for governor this year, saying “ I feel this one I have to call for Rosie.” But one Tem pe senator is hoping Mofford w ill make a last “ parting, generous, magnanimous step,” to help ASU before she leaves office. Sen. Doug Todd, R-Tempe, would like to see a more balanced Board of Regents — a step he believes would take the sting out of the governor’s proposed cut of $2.5 million from the University’s budget. “ She could be a great help to Arizona State University . . . by putting two Maricopa County, Arizona State University Regents on the board” to represent ASU’s interests, he said. Rep. Bev Hermon, R-Tempe, said she believed that M offord would rather not have had to make her State of the State speech before leaving office. Turn to Molford, page 2. Hundreds o f students m ay be denied the opportunity to voice their opinions on possible tuition increases because public hëarings on the subject w ere scheduled fo r a room that w ill only hold 100 people, said Shannon Sellers, state relations director of Associated Students of ASU. “ Students a ffected by the possible should be able to voice their concern,” Sellers said. “ M y concern about the whole thing is that the regents are limiting students from this.” The resources committee o f the Arizona Board o f Regents w ill hold a public meeting Thursday in the MU Alumni Lounge to discuss a possible $116 to $152 tuition hike for resident students and $532 to $1720 tuition increase for non-resident students. When the board held hearings last year to discuss a proposed $156 resident tuition increase, hundreds of protesting students crammed into the ASU College of L aw ’s Great Hall. The tuition increase was held at $84. Jon Kierman, ASASU regents affairs coordinator, said he thinks the regents are afraid o f a sim ilar scenario occuring again. “ They (the regents) don’t want to face a large public crowd,” Kierm an said. Judy, Garza, secretary to the hoard who sch ed u lesth e m eeting rooms, said no member o f the board asked her to schedule a particular room. “ W e call and ask for what’s available,” Garza said. “ We don’t ask for a room.” Garza said the office reserved the Alumni Lounge “ a couple o f weeks ago” and that moving the meeting to another room is probably not an option because space is not available. Sellers agreed. She said she contacted the board at the beginning o f the sem ester about the impending space problem. Sellers said she ‘There are going to be some sorry people if plans remain as they are.’ — Paul Larson received no response and attempted to remedy the matter herself yesterday. Sellers said the Students A ffairs Office informed Her that all the large meeting rooms and lecture halls w ere booked. She said they suggested putting students in a nearby M U meeting room and “ piping” the hearing proceedings to them. ASASU President Paul Larson said he is displeased with thè situation. “ Piping sound into another room is one of th e n io r e in s id io u s a n d lu d ic ro u s t, suggestions that has come m y way in a long ■ time,” Larson said. He sa id h eis meeting with administrators today to examine ,the schematics o f the tuition hearings. “ There are going to be some sorry people if plans remain as they are currently laid o u t,” L a r s o n said . “ I ’ m co n fid en t something w ill be worked out.” Student Regent P eggy Steffens said she assumes the board had no ulterior motive fo r scheduling a room too sm all to accommodate all students who wish to attend. “ I can’t believe the board would do this as a political m ove,” Steffens said. “ They obviously know how many students want to attend this. They value their input.” Tem pe sees rise in major crim es Auto thefts in city reach highest level, p o lice say B y M IKE B U R G E S S State P re ss < More vehicles w ere Stolen in Tem pe during 1989 than ever before as m ajor crimes reported in the city rose 11.3 percent, according to P o lic e D epartm ent statistics released Thursday. “ Auto thefts are our prim ary concern,” said Officer Roger Austin, a Tem pe police spokesman. P olice records show that 1,355 vehicles w ere stolen last year, a 70.2 percent increase from the 796 taken in 1988. • Austin said thieves targeted Chevrolet Camaros and Pontiac Firebirds m ore than any other makes. Customized trucks w ere also popular with crooks, he said. He said many of the vehicles end up in where they are dismantled and the parts are sold tor a prom. Many of the suspects in the thefts are juveniles, he said; T o combat the increase, Austin said Tem pe police are part o f an auto theft task force with other East Valley police departments. Also, Tem pe police are involved in the Combat Auto Thefts, M urder R a p ii Roboni A s s a il| | Burglary Larcen^ Auto Th« Arson G o W est: New columnist Jade Danner explores the idea of voluntary na­ tional service. New ASU President Lattie Coor checks out the University's west campus. Page 4 Page 10 m tree: T em pe Police Department or CAT, a statewide program in which residents place a sticker in the back window o f their vehicles. The sticker gives officers probable cause to stop a vehicle between 1 a.m. and 5 Turn to Crim e, page 11. Pride and Fear: We Want You: IIS H Crime Index A member of the University’s homosexual com­ munity tells what it's like to be gay at ASU. State P ress Magazine Today’s weather: Continued cloudy skies with possible morning showers aptd a. high In the mld-50s. Lows tonight in the mid-40s. Classifieds Police Report........... S p o rts .....................................................19 Wodd/Natioii..... Page g State Press Friday, January 19,1990 Today M offord— ------- Continued from p a g e 1. Meetings •German Club will meet at 2 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building, Room C133. •Devil’s Juggling Chib will meet in front of the Language and Literature Building from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. to practice and recruit new members. •A.I.E.S.E.C. will have a past and present members meeting, at 4 p.m., to discuss information on Rush Week, activities, EMM, and office positions available,in the MU, Mohave Room 222. •Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Committee will present a Paul Robeson Play at the Paul Galvin Playhouse, Russell and Bonita Nelson Fine Arts Complex at 8 p.m. Ticket prices are $10 for general admission, $8 for faculty and staff, and $5 for students. Also a Mariachi Los Diablos Del Sol Concert will be held on Cady Mall by the fountain at 1 p.m. At 2 p.m. Randall Robinson, Executive Director of Trans Africa, will be the keynote speaker in the Education Lecture Hall. •MUAB — Film Committee is showing “ Do the Right Thing” from Spike Lee at 7 and 9:30 p.m. today and Saturday in the Union Cinema in the lower level of the MU. •Pathways Foundation presents Thomas F. M ail’s Peace Transformation Fertility Workshop at 7 p.m. in the Mesa Southwest Museum. The workshop will also be held on Saturday arid Sunday. Saturday •Esperanto — ASU kicks off the spring semester with continuing classes in "The International Language’’ in the MU, Room 213 at noon. Sunday •Students For Life will have their Pro-Life Rally and March to the Capital. They will meet at Encanto Park at 12:30 p.m. •Society For Creative Anachronism will be holding medieval fighter practice in front of the Student Services Building and will discuss plans for the Estrella War in February. New members are welcome. •Alleluia Lutheran Church and Student Center will have “ The Rose M offord I know wouldn’t cut education,” Hermon said, adding that M offord’s decision not to run again did not surprise her. “ I expected her to pull out,” Hermon said. “ The kind of criticism one must take and the arm or one must have is not to her liking.” In her announcement, M offord said she has “ served Arizona long and hard a n d . . . has done an outstanding job for 50 years.” She made her announcement in a room packed with reporters after first meeting with her advisors, campaign staff and key lawmakers. She said she decided to make her announcement now “ to end all of the speculation.” The décision was made, she said, “ in the last couple of days.” She said she started thinking about not running “ while I was lying in the hospital.” Mofford has been plagued by medical problems as well as by political critics since she became governor in 1988 upon the impeachment of her elected predecessor, Republican Evan Mecham. She said, however, that her health was not a factor in her decision not to run. “ I am not tired,” she said. “ I wish I had 50 years to go” Mofford has been criticized for her hands-off approach to government and lack o f leadership. Particularly damaging was her commutation o f the prison sentences of two convicted Murderers last year, which she later rescinded, saying she didn’t realize that families o f the victims had not been notified. Her popularity also had been slipping in recent months, according to polls. The latest periodic poll by the Phoenix-based B ehavior Research Center, conducted in early January, gave her an approval rating o f 46 percent, down from 49 percent in October and from a high of 51 percent in July. M offord said she would be a “ full-time governor” until her term expires next January. Mofford went to work in 1941 as a secretary in the state trea su rer’s o ffic e and n ever le ft state government. She was appointed assistant secretary of state in 1955, and 22 years later she was chosen to succeed her boss, Wesley Bolin, Who became governor. She went on to win election to the office in 1978,1982 and l986, winning each tim e by large margins. A n o c M w l P ra n photo G o v . R o se M offord a n n ou n ces to re po rters T h u rsd ay that sh e win not se e k e le ctio n in N ovem ber, sh yin g sh e w anted to “ end e ll the sp e cu la tio n ” su rro u n d in g her p o ssib le can d id a cy . Mofford said she hoped to be remembered “ as a caring governor.” She declined to endorse any candidate fen' governor, or even to mention any potential Democratic candidates for the office, but said she would support the winner of the Democratic prim ary . Both Todd and Hermon, however, said Democrat Phoenix M ayor T erry Goddard and Arizona Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank X. Gordon are likely gubernatorial candidates. State Press reporter Gremlyn Bradley contributed to this report. Sunday worship at 11 a.m. at 1034 S. Mill Avenue. R A R E L IO N R E S A L E A F U C in e S e l e c t io n s e d C l o t h in g o l l e c t ib l e s , o f .A a n d Q n t iq u e s J . e w e l r y R a r e D e a ls a t R o a r in g G o o d P r ic e s MON. - S a t lO a .m . - 6 p .m . 921 S. M il l . 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Tempe • ASU Departments • Campus Clubs/Organizations •Individuals We’re located in the basement of Matthews Center, o r c a ll 9 « 5 -* ° 9 t World/Nation State Press Friday, January 19,1990 Soviets call up reserves to quell ethnic violence A sso cia ted P ress photo A S o v ie t s o ld ie r sta n d s guard near a victim o f the ra cia l v io le n ce ripp in g through the south ern p art o f S o v ie t A zerbaijan. S o viet tro op s in the area now have authority to sh oo t. News Briefs MOSCOW (A P ) — The Defense Ministry called up reserve troops Thursday to help 29,000 soldiers quell ethnic violence in the Caucasus that has killed at least 66 people and wounded more than 220. Defense Minister Dmitri T. Yazov said the additional troops were necessary to maintain order and possibly enforce a curfew — a measure authorities in the republic of Azerbaijan have refused to impose despite reports of vicious attacks by A ze rb a ija n i extrem ists on A rm en ian residents. A t least 10,500 Armenians reportedly have been evacuated from the Azerbaijani c a p ita l o f B aku, w h e re ra m p a g in g A zerbaijani mobs began the violence Saturday. E x t r e m is t s h a v e o b ta in e d h e a v y weaponry, including helicopters, tanks and ground-to-ground missiles in what Interior Minster Vadim Bakatin on Thursday called a “ civil w ar.” In his first public comments since the Baku riots, President Mikhail Gorbachev defended the Krem lin’s decision Monday to declare a state o f em ergency but said the ethnic problems date back centuries. “ T h e p rob lem s, w h ich h a ve been accumulating for tens, no, for hundreds of years, have erupted and acquired the character w e are now confronted with in the Baltics, Moldavia and now in such forms this interethnic strife are going on in T r a n s c a u c a s ia , in A z e r b a ija n and Armenia,” he told a meeting in Moscow, “ W e are now busy trying to halt this process, to prevent it from going deeper and getting more acute,” Gorbachev said in comments broadcast on state radio. “ We have resorted to the use o f force against criminals, against this vandalism.” It was not clear whether the Krem lin intended to impose the curfew in Baku and other parts o f Azerbaijan, or if Yazov expected the Azerbaijani authorities to do it. Members o f the Azerbáijani People’s Front said Thursday they had warned Moscow that if a curfew or martial law were imposed on Baku they would launch a general strike in the strategic oil center. On Wednesday, the 29,000 troops already in Azerbaijan and the republic of Armenia Were authorized to shoot if necessary to stop the bitter fighting in the hills around the disputed territory o f Nagorno-Karabakh, according to Soviet media, . Foreign reporters w ere barred from travel to the republics. In N a g o r n o - K a r a b a k h , a la r g e l y Arm enian en cla ve inside Azerbaijan , officials expanded an existing curfew by twp hours Thursday, said Tass, the official Soviet news agency, The m ilitary commandant in NagomoK arabakh also ord ered unregistered, organizations dissolved, Tass said. Y evgeny Prim akov, a top-ranking Soviet le g is la to r , con fron ted a m ass antiTumiosoviet,peg*a. * FBI arrests D.C. mayor W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Mayor Marion Barry was arrested by the F B I on a drug charge Thursday night at a downtown hotel in what federal authorities described as “ an ongoing public corruption probe.” . The U.S. attorney’s office said Barry would appear before a federal magistrate on unspeci­ fied drug charges shortly after 8 a.m. on Friday. The office did not say where Barry was being held. Details were sketchy, but the manager of the Vista Internation­ al Hotel, Rex Rice, said Barry had been arrested there. The embattled mayor, who has been fending o ff accusations of Barry drug use for at least the last half of his 11 years in office, planned to announce his bid for re-election to a fourth term on Sunday. Jesse Jackson, who recently moved to Washington from Chicago amid furious speculation that he would seek the job, has said he would not run against Barry. First word of the arrest was broadcast shortly after 10 p.m. by television station WRC, which said the m ayor attempted to buy cocaine on the seventh floor. Year of threats ends in shooting T O K Y O (A P ) — Police arrested an avowed rightwing terrorist Thursday in the shooting o f Nagasaki’s mayor, who had endured a year of death threats after saying Em peror Hirohito bore some responsibility for World W ar II. The shooting, said to be the first of an important politician in this country since the war, outraged many Japanese and brought calls to heighten respect for freedom o f speech. Hitbshi Motoshima, 67, was shot in the back Thursday as he left City Hall. He was reported in serious, but not life-threatening, condition after surgery to repair damage from a single bullet that pierced his left lung. The gunman escaped alone in a white car, but within fiv e hours police said they had arrested Kazumi Tajiri, 40, o f Tokyo, in a Nagasaki hotel. T a jiri admitted to shooting Motoshima and was held on suspicion of attempted murder, said a Nagasaki police spokesman who refused to have his name used. T a jiri was the leader of a rightist group with a record of violence, Nagasaki police said, and the group had been active in the campaign of intimidation that erupted in December 1988 after the m ayor spoke out on the late em peror’s w artim e role. Air crash in Atlanta R e scu e w orker* su rro u n d the w reckage o f a B ee ch cra ft K ing A ir 100 on the tarm ac at H artsfleld A tlanta International A irp o rt In A tlanta T h u rsd a y after it co llid e d w ith an Eastern A irlin e s 727. O n * person a board the B eech craft w as k illed and another Injured. McMartin preschool owners acquitted LOS AN G E LE S (A P ) — Preschool operators Raymond Buckey and his mother w ere acquitted Thursday of 52 child molestation charges in the nation’s longest and costliest criminal trial, inciting outrage among parents of youngsters in the case. Jurors deadlocked on 12 sex abuse counts against Buckey and a single conspiracy count against him and his 63-year-old mother, P eggy McMartin Buckey. Superior Court Judge W illiam Pounders declared a mistrial on those charges. The investigation of alleged mass molestation at the suburban McMartin Pre-School ignited a nationwide w ave of worry about child abuse when it cam e to light in 1983. It produced widespread fear among working parents that their children might be at risk at school. The trial lasted nearly three years and cost $15 million, making it the longest and most expensive criminal proceeding in U. S. history. Buckey, 31, spent nearly fiv e years in ja il because of the charges, and his mother was jailed for almost two years. Announcement of the innocent verdicts brought gasps and sobs in the packed courtroom while the defendants cried but w ere restrained in their reactions. About an hour a fter the verdicts w ere read, parent Jackie McGauley said: “ I ’m still in shock.. . . When I first heard it, I didn’t believe it. I thought someone had m ade a mistake.” . Parent M ary M ae Cioffi added: “ I am really disappointed. The anger is beginning to rise. We have programs all over the country that tell children to run and tell when somebody hurts them, and our children told. Some of them spent 35 days on the stand and they get a ‘not guilty.’ It shows that our justice system needs a revam p for kids.” “ I know m y children w ere molested. I had my daughter > sleep between m y husband and I for a whole year because * Turn to Trial, p a g e 7. ~ £ f Opinion State Press Friday, January 1 9 ,1990 Page 4 National service Country would benefit from volunteer program leaders is important. A national service program would give participants a sense of responsibility because of the work they do. Those who work in parks would not be inclined to litter after spending time cleaning up someone else’s litter. With the rising costs of tuition, and all the other fees that go along with college, many students are faced with die pressures of meeting education’s expensive price tag. The days of large grant programs a re probably over. Student financial assistance is going to be more difficult to obtain in the future. So how can a college student finance his education? One possible solution is to install a voluntary national service program that would recruit young men and women, ages 18 to 25, into the m ilitary or civilian services for one to two years. T h e pay w ou ld be m in im a l — a subsistence w age — but the rewards of serving would be substantial. Federal student aid, job experience and^rainihg are all incentives for young people to join the program. The national service program would be beneficial to the United States because it would improve the character of Americans and the country would get more for its money. Building character in the future national Through their work the students would become m ore aware of the problems in A m e ric a lik e adult illit e r a c y , drug experimentation in the school systems, the lack of adequate social programs and the diminishing interest in the m ilitary as an occupation. Tw o other character-building traits that could be instilled through the national s e rvice p rogram are citizenship and patriotism. B y working fo r America, more young people Will take pride in their community and realize that democracy is everyone’s responsibility. Perhaps, they’ll re a liz e that One vote does m ake a difference. Working inside the system will give young Americans a better understanding of our political system , and how it can be responsive to their needs, A fter becoming aware of Am erica’s problems, some students will be motivated to find solutions. Once one has served one’s country, pride in and devotion to the country w ill likely develop. A young American who has worked for Am erica w ill know what the United States stands for and w ill be devoted to preserving those ideals. While the young people who work through the program w ill benefit from the character building aspects o f national service, Am erica Will benefit from the work they do. Through the program, the students will enhance the m ilitary, clean up Am erica and provide other useful social services. The m ilitary is not as well stocked with men and women as it has been in years past because the repercussions o f the “ babybust” era are taking effect. The national ‘The pa y w ould be m inim al — a subsistence wage — but the rewards o f serving w ould be substantial.’ service program w ill encourage the young to serve in the arm ed forces and, possibly, lead to more young people pursuing careers in the military. Even if great numbers o f enlistees opt for civil service or the private sector at the end o f their enlistment, the program holds the promise of more Am erican civilians trained in the m ilitary than Am erica currently has without such a program. Besides training men and women in the m ilitary, the national service program could use young people to clean up and beautify Am erica, They could, through the r RITTER program, work at replenishing forests, stopping forest fires and floods and maintaining parks and w ildlife preserves. The enlistees could also work in cities; clea n in g up neighborhoods, building shelters and cleaning up the effects of vandalism. The national service program could really clean up America. There is a great need, especially in the cities, for affordable Social programs of almost every kind. The enlistees involved in the national service program could improve literacy in the United States by tutoring adults as well as children. Currently, in the United States, there is an acute shortage o f affordable elderly care — thé country lacks adequate numbers of Care centers. The national service program could p ro v id e e x is tin g c a r e c e n ters w ith inexpensive help. This would encourage the opening of other elderly care centers by making such centers more profitable. Through the national service program, there could be more people working in child day-care centers, city shelters and drug rehabilition centers as well. Many older people believe that the American youth are so wrapped up in materialistic values that they would not respond to the call o f a national service program. The youth believe that they have not yet been called; Jade Danner is a Junior at ASU m ajoring in English. Letters R O T C not ‘ baby killers’ Editor: : I found it incredible that College of Education professors would spout rhetoric and need to rely on sterotypes as a basis 'for their arguments to rem ove the ROTC program from ASU. That w e have a “ w ar m achine" full of “ killers” and “ hired guns” on campus resounds of the argument that immigrants are taking all of our jobs and women don’t belong in the workplace. The m ilitary is composed of individuals who enter for varied personal reasons. They are not a mass o f baby-killers whose only desire is to start a war. In fact, while I was in the Arm y, the overwhelming m ajority of the people I knew — fathers, husbands and sons — did not look forward to combat. But they believed, as do I, that the defense of the United States is a highly honorable and noble endeavor and would fight if necessary. But what I am most curious about is whether Professor Axford and the others in his group have actually taken the time to speak with the student members of the ROTC to learn why they have joined — or do they only sit in their offices overlooking campus and condemn. Communication, I think, would help enormously in easing this conflict and help promote understanding. I.E . Bowman Junior, Mechanical Engineering S T A T E PRESS DARRIN HOSTETLER Editor C AR O LYN HOFIG Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor SU ZANNE R O S S City Editor....... . .:.... ..,,.MICHELLE A LLM AN BURG ESS Opinion Edi tor. . . . . . . . . . BR IAN TASSINARI Asst. Opinion Editor ............. ........ . LY N N VAVRECK .... ............. .. b e n M c Co n n e l l ...................... SH A R O N KANEY .................... MEG HALVERSON ................... MICHELLE C RU FF ................... .....S TE V E KRICUN Sports Editor......- ................... ............................... PA U L C O R O Asst Sports Editor..................................................SETH SU LKA Copy C h ie f...................... ............................... NICOLE P E R R O N Photo Editor....................................................S C O T T T R Y A N O S REPO RTERS. Gremtyn Bradley, Mike Burgess, N icole Carroll, Michelle Henry, Kelly Jain, Sonja Lewis. Dan Nowicki. Hobart Rowland. Kevin Sheh, Tenny Tatusian, Kristie Young. S P O R T S REPO RTERS: Vicki Culver, Matthew Kaster.Larry Newell, Kris Timmons, Dan Zeiger. PH O TO G RAPH ERS: Jeorgetta Douglas, Jamie Lytle, Sundi Kjenstad, Shelli Wright. C O PY EDITORS: Charles Granieri, Kristen Johnson, Jill Tibke. FREELANCE W RITERS: Heidi Donat, Kimberly Harris. Jill Christine Herbranson, Christopher Horak, Deborah Nemko, Francine Stahl, MishTell, Kramer W etzel. Quotable “Love thy neighbor as thyself, but choose your neighborhood. ’’ — Louise Beal C ARTO O NISTS: Mike Ritter, Julie Sigwart. COLUMNIST. Jade Danner PRODUCTION: Fernando Alvidrez, Nancy N ess, Mark Nothaft, Robyn Pinkston, Lynne Senzek, T.J. Sokol, Eric Zotcavage. a u v EH USING REPRESENTATIVES: Jay Eçkhardt, Dan Ellstrom, Lysa Fitzhugh, Jessica Irwin, Tricia Kluter, Paul Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Brook Mullen, Terri Smith, Charlotte Tang, Ray Zickel. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tem pe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W e d o not answer questions o f a general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. T h e State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the A SU c*mpus. The news and views published in thie newspaper are not necessarily those o f the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student body. L E T T E R 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 and 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. A ll letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287-1502. Opinion Page 5 Friday, January 19; 1990 State Prese Freedom Challenges of Eastern Europe confront all of us . Cody Shearer North American Syndicate LOS AN G E LE S — Last year was a joyous tim é for freedom and a delicious period in which to be a journalist. The fun for some of us began with the festivities in Paris marking the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution. But no reporter I socialized with during the Sommet De L ’Arch suggested that 1989 would be as revolutionary as 1789. But that’s what happened. Communism went down the tubes in Poland, Hungary, East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Romania. By the y e a r’s end, it w ere as if the entire world had emerged from some drug trip. But now that the psychological impact of the demise of communism has begun to settle in, I can’t help but be disturbed by the notion that Eastern Europe will m ove easily into a period of economic success, now that it is liberalizing its economy. Such wishful thinking ultimately ignores the transitional problems of establishing sound currencies, which is mandatory to operate an efficient economy. Given the break-up of the Soviet system and the end of the Cold War, it is widely assumed that the world will automatically be a more peaceful, stable place. But the economic consequences the West m ay have to pay in Eastern Europe could turn out to be much higher than most people anticipate. Optimists assume that the challenge of rebuilding Eastern Europe w ill replace the military industrial complex’s armfor- arms-sake philosophy. But w ill the internal politics of the West allow this new reordering to take place without terrible sacrifices? ‘B u t no reporter I socialized w ith during the Som m et De L ’Arch suggested that 1989 w ould be as revolutionary as 1789. B u t th a t’s w hat happened. ’ The revival of Eastern Europe is going to require a tremendous transfer of resources from all sectors of the West. Bitter talk of new taxes and belt-tightening are bound to impinge on all Westerners, except those in Germany who have an incentive to make sacrifices for their East German brethren. L et’s face it, the economics of Eastern Europe are in a total mess. A ll the countries in the region have experienced rapidly declining rates of growth, persistent balance-ofpayments difficulties, faltering resources for consumption and investment and a dramatic loss of shares in Western markets. In 1975, Eastern Europe, Latin Am erica and Asian markets had about the same share of the Western market, but during the 80s, Eastern Europe trade with the West went belly up, while Western trade with these other regions increased significantly. Not surprisingly, the standard qf living in the region has dropped sharply. P e r capita income and life expectancy continue to decline. G rave environmental conditions, excessive smoking and alcohol consumption and the poor quality of health care, have made life unbearable. Of course, the culprit in this slide has been the Soviet-style system of central planning, which provides inadequate incentives to in crease p rodu ctivity and encourage innovation. In order to turn the situation around, Eastern Europe planners w ill have to focus on promising industries and de-emphasize smokestack plants that have traditionally absorbed so much of the regions capital investment. Despite whatever help it can squeeze from the West, the success or failure of the Eastern bloc’s transformation into a free-market economy w ill largely depend on its commitment to change. But the challenge w ill be given to the region’s hyper-inflation and large budget deficits. The Organization F o r Econom ic Cooperation and Development said in a report issued last week that self-help was the only answer for the region. Depsite Western financial aid “ success w ill mainly depend on the ability of those countries to identify an appropriate set o f solutions, and to commit themselves to the specific lines to policy action involved.” In the short-term however, radical economic reforms are likely to be painful. The balance of payments will deteriorate, austerity w ill be required and jobs w ill surely be threatened. N o doubt, it is easier to distinguish sound policies from stupid ones. But establishing effective ones after a history of foolish programs is extraordinarily difficult. As w e savor the political and economic triumph of capitalism, w e might ask ourselves what our government should be doing for Eastern Europe in the near future. For starters, financial credits should be targeted for privatized sectors of these economies, which are designed to support specific export industries or those conditioned on sectoral restructuring. F or the rest of us, this should be a tim e of spawning new cultural relations that draw our nations closer together so the East can gain greater access to our strengths and learn from our weaknesses. T ravel and tourism in both directions, the distribution of pop culture, business contacts fo r trade and investment, and relations between churches, unions, and private organizations should all be encouraged. A failure to explore opportunities awaiting us in Eastern Europe w ill not be quickly forgiven by future generations. Murder reveals truth about race relations in US Joseph Sobran Universal Press Syndicate W ASHINGTON — Sometimes people are m ore vociferous than illuminating about what’s eating them. It can be a mistake to take what they say literally, and then d is m is s it b e c a u s e o f its o b viou s exaggeration. You have to listen with your imagination. L ik e m ost w h ite s , I g e t sick o f undifferentiated charges o f “ racism .” Entire categories o f people . shouldn’t be stigmatized. One thinks of Edmund Burke’s ' famous rem ark that he did not know the method of drawing up an indictment against a whole people. I thought that was the idea b eh in d the c i v i l rig h ts m o v e m e n t; individual guilt, not white guilt. But the Charles Stuart case in Boston prompts reflection. As all the world knows now, Stuart — a form er altar boy, by the way — apparently shot his w ife to death, also killinjg their unborn child. He seriously wounded himself too, then told the police a black had done it. This led to a huge manhunt, accompanied by tremendous publicity, in Boston’s black neighborhoods. E very day the police grilled hundreds o f b lack men. T h e black com m unity accepted the sham e and humiliation o f this uproar, cooperating with the police and taking responsibility for their errant brother. Only a few detectives in the homicide bureau suspected that this errant brother might be a fiction, and they had to k e e p th eir suspicion to them selves. Meanwhile, the search focused on a black ex-con named W illie Bennett. It sounded so plausible, as in W illie Horton. ‘Like m ost whites, I ge t sick o f undifferentiated charges o f ‘ ‘racism . ’ ’ Entire categories o f people shouldn’t be stigm atized. ’ Then Stuart himself became the chief suspect. The police were on the verge of concluding that Stuart had killed his w ife and child for the insurance money, then staged the crim e (probably hurting himself m ore severely than he’d meant to) and fabricating a story that would fly. And fly it did. The crim e got nationwide attention as one more example of chaotic “ inner-city” violence. When the truth, as we now know it, transpired, Stuart killed himself , and blacks in Boston and elsewhere w ere outraged in a way they are seldom outraged. They felt they had all been fram ed: by Stuart, by the police, by the press, by the entire white community. This is the point where the self-defeating charge of “ racism ” was made. A fter all, everyone but Stuart had some excuse. The police had to accept his story provisionally, because he was the only witness. He was also badly wounded, and his story, like all artful lies, was based on a grim social reality: the high crim e rate among blacks. The press and public also took the story at face value, having less reason than the city’s detectives to smell a rat, But what a rat. The fiendishness of the actual crim e must be reverberating in hell. It was much easier to believe that some junkie had hit an innocent couple than that a respectable citizen would contrive so bizarre and diabolical a murder against his own flesh and blood. The real crim e was, in fact, infinitely worse than the crim e Stuart had described. But it hasn’t stained the white community the way the purely invented crim e stained the black community. Boston’s whites, including form er altar boys, aren’t hanging their heads in shame over their own errant brother. Should they? No. But the incident should help them to realize what blacks go through all the time. When a white man commits a crime, w e don’t generalize about it. Whites aren’t made to feel thati t ’s any reflection on them. Legions of black police don’t rush into white neighborhoods to grill everyone, and there is no black-owned press to pound the story home. Not that the white press is racist. It gave much the same treatment to the Tawana Brawley story, another hoax o f interracial crime. But the white press is undeniably white, It expresses white interests and reinforces white perspectives, even when, as now, it’s correcting its own errors. ‘The fiendishness o f the actu al crim e m ust be reverberating in hell. ’ It m ay be nobody’s fault, but in an overwhelmingly white society, blacks have to live with the constant apprehension of humiliations they can’t reciprocally inflict. They exist in a vulnerable psychic situation that is hard for whites to imagine. It’s not always profoundly white-oriented. I don’t say that this is evil, because I don’t see how it can be helped. But it puts a strain on anyone who isn’t white. E ven when w e’re all denouncing racism and saying what a great man Dr. King was, the girls in the tooth p a ste c o m m e rc ia ls a r e a lw a y s vivacious blondes. W e express our real feelings when w e’re not awaTe o f doing so. Maybe Charles Stuart tricked us into expressing them once more. We trusted him. A fter all, he was one of us. Page 6 State Press JFridayjJamj«7j9j1990 Support continues to drop for M cCain, DeConcini B y KRISTIE Y O U N G State P ress Public support for Arizona Sens. John McCain and Dennis DeConcini continues to plummet in the wake of the Charles H Keating affair, a recent Rocky Mountain Poll reported. Only 33 percent of those polled in the state gave McCain, a Republican, a favorable job p erform an ce ratin g, w h ile D em ocrat DeConcini garnered 34 percent. It was the lowest rating ever for both senators. The poll showed the first sharp drop in , public approval for McCain since the his term began in 1986. The so-called Keating a ffa ir began when a lleg a tio n s su rfaced re g a rd in g each senator’s relationship with Keating, thenhead o f California-based Lincoln Savings and Loan. Lincoln became the costliest loss DeConcini McCain for the federal government when it was taken over during the S & L bailout effort. Both senators are among five who had been charged with misusing their influence in Washington, D.C. to try to help Keating avoid a takeover. Keating has charged in a ome out o f suit against the U. S. government that the thrift never would have posted such losses if he had been allowed to keep control. B ob M a yn es, press s e c r e ta r y fo r DeConcini, attributed the senators’ drop in popularity to misinformation about their dealings with Keating. “ Due to the fact that a large part o f the public doesn’ t know the true facts about the Keating affair, both senators must suffer the un popu larity o f this in accu rate information,” Maynes said. He said DeConcini hired two focus groups in December to ensure that the public received accurate information. “ When the people were given accurate information about the Keating incident, they fe lt better about both senators and rated them higher in job performance,” Maynes said. u L j o u r McCain’s negative ratings have doubled between the months o f October and January, despite an extensive statewide p u b lic re la tio n s e f fo r t he r e c e n tly completed. A lso, M cC ain ’s ratin gs w ithin the Republican party w ere surprisingly low, according to the poll. Among Republicans, McCain was viewed positively by 33 percent, but 24 percent rated his performance as “ poor.” Heads of household who w ere most likely to vote gave both senators slightly higher ratings than other groups surveyed in the Jan. 5 and Jan. 8 telephone poll. McCain received approval from 39 percept, while DeConcini received positivé response from 37 percent. vea d tile ^ t ¿ate P veçç. NOT FOR WOMEN ONLY / W OMEN and JUDAISM (WST 394) 6:40-9:30 pm Monday D E L T A S IG M A P I The Business Fratern ity A look at the myths an d realities o f the p o rtray al o f Jewish w o m e n in­ c lu d in g the Jewish m oth er and the . Invites all business majors to our free Rush events: Jewish A m e ric a n Princess. •Pre-Rush Party in Papago Park Saturday, Noon to 3, Guriy at College T h is course exam ines the role a n d status, both m o d e rn a n d tra d i­ tio n a l, o f Jew ish w om en in •The lee Breaker Tuesday, 7-10 p. m., Quadrangles, 1255 E. University religious, legal, cultural a n d social areas. c f& o DOMENICS m CYCLING STUDENT DISCOUNT _ PIZZA & PUB E5I Sunny’s KOs The Competition U-LO CKS w / m o u n tin g BRACKETS »FUJI $ ONLY $11* MOUNTAIN BIKE Reg. 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Sun-Thurs 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri-Sun M c K e llip s 3 **•**9 B roa d w a y M o n -T h u n • am -7 pm F ri 9 am -6 pm Sat S am -5 pm Sun 1 1 am -3 p m OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK FREE DELIVERY ASU A R E A '- 8 966-6666 Q t “ D e liv e ry A re a '' We accept MasterCard, Visa, AmEx l .00 O f f a n y » IZ Z A / OMCCOUtONf « MIU Page 7 Friday, January 19,1990 State Press Trial Continued from p e g # 3. 13 « 2 for 1 price on everything at the bar 4 p m -G p m W eekly Drink Special 9 p m -11 pm m ust be 21 or O lder S A R JM W Classic Night the best music from the 6 0 s,7 0 s & 8 0 s m ust be 21 or O lder 0^ On the basis of her complaint, Buckey was arrested, released and later re-arrested. By 1984, when indictments w ere handed up, prosecutors accused Buckey, his mother, sister, grandm other and three other teachers o f molesting hundreds o f tots at the school. Children gave investigators accounts of satanic rites and animals tortured to frighten youngsters into silence. When Buckey and his mother finally came to trial in 1987, the focus of the prosecution had narrowed. What had originally been hundreds of counts of child molestation was pruned to 64 counts and a shared count of conspiracy. The 41 children once said to have been abused came down to 11 alleged victims. Be careful. You don’t get what you pay for. 1 SCORE HG WITH A SUPER BOWL PARTY. Discounted drink prices all the firme j i a As fo r the pressures on the jury, Ms. Williams said, “ There w ere days when I didn’t know if I could stand it an ym ore. . . I think it’s going to be very hard getting back into the real world.” A single scream was heard in the crowded courthouse hallway when the verdicts w ere read. An unidentified woman wept into her hands and another looked distressed. Friends or relatives shielded the women from T V cameras. “ They’re making a big mistake,” said Chris Collins, 18, who as a child was a student at M cMartin Pre-School, but wasn’t one of the children involved in the abuse allegations. “ When I woke up this morning I thought they would be going to ja il the next day, The justice system has let us down.” Buckey, who was released on $1.5 million bail in February, and his mother, free on $295,000 bail, w ere required to stand trial after an 18-month preliminary hearing, But fiv e teachers who worked at the preschool had charges against them dismissed. Among those w ere Buckey’s sister, P eggy Ann, and his grandm other, V irgin ia McMartin, who founded the once prestigious but now defunct nursery school. A jury of 12, plus six alternates, began the trial in April 1987. As months and years passed, job problems and illness left just a dozen panelists, all necessary to deliberate and avoid a mistrial on all 65 counts. More than 1,000 pieces of evidence were introduced, and 124 witnesses testified. The case began in August 1983 when Judy Johnson, mother o f a child at the school, told the Manhattan Beach police department’s sex abuse and juvenile investigator that her son’s bottom was red and that he had spoken of a man named R ay who worked at the school. Letters w ere sent alerting parents to c h e c k t h e ir c h ild r e n fo r s ig n s o f molestation. Mrs. Johnson, suffering from alcohol and mental problems, died at a ge 44 a few months b e fo re tr ia l began. D efense attorneys contended she was unbalanced and that the case that em erged was largely the result of her increasingly bizarre allegations. M AIL FRAUD. Music & begin a t 9 p m I T she was so afraid somebody would come and get her, that they would kill her, because she told,” she said. Mrs. Buckey said: “ I ’ve gone through hell and now w e’ve lost everything. M y concern was for my son and what they’ve done to •him . . . because m y son would never barin a child.” “ I feel wonderful,” said Charles Buckey, fa th er o f R aym on d and husband o f Mrs. Buckey. P ro s e c u to r L a e l Rubin said, “ W e ultimately must respect thè jury’s decision even though I personally disagree with it . . I believe that the fam ilies involved in this casé and the children involved in this case . . . cannot be forgotten or overlooked in terms of what they have had to endure in the kind of system w e presently have.” Pounders scheduled a Jan. 31 hearing to determine whether the district attorney w ill refile charges against Buckey on the 13 deadlocked counts. Rubin said she would consult with parents in the case before deciding. Pounders was the first to see the 52 sealed verdicts, which absolved the defendants of an array of child sexual abuse allegations involving rape, sodomy and fondling. The conspiracy count alleged that Buckey and his mother conspired to commit an assortment o f lewd and lascivious acts on children under 14 years old. ’ ‘This is somebody e ls e ’s system ,” complained parent Bob Curry. “ In baseball, it’s never over till it’s over. In child molestation, and this is a good example of it, it’s never over when it’s over.” The jury spent nine weeks deliberating.on the charges against the Buckeys, who were accused of molesting 11 children over five years at the fam ily-owned school in suburban Manhattan Beach. “ You have endured where all else has failed,’ ’ the judge told jurors. “ There is really no w ay I can thank you for your service.” When he announced, “ You are excused from further jury service,” the panelists broke into shouts and applause. In interviews in the courtroom afterward, tile jurors said they bèlievèd sortie of the Children w ere molested, but the prosecution never established that the defendants were responsible. TTiey also said parents’ fears and the techniques of psychologists who interviewed the students may have planted ideas in the children’s heads, “ I believe that the children believed what th ey w e re sa yin g w as tru e in the courtroom,” said juror Brenda Williams. At the Childrens Institute International, where psychologists conducted taped interviews with the children, she said, “ I could not tell from watching the tape that the children w ere telling what actually happened to them or if they w ere repeating what their parents told them.” Lunch & Dinner served tC ÌD Salado RESTAURANT & NIGHTCLUB 11 am-9 pm ^ Coll for daily specials ^TUfr.' Feed 25 football fans for free. . . . . . . . ____________ 1* T e m p e 894 0533 R Ä Ä i Subway's kicking off the Super Bowl with a super contest. You can win 25 regular footlong subs and 25 free drinks. Just come fill out an entry form. And you could score big on Super Bowl Sunday. 4 East 10th Street. Tempe N E Corner of 10th St. & Mill Ave. Tem pe Center • 829-7213 T h e drawing fo r the w inner will b e held: Thuraday, January 2 5 ,1990,5 p.m. « S U B U J f lV * Page? State Press Friday, January 19,1990 Soviet ConMnuad tram page 3. government demonstration outside the A z e r b a ija n i C o m m u n is t P a r t y headquarters in Baku and said the riots had to stop. The demonstrators called for the liquidation of Soviet power in Azerbaijan and the resignation of the Azerbaijani leadership, reported Interfax, a news service of Radio Moscow. Soviet authorities sent 5,000 arm y troops into Azerbaijan Tuesday. Interfax said Thursday there are also 24,000 Interior M in is try . troops in the two southern republics 1,250 miles southeast of Moscow. Extremists in Azerbaijan have blockaded highways, interrupting the movement of troops and halted 136 freigh t trains, in c lu d in g t h r e e c a r r y in g m i l i t a r y equipment, Interfax said. Yazov said more troops were needed because the area was so large and “ the people in literally all towns and all populated areas have been roused by these events,” according to Radio Moscow. Yazov did not specify how many reserve soldiers had been called up. He said men w ere being called up from “ neighboring regions,’’ but did not specify. Tass said the m en had r e c e n tly c o m p le te d th e ir compulsory m ilitary service. hours, Interfax reported. “ Hundreds o f trucks with Armenian militants patrol the border” with the Lachin and K ubaltin regions o f A zerbaijan , In terfax said, and troops have been reinforced. . Interfax also said thousands also rallied in Nakhichevan on Wednesday to protest plans to rebuild border defenses and string barbed w ire along the middle of the Araks River, the border with Iran. Yazov said he understood reservists would be unhappy about his move but emphasized that they are hot going with “ the task of killing, shooting, going onto some offensive. It is principally to protect public order.” Hundreds of Azerbaijanis have crossed the river illegally in recent weeks to visit relatives and démand removal of the border barriers. He said the reservist call-up was needed in p a rt b ecau se re c e n t cuts under Gorbachev’s plan to slash the nation’s armed forces by 500,000 men have depleted the forces that Can be moved to the Caucasus. Yerevan, the Armenian capital, was reported to be running out of fuel because of the A zerb a ija n i blockade. Armenians countered with a blockade of Nakhichevan, an Azerbaijani enclave inside Armenia, Interfax said. Extremists besieged the Interior Ministry department in the town of Masali for two H A Y D E N 'S F E R R Y R E V I Detailing the difficulties facing units sent to the Caucasus, Radio Moscow said one transport plane arriving with troops had been immediately seized by Armenians fleeing the fighting who demanded to be flown to safety. E Pickets continued at two m ilitary airfields in Azerbaijan and attempts w ere made in Baku to block streets, Interior Ministry spokesman Dm itri Seleznev said. He said the death toll in the ethnic bloodshed was up to 66 from the 58 reported Wednesday, and that 220 people had been wounded. In the past 24 hours, he said, 4,658 more Armenians had been evacuated from Baku and 45 ethnically motivated attacks were reported there. In t h e A z e r b a i j a n i e n c l a v e o f Nakhichevan, 3,000 Armenians blockaded the village of Kerki, defended by 30 residents who w ere aided by 50 soldiers, Seleznev said. He said there had been shooting but no deaths. Foreign M in istry spokesman Vadim P e r filie v dispelled rumors the Soviet borders with Iran and Turkey had been sealed, saying as far as he knew the border zone had not been totally shut. Tehran media reported hundreds of people crossing into Soviet territory from Bran. In Armenia, the Interior Ministry official said, people continued attacks on armories to steal weapons. During the 24-hour period, 198 more weapons w ere seized including four armored cars and a T-34 tank. HOT & COLD SUBS W SPARKY — roast b e e f, tu rk e y 6 ha m ROAST BEEF — p r im e , lean roast b e e f PORKY — h a m , s p ice d h a m , sa la m i HAM — su ccu len t D a n is h hà m TURKEY — w h ite tu rkey breast CHICKEN SALAD — w h ite ch u n k c h ick e n H A Y D E N ’S F E R R Y 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. 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C O LL E G E TO U R S 2544 N. 7th S t , ^ Phoenix A Z 85006 — Phone 271-4553 Page 9 Friday, January 19,1990 S tateness AIDS support group formed for ASU students By S O N JA LEW IS S ta te Press ASU health officials have developed a confidential AIDS support group to address the needs o f students infected with the H IV virus. The group w ill also function educationally and emotionally for all students concerned about AIDS, a psychologist at ASU’s Counseling and Consultation said. “ M y belief is that in the next five yearn the H IV virus (the virus that causes AID S) w ill be one of the largest issues of the 1990s,” Andy Hogg said. Hogg continued, “ M y hope is to begin to develop program s while there still aren’t ve ry many students who have (A ID S ).” The needs o f the following groups w ill be addressed: •Students already diagnosed with the H IV virus or those that have advanced to AIDS. •Students worried about getting AIDS and interested in education and prevention. •Those who have friends or lovers with the disease. infected with the early stages of the H IV virus w ill attend. However, they predict there w ill be people grieving for loved ones who have the disease. students with the H IV virus and be more sensitive to the questions o f those worried about contracting the disease or loved ones who already have it. The group has been structured after V a lle y support groups so a sim ila r environment can be developed. “ F or every person with AIDS there are dozens of people around them that are affected with the disease (em otionally),” Hogg said. Brownell and Hogg see an H IV support group not as just an option, but as a necessity. “ I f w e can begin to get students, student leaders and faculty to understand that this (spread of AID S) is coming and we’v e got to be prepared then w e can be ahead of the challenge instead o f behind it,” Hogg said. The associate director o f AIDS Referral, Counseling & Education, said the purpose of H IV support groups is to share experiences and to realize they are not alone in their grief and confusion. “ There’s a need to know that you are not the only person going through this,” E d V a n lan d in gh am said . “ Then you r experience can help ease someone else’s experience, and then you can feel better about yourself.” The founders of the support group are not sure how many persons with AIDS or Danae Brownell, health educator at the ASU Health Center, said that the University support group offers another option to students previously unable or unwilling to attend V alley groups. Brownell agreed, “ Not only w ill students be at risk because o f their sexual behavior, but at the same time because they are young and healthy they don’t feel at risk.” F or reasons of confidentiality, students a r e a s k e d to c a l l C o u n selin g and Consultation or the Health Crater if they are interested in a support group. “ F o r instance, I see someone who is young and fem ale and she doesn’t feel she affiliates w ell with other groups because they fend to be m ale and older,” Brownell said. Brownell added that campus support groups can focus on the particular needs of U -LO C K S *995* .mis 1 8 S P E E D IN D E X E D M TN *229 *269 50% O FF FREE: ALL USED BIKES W ATER B O T T LE & CAG E* 1 Y E A R FR E E A D JU STM EN TS* i 9 5 < BIKES F IN A N C IN G & LA Y A W A Y 3 8 9 4 -6 8 5 2 1212 E. A P A C H E B LV D E o n e b lo c k e a it o f A S U *w /Blke P u rc h a s e (exp. 2/11/90) at terrace ».«fll: ASU D r in k s ! E X P E R T R E P A IR S O N A L L M A K E S APACHE "l Ì* ■ ‘‘Giving all of ASU some darn good advice.” Fridays 8 -1 0 :3 0 WEDNESDAY SATURDAY $ 1 .0 0 M O N S T E R 60 o z. P I T C H E R S L A D IE S N IG H T $ 1 .0 0 M A L I B U R U M D R I N K S $ 1 ,0 0 D R I N K S f o r L a d ie s 9 :0 0 p m - l:0 0 a m 8 :0 0 -1 0 :3 0 p m N O C O V E R F O R L A D I E S u n til 1 0 :3 0 p m A F T E R H O U R S u n til 3:0 0 a m O p e n 9 :0 0 p m Dear Trixie: I have a truly puzzling problem. It ’s about my romance with a campus cop. I know he’s a lot older than m e and has a w ife, but when I see him mounted on that big horse, I just melt. He rides over to m y dorm, parks T rig g e r and visits • m y room fo r some “ discipline.” The problem is this: I give him what his w ife won’t, even if it is illegal, not to mention immoral. Yesterday, he caught m e riding m y bike in a nondesignated area and damn if he didn’t g iv e me a ticket! Now, I won’t see him anymore, so he has me followed on m y bike to be certain I don’t break any m ore laws! Trixie, how do I get this oversized jockey out of m y life for good? Signed, Last Place D ea r La st P la c e : Th ere’s m ore than one ra ce to win in this life tim e . Ya win a few , lose a tew . You’l l know when you m eet the rig h t gu y...ju st stay away from ra ce tracks and p o lice stations. Want to ask Trixie a perplexing question? Sen d y o u r qu estion s to : ~ T rix ie c/o S T A T E P R E S S D ep t. YST-1502 T e m p e , A Z 85287-1502 A ll letters received w ill be entered in a drawing at the end of the semester fo ra $50 prize. 415 S. MILL AVE. • TEMPE • 966-8888 This week's column brought to you by: DR. D O N D EA R TH Liberty Chiropractic 2030 S. Rural e Tem po 966-2772 Page 10 Stete P it» Friday, January 19,1990 Coor opens office at West cam pite t o 'shape A S U ’ B y TEN N Y T A TU SIA N S ta ts P re ss ASU President Lattie Coor officially opened his new office Thursday at the ASU West campus as a means of integrating the growth of the Phoenix site with the main campus, he said. ASU’s 15th president added that he will work from the satellite office once a week in order to “ help shape the ASU o f the future.” “ This is a solid campus with its own identity, yet an intergral part o f the whole University,” Coor said, adding that his goal is to make ASU West “ a University entity that reaches the entire community.” ‘This is going to be a unique 21st century cam pus, ’ — Vernon C. Lattin Building more branch campuses around the V alley is a serious consideration because o f the grow ing demand for graduate studies, be added. “ There are a lot o f important issues between a University with a traditionally sin gle-sited v ie w ,” Coor said. ‘ ‘ The Univeristy’s capacity is on the agenda but w e need to find a way for it to embrace all students.” Student enrollment at the West campus — located on 43rd Avenue and Thunderbird Road — is expected to reach almost 18,000 by the year 2000, Provost Vernon C. Lattin said, adding that there was a 26 percent increase in the number of full-time students on the West campus in F all 1989. Models for possible future campus sites include the University of Michigan and Rutgers University in New Jersey, Coor said. He added that he does not favor physically separating undergraduate and graduate programs. ‘ ‘ T h e r e is t e n s i o n a m o n g the undergraduate and graduate programs but the quality of the complement is so strong that I would not imagine separating the two,” Coor said. “ It is a constructive tension.” Inform al m eeting w ith the p re ss T h u rsd a y to m ark C o o r’s firs t v isit to the A S U W est C am pus. The operating budget for the West campus is $17,019,700 for the 1989-1990budget year, a $7.4 million increase from the previous year, according to the University Budget Office. “ This increase must be understood as a cut as well,” Coor said, adding that $4 million goes to lease payments. Lattin said Coor’s weekly presence on the West campus is a “ very positive thing.” Shell! Wrlght/State P i » » » U n iversity P resid en t Lattie C o o r (left) and A S U W est C am pu s P ro vo st V ernon C . Lattin hold a n “ This is going to be a unique 21st century campus,” Lattin said. “ I ’m very excited Dr. Coor will be here.” Coor’s West campus office is on the third floor of the Fletcher Library. Vicarious thrills can be fou rni In the State Stress Personals. $1400 Before you buya typewriter it pays tocbyour homework Haircuts Reg. $17.00 SAVE S3.00 Includes Shampoo & Conditioner (With Coupon) Perms $5 .00 O ff Regular $1 0.0 0 O ff Spiral Wraps E l ^ 0 0 0 C h aracter M e m o r y 0 A u t o C enter/R etum E l 2 4 C h aracter D is p la y 0 Relocate El Insert 0 A u t o U n d ersco re 0 S pell-R igh t* 5 0 ,0 0 0 W o r d 0 E n d o f fttge W a r n in g Electronic D ic tio n a ry 0 D u a l Pitch 0 Full-Line C o rrectio n 0 B i-D irectio n al Print 0 C o rre c tin g Cassette 0 S top C o d e s 0 R ig h t R ib b o n S ystem “ 0 M e m o r y B attery B a c k -U p 0 W o rd F in d * Includes Shampoo. Conditioner & Cut I W ith C o u p o n fo r F irs t T im e C u sto m e rs O n ly O ne Coupon | C ellophane ................ «4 Highlights................... 4 I W ith Coupon fo r First Tim e Customers Only 0 B o ld Print 0 L is t 0 Forward/Reverse In dex 0 0 A u t o H alf-S p ace W o rd E ra se r* Ç ë H fo r A p p oin tm ent ¡¡¡IS ip COLLEGE AGE t 8 9 4 -2 2 0 1 x 2 1 9 Grace Community Church 1200 E Southern Tempe 65282 {on Southern» e a s f ot Rural) ' Today’s assignment is quite simple. A n d quite rewarding. Just study the remarkable features o f the Sm ith C oro n a X D 5600 and compare them w ith other typewriters. A fter all, h o w m an y com parably priced type­ writers give you w o rd processing capabilities like « you need a ride, give us a c e il i Ü U STUDIES IN W E VINEY Abb or the exclusive fumble-firee Correcting Cassette on anything but a Smith C oro n a typewriter D isplay and M em ory, so you can edit, revise and make your w o rk letter perfect. A n d try and find the Spell-Right* 50,000 w o rd Electronic Dictionary T h o u g h w e ’ve packed all these features into a portable m at w eigh s under 14 pounds, w e ’ve been able to keep the cost equally lightweight. 1 T h e versatile Smith C o ro n a X D 5600. It makes buyin g a typewriter the easiest assignment you’ll ever have. ' ^ y m lE S M IT H CORONK TOM«mcwysispf«xoGY A T YO U R TOUCH " For more information on this product, write to Smith Corona Corporation, 6 5 Locust Averiye, New Canaan, C T 06340 ‘ or Smith Corona Canada, 4 4 0 Tapscott Road, Scarborough, Ontario, Canada M 1 B 1Y4. T- State Presi Fagell Friday, January 19,1990 Read the We’re ueer friendly. Crim e - Continued from p*ga 1. a m. to make sure & e vehicle was not stolen. It is the first statewide program of its kind in the nation. Austin said most vehicle thefts can be thwarted if owners don’t leave their keys in a vehicle or lock their vehicle’s doors. He said vehicle owners should also install anti-theft devices such as burglary alarms or engine locks if they park them outside. In addition to auto theft, police statistics show: •Arson increased 32.1 percent in 1989. There w ere 74 deliberately set blazes last year, while 56 fires were set the year before. •Rape rose 29.4 percent, with 66 sexual assaults being reported in 1989. There w ere 51 rapes reported the previous year. •Burglary was up 15.2 percent last year with 1,911 incidents occurring. There Were 1,659 burglaries reported in 1988, •Larceny showed the smafiest increase, rising 6.6 percent. There were 8,966 thefts in 1989, while 8,409 occurred during the previous year. •Murder was down 37.5 percent, with fiv e people killed ih the city. There w ere eight homicides in 1988. •Assault dropped 18.4 percent. There w ere 368 assaults last year, while 451 people w ere assaulted in 1988. •Robbery showed the smallest decrease, dipping only 2 percent. In 1989 there w ere 198 robberies, two few er than the previous year. Austin said Tem pe police attribute the rise in overall crim e to the city’s increasing population. “ With mote people, there is more crim e,” Austin said. “ We expected a sm all increase in crim e that reflects the growth o f the city.” V. T he State P ress M agazine BICYCLE LIQ U ID A TIO N We Will Not Be Undersold!!! A ll 1989 stock must go, many models reduced to sell BACK TO SCHOOL IS HERE Ask about student discounts ^ PIZZA —PIZZA FOR LESS— j Buy any Large Pizza J and get 2nd at T Half Price J 1 (Equal or less value) \ valid with other offers or coupons. Tax not included: Limited delivery area. Mountain Bikes Ten Speeds from $1699S from \ j fk H Home of A ll You can Eat / I f , Pizza Buffet / / Lunch-$3.59 11-2 * I Dinner-$4.19 5-8 ' / ) / \ DAILY I 9999s /A J G ood on eat in, carry out or delivery. Not . FREE DELIVERY 894-1234 U-Locks only *1495 A ll bicycles come fully assembled and with warranty. D on’t be m isled b y In flated list ^ ^ e g u a k m r te e th e lo m ^ l ' |k comparable make and quality. 2322H I rco o u j CLOlHSâ I “DOORS ■V- TEMPE BICYCLE 4 • h/ University Dr. TEMPE BICYCLE 330 W. University U niversity & F arm er (4 b lo cks w est o l M ill) Arizona State University 9 6 6 -6 8 9 6 UHIVEHSnY fiimncu H State Picks Friday, January 19,1990 Page 12 Unknown man robs Tempo bank, seizes untold amount of money and the teller gave the suspect money that he put into a plastic bag and stuffed it under his belt, police said. Austin said the suspect then fled the bank on foot, traveling east on Sixth Street. The suspect was described by police as a Caucasian male in his late 20s, 5-foot-9,150 pounds with light brown hair and brown eyes. He was last seen wearing a light beige shirt over a blue plaid shirt, blue jeans with a belt and a light-colored baseball hat. B y M IKE B U R G E S S State P re ss A bandit robbed a downtown Tem pe bank Thursday o f an undetermined amount of cash, police said. The suspect entered the Western Savings branch at 525 S. M ill Ave. about 2:10 p.m. and handed a teller a note that demanded money, Tem pe police spokesman Roger Austin said. No weapon was seen during the holdup, Pol ice identify wounded man B y M IKE B U R G E S S S ta te P re ss Police have identified a Tem pe man who was shot W ednesday night as Steve Pefferm an, 29. Pefferm an, who suffered two gunshot wounds to the chest, was listed in guarded condition Thursday in the critical care unit of Maricopa County Medical Center in Phoenix, a hospital nursing supervisor said. He was shot about 7:44 p.m. in the Salt R iver bottom near Priest Drive, just inside the Phoenix city limit. A fter being shot Pefferm an fled south on Priest D rive into Tempe, where he crashed his buck into a car near Broadway Road. O fficer Leo Speliopoulos, a Phoenix police sp okesm an , s a id d e te c tiv e s h a ve interviewed two teenage girls in connection with the shooting. The girls w ere later released because the statements they gave conflicted with Pefferm an’s. Phoenix police are investigating the incident because the shooting occurred in that city. Speliopoulos said Pefferm an was shot by one of two teenage girls he picked up at a Circle K store at Seventh Street and Buckeye Road in Phoenix. The three drove to the river bottom to go four-wheeling, he said. Speliopoulos said one of the juveniles told police that while at the river bottom Pefferm an made romantic advances to one of the teenagers, who refused. When he would not stop badgering the girl, the other girl pulled out a gun and shot Pefferm an, who then managed to take the gun away. JOB... You Ware It Well. Rev - Up your fall wardrobe with your very own high-quality, premium weight J O B -W A R E ™ sportswear... T-shirts, sweatshirts and sweatpants in cool white with the fam ous red & blue logo and "Roll with the Best" tag line. 50 cotton/ 50 poly knit resists shrinkage. Pefferm an then drove o ff to try to find a hospital, Speliopoulos said. S e n d c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r p a y a b le t o JO B W ARE™ O F F E R a lo n g w ith in fo rm a tio n b e lo w to : JO B -W A R E ™ O F F E R , P.O. B o x 4 0 8 3 0 9 , C h ic a g o , IL 60640-9998. (P le a s e a llo w 4-6 w e e k s fo r d e liv e ry .) tL r e s id e n ts a d d 8 % s a le s tax. Police Report P ii ASU police reported the following incidents on Thursday: •A woman was injured Wednesday after her car was struck by another vehicle in Lot 59. The woman suffered back pain but refused medical treatment at the scene. A third vehicle, which was parked in the lot, was also hit. There w ere no citations issued and the total damage was $3,000. •A U n iv e r s ity e m p lo y e e rep orted Wednesday his set of ASU keys was stolen in Decemeber. He also reported that in Septem ber, a vandal caused $250 in damages to his gold 1987 Honda Accord while it was in Parking Structure One. •A thief stole $45, a calculator and a portable cassette radio Wednesday from a room the Architecture Building. A door lock to the room was broken. Total loss is $188. •An ASU student reported on Wednesday that her bicycle, valued at $120, was stolen last week from bicycle racks between the A and B wings of Sahuaro Hall. •A thief stole a student’s backpack and its contents, valued at $55, Wednesday from a storage bin at the ASU Bookstore. •A student reported Wednesday that $895 worth of Jewelry and clothing was stolen from her room at Manzanita Hall during winter break. •A U n iversity em ployee was injured Wednesday when he was struck in Lot 41 by an ASU student’s vehicle. The man was taken to Tem pe St. Luke’s hospital where he was treated and released. •Vandals damaged two smoke detectors in Manzanita Hall early Thursday. E a sy ro llin g a n d s lo w b u rn in g J O B C ig a re tte P a p e rs F o r th e b e st in to b a cco sm o k in g p le a su re . S M S M S M L L L XL XL XL S L XL M ROLL W ITH T H E B E S T M H O T . CflROL. TER R IFIC! ; ; Compiled by State Press reported M ike Burgess. S T A T E P R E S S C la ssifie d s B y P hone • 965-6731 Visa • M a ste rC a rd • S o rry, n o b illin g The next time you could dig a day at the beach, catch the wave to Kowabunga! NOW APPEARING: Live tunes and dancing make for a rockin' beach * party .very right! « S ^ rtu m r Dive head first Into our super margaritas and other frozen favorites Thirteen delicious ingredients including three meats and three cheeses served hot on our baked fresh daily bread have made the Original a favorite fo r over 17 years. JOB T-Shirt 8.00 ea . JOB S w eatshirt _ _ _ j @ 14:00 ea. JO B S w eatpan ts-___ @ 15.00 ea. j JOB-W ARE Value Trio i (S et o f 3 above). __ @ 32.95 ea. Friday-Saturday, January 19-20 DeVftf Dodt F ^s Sunday-Monday, TuMdvFri There's money available for students who have been newspaper car­ riers, grocery clerks, cheerleaders, non-smokers.. .etc. • Results GUARANTEED. CALL ANYTIME For A Free Brochure (800)346-6401 B O D Y, M IN D , & SOUL 33 Days — 2 Countries Com e to the Soviet Union for a com plete ex­ perience. Touch the fading iron curtain now. •Stand on Red Square; sail the Black Sea. •See Romania for yourself. •Be a guest in a Soviet home. •Learn Russian w hile traveling. •Earn college credit (optional). Abortion groups to march, rally B y DAN NOW ICKI State P re ss Competing marches and rallies by both pro-choice and anti-abortion groups will be held in downtown Phoenix Sunday to mark the 17th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion. The anti-abortion demonstration will begin at 1:30 p.ni. with a rally at Encanto Park, and w ill be immediately followed by a march to the Capitol. The pro-choice marchers will meet at 1 p.m. at Patriots’ Square and march to Wesley Bolin Plaza for a 3 p.m. rally. Each side expects thousands o f Arizonans to participate. “ This is the biggest pro-choice.eyent ev e r in this state, and the Legislature w ill be looking at the numbers,” said Kim Martin, statewide coordinator for the Arizona Right to Choose. “ W e’re really trying to get a big crowd out,” ASU’s United Students o f Arizona for Choice is sponsoring a bus for ASU students who need a ride to the march, said USAC co-chair Angie Barone. “ At least 1,000 people are going from ASU,” Barone said. “ There w ill probably be at least 100 going by bus,” Bob Zalimas, president o f ASU’s Students F or Life, said he is also hoping for a large turnout at Sunday’s rally. “ This is a good opportunity to show the strength of the pro­ life movement,” Zalimas said. “ The pro-abortion people always say that they’re the majority. This w ill be a good oppurtunity to prove them wrong.” Zalimas and six other members of his group are traveling to Washington, D.C., this weekend to attend the American Collegiates F or L ife Conference at Georgetown University and participate in the 17th Annual March F or L ife at the nation’s capital. Organizers of the march expect to attract more than 100,000 anti-abortion advocates from around the country. Christine Pabst, media coordinator fo r Arizona Right To Life, also stressed the “ strength and diversity” of the antiabortion movement. ' “ It is a civil rights issue, not a religious issue,” she said. “ W e’re non-partison and non-sectarian. W e are often branded as a religious group but that’s just not the case.” Both sides played down the possibility o f any confrontation between marchers. “ Because this is such an emotional issue, there is likely to be some discussion,” said Martha Doherty, the other co- Jeorgetta Douglaa/State Presa S h eri M iller hands out flie rs T h u rsd a y o n C ady M all. T h e flie rs w ere to prom ote a ctiv itie s Su nday to m ark the 17th a nniversary o f the Su prem e C ou rt ’d e cisio n that leg alized a bortion in a ll 50 states. chair for the United Students o f Arizona for Choice. “ I certainly don’t expect any violence,’ ’ Barone agreed. “ People involved with this issue have a tendency to be very vocal, but there w ill be a lot o f cops on hand as well as our own peace-keepers to prevent things from getting out o f control,” She said. F o r m ore inform ation w rite or call: W O R L D E X C H A N G E TO URS 1-800-776-1517 TspesetlUg stale Press Production Deparimeil Matthews cerner, bdsemcil • 965-2097 A Crash Course In Furniture Rental Course 101: (without Aaron Rents) Studentius Slobbum: a p e c u lia r c o n d it io n t h a t c o m m o n l y e x is t s am ong m any cam pus Course 102: (w ith A aron Rents) Studentius Contentuiti: a p le a s a n t c o n d itio n c h a r a c t e r is t ic o f s m a r t stu d en ts w ho have e n v i r o n m e n t s in w h i c h d is c o v e r e d th a t A a r o n -th e k n o w le d g e o f A a r o n R e n t s is a p r e r e q u i s i t e R en ts fu rn itu re u n a c q u ir e d . is to liv in g w it h decent fu r n it u r e . SPECIAL STU D E N T SA V IN G S: 50% Off First Month's Rent and 50% Off Delivery! O r We'll Match Any Competitor's O ffer. B rin g in this ad and p resen t stu d en t I.D , to r e c e iv e o ffe r . A t Aaron Rents you get more: lowest rates, no security deposit, short-term rental period/ next-day delivery and wide selections. Plus; we also sell a wide variety of rental return items. With Aaron Rents, it's easy to turn your campus quarters into a class act. Aaron Rents Furniture 9 2405 W . U n iv e r s ity D r iv e , T e m p e 594-6913 Am erica's Largest Furniture Rental and Sales Company Com ics Page 14 Stale Press Friday, January 19,1990 by ftill Watterson The Far Side Calvin and tiòbbes CALVIN, VOU m * l W R E NOT ALLOWED Tt» EAT COOKIES BEFORE DINNER ! PUT RIOSE. AWAX/ DID W CLEAN A T $ J M o OR ROOM XET ? I ’M NOT X I Dont WANT TO CALVIN. \ WEAR ABOUT IT. I ’M a \ now move : DUPLICATE./ by Gary Larson OOW. SOME DATS TUAT KID OF _ MINE... «B9K Doonesbury LISTEN, COLONEL, AFTER WE CLEAR OUT OF HERB, YOU C AN 60BAC KT0Y0U R 0W N M AY OF KEEPING ORDER! BUT UNTIL im i, IV E GOTA DEM OCRACY TO RUN1 youve ear to f in d a mum in for THE PUBLIC FORCE WHOWEREN7 IN THE PDF! EVERYONE THINKS ALL WEVE PONE IS CHANGE THE SHOULDER. PATCHES! S I,SEÑOR AREYOUKIDDING* PROCONSUL. THEYLOATHE THEM! BUT THE 92% OF THE PANAMANIAN PEOPEOPLE RESPECT P IE SUPPORT HYM EN ! THEINVASION! IF YOUSAY SO, SEÑOR. SHOULDWE DETAIN THE OTHER m \ “ First of all, Mr, Hawkins, let’s put the gun d o w n . . . I w ould guess it’s an itchy trigger finger, but I want to take a clo ser look.” Ivory Towers by Mike Ritter THIS IS A REQUIRE? TEXT WRITTEN ©i'M Y PROFESSOR... WELL, At LEAST W KJJOtf HE’S fa m ilia r WITH THE I T S 7 5 PACES, RAPERBÁCAL, MO PIC TU R E S, DOUBLE s p A e e t ? P R i m t i n & . a n P n o c o l r r .. S U B JE C T/ \ D E TR O IT (A P ) — Park the latest General Motors Corp. concept truck near Waikiki Beach and someone m ay toss a worn-out lèi in the back. Or say ‘ ‘you’re welcom e.” In a linguistic gaffe, the world’s largest automaker tagged its latest show pickup the Mahalo. In the recently ended North American International Auto Show, GM said the word meant “ hang loose. ” Nope. Nohea Lani Wallace, who teaches at the Center for Hawaiian Studies at the University Of HaWaii, said “ mahalo” means “ thank you.” He said it often appears on trash cans in the Aloha State to thank people for not littering. A house is not a home until it’s occupied! A -eii m i® Rent it through STATE PRESS R Classified Advertising! Now, how many guys would be willing to take their buddies hunting in a pickup called a “ thank you.” “ Basically, what we found out is that w e were wrong,” a GMC spokesman said Wednesday. He said the mistranslation originated in the division’s marketing department. GMC will continue to use the name when the truck makes the rounds o f future auto shows. Sports fM g elS Fridaj^arjuafyJ^WO State Press Rain keeps ASU’s home opener streak in tact B y SETH SU LK A State Pres* Mother Nature has wasted no time affecting the ASU baseball schedule this season. F rid a y’s scheduled opener at Grand Canyon University has been postponed due to wet grounds and the Sun Devils w ill now open at Packard Stadium Saturday at 3: 30. F rid a y’s gam e at Brazell Field is expected to be played Sunday afternoon. GCU officials said that Sunday’s game could be cancelled if the field gets anymore rain. ASU now avoids opening the season on the road — it would have been the first time since 1959 they did. “ I don’t think that it makes much difference if w e open here or over there,” said ASU Head Coach Jim Brock, “ It won’t affect the team much. If we get to practice (today) and play an intersquad game, w e’ll be fine.” Even with the one day delay, the opener Will be the Sun Devils earliest ever. ASU’s previous earliest start was on Jan. 21 (1988). Brock is guiding his youngest team ever — the squad has no seniors— into the season in hopes of his third College World Series appearance in four years. Although ASU is young, the team is loaded with talent. The Sun Devils have six players on Baseball A m erica’s first, second or third teams. Leading the w ay on the magazine’s first team is sophomore left fielder Mike Kelly. In 1989, the national freshman player o f the year batted .300 and led the team in home runs (10) and R B I (56). Freshman center fielder Todd Steverson and sophomore right fielder Tom m y Adams w ill team with K elly for one o f the nation’s top outfields. Brock said Adams w ill lead o ff the batting order, followed by juniors Fernando Vina and Anthony Manahan. Junior E ric Helfand and K elly w ill switch at fourth and fifth in the lineup, depending on whether a right- or left-hand^ was pitching. Steverson w ill bat ninth to relieve any pressure that he might feel. Brock said, “ W e’re just going tq ask him not to w orry about anything other than having fun for a year.” The Antelopes return three top starters from last season fo r the season opener. Leading the w ay is Anthony Farinacci. He hit .392 with four homers and 58 R B I last season as GCU won the N A IA District 7 Championship. Women volley for places on lineup Devils take win into tournament B y VICKI C U LV E R S ta te P re ss B y VICKI C U L V E R S ta te P re ss A fter yesterday’s solid win over New Mexico State, the ASU mens tennis team is prepared to make a strong showing in today’s Winter Classic tournament at Whiteman Tennis Center. ’ The Sun Devils defeated the Aggies, 8-1, Thursday in their first regular match o f the season. ASU Head Coach Lou Belken said the victory was a pleasant start to the season. “ We talked about trying to be intimidating as a team by playing aggressively and with confidence,” he said. “ And for the most part w e did that.” No. 1 seed Brian Gyetko, No. 3 Daniel Marting, No. 4 Joel Finnigan, No. 5 Brad Williams and No. 6 Craig Purcell won their singles matches. The only Sun D evil to be defeated was No. 2 David Lomicky. Belken said Lom icky started off in the wrong fram e of mind a fter making some errors early in the match. “ David is someone who is very high-strung,” Belken said. “ H e’s done a tremendous job, most of the time, controlling his emotions, but (today) he got at the wrong arousal level.” One positive outcome of Thursday's tournament, Belken Said, was the doubles competition. The doubles teams of Gyetko/Lomicky, Marting/Williams and Fihnigan and Nick White each defeated the Aggies. Finnigan said he was happy with the results of his partnership with James Madison University transfer Nick White, and feels the duo will be a m ajor contribution to the team. “ I am more pumped up because the team is looking toward a good year,” Finnigan said. “ We didn’t start off ranked in the top 20, but surely w e’ll end up there.” A fter sitting out a year after his transfer, White said he is happy to finally compete. “ I ’m really excited and I ’m ready to play,” he said. “ W e’v e worked hard and want to play good tennis.” During the Winter Classic, all o f the Sun Devils except Gyetko and Lomicky w ill get the opportunity to play, Belken said. He is looking for it to be an excellent learning experience for the whole team. Each player from the two 16-player draws is guaranteed four matches. Players from the University o f Nevada-Las Vegas, NMSU, University of Washington and two players from N A U w ill be competing. Belken said each team has highly competitive top seeds, and hopes his team w ill fare well without the services of Gyetko and Lomicky. “ Our 3-6 guys are in the top flight, so w e’ll see how they handle it,” he said. ASU Head Coach Sheila Mclnerney is having trouble establishing a perfect tennis lineup for tommorrow’s 11 a.m. season opener against New M exico State at Tem pe West Reserve. The intrasquad competition is turning out to be the toughest positioning battle Mclnerney has witnessed in years. Not only did the team lose no players, but it gained one freshman, P am Cioffi, and regained Laura Glitz who redshirted last season diie to a shoulder injury. “ They’re all playing w ell,” Mclnerney said. “ It is very competitive this year — w e have ten good players. Laura is playing so w ell — it’s really a boost to have her back.” No m atter who the top six seeds are, M clnerney said all players w ill get the opportunity to compete at one time or another. Against New M exico State, she said she wants to concentrate on giving younger players some time on the court. “ With the type of schedule w e play, w e need everyone because o f the injuries, the players who get sick, and just to give someone a rest once in awhile,” she said. “ The younger kids have been working hard and playing w ell and I would like to see them under match conditions.” Last season, the Sun Devils defeated the Aggies, 9-0. Mclnerney said that although it was a clean win, she is always hesitant to anticipate an easy victory. “ New M exico State is always a good team,” she said. “ They remain fairly competitive all the w ay down the line. W e really can’t w orry about them, but must concentrate on ourselves.” The mens and womens teams for the Aggies are coached by Donald Ball. Ball w ill also be coaching his mens team in the Winter Classic, held this weekend at Whiteman Tennis Center. M clnerney said B all’s assistant w ill help out if his schedules overlap. Scott Troyanoa/Stato Prow B rian G yetko takes a aw ing in h is victo ry yesterd a y a t the W hitem an T e n n is C en ter, The weekend-long Winter Classic is the reason the ASU womens team is playing at Tem pe West Reserve. Because '• the team does practice and compete on these courts } regularly throughout the season, Mclnerney said it is just as much a home-court advantage as it would be playing on campus. Last week, some of the Sun Devils competed in an individual tournament in Palm Springs, Calif. ASU’s No. 1 seed, Krista Amend, advanced to the quarterfinals. Glitz eventually won the consolation round and the doubles team of Jennifer Rojohn and Karen Bergan lost in the semifinals. Hoo©sters hope to halt losing skid in Miami By PA U L CORO State P ress Lewis . A fter Wednesday night’s effort against| UefA, the ASU basketball team deserves a * vacation. So, they are heading for Miami today. Unfortunately, it won’t be much o f a vacation for the Sun Devils (8-7 overall, 2-5 Pac-10) as they w ill try to erase a threegam e losing streak against the University of M iam i (F la .) Saturday at 5:30 p.m. (E S T). “ (Today’s noon departure) doesn’t give us a lot of tim e to prepare,” ASU Head Coach B ill Frieder said, “ considering we have a six-hour flight.” The Sun Devils w ill face a resurrected M iam i basketball program in a non­ conference gam e fen’ the first time ever. M iam i has struggled to a 6-6 (5-2 at home) mark this season. “ Th ey’ve been an up and down team,” F rieder said. “ Blit they have been very good at home.” M i a m i has p la y e d th re e com m on opponents with ASU this year. The Hurricanes w ere drilled 83-53 by the .Wtidcats in Tucson. Against Kansas, which feeat^he Sun Devils 90-67 in Lawrence, the leapt was pummelled 100-73 at home. '^ f t Washington Monday, M iam i took it on the chin again in a 83-87 pounding. On Jan. 6, ASU handled the Huskies in a 63-48 win with the aid of Matt Anderson, who suffered a knee injury in the gam e’s final seconds. In Wednesday’s 70-61 loss, the Sun Devils; played their best gam e since losing Anderson, the tea m ’s J|t.cond-leading scorer, until mid-February!^ “ I hope w e can sustain this "kind of play until he gets back,” Frieder said. “ W e just have got to hope w e can bounce back with a victory some w ay and not allow any kind of losing streak to continue.” A key for ASU since Anderson’s injury has been the play o f Isaac Austin. Austin, who was impressive at USC Saturday, was r e in s e r te d in to th e s ta r tin g lin e u p Wednesday. He posted 12 points and seven rebounds, despite foul trouble. Austin w ill probably draw the defensive assignment fo r 6-foot-9 Hurricanes center Joe Wylie, who leads the team with 22.3 points and 9.1 rebounds per game. « Outside o f W ylie, M iam i is .small on the front line with 6-foot-5 freshman Samarr Logan and 6-foot-4 sophomore Joseph Randon. The Hurricanes have been outrebounded by an average o f eight rebounds jg a m e . B rian Camper, a 6-foot-6 freshman guard, taller than both M iam i forwards. Camper turned in another solid performance against U o f A as h e m a d e s o m e c r e a t i v e playmaking. “ I think w e’ll be ready,” Camper said. “ A t USC and UCLA, w e didn’t play that type of (slow-paced) gam e real w ell I think w e can carry (the U ofA gam e) over to M iam i.” ASU’s scoring attack continues to be led by A lex Austin (18.8 points per gam e), but is no longer relying on it solely as it did at UCLA. • “ W e’re not satisfied, w e’re just looking ahead to M iam i,” the 6-foot-6 senior said. “ W e’re going to g o o n a spurt again.” .«o s State Press Friday, January19,1990 Page 16 Devils use break to dive ahead B y LA R R Y N E W E LL State P ress While winter recess has traditionally been a tim e for college students to take refuge from their hectic schedules, the ASU swimming and diving teams have used this break from the classroom to get ahead in the pool. “ Right after Christmas w e started having double workouts every day, with only a few exceptions,” ASU Diving Coach Ward O’Connell said. “ The next six weeks of the season is the Crucial part o f the season, with both conference and NCAA competition.” Along with a more stringent practice regiment, the 12th-ranked Sun Devils’ mens swimming squad should be strengthened by the re-emergence o f sophomore butterfly sp ecia list K eith Dennison, who was ineligible during the fall. “ Keith is a very talented swim m er,” ASU swimming Coach Ron Johnson said. “ At the moment, Keith is our top swim m er in the fly, and his presence w ill definitely be an asset to our team.” Sophomore David LeBlanc w ill be looked upon to continue swimming at a high level. Against B YU and Utah last week in Provo, LeBlanc recorded a 56.1 time in the 100-meter breaststroke, his fastest in-season time ever. He also recorded a time of 203.2 in the 200-meter breaststroke, which was one o f the fastest 200-meter times at that altitude ever. “ D a vid ’s perform ances w ere rea lly amazing, especially considering that they w ere recorded in mediocre pools and at high altitudes," Johnson said. Junior Scott Benesch, a Brophy Prep 1987 graduate, w ill also be looked Upon to continue his stellar swim m ing. Last week, Benesch turned in a 20.3 time in the 50-meter relay and a 21.1 in the 50-meter freestyle. “ Our road trip to Utah unified the team, as w e w e r e able to s o lv e som e communication problems, set team goals and it gave us a better direction for the year,” Johnson said. The key to the Sun Devils’ success in the second half of the season w ill lie in the production of freshmen W illy Landmark, Neil Lichter, F ort Guerin and Fran Gray. “ A ll of our young swimmers are going to have to come around, as w e are really counting on them,” Johnson said. “ They are not just developm ental, they are an important part o f the team.” With a number of athletes either in bandages or in the sickbed, the 6-0 and seventh-ranked ASU womens team has had m ore problem s gettin g healthy than defeating its early season opponents. Among the most severly injured is sophomore Kristen Neidhoefer, who is currently ranked No. l in both the 200- and 400-intermediate. She is suffering from cronic back problems. “ Kristen is definitely out for the year, possibly out fo r good,” ASU womens swimming Coach Tim Hill said. Juniors Jennifer Linder, Jodi Quas and Michelle Thompson have all joined the growing list of Sun Devil swimmers who h a ve been ham pered with recu rring injuries. “ Right now, w e need people to step forward and do well in their o ff events,” Hill said. “ I think the adversity is helping us to concentrate more on racing and to be more competitive, which has become a good trait of this team.” LeBlanc Sundi Kjenstad/State P ress O’Connell has higher expectations for his diving team for the second half of the season. “ The first half of the season was a learning experience, giving the athletes the opportunity to learn the college list of dives,” O’Connell said. “ The second half is when w e perfect them.” : The ASU mens and womens swimming and diving teams return to action Saturday at noon, when they play host to UC-Irvine at the Mona Plum m er Aquatic Center. WHY ATTEND SCOTTSDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE? *Convenience • approximately 1000 day/night within a short drive. *Affordable tuition - a low “ resident” tuition o f $23 per credit hour. *Parking - no hassles, park free. ‘ Small classes - sm aller classes mean more individualized attention. ‘ Quality instruction - highly qualified & experienced faculty. >» Sorrento Topanga A scen t A scen t EX CATEYE MICRO COMPUTER Reg. *54“ SALE *34“ Reg. *3oo°° $370°° *445°° *540°° SALE »ass*5 <324** *329** *464** Open Registration for Spring Sem ester ’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. AVENIR HELMET Reg. *4995 SALE *39“ C lasses begin January 22 Register in person at the Adm issions O ffice or by phone* '(phone registration for continuing students only) 2010 S. Rural Rd. § Tempe __[wgpl 968-8011 ■ Broadway ____ *- *423-6114 G eneral information 423-6000 Adm issions 423-6100 Activity 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 Maricopa Community Collage” Page 17 Friday, January 19,1990 State Press A S U -U o fA wom en tip off a tU A C B y KRIS TIM M ONS State P ress The rivalry continues as four seniors head ASU’S womens basketball team into its final grudge match with Uof A in the University Activity Center at 7:30 p.m. Center Fran Ciak, guard Rosiland Senior, and forwards Carolyn DeHoff and Lisa Jones w ill have a chance to avenge last season’s 84-74 home loss to the Wildcats. “ I ’m psyched,” said DeHoff. “ Deep down inside, I feel a sense of big rivalry and I want to come out and play the best I ’ve played all year.” DeHoff believes that the Sun Devils will outplay Uof A in every facet o f the game. “ W e’re going to beat them with our inside gam e,” she said. “ W e’re going to beat them with our quickness. W e’re going to out-think them and w e’re going to play better than they are. I believe we are going to beat them.” ASU (8-6 overall, 0-3 Pac-10) is looking for its first Pac-10 win of the season and an end to a four-game losing streak. Head Coach Maura McHugh said the key for the Sun Devils to win tonight is their offense. “ We want to try to get our offense on track and w e’ve got to push the ball up the floor,” McHugh said. “ W e’ve got to be patient offensively and get a good shot. I expect they (the Wildcats) w ill come out playing full-court man (defense) with pressure the whole gam e.” Defensively, McHugh feels ASU has to play man-to-man to cover U of A ’s outside shooters. The Wildcats are third in the conference in field goal percentage shooting (44.7 percent). McHugh said that the Sun Devils have to hit the boards hard to take advantage of their superior height. ASU is second in the conference in rebounding, pulling down an average of 44.8 boards per game, while Uof A is ninth with an average of 38.6. The recent suspension o f U of A forward Melissa Handley for academic reasons will cut down on some o f the Wildcat depth, according to McHugh. “ She (Handley) is a tough player for them (U o fA ), and I think it (the suspension) is going to hurt their depth,” McHugh said. O a k and U ofA’s Brenda Frese w ere both nominated last week for Pac-10 Womens Basketball Player of the Week. Classifieds UNER AD RATES: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days In Parson: $2.76 per day for 5-9 days Ca sh , Check (with guarantee card), VISA $2.50 per day for 10+ days or MasterCard. W e ’re located in the 15* each additional word lower level of Matthews Center, room 46H. Th e first 2 words are capitalized. Office hours are 8 a.m.-5 p.m . Mon.-Fri. N o bold face or centering. Y ou can also place your a d at the North M U Information D esk (fall and spring semesters only), between the hours of 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m . WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? Mon.-Fri. Classified Oner ads can begin 1 da y after they are placed (if placed before noon). Classified display ads can begin 2 d a y s after they are placed (if placed before 10 a m ) - B y Phono: 965-6731 Payment with VISA/MC only. $ 6 minimum on A d s may run for any length of time. Canceled all phone orders. a d s will be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. B y Mail: A dve rtisin g P olicy: S end your ad (with payment) to: Th e State Press reserves the right to edit S tate Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Rm 15 or reject any advertising copy submitted. Tem pe, A Z 85287-1502 AUTOM OBILES ANNOUNCEMENTS Tarot-the 1977 CORONA. 67,000 actual miles. Runs Western Mystical tradition. January 22, perfect, needs body work. $800 or best $28/month. Claire Lenormand, 945-9572. offer. 464-8920. INTRODUCTION TO the I Ching-Chinese 1979 T O Y O TA Corolla. Automatic, air- book o f oracles and wisdom. January 20, c o n d itio n in g , 2-5, $15. Claire Lenormand, 945-9572. $1250/offer, 921-2758/evenings or leave INITIATION Read the STATE PRESS Classifieds, ycu never knew what you may find! HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: . IS (words or less: THROUGH the __________ AM /FM , runs r g rea t. message. LOVE T O dance? Hate the bar scene? FoUett’s Gift Shop You’ll love the All Singles Dances, every 1987 RENAULT Alliance, 4-speed, air- Friday and Sunday at better Valley hotels. conditioner, good condition, $3,100. Call Recorded information, 946-4086. 921-3933. I00 MODELS wanted for hair show at the 1989 G T Mustang hatchback, 5-speed, Carsten Institute, 3345 South Rural Rd. power windows, power locks. White exter­ 491-0449. io r . g r a y in te r io r . 285-9063/message. TAI has the Best Deals School Supplies in CHI Chuan-Chinese exercise $ 1 2 ,5 0 0 / o ffe r. for health and meditation, January 24thr 7pm, IS IT true...Jeeps for $44 through the $25/month. Claire Lenormand, 945-9572. g o v e rn m e n t? C a ll fo r fa c ts ! 1-708-742-1142 Ext. 9162-A 100 MODELS Wanted for hair show at the Carsten Institute, 3345 S. Rural Rd. 491-0449 MOVING, M UST sell! 1987 Jeep Wran­ gler, 5-speed, 4 cylinder, 28,000/miles. Air-conditioning/heat. Perfect condition, $7,000 941-2042 TRUCKS 1987 CHEVY S-10 truck, red, 4-cylirtder. 4 - s p e e d , AM /FM c a s s e t t e , conditioning. $6,000. 921-9268. We Feature a^m N attonal" * S A N FORo . Postiti ( e^ T P A K RAPER8MATE* FaberCasteT &t d k MOTORCYCLES SHARP L SHARP with ^ _ SAVE $1 Q 00 1 FINANCIAL SoE ír$ 1 99 C om pare at * ” 1 •CALCULATOR p ■19 «TD K Ä 10-PACK SAWES 300 COLORFLOPPY y fi||90 DISKETTES PS/DD 9 Compare at * »' ; Is¡MEMO NOTEPAD A,^d‘c lr,$Q 99 SAME$*|00 C UBE c°lor> Ù Reg. * " If ■ . ' ? SPIRAL ISOSheets $¡94!9 s E 50( NOTEBOOK 3Subiec,s wLmReg. $» 1985 HONDA Elite 150, good condition, blue. Must sell, $1,000 or take over $60/month. 967-2087. 1987 HONDA scooter, new tags, good condition. A SU parking permit $400/offer. Lisa, 731-9605. 29 While Quantities Last 1987 HONDA Elite 150. Low milage, sky $2,300, you can drive it away for $1,350. C MINI-STORAGE ^ $23 ¡9 VINYL 3-RING UNDER 2 p S y S ^ m N a tlo n a T H U B ) P A P E R FROM $9.95 -M A T E ' it. Call 5’x5’ to 10’x20’ R.V. & Car Storage NEAR ASU Call Helen at HONDA ELITE Scooter, 1987, 80cc. Runs Call Eileen 820-6486. MOPED HONDA Aero 125 (with/helmet). Excellent condition. $595 or best offer. 840-5995. RED SCOOTER. 1983 Honda Aero, 80cc. Will sell for best offer. Call Liz, 968-5441 Arizona Storage Inns L 2235 W. 1st Street 967-0210 j BICYCLES MEN’S 10-SPEED, Sebring, Shimano shifters, A pex Alloy cranks. Excellent condition. N ew grips, tuned. $75/firm. 941-0939. Mountain P A P E R used great, reliable transportation. $475/offer M OUNTAIN • rarely HONDA A E R O . 125, perfect condition. Check Our Everyday Low Prices on f ow ner 967-1010 day or 731-3519 night. Ask for $500, negotiable. 840-5786. 4 OUR EVBYDAY LOWPRICE! Original Michael. 12 1 2 ■ blue, recently tuned up. Purchased for free -'Wr a ir - BIKES, Storm two with yellow water Huffy bottles. $125/each, and Blue Schwinn 10-speed, $85. 945-6360 or 377-7554. NEW E L E C T A F O U IT RED Beach Cruiser with lock. Perfect condition. Graduated, must sell. 957-0812. $79/offer. • ■%/ B J C y 7 -P A C K A U T O M A T IC P E N M • tE A C T W U f BACKPACKS FURNITURE CUSTOM MADE-/Queen size futon couch, W V V CARDS DECORATIONS GIFT WRAP \# V GIFTS V PARTY WARE V STUFFED ANIMALS only ten months old, excellent condition, $ 200- Call 967-0955. FULL SIZE bed $125. Water bed $180. With accessories. Microwave stand $15. Tandem Bicycle brand new $200. Pull-out Browse through ou r 3 flo o rs o f: s p e c i a l p r iv o n t valid through 1/31/90 A .S.U . Mem orial Union Low er Level • 966-9188 Follett’s Gift Shop •New & Used Books * • Calendars & Cards • Books on Cassette • Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit whichmay beusedtopurchaseanything in the store. - • 1 : (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M -F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 M ill Avenue • Tem pe • 966-0203 couch to bed $150. Susan 968-1013. NEW $200, Futon with complete frame etc. Used only 2 month. $140. N ew $125, student table/chair, $75. Call 840-5995 anytime. W AREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49. chairs from $14, computer tables from $39, files, bookcases and more. Arizona Office Liquidators, 5064 South 40th Street (Vfe mile south o f Broadway). MondayFriday, 9-5, Saturday 10-2. 437-2224. W e w o r k t o h e l p y o u f in d w o r k ! S i d l e P r e s s ( lu s s ifie d s . ■pc- Page 18 APARTMENTS MISCELLANEOUS EOR SALE A U T H E N T IC PE R S O N A L IZ E D street signs: Without the hassle!! Only $19.95. 2 BEDROOM, fenced yard. 1 mile ASU! Pets ok. $345/month. 265-2066. ASU AREA 2 b ed room , 2 HAYDEN apartments 948-8503 966-8838. $260 and up. ASU. TW O Lease or sell. BEDROOM, 2 bath condo with BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. washer/dryer, Walk to ASU, pool, laundry room. 1 block $550/month. Call Paul, 994-9582 south o f University on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special. original price $385. Now $175 each. Light STAFF, FACULTY, weight over stuffed upholstered chairs, m ove in special, apartments. Great graduate students: beautiful remodeled location, STUDIO AND 2 bedroom apartments. E. Cheerytynn, Scottsdale. Sammy, 994-9242 or Pueblo 992-RENT. COMPUTERS SUBLEASE TW O bedroom, $435/month. Walk to ASU. 1 bath, Available System, $995. AT 386-16 SX, complete, 2 TW O BEDROOM 2 bath townhouse, male/ bedroom, 2 bath, Desert Palms Apart­ female, fireplace. $250. Nonsmoker. Near ASU. 829-4909 n eed ed to share ments. $220/month. Brian, 921-1547. MALE/FEMAL.E for 3 bedroom house with T W O BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, near $200 plus 1/« utilities. 838-3499: covered parking, pool, excellent condition, MALE/FEMALE good insulation. 966-0962. bedroom, 2 bath apartment, Broadway RENTAL SHARING needed to share r o o m m a te . non-smoking W ash er/D ryer» c a b le » $205/month, plus share utilities. 838-6743 department. Must b e outgoing, enthusias­ tic, and self motivative. Earn $75-$350 per UNIVERSITY OFFICE spaces, 400 square week. Call Charles Tumbow, 423-7012, between 1-3. NEAR HAYDEN & Monthly, includes 946-9493. Camelback, utilities. $150 feet and up spaces available. C om er of Evenings, Apache and Rural. Project management bedroom, semi-private bath, $175 rent, division o f incoming calls. Free utilities and use o f FAX and copy machines. Sign V* immediately. 2 bedroom apartment, plus $175 deposit. 966-6308. L A P T O P TOSHIBA 1200F A AA NEED male roommate to share 2 Spanish speaking would be greatl Price bedroom apartment, 5 blocks from ASU. ran ge: Washer/Dryer fully furnished, Contact Natalie, Monday-Friday, 2-7pm; fu rn itu re Sunday, 12-5pm at 236-5782, ext. 12. ZENITH PC X T compatible, 512k, 20m HDD. Hercules Graphics, 1200 Baud Modem, Logitech M ouse, DOS, MSW in d o w . $99 0 Cal l 9 6 5 - 2 5 78 (9 a m -6 p m ) , (6pm-10pm) V e lu , 9 6 8 -5 8 7 2 APARTMENT HOMES: REAL ESTATE 3 BEDROOM 2 bath apartment, covered parking, modern h o o k -u p s. 949 appliances, S o u th laundry M cCIrntock. (between Apache / University). Jess Sotomayer, 897-0516. CU STO M HOME, perfect for Studios & 1 bedroom s a v a ila b le in a s m a ll, peaceful community in North T em pe. F R E E u tilitie s, F R E E basic cable! Call for specials. b ed room an d appliances. $220/month. Matt, 967-6429 PRIVATE including ROOMS-Shared bath, $175 plus $195 deposit. 1432 West Emer­ Very clean. Bike ASU. $180, $200, $220. ald, Mesa. Pool, tennis court. 966-6308. 893-2577, 965-2814. BEDROOM IN house. Priest and Universi­ R ESO RT S PLIT level condo near Fiesta ty. utilities. Mall. Heated pools, tennis, raCketball, and $200.00 deposit over two months. Cold more. Master bedroom, adjacent bath, Central $295. Loft, $225 plus utitilies. 461-1023 $250/monthly, private in clu des air-conditioner. Non-sm okers NQNSM OKER roommate G O RGEOUS 2 suite townhome at Broad­ w ay and Milf, all appliances stay, 2-car garage, fireplace in Master bedroom. $105,000. Blue Ribbon Realty, Linda Grale 263-9696. RO O M M ATE to ceiling. S ave $28,000. only $55,000! W hy rent this sem ester? Greg, long-term positions available. Hours: 5:30 thru 9:30 pm. $5.45/hour. Tem pe locations CHILDCARE AND pool, dishwasher, storage room, good part-time flexible. Vicinity o f Central and sh a re utilities.Baselinp/Priest,. 438-9363 FEMALE •Newly redecorated •Vertical blinds •Designer carpet •4 sparkling pools •Laundry facilities •Great for rental sharing •Walk to ASU •1st Months Rent $99 t same, bath, you get own bedroom and bath. non- Meridian Corners. V ery nice. Call Greg 967-6362. ROOMMATE W ANTED to share large, 4 including 2 pools, tennis courts, jaccuzzi. bedroom, 2 bath house in quiet neighbor­ 10 minutes from ASU. Gall Kim or Ann, hood. 945=7019. 965-3644, 966-2427. Non-smoking. FEMALE TO share 3 bedroom house, 1 SHARE APARTM ENT, own bedroom block from campus. Fireplace, pool, microwave, washer/dryer, large yard. Share minutes walk from campus. Fully furn­ furnished. Many professional. $275/month plus 968-9407. Call 204-7774 between 10-6 to schedule interview. COM PUTER ASSISTAN T for mailing list program, Lotus 1-2-3, and data entry of Vs utilities. $220/month plus E ast Lem on pqrt-time, $5/hour. Scottsdale and Camelback Road. 941-0572. Vi- utilities. S treet. COM PUTER WHIZ for Tem pe market research finn. (Basic, D-Base, Harvard 2 ished. $200/month plus Vb electric. $100 deposit. One, maybe two roommates; 1019 fine art slides into data base. Flexible Contact Graphics, SPSS). Also data entry person. $4-$8/hour. 967-4441 COOK A N D drivers needed for ASU Pizza HELP WANTED parlor. Full/Part time. 966-4292 after 3pm: Raphael, 965-2735 or Manager, Apt 124. G RO O VY PERSO N to rent 1 bedroom in SHARE large 3 bedroom apartment. No party Tem pe. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, large pool and HOUSE, dudes or heavy smokers. $160/month plus yard, Vs utilities. 947-1152. Must dig our cat. 946-3499. N o drugs. laundry Fem ale $250, only, utilities north included. A AA FUNJ Private company with restaur­ GORK’N - CLEAVER ant accounts. Great personality, aggres­ tions sive, neat apperance. 21-30 years. Even­ ings and weekends. 966-7006. hostess. Will train. Short shifts. Conve­ A AA MARKETING research assistant, opinion research . Advancement oppor­ 1028 E. Orange HELP WANTED 967-0489 b e d r o o m 2 b a th w a s h e r , d r y e r , dishwasher, compactor, fans stay 1100 with part-time help. Monday-Friday, 10-2 or 2-6. ROOMMATE WANTED. 2 bedroom, 2 %ji with fem ale law student and young male Utilities Included ZE R O DOWN No qualify Papago II. 2 room assistance, COMPETITIVE SWIMWEAR store needs 2 extras washer/dryer; O pen D aily 9 to 5 Realty Executives, 941-7705. TO general Glendale in Phoenix. 943-8892. V* smoker. 3 bedroom, 2 bath apartment, (plus deposits) vaulted large manufacturing company. Part-time ROOM FO R rent in 4 bedroom house with bedroom, 2 bath house. $235/month, Vi O N L Y $100 down for beautiful Papago Park Village 2 bedroom, 2 bath unit with CAFETERIA W O RKERS, experienced for to E A SY T O own 2 bedroom condo; 13th and $4,500. P ete’s 19th Tee, 1405 North Mill Avenue Tempe. Equal Opportunity Employer. FEMALE Tic FounlUns lunches. (Rolling Hills Golf Course). utilities. 838-7336. Owner, 897-9654 W EEKDAY Dishwasher, evenings. Apply in person: Angelo, 829-6573. F E M A LE yard maintenance. BUSPERSON, male, one mile from campus. Call John su re; park-like yard, M any unique features. 2300 square feet. $127,900 and M anager 820-9282. sional environment near Fiesta Mall. $225, Male/female, nonsmoker. $180 plus water Part-time evenings. Call anytime, ask for C O ZY LOFT in resort condo- quiet, profes­ neighborhood. Baseline and McClintock. 894-9787. N o experience necessary. Delivery driv­ ers, pizza makers, waitress/counter help. (bike distance from ASU). N o fee, local, weekly pay. Apply 9-11 o r 1-3, TAD furnished. $210 plus Vb utilities. 894-8189. FURNISHED 2 bedroom mobile home, 1 block from ASU. $160 space rent includes BASELINE/HARDY, hiring all positions. Temporaries 3923 S. McClintock, No*401, share 2 bedroom/2 bath condo. Fully 921-1438. tation required. 860-1942. ROOM AVAILABLE for. a clean, responible convenient to ASU. North/South expo­ Hardy. Like new, furnished. N o qualifying, assume $567/month; $2000 down. Owner square foot for January’s rent. Sign up for 800 square feet, get a month’s free rent. 921-9344/921-1100. furn­ ished, p od s, washer/dryer, all appliances. LARGE BABYSITTER NEEDED for 2 small child­ ren in Northeast Scottsdale. Monday, Wednesday, Friday afternoons. Transpor­ utilties. bedroom. BEAUTIFUL Vi utilities. 461-1023. 946-5523 $100-$300 Limited openings, s o call how! lease by January 31 and only pay $1 per NEED PLA C E to live» prefer females. preferred. Available 2/15/90. 894-0531. LAMPLIGHTER faculty in c lu d in g in unit; ence speaking with alumni nationwide. If P.O.Box 1652, Mesa, Arizona 85211. V» utilities. ic. Call Kim at 968-0851. Large 1 & 2 bedrooms. $330/$400. 1 block to ASU, DW, laundry, pool. 1014 E. Spence 968-6947 Great nightly incentives, gain valuable telemarketing and public relations experi­ you have sales ability, call us at 965-6754. 829-9281 mile from campus. $227.50 plus Vb electr­ SUNRISE A P T S . Thursday even in gs, 5:30-9:30. Earn $4.10/hour plus bonus, plus commission. MALE T O share 2 bedrooom Condo. Fully $1395. Lektronics Arizona. 827-0688. drives. 1 megabyte RAM. Reflective screen. Like new. $850. Art, 967-5004. member o f the ASU Telefund team! Now hiring for Spring, on-campus location, can work 8-16 hours per week, Sunday- ATTENTION COLLEGE Students: W e are looking for students in our advertisement 224 EAST, 14th Street. Private furnished Tw o 720K ASU IS calling on you...to becom e a commitment. Free training. 12=15 hours per week. Commission. Send Resume to: NEED FEMALE, nonsmoker roommate Call 279-2822. Ken, 967-2498 14x10 BEDROOM Im m ediately! P ric e n egotiable. anytime, 350-0371, ask for Kevin. thé 68020. T o apply, call Ticketmaster at immediately! Must b e willing to make a r o o m m a te . W a s h e r / D r y e r , c a b le . $215/month, plus share utilities. 838-6743 non-smoking operating system applications for VAX and and McClintock. $250/month and utilities. U NIVERSITY TO W ERS, own room plus needs BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES write software for Real Time/Multi-user I NEED five people in my organization furnished, must see. $180 plus needs two anytime. 894-0021. kitchen, bathroom, living room. Urgent! AT 286-12, 1MB RAM, HD/FD, complete plus 1/4 utilities. Call Dave at 967-1787. utilities. Mark, 897-0183. pool, fireplace. 12x10 BEDROOM 2 ASU. Call ounces plant material every 45 days. All accessories $400. 894-8319. N ear Apartments, 894-6468. 6643 PH O TO TR O N H YD RO PO N IC system, 6 firep lace. W estridge and 3 drawer file cabinets, $25; Stools, $10. Call 835-9080, anytime. V*. ASU, W est o f Mill. Quiet residence, lighted V C R 's with remote all standard features, Speno chairs with pneumatic lift, $45. 2 students with strong math aptitudes to MALE/FEMALE LIKE NEW- L ess then 1 year old. 13” RCA Desk height tables, 30x60, $40. utilities. Washer/dryer. 464-1944. 947-8101, color T V ’s with headphones and remote; original price, $300, now $150 each. RCA Rapidly growing company is looking for each. Call 829-8160. and many extras. $300/month plus rent. town- SHARE LARGE 4 bedroom house with 967-4789. for pretty others. 4th bedroom a study. Large kitch­ en, cable T.V., 2Vb bath, pool. $250/month boxspring. 246-6134 negotiate. ASSEM BLY PROGRAM M ERS, part-time. W ANTED , house. Broadway/Gilbert. $225/month, Vb HUGE ROOM with personal bath, ceiling quality Beauty Rest twin mattress and will RO O M M ATE fan, and cable in beautiful home with pool from $400, two Desert W ide Properties 838-6631. ASU AREA. Studios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom Paid for women to share a master bedroom, $250 fireplace, pool, refrigerator, $450/month. e le c t r ic it y . T W O BEDROOM, 1% bath, 7 minutes HIGH Q UALITY never used, extra firm looking HELP WANTED A ir- conditioning, jaccuzzi, no pets, deposit. p lu s SQUARE, RENTAL SHARING Cape Cod near ASU. 2 bedroom, 1Vb bath, $350/m 6nth Mastercard accepted. 1-800-526-0870. RENTAL SHARING b a th , today. Best time: 6am to 4pm. Visa/ TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS SPECIAL $100 off move-in. Charming W e ’ ll print "alm ost” anything.Order yours $75. State Press Friday, January 19,1990 HELP WANTED tunities. 967-4441 E venings/w eekends. Susan for: lunch accepting waitress applica­ and lunch nient hours. Fun atmosphere. Concern with appearance, reliability and personali­ ty are important. Apply in person, MondayFriday, 2-5 pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th S treet (44th arid Camelback). 952-0585 plus feet. Roommate. Many more! Bill Rider Realty. 730-8899 Big Price Reduction on 4 bedroom house. C lose to ASU. Now $77,900. Custom home. Call Roma Realty • 968-6890 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS 7M l w ould like to w ish a warm 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath townhouse. Private yard, pets dk.. Near T h e Lakes in Tem pe. $495/month. 921-1015. 2 BEDROOM condo, 15 minutes to ASU. Fireplace, heated pool. $448/month. 265-2066. APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath townhouse. 924 square feet, washer/dryer included. Near 48th Street/Broadway. $375 per month. Call 835-7562. Super Quiet Facutty/Staff/Graduate Students Lovely 1 & 2 bedroom a p a r t m e n t s . A11 amenities. Plus beautiful pool and c o v e r e d parking. Close to ASU Hidden Glenn 818 W. 3rd St., Tempe (Hardy & 2nd Street) 968-8183 Too newly remodeled 2 bedroom apartm ents wi th p o o l, la u n d ry , coveredparking and cèiling fans. Broadway & Roosevelt area across from Clark Park. 966-1662 Need extra MONEY 2 FEMALES needed to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo near ASU. 892-3497. 3 BEDROOM 2Vfe bath 2 story furnished townhouse. Tem pe, near ASU, $625. Call Deanna, 951-8876 or 898-0054. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, washer/dryer, pool. Close to ASU. $610/month. 921-0279 BEAUTIFUL ONE bedroom large condo. Pool, carpeted. 1111 East University, FOR: •B O O K S •TUITION •RENT *EXTRACURRICULARS no. 114. $385, $200 deposit. 966-6308. CLEAN MODERN on e bedroom condo. Close to Mad, Albertson’s, busline. Close to ASU , $290. 898-3734. CONDO FOR RENT- 2 bedroom/1 bath. $199 MOVES YOU IN! W E L Cto O M E BACK a ll A S U students Washer and dryer. Dobson and Broadway. $450/month. Tam m i,631-0161. DELUXE 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. All appliances, washer/dryer. Also covered parking, pool, tennis courts, patio. No pets $450. Call 967-1044. We provide: $5.50/Hour Guaranteed Plus •Flexible Scheduling •Day & Evening Hours •No Cold Calling •Friendly Supporting Mgt. •Pleasant Atmosphere •Contests, Incentives HOT DEAL! Any part o f town you want to live in, w e have condos. Two bedroom, dining room, newly remodeled, neatly decorated. Private parking at your front door, private patio. Move-in special: $325 per month. With student ID, one month free 265-0470, 921-1100. ' LUXURY TOW NHOM ES, 2 and 3 bedrooms Washer/dryer. Vb mile to ASU. If in terested in w orking in fo r the nation’s largest, m ost rapid­ ly grow ing telem arketing com panies, co n tact Laura: 967-0066 Pools, Tennis courts. 967-4908. I Stete Presi HELP WANTED HELP WANTED C O U N S E LO R S FOR. boy’s camp in Maine. Openings in most activities (WSI, tennis, basketball, ship in exchange for evaluating service. drama, music preferred. lacrosse, etc.) Write: Upper C am p sailing, classmen Cedar, 1758 B eacon Street, P.O. Box 9, Brookline, MA. 02146 or call 617-277-8080. HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS TRAVEL M ARKETING C O M PA N Y seeks individu­ NEED PEOPLE to sell T-shirts in dorms. FACULTY/STAFF! V a lu e priced 14 day $15/hour average. 921-0051, 376-6442. SUMMER JOBS, outdoors. O ver 5,000 openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire KIMBERLEY: H A PPY Birthday tomorrow! als interested in free health d u b member­ You are getting pretty old but I still love Alaska Cruise from crews. Send stamp for free details. 113 STO C K YAR D S R ESTAU RANT now hiring East Wyoming, KalispeH, MT 59901. you! Hope you have a great day! Love, Chris. SW E N SO N ’S. USA P lease call 1-806627-3053 full-time, rib and line cooks, lunch waitres­ provided. Center Against Sexual Assault, 956-1163. C U R R E N TLY SEEKING enthusiastic and personable individuals for the following positions: Retail clerks, full and part-time E xcellen t opportunity for growth-oriented, ambitious people. Apply in person, 6107 North Scottsdale Road, Hilton Village. ENG INEERING TECHNICIAN, full or parttime. 1 year engineering or technology. S om e experience required . 956-8200 ESTABLISHED COM PANY seeks self- motivated m anagement trainees. Full or p art-tim e. N o e x p e rie n c e com pany training. 840-6414. required, 100%. waitresses. Shifts begin at 10:30 am. Have Concerned friends. mountain. 20 minutes to 7 major resorts. STUDENT JOBS: Full-time, $300/week, sary. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 3-5 pm. Price/Baseline. Nightshirts also NIK-NUT; HERE’S to the best semester tion. All dates available, $700/week or ever!! Finally! Love always, Libby. $120 a night. Call (801) 261-5543. N IK -R E A D Y for ice skating lession no. 1? Can’t wait to s ee you tonight. How am T membership with purchase o f Eurail pass. NEED MOTIVATED person to work poolside at area resorts seHing suncare and sun wear. Full/part-time available. PH O TO G RAPH ERS now! Friday. 963-2071. TALL FEMALE (5M 0" or taller) to display m entally/physically $4.59-$4.90/hour. handicapped. K evin or Kathy, 894-2355 or apply at 1822 W est 3rd Street, Tem pe. EOE. G Y M N A S T IC S COACH needed. 40th Street/Thomas. 946-9493, evenings. LA W O FFICE on-site billing assistant, computer literate accounting student. Experienced, aggressive individual. Bill­ ing, collections, bookkeeping. Part-time 1 day/week or 2 half days. Downtown Phoenix, $10/hour plus bonus. 252-2020, 1-3pm. time evenings. N o calls please. 3308 South McClintock. PARADISE VALLEY group home serving 4 autistic individuals needs staff who are skilled in or motivated to learn sign language. Kevin 894-2355 or apply at 1822 W est. 3rd Street. Tempe. PART-TIM E W ORK to do 423-7767. A d va n ce ble hours. 64 50 per hour. 9665002. W E H AVE JO B S •$5.50/per hour guaranteed •24-hrs per week * EXTRA MONEY★ Earn $120 + a m onth and C a m e lb a c k R oad. NEEDED to assist disabled $7/hour. Call Barb, wagon hostess and parttime bartender on experience for aH types o f Media donors on first donation with this a d . A s k a b o u t a dd ition al bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). between McClintock and Price in Tem pe. needed. Must b e 19 years old. Apply in Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tempe STUDENTS W ANTED sam ples o f lecture to hand CASH FO R gold, diamonds. Mill Avenue 15 minutes work. Apply in person at the counter THETA U S A L So tell us again...whose 21st is in two months and 6 days?! TRI-SIGMA RUSH! January 23rd to 25th Crafts, B icycling, V INTERNATIONAL SERVICES sor and former English teacher. Laser nent printer. Claudia, 964-6012. hair removal and permanently (AB S) Y O U R word processing profession­ Ginnie Monroe, ACSW 897-0444 468-3850 10th St. ACam elback 27 0-40 34 The Southwests largest Scuba, Soccer, W ood. Men call o r write: Camp Winadu, 5 Glen Lane, Mamaroneck, New Yorfr 10543, (914) 381-5983. Women call or P.O. Box 1771, students with and/or daily living personal FREE LOST/FOUND L O S T ,12/21/89, 5 nursing books. Outside Physical Plant. V ery important-please return! Reward! 1-492-9273, call collect. PERSONALS Thin and Natural Sculptured Nail Strong bonding made with fiberglass resins. Doesn’t yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. . Full set $25 • Fills $18 Cactus N a il Company Scottsdale 423-5504 needs. ' Experience psyched! preferred but not required. 12 hours of Pizza Miracle research company has openings f6r mark­ et research interviewers. Full, part-time positions available in early evenings and weekends. WiH train on research techniques and computer terminals. Good verbal skills needed, no experience neces­ sary. Start at $4.75-$5.75/hour with bonus, 483-8214 or 4867544 between 9 am and6 •pm. . M ARKETING FIRM seeks reliable, moti­ vated student to m anage campus promo­ REAL ESTATE office in Scottdale needs tions. Flexiblè hours. High earning poten­ tial. Excellent work experience. N o selling. part-time 800-366-6498 951-9159. Ask for Lisa. help Monday-Friday 6noon. Light typing, phones. CaU between 1-5 at TRANSPORTATION nity invites anyone interested in ultimate A M Y AN D Enin- Hi roomies! It’ s back to paid vacation, and health insurance. Call D R IV E R S $ 4 " an hour! O w n car, 18 yrs. or over Commissions + Tips Training Program $100 Bonus after 4 months the 3 am igos! Get psyched for an GOUS CAROLINE- H ere’ s your first ASU personal! I’m so glad you decided to make the trip West- it’s been a blast! Love, Kat. humor and b e a good kisser. Send note and phone number to: Box holder P.O. • P u b lis h e r S e rvices • B o o k C lu b Program s •N o n -p ro fit program s O u r e asy sch e d u le s and a p ro fe ssio n a l staff all ad d up to an e n jo ya b le and lu cra tiv e job. O u r T em p e o ffic e is 5 m inutes from cam pus. e r le a 894-0264 RESUM ES, COVER letters,; term papers, : R esum es & editing available. Reliable. CaH 921-3770 evenings & w eekends. ADOPTION ADOPTION TRAVEL - IF you are considering adoption, I am a single man financially talk. 415-641-8760. Confidential expenses paid as legal. G R AN D PA PIKE, thanks for the card!! Miss you tons! Your Paradise M nw u R an 7 NICHTS SOVINM R C M UM 5 0 2 7 NICHTS STEAMBOAT 2. 5 OR 7 NICHTS . N m u m aa m * 129' ^*129 *101 ,™?132‘ 7 NICHTS M7ttlW MEMBUM NICHTS J12T cornsamsrt/ MMMMMUM Box-1861 Tem pe, Arizona 85280. W e have te le m arke tin g p o sitio n s a v a ilab le in several departm ents in clu d in g : REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your papers that “ professional” look. Macin­ tosh, and Laser print. Susan, 9461500. P le a s e call collect. RESERVATIONS A V A ILA B LE N O W ! BREADSTICKSIII lent resume experience. Call 222-8106. Valley Grandma. XO. 5 0 * 7 NICHTS CALL TOLL FREE TODAY *99 MISCELLANEOUS FREE PORTABLE cellular phone for 6 months. N o gimmicks. You pay airtime. 921-0051,3766442. TUTORS UPPERD IVISIO N ARC H ITE C TU R E or Interior Design student needed to help 1-800-321-5911 lower division students with projects. Pay is negotiable. Call 968-4985 H A P P Y 20TH birthday Prince Charming! W e ’ll celebrate Saturday. G ood luck going active. Your little Pocahontas. IT: YO U know what this world needs? S om e more innovative, and - motivated humans that like to m ake It happen. At Delta Sigm a Pi w e make It happen and w e love It. The Business Fraternity. •Depending on break dates and length o f stay. PHOTOGRAPHY JASO N RESTAURANTS/ BARS SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks. Models’ , actors’, and artists’ , portfolios. Reasonable. 9961818. A' -• CLUB U.M. is accepting applications for: PERSONALS IBM baby to adopt. 2062260567. 61,762/month. C ollege credit, and excel­ »Evenings or older. Call 2762000, then 4530. mall. 1201 Alm a School, No.7950, M esa 85210 •A fternoons using computer. 9644)994. LOVING COUPLE looking for newborn litigation legal assistant. Send resume to: B ill A d a m s o n Grammar/spettfrig graduate rush starting Monday at 6pm. For informa­ intellegent female. Must have a sen se of T h e n a tio n ’s fin e st and larg est telem arketing firm is now a cce p tin g a p p lica tio n s fo r sh ifts in the: m ailings. C ollege tion call 966-8687 or s e e our table on the Jewish senior. Looking for a sweet, cute, A sk fo r checks. m ay $4M an hour! Training Program 257-0818 PAPE R , RESUMES, letters, transcribing, ed itin g, Om ega, Christian Fraternity, invites you to O RD ER TAKERS $8 to $10/hour W e fu lly tra in $5.50 guaranteed/hour. CaH anytime. childs life. Please call Bem ie collect s o w e business P a r t - t im e A A A DRIVEAWAY. F ree cars to most major Cities. G as allowances available. 21 ATTENTIO N ALL rushees Alpha Gamma viewing for Summer week in sales and Growth Opportunity and Advancement at all Levels accurate. parent, you will always have a place in this reception with objective to train as pre­ AFTER CLASS HOURS Fast, Prices competitive, negotiable. 9662186. cookies! Love, Kath. new staff member. Initial duties: primarily $4°° an hour! AREA. Typing, word processing, secure who will be a caring and devoted FUN LOVING and charming 25 year old PIZ Z A M A K E R S CaH Jessie, good, mom will bake you chocolate chip SOUTHW ESTERN C O M PA N Y now inter­ Make typing/word Need it fast? aw esom e sem ester and remember, if your M ESA PE R S O N A L injury law office seeks management. EXPERIENCED 8 3 6 3 3 0 5 ,6 5 pm. 9668687, or s e e our table on the maU. NOW HIRING AT 4 LOCATIONS processing. 9465744. W O RD PRO CESSING — $1.50 p er page. A LPH A GAM M A O m ega, Christian Frater­ brotherhood to attend rush, starting Monday at 6pm. For information call training wiH be provided. Contact Disabled Student Resources at 965-1234. Ask for around. Call 894-6074. APA/MLA custom writing. Reasonable prices. Call A LL TRI-SIGMAS: let’ s start the sem ester care read, editing, all included. Quick turn­ editing. Duxbury, Maine 02332, (617) 934-6536. PE R SO N AL CARE attendants- to assist AC C E N TS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ ASU o ff right- with and aw esom e rush! Get disabled TYPING/WORD PROCESSING A SO FT touch electrolysis offers perma­ intial treatment. 8267829. graphy, Piano, Radio, Rocketry, Ropes, V ega, 8 2 0 -5 6 5 2 applied eyeliner, lipliner, eyebrows. Free/ C heerleading, Karate, Lacrosse, Nature, Nurses, Photo- Camp 1250 E. Baseline: Suite 102 $1.65 A N D up. Professional word proces­ Dance, Drama, Drums, Fencing, Golf, write: End of S c h o o l C ru is e s N e x t M a y fo r A S U S t u d e n t s C a r i b b e a n f r o m S605 M e x i c a n R iv i e r a f r o m S4 75 784-0559 for more information. Baseball, Guitar, Gymnastics, Hockey, Horseback, Sailing, CRUISE BARGAINS TRI-SIGMA MISSY T.- Hi mom! I’ m so Private, confidential counseling. Insurance accepted. There Is a solution! skill in one o f the following activities: B asketball, Street. Phoenix. Arizona or call 254-9803 ery. Phone Lori, 9662096. Travel allowance. Must love kids and have apd American Youth Hostels. 1.026 North Oth als. Student discounts, pick-up and deliv­ W e s te rn M assachusetts/girls cam p, Maine. Top salary, room/board/laundry. Arts m et travel packs, other travel items also available. Contact at 7:30pm in the M.U. Arizona room! CaH BULIM IA, Tennis, Track, W SI, Waterski, Weights, A SU Bookstore Service Counter C lass Quotes 965-4169 PHONE MARKET research. Expanding D ia la m SIGM A S IS T E R 6 g et ready for the best sem ester ever! Sigma Love, Kath. or SUM M ER JOB: Counselors- boys camp, Archery, student-fare, flights, etc. Sandy, 964-7815. ground in science and in math desired. $6/hour. 921-9562 Sailboarding, •W eek ly pay •Bonus •Cornerstone M all location •Early A.M. room. S e e you there! 10 Y E A R S experience professional housecleaning. Detail cleaning, laundry, ovens, ENGAGEMENT RING SPECIALIST out in front of to work in between your classes. $3.00 for s e rv ic e V i PR IC E international Youth Hostels Both issued on the spot! ISIC cards SIGM A SIG M A sigma sorority rush is here! Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tem pe. auditoriums on campus. W e schedule you B ookstore ranking s o far? The pursuer. awesom e! I sigma lo ve you) Love, Kat. 9665967. notes SKI UTAH, fully furnished condo at base of psyched for this sem esterl It’s gonna be S TU D Y ASSISTAN T wanted. Good back­ A ll graduate students eligi­ b le . U n d erg ra d u a te up­ perclassm en with a 3.3 G P A o r a b o v e e lig ib le . A ll undergraduates with a 3.3 G P A or better registered in a cla ss with an enrollment larger than 100 are eligible to be a notetaker for that course. You! Sleeps 6, fireplace, jacquzzi. Great loca­ 965-4169 for information. Notetakers Wanted love JEWELRY University Plasma Center ASU or Chuck.) We you person. 2032 East Golf, north o f Southern PART-TIME A R T or Media student with PC ant. Opportunity for a wide range of hands positive. behind student in a Monday, W ednesday class, expertece to assist in set-up and genera­ materials for large Paradise Valley restaur­ Stay w e ’re ary 25th! 7:30pm in the M .U: Arizona T Y P IS T our busy g o lf shop. A lso daytime happy 968-6139 tion o f various advertising and promotion LEATHERS- Tuesday January 23rd to Thursday Janu­ Safer, faster plasm a donation a t A B I Centers due to autom ated procedure. $5 bonus to new E nergy •Evenings > S c o tts d a le 941-0572. W AN TE D : SH ALIM AR Country Club needs w eekend help with clothing sells in Is nice, but you can help people too: business Jim Hemauer. 968-4457 wearable art. (Designer quality). Part-time, 9:30 to 11130. 8969558. to join our team. FulMime days or part- Applications available at: M ANU FACTU RERS W AREHOUSE Flexi­ needed computer knowledge helpful. Call Scott, 351-2736. and responsible staff n eeded for part-time evening or weekend shifts in group homes fo r REPRESENTATIVE 9am until 8pm. $4/hour. 244-1022. immediate 8362633. Located in Tem pe. computer knowledge required, Compaq NEW HOTDOG restaurant, "across from has available. good buyer. Call 962-1437 or 461-9058, applications. Pendleton’s, 8464650 (John G R O U P HOMES. Creative, hardworking in for Compass facility. 9 hours/week. Basic Systems. flexible between 8 am-4 pm, Monday- O p en in gs Have N E LLO 'S NEEDS highly motivated people TEM PE Customer Service and Retail. Scholar­ ships available. Call 9am to 5pm. STUDENT NEED Playing, giggling, singing, and dancing home. Light housework to be done while baby naps. Dobson/Elliot area, hours $150/week. Own transportation required.941-2751 d etails: mother’s helper while mother works at Apply in person, your nights free! N o experience neces­ surveys Excellent commissions. CaM for loving, responsible person to serve as hostesses. Part-tim e, G E T P A Y E D to giggle, 15-25 hours/week. with terrific 2 year old. Looking for mature, Seattle. openings for daytime sandwich cooks and and Sky Harbor. Part-time weekday lunches. Buy il. sell il. lin d il. tell il. S ta le Press ( Idssilieds or 1611:30am and after 1:30pm. 5001 East Washington. mornings, 7565388. Monday-Friday, days/evenings. Training Van c o ver ly, Ahwatukee. Non-smoker. Afternoons, evenings, flexible hours. Own transporta­ On-caH basis. required. lectures, library. Departs 7/29. Book by 2/7 fo r fre e stay 497-2109. ses tion References required. Call Mary Ann, Transportation $1,6751 Concerts, MOTHER’S HELPER needed immediate­ CRISIS INTERVENTIO N Staff, part-time m ornings. Page 19 Friday, January 19,1990 JOEL- C O N G RATS baby! I knew U could waitress, barbacks and clean-up person­ d o it. Good luck this season, you’ re the nel. Apply in person, 1-4 p.m., Monday- best: Love, Jennifer. Friday. 411 South Mill, Suite 203. T H E T A C H I P R A T E R N IT Y Spring Rush schedule Starting January 21st Sunday, 21st: House BBQ starting at 11:00 a.m. Monday, 22nd: Snacks and Malibu Car Racing starts a 7:45 p.m. Tuesday, 23rd: Pizza Dinner and Hypnotist plus other entertainment. Wednesday, 24th: Panama Night at Arizona Survival Games. Dinner included. Starts at 6:45 p.m. sharp. (Limited space.) Thursday, 25th: Preference Dinner (by invitation) 6:45 p.m. at the Holiday Resort. Friday, 26th: Blowout Bash. Saturday, 27th: Traditional ox Shootout. RESTAURANTS/ BARS Footlong Sub Buy One G et One Buy any footlong sub or reg. salad plus a 22 oz. soft drink and receive a sub or salad of equal o r lesser price for F R E E . T h is coupon valid only at 4 East 10th Street, Tem pe. N E Com er of 10th St. & M ill A ve., Tem pe Center Not valid with other coupons or discounts. 829-7213 O ne coupon J T J I I .1 1 1 f A f A L p*rpurcha*a v ä U J I H I P E xp ire s 1' 3 1 ' 9 0 »I Pasc 20 State Press Friday, January 19,1990 Conveniently located at the NE Corner of Broadway ^ and Rural Roads SH lZV ket ™ ™ Broadway & Rural WELCOME BACK ASU “Serving Your College Needs” FREE w/coupon 20 oz. Fountain Drink with purchase of BBQ G LA ZED CH ICKEN or BREAST O F CH ICKEN SANDW ICH MILKY W A Y AND SNICKERS We gladly accept MasterCard, Visa and American Express for all purchases. Lim it one coupon per custom er 3 fo r Junior Mint s and 3 for 99