C opyright, S tate Press, 1990 Tem pe, Arizona Tuesday, January 30,1990 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Voi. 72 No. 78 State gives up plan to restrict tuition waivers By NICOLE CARROLL State Press Legislators searching for a way to reduce the Arizona education budget are no longer toying with the idea of taking away university faculty and staff tuition w aivers, a state senate»' said Monday: ‘ ‘1 nor anyone else I know h as any intention of introducing legislation (restricting w aivers),” said Sen. Je rry G illespie, R-M esa. “ ft’s going to rem ain in tact,” Currently, full-tim e employees of state universities can register for up to six credit hours and pay only $25. Those employees taking seven or more hours and dependent children of employees pay for 25 percent of their tuition. In Decem ber, legislators were exam ining the elim ination of tuition w aivers as a possible means of increasing university revenue. G illespie said that although he w ill take no legislative action, he still opposes the waivers because they are only offered to university employees. “ If one section of state employees receive a benefit, all (state) employees should, ’ ’ G illespie said. A spokesm an fo r Sen . P a t W right, R -G le n d a le , chairwoman of the Senate Appropriations Com m ittee, said W right would not seek to elim inate the w aivers either. Shelly Sorensen, vice chairm an of the ASU Classified Staff Com m ittee, said University employees value the benefit of reduced registration fees and were worried about its possible elim ination. “ That’s good news for u s,” Sorensen said. “ That’s a real concern for a lot of sta ff here.” Last sem ester, A SU paid $635,190 to provide 1,449 faculty Good Day Sunshine An unidentified ASU eenlor management major takes advantage of the warm winter temperatures and afternoon sun outside McCUntock Hall Monday. Turn to Watvoia. page 8. Faculty delays personnel plan Senate motion would open staffing, tenure decisions By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press A Faculty Senate subcom mittee decided Monday it would need more tim e to discuss a motion that would give faculty members a say in department decisions that currently are made exclusively by adm inistrators. The Personnel Committee decided to meet again F eb . 12 to continue its discussion of a proposal made by political science Professor Dickinson M cGaw that asks that faculty be granted the right to vote on personnel m atters within the department. Such m atters would include the hiring, promotion, retention and tenure of faculty m em bers. M cGaw said the power of the facu lty has been “ disinfranchised” in the past few years and the measure would give the faculty a chance to gain back some of its power. "" “ This is an opportunity for departments to be selfexpressive,” M cGaw added. Currently the dean of each college creates adm inistrative search com mittees and m akes a ll decisions regarding personnel. Fin al confirm ation comes from the University president and the Arizona Board o f Regents. Some members of the subcommittee said the faculty should not have such a vote in hiring decisions or in granting tenure because their decisions would be based on popularity. “ If a department gets to vote on tenure then it becomes a popularity contest,” said Alleen Nilsen, assistant to the vice president for academ ic personnel. Nilsen suggested elected com m ittee members with three- year terms study the issues of its department. “ An elected com m itte is more responsible,” Nilsen said, adding that votes from the entire department would be “ asking for careless evaluations.” Sen. Ann Casebolt from the School of Social Work agreed with N ilsen. • “ It’s disturbing if non-tenured faculty could read files on those up for tenure,” Casebolt said. In an effort to com promise, M cGaw said that a department would, not have to vote but could determine its own method of decision-m aking. M m M 1 m .1 Page 2 —Alleen Nilsen A su b stitu te m otion w as in trodu ced by Ja m e s Schoenwetter, chairm an of the com m ittee that Would require a three-fifths m ajority of the department before a decision could be passed. This provision would require that decisions be m ade by a m ajority of the faculty instead of just a handful of interested m em bers, Schoenwetter said. Schoenwetter added that department chair positions should not be voted on by the faculty because those positions are officially adm inistrative posts. '-’ J ' The com m ittee w ill pass its decision on to the Faculty Senate during its m eeting Feb. 19. If the F acu lty Senate passes the proposal it w ill go to the President’s O ffice for final approval. 2 •; AK ^ By DAN NOWICKI State Press ‘If a department gets to vote on tenure then it becomes a popularity contest. ’ Survey Says: State Attorney General Bob Corbin earns high marks in a recent po ll as the 1990 election takes shape. Fine arts senator quits ASASU post W / J r w J l } + 2 as 5: NAU students want algebra rem oved as a required course. but their protestations do n't add up. Column. Page 4 la g College of Fine A rts Sen. Stacëÿ Vogel announced her: resignation from Associated Students of A SU Monday due to what she termed “ professional conflicts.” Vogel, a second-year senator who served bn the Appropriations Com m ittee, said she w ill submit her form al letter of resignation to A SASU Executive V ice President M ike Pressendo today. “ It was not a personal conflict with any of the senators or with M ike Pressendo,” she said . “ It was a professional conflict with the w ay things w ere being handled.” . V ogel Vogel said she feels her ideas were m et with a lack of respect and her efforts to organize a college council for the College, of Fin e Arts were thwarted by Senate bureaucracy. The College of Fine A rts has not had a College Council for m ore than two years. “ I promised m yself two years ago, when I first ran for the Senate, that I was going to get a College Council started,” Vogel said. “ I fin ally had people interested, but I couldn’t get any support from the A SA SU council coordinator or anyone e lse .” • “ M ichelle Neilson, the council coordinator, decided that Liberal A rts and P ublic Program s were more Turn to Haalgn, page ». Strike One: Tho Sun Devils baseball team faces Its first loss of the season to CalRiverside in 11 innings. Page 11 Today'» w»«th»r: Partly cloudy, wtth a high In tho low 70a. Tonight'» tow should bo In tha mkMOa. CtaaaMada.............. .............- .................... . 14 Com lea................................................... 10 Polle* noport............ ......................................7 Sporta................................ - ....................... ~.11 Wortd/NaHon..... ......................................... « ...3 - S tate Press Tuesday, January 30,1990 Page 2 Today Meetings •S o ciety of W om en Engineers will have its first meeting of the decade from 12:40 to 1 -.30 p.m. in ERG 493. Scholarship opportunities available. All engineers are welcome to attend. •C h i A lpha C hristian Fellow ship will meet at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel for prayer, fellowship and bible study. All are welcome to attend. •E conom ics A ssociation will -have a short meeting from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m . at Bandersnatch Brew Pub, 125 E. Fifth St. •ECKANKAR will have an introductory video and discusssion at 11:30 a.m . in the M U, Room 209. •U ndergraduate Law C hib will have a social meeting about upcoming events from 4 to 5 p.m . in Armstrong Half, Room 111. New members welcome. •C irc le K International will meet at 7 p.m . in the MU Pinal Room. •G reek S teering will meet to discuss Greek Week budgeting at 7:45 p.m . in the Palo Verde Main Cafeteria. •G reek Events will get ready for fashion show, 5K run, dunk tank, drive-ins and hypnotist at 9:30 p.m. in the UT Lounge. •H ille l Union o f Jew ish S tudents will show the film "Beyond the W alls” — Jews and Arabs in an Israeli prison, rated R, Hebrew with English subtitles. •M U A B Film Com m ittee is showing “ Lethal Weapon II” at 7 and 9:30 p.m. at the Union Cinema in the lower level of the M U. •S o ciety For Hum an Resource M anagem ent will have guest speaker Jim Wellington; APS Employment Manager, from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in BA 401. •M U A B C ulture and A rts C om m ittee will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Graham Room. New members welcome, •A lco ho lics Anonym ous will have an open meeting at noon in the basement of Newman Center (corner of College and University). •S hotokan Karate Club will be offering special beginner’s lessons and practicing a traditional Japanese Martial Art from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the Student Recreation Complex,; Gym C. •B a p tis t Student Union will have Byron Banta speaking on "Biblical Principles for Making Life Decisions” at 7 p.m. at 1322 S. Mill Ave. Poll finds high approval for Corbin By KEVIN SHEH State Press State Attorney General Bob Corbin received h is second highest approval rating since 1986 and has widened his lead over two o f his rivals in the G O P prim ary race for attorney general, according to a poll released today . The Rocky Mountain Poll found that, of 700 Arizonans polled, 35 percent thought.Corbin was doing an excellent or good job, while only 13 percent rated his perform ance as poor or very poor. Forty percent of the people surveyed said they would vote for Corbin if the prim ary were held today, but Corbin has not officially announced his candidacy. “ (The poll) is really nice and I appreciate it, but I ’m not basing my decision (to run) on it ,” Corbin said. He said he w ill to decide whether or not to run sometime this week. Corbin attributed the 13 percent who rated him as doing poorly to followers of form er G ov. E van M echam . Corbin’s office had launched an investigation of M echam that ultim ately led to the embattled governor’s indictm ent. Corbin’s principle rivals, D avid Eisenstein of Tucson and Grant Woods of M esa, were skeptical of the im portance of the poll’s results. “ The (Rocky Mountain Poll) has been ludicrous from the sta rt,” Woods said, adding that the poll was m erely an exercise in name identification. Eisenstein attributes Corbin’s success in the polls to his recent publicity. “ I think he made a. big splash on the Bolles case,” Risonstain said, referring to the newly reopened case on the murder of Don Bolles, a reporter for the Arizona Republic. Eisenstein also said Corbin’s role in reversing the controversial prison-term commutations for two convicted murderers helped. Corbin advised Gov. Rose Mofford that it would likely be legal for her to rescind the commutations when evidence arose that the victim s’ fam ilies had not been notified itt advance of the action. S ta te A tto rn ey G en eral P oll ■ E3 □ 0 CORBIN 40% WOODS 9 % EISENSTEIN 7% UNCOMMITTED 4 4 % Souroei' Rocky Mountain Pofl Woods said early polls won’t be indicative of the race’s outcome. “ Our cam paign is right on track ,” Woods said. Benue Lum bert, a Kingm an resident, announced his candidacy after the poll was taken. He challenged his G O P rivals to a public debate on knowlege of the law . “ I can whip the other two (announced candidates) in relevant law ,” said Lum bert, who is not a law yer. Lum bert said he doesn’t feel not being a law yer w ill hurt his candidacy for the state attorney general spot. “ People have a resentm ent for law yers,” he said. Corbin said, “ H e’s a joke. There’s no way to run for (attorney general) without being a law yer.” L egally, a candidate for attorney general does not have to be a law yer, according to Richard Brown, director of A SU ’s law library. But Woods concurred that Lum bert “ is not a serious candidate,” The Rocky Mountain P o ll, an independent, non-partisan survey conducted by the Behavior Research Center of Arizona, is based on 700 telephone interviews statew ide. The m argin of error is estim ated to be plus or minus 6.6 percent. T he State Press Magazine Business College Council Congratulates Their New Officers HAPPY HOUR Mon.-Fri. 4-7 PM FREE FOOD REVERSE HAPPY HOUR Mon., Tues. & Thurs. 10:30 pm -1 am B ill B aber B la ke B riscoe D avid V illa ve rd e K a rl Kuo J e ff W o lla rd A le x E rickso n S un Jone s M ike C ro a tti R ich a rd Joach im P resident E xe cu tive V .P . V .P . o f A c tiv itie s V .P . o f F inance V .P . o f P u b lic R e latio ns V .P . o f P u b lica tio n s V .P . o f C om m unications S enator S enator Come to our first meeting TODAY at 3:15 p.m . in BAC 218 ★ Open to all business students ★ No membership dues ★ Happy Hours Applications Accepted at BAC 219 or call 965-7441 9 mk Ike (uh m i Make a di W o r ld / N a lio n Page 3 Tuesday, January 30,1990 S tate Press New national budget a lesson in giving, taking Cites trees, trains, saving accounts W ASH INGTON (A PI - President Bush’s budget prom ises to save your fam ily $114,000 in taxes over the next 25 years if you can set aside $5,000 a year. It makes enticing prom ises, too, if you love trees, have a houseful of tots or are fascinated by m agnetic levitation. But in budgetry, an exercise somewhat rem oved from reality, the budget that giveth also taketh aw ay. H ie taking would come from people who ride Am trak or the airlines, go boating on w eeken d s or w ork fo r the fe d e ra l governm ent. Don’t bank on the $114,000 w indfall or get rid of your boat. By August, when Congress usually focuses oh budgets, Jan u ary’s proposals have a habit of changing or vanishing altogether. Bush’s proposal to require a $25 decal on any recreational or com m ercial boat using waterw ays patrolled by the Coast Guard revived an idea originally floated by President R eagan. Congress balked, and the idea sank. So, too, did R eagan’s proposal to drop the federal subsidy received by the Am trak rail passenger system . Reagan said it would be cheaper to hand an airline or bus ticket to every Am trak passenger than to pay a subsidy averaging $30 for every Am trak rider. Bush’s fiscal 1991 budget plan drops that argum ent, but retains the proposal. His budget director« Richard Darm an, told rep orters M onday that “ th e fed eral government’s responsibility is not to run the railroads.” M agnetic levitation is something else again. The budget document describes it as “ a new transportation technology that relies on the use of m agnets for propulsion and levitation rather than conventional steel- wheel-on-rail technology.” Bush proposed spending $9.7 m illion to check it out. In the m e a n tim e , B ush proposed elim inating subsidies to keep big-city m ass transit system s operating. Darm an said that’s a local responsibility. A ir passengers would pay more — a boost in the 8 percent ticket tax to 10 percent — but would get m ore, for airport construction and hiring 495 more air traffic controllers to help the 17,000 now scanning the skies. The $3 tax on international flights would double. Here’s how that $114,000 w indfall would work for fam ilies able to save: Fam ilies with incomes under $120,000 would be able to open two savings accounts in which husband and wife would deposit a total of $5,000. If the accounts were left untouched for more than seven years, the interest earned would escape taxation. E a rly Withdrawal, in less than three years, would carry a 10 percent penalty on top of the regular tax on interest. T reasu ry Secretary N icholas Brady figures that in 25 years a fam ily would save $395,000 of which $114,000 would otherwise have been paid in taxes. He assum ed the fam ily pays income tax at a 28 percent rate and can find a bank paying 8 percent interest. Poor fam ilies would get a tax credit of $1,000 — subtracted from taxes owed — for every youngster under age four. And parents who adopt children with special needs could deduct $3,000. To start those tots on the road to school, Bush proposed m aking room fo r 180,000 m ore H ead S ta r t youngsters in a program that now enrolls 450,000 needy preschoolers. For investors who hold onto their stocks for three years or m ore, 30 percent of the profits when they finally sell the stocks would be tax-exem pt. That’s more generous than the capital gains tax proposal that, with Bush’s backing, passed the House but stalled in the Senate last year. Federal workers would be among the Associated Press photo President Bush signs copies of the budget for fiscal year 1991 on Monday for members of Con­ gress in th e Oval Office. losers in the budgetary gam e of winners and losers. Bush’s budget proposes a threemonth delay in a federal pay raise that is, scheduled to take effect O ct. 31; end the 30 percent of state and local government workers who are exempt from Social Security taxes — and benefits — would lose that status. Those steps, said the budget, should “ dosé the gap between taxes owed and taxes paid.” What the president proposed for trees was to plant more of them — one billion a year through a $175 m illion reforestatio n program plus another 30 m illion through a community “ plant a tree” initiative. His budget m essage said growing more trees across Am erica would fight the threat o f c lim a tic w arm ing known as the greenhouse effect. An acre of trees removes up to nine m illion tons of carbon dioxide from the a ir, but the country is losing 700,000 acres of trees annually, it said. F in ally, grim prospects for tax sharpies. The budget proposes mere money for enforcement of the tax law s, specifically for collecting delinquent taxes, checking out fake dependent claim s, auditing mortgage interest deductions, and m atching what the taxpayer says he received in interest against what interest payers said they paid. Opposition supporters rally in Bucharest News B riefs B U C H A R E ST , Rom ania (A P) — The government accused opponents Monday of attem pting a coup and supporters rallied behind it, occupying the offices of one opposition party and forcing another’s leader to flee in an arm ored car. More than 15,000 people rallied in Bucharest to support the self-appointed government that took over when Communist dictator N icolae Ceausescu was deposed and executed last month. News media reported sim ilar demonstrations in several other cities, but gavé no details. On Sunday, about 15,000 people protested in the capital, dem anding the resignation of the Council of the National Salvation Front, the name adopted by the government that is running the country until elections planned for M ay 20. A fter in itially declaring its only purpose was to guide Rom ania through the im m ediate post-revolutionary period, the Front recently said it would enter candidates in the elections. That decision angered the fledgling opposition, which says the Front — 150 intellectuals, technocrats and form er Comm unists t - has an unfair advantage. M any opposition politicians have pointed to the Communist pasts of leading Front members and suggested it really is the Com m unist P arty in disguise. As the thousands of pro-government demonstrators gathered Monday outside Front headquarters in Victory Square, three of Ceausescu’s henchmen pleaded guilty in court to com plicity in genocide. F o rm « 1 Interior M inister Tudor Postelnicu, former Central Com m ittee secretary E m il Bobu, and former Politburo member M anea M anescu, along with Ion D inca, a form er Politburo member who pleaded guilty Saturday, a d m itte d su p p o rtin g C e a u se scu ’s order to shoot dem onstrators at the revolution’s outset. About the Sunday protest, Front member Silviu Brucan said it was organized by the Peasants P arty, which was a dominant presence in Parliam ent before World W ar II and is thought to be the strongest opposition party now. BruCan, a ranking Communist who fe ll out with Ceausescu aft«* criticizing his dictatorial methods, told reporters the rally was an attem pt to overthrow the Front. “ Their shock troops cam e close to the m ain entrance of the building," he said. “ The whole event amounted to a putsch, a coup d’etat;” Peasants P arty spokesman Ion R atiu said of Brucan’s allegations: “ The whole tiling was turned around to justify their actions today.” He spoke at a news conference held in the hotel room he has called home since returning last week from decades o fse lfexile in B ritain. Honecker to be tried for treason E A ST B E R L IN (AP) — E rich Honecker, who ruled E ast Germ any for 18 years until his downfall in October, was arrested im m ediately after his release from a hospital Monday and w ill be tried for treason, the national prosecutor said. Plans to put the form er Comm unist P arty chief and three mem bers of Ids Politburo on trial in M arch were announced by Prosecutor Hans-Juergen Joseph at a session Of parliam ent, where Prem ier Hans Modrow offered a grim account of the state of the nation. The sw ift action against Honecker, 77, indicates the strength of a nationwide backlash against corruption in his Stalinist regim e. Econom ic problems and widespread unrest have forced Modrow, the em battled Communist prem ier, to move the country’s first free elections up from M ay to M arch 18 and bring the opposition into a coalition that w ill govern until then. More than 100,000 people demonstrated in Leipzig and other cities Monday night. M any called for the election defeat of the Comm unists and reunification with prosperous West Germ any. Moscow fails on consumer goods Associated Press photo Ion Dinca, one o f the four close collaborators of form er ruler Nicolae Ceausescu who are on trial in Romania, is overcome by emotion Monday. The four are accused o f genocide. R atiu, a wealthy shipbuilder and real estate investor, accused the Front of staging Monday’s dem onstrelwns. M any protesters arrived at Victory Square in buseS-and trucks. ■ H Another pro-government rally formed around the building that houses Peasants P arty headquarters, about two m iles from the Front building, and at the nearby Liberal Party headquarters. “ We won’t leave until you dissolve the p a rty !” demonstrators chanted as they forced their way into Liberal headquarters. Peasants P arty leader ComeUu Coposu evacuated the building aided by soldiers in an arm ored car. No injuries were reported at either headquarters. Brucan said three people suffered stab wounds to tile back during Sunday’s protest, but that none was in serious condition. MOSCOW (A P) — New government figures have confirm ed what Soviet shoppers already know: most industries in 1989 failed m iserably at fu lfilling Soviet leader M ikh ail G orbachev's prom ise of more consumer goods. A d ip lo m a t who spoke on condition of anonymity said what Utile increase there,was in consumer goods could be attributed to inflation, a greater emphasis on producing alcohol, and im ports from the W est. Wheat farm ers had a good year, but they were about the tflgy ones in agriculture, according to statistics printed in m ost newspapers this weekend. After an investm ent of $110 billion in agriculture, in 1989, food production ro se ju st 1 percent — not the 6.6 percent expected. w * Most o f tteit sm all increase- cam e in grain, sugarbeets and potatoes. Soviet consumers w ill And the increase in the last category hard to comprehend, since the noripally ubiquitous potatoes are hard to find and are several tim es more expensive on the farm ers’ m arkets this winter. Opinion S late Press Tuesday, January 30,1990 Page 4 M a th path NAU students should be forced to take college algebra "Wife Theory°fRdativibij” B ria n T assin ari Opinion Editor A group of 1,800 NAU students have compounded the educational error of choosing to attend NAU over Arizona State University by signing a petition, asking the NAU officials to rescind the requirement that all students take college algebra. It would be more appropriate if they rescinded the registration of these students and sent them a ll over to work at the M cDonalds (with an abacus to keep track of the Big M acs). The argum ent these pedagogical isolationists are clinging to is that m ath is unimportant to their particular m ajors — a slippery slope, indeed, because it is difficult to im agine how a person taking the first step in a career can know what is, and is not, relevant to his future. These students are obviously less concerned about getting an education than they are about keeping their evenings free to watch “ M *A*S*H*” reruns. However, I am going to refrain from belaboring the point that Am erican students finish last on ju st about every test of knowledge im aginable' — with the possible exception of the M TV Top-10 video Countdown. We’ve all become accustomed to the fact that in addition to not being able to read, Johnny can’t add. In discussions I’ve had with m y friends, most have said that while they support the tightened math requirements here at A SU , they are glad they don’t have to meet them. This is too bad. It’s too bad that m ath is treated like the plague by university students, grade-school children, parents, the media and just about everyone else in North Am erica. Kids are socialized early in life to think that math is hard and bad and something to be avoided at all costs, like cod liver oil. But it shouldn’t be this w ay. M ath is just a language of logic. You have to put in the hours to learn the syntax of the ‘ language before you can speak it. Learning algebra is to m ath what learning spelling and the rules of gram m ar are to English. Only when one m asters the language of m ath can one write the essays of logic that are calculus or differential equations. In the sam e way that English professors don’t sit around conjugating verbs for fun, m ath teachers don’t worry about when train A w ill m eet train B if train A leaves one hour before train B . This is the boring part of the discipline, but it is necessary to learn the basics before moving on to more interesting topics. Everyone agrees that students must learn to read and write w ell, and that their failure to do so threatens our country’s future. But for some reason, m ath illiteracy, which is as big a problem as English illiteracy, is winked at because, “ w ell, math is hard.” O f course, the real reason math seems hard is that students are not forced to take enough of it to get past the boring drudgery and into the more interesting areas — or to develop a true proficiency. English would be hard, too, if all the exposure we had to it was our fifth grade gram m ar books. The students at N AU should be forced to take algebra and learn the language of logic because it m ay help them clear their obviously cluttered minds. In addition to providing its graduates with m arketable skills, colleges have another, older obligation — to educate its students in a m ultidisciplinary fashion. The world needs Letters STATE PRESS DARRIN HOSTETLER E ditor ROTC must be stopped Editor: . Reasons for requesting that ROTC be discontinued at A SU : 1) Secretary of Offense (called defense) Chaney has recommended a $35 billion cut in the m ilitary budget. We should and cart help him , and here is one of the places. 2) If the business of R O TC is not “ training to k ill” what is it? Even m y ROTC friends adm it that. Rem em ber C alley and M ai L i?? 3) When the A-bom b w ent o ff at Hiroshima (and overkill N agasaki), D r. A lb e r t E in s tie n ( s c ie n t is t ) s a id , “ everything in the world has changed but our thinking, and we are drifting toward catastrophe!” That was 1945. We are now one world, with world law (only answers to terrorism , adm it it), and with blurred boundaries (which are only in our head, righ t?). The astronauts taught us a lesson, if we would listen, when they said from the moon looking down on our fragile earth, “ There are no boundaries.” 4) D r . E r n e s t B o y e r , fo r m e r com missioner of education and form er head of all h igh «’ education for the New York Higher Education, said in the Mesa Tribune few er myopic vocational m ajors and more people who can think in a clear and logical fashion. Another purpose of college is to expose students to the world so they can find their place in it. M ath is the language used by scientists to describe our world; without it one cannot understand how our world works. So, when NAU students claim that math is not relevant to their m ajors, they are, in essence, saying their m ajors aren’t relevant to the world. L et’s hope the adm inistration at N AU doesn’t let the students off too easily. Although the debate has already been cast in the old light of m ath is bad, adm inistrators should m ake the dissenting students take the algebra class anyway. I f the N AU students can’t pass a sim ple algebra class, then they have no claim to a college degree. Send the m essage th at w ithout a ru d im en tary understanding of m ath, they aren’t going to graduate — that’s the kind of language they’ll understand. a week ago, titled “ From Swords to Schools,” that we should cut the m ilitary budget in the U . S. $10 to $20 billion and give it to improve our schools, 5) When G ov. Mofford is proposing cutting education $63 m illion, 5 percent from school budgets, isn’t it prudent to cut the ROTC program from a university, which has no business offering it in this decade? We are not a land grant institution, so the reason for offering it must be the money, and the m ilitary buys the minds and Souls o f our students in the universities. 6) I was reminded by D r. Benjam in Ferencz, Professor of World Law , Pace University, and prosecutor of the N azi War Crim es Trials when he spoke on cam pus, A SU , and was a visiting peace scholar for the Arizona Institute for Peace Education and Research in Tem pe, that h alf of the men that killed 6 m illion Jew s in the death cam ps, Holocaust, m ufiP h.D ’s and one had two! H itler m ilitarized the universities, anid we are now being strangled by what President Eisenhower warned us of, “ the m ilitary industrial com plex” ! Roger Axford Professor, Education Quotable “ The only good ts knowledge and the only evil is ignorance. ” — Socrates CAROLYN HOFIG M anaging E d ito r .......... ..................SUZANNE ROSS C hristine Herbranson. ChristODher Horak, Deborah Nemko. ....M IC HELLE ALLM AN BURGESS Francine Stahl, M ishTell, Kram er W etzel. .......... ........BR IAN TASSINARI CARTOONISTS: M ike R itte r, Julie S igw art. ......LYNN VAVRECK COLUMNIST: Jade Danner .......................... b e n McCo n n e l l Assoc. M agazine E d ito r... .......................... . SHARON KANEY PRODUCTION: Fernando A lvidrez, Nancy Ness. M ark Asst M agazine E ditor...... ...........................MEG HALVERSON N othaft, Robyn Pinkston, Lynne Senzek, T.J. Sokol, E ric ......................... M ICHELLE CRUFF News E d ito r....,................. .................................STEVE KRICUN ...................................... PAUL CORO ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Jay E ckhardt, Dan ..................................... 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The State Press is the o n ly newspaper exclusively published Kjenstad, S h e lli W right. fo r and circulate d on the ASU cam pus. The news and views COPY EDITORS: C harles G ranieri, K risten Johnson, J ill Tibke. published in th is new spaper are not necessarily those of the FREELANCE W RITERS: H eidi Donat, K im berly H arris, J ill ASU adm inistration, fa cu lty, sta ff o r student body. LETTER POLICY The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. Alt 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. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews- Center or else addressed to: State Press, 1.5 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287-1502. Opinion State Press Page 5 Tuesday, January 30,1990 Sinner’s confession Marion Barry remains master of political theater J e ff G re e n fie ld Universal Press Syndicate NEW Y O R K There’s a story they tell about a Southern governor back in the 1950s who had gotten him self quite a reputation for hell-raising. H is bedrock constituency, God-fearing, churchgoing country folk, were becoming unsettled by these stories, and one Sunday the governor visited a rural church and found him self confronted by a parishioner. “ Governor,” the Am erican Gothic said, “ w hat’s a ll this we hear about you carrying on up there at the cap ital, drinking and sporting with women and having yourself a tim e?” In response, the governor grasped the hand of his inquisitor, looked him square iii the eye and said with a choked voice, “ Brother — pray for m e.” I thought of this tale as I watched Washington M ayor M arion Barry go before the T V cam eras before checking into a Florida rehabilitation center. Regardless of the ultim ate outcom e, it w as, in purely political term s, one of the more skillfull maneuvers I have seen in years. Most èlected officials, learning they had been captured buying and using a dangerous drug on videotape, would have resigned their office at once and thrown them selves on the m ercy of the powers that be. Not M arion B arry. He traced his fall to an excessive political devotion; he had sim ply been too busy caring about others to care about him self. It was thé political equivalent of 100 m illion mothers who have pounded their chests with their fists over the centuries, declaring to heaven that “ M y problem is — I ’m too good!”. He never mentioned exactly what his failin g was — a wise manuever, considering that a specific adm ission of drug use would have opened him to charges of perjury, since Barry had repeatedly told grand juries he was not a drug user. He sim ply announced that he had a problem and would set about healing him self. A spokeswoman then told the press that the m ayor’s real problem was alcohol abuse — a failing that is fa r more socially acceptable in Am erica than the use of drugs. What is likely to com e next is right out of a handbook of The USK.YOF political relations strategy: In a few weeks, the mayor will check out o f Hanley-Hazelden and stage a triumphant return home. Before a packed church, surrounded by friendly clergy, the m ayor w ill declare him self purged of toxins, ready and able to return to the business of leading the great city of W ashington. H e w ill likely eagerly confess that he has sinned. Look for appearances on local talk shows, on a Barbara W alters Special, on “ Donahue” and “ Oprah,” where members of the studio audience w ill praise him for his courage in confronting his weakness and dealing with it. Members of the studio audience w ill lustily applaud. B arry’s supporters w ill charge his critics with a racist double standard: They w ill point to the white celebrities who have returned to their lucrative work after a stint at Betty Ford and ask why this black leader should not be accorded BARRY. the sam e privilege. Meanwhile, the years of lies and scandals, the appalling state of the public schools and the public hospitals in the D istrict of Colum bia, the hundreds of m illions of taxpayer dollars stolen -or w asted, the condition of what the W ashington M onthly m agazin e c a lle d , “ th e . w orst government in A m erica,” a ll w ill be swept aside as the celebration focuses on the redemption of Marion B arry. To be sure, this m ay not work; it w ell m ay be that this tim e, M arion B arry went too fa r, even for his rem arkably loyal and patient base. At the least, however, the m ayor’s perform ance shows that the use of crack m ay not affect that part of the brain where the instinct for political survival is located. So fa r, B arry has played a losing hand with the skill of a riverboat gam bler. Clean Air Act could save billions of dollars, lives C ody S h earer North American Syndicate W ASHINGTON - A fifth of the world’s population, more than a billion people — breathe contam inated air every day that is above international safety lim its. From Warsaw to M adrid to Los Angeles, air pollution is inflicting a mounting toll on health and the world environment. Anyone who doubts that pollution is now a m ore im m ediate and perilous threat to hum anity, than say nuclear weapons, should peruse an alarm ing report issued here last week by the Worldwatch Institute. The study offers exhaustive health statistics from around the world. It claim s deaths in Athens to be sixfold on heavily polluted days. And industrial pollution in Bombay leaves the air so putrid that a day’s breathing is tantamount to smoking h alf a packet of cigarettes. W hile a ir pollution in urban Am erica may not be toppling citizens on the sidewalks, it’s hardly som ething to brag about. It’s estim ated to cause up to 50,000 deaths a year and to cost $40 billion in health care and lost work days. Over the next several weeks, the U , S. Senate w ill have a chance to make history by tackling clean a ir legislation when it considers the reauthorization of the Clean A ir A ct. Though there is little doubt some kind of green legislation w ill be approved this year, it’s uncertain how stringent the new air pollution controls w ill be, what they w ill cost and who’ll pay for them. T h e r e a s o n th e C le a n A ir A c t reauthorization process is so controversial is that Senate B ill 1630 is not your typical sell-out legislation, at least a t this stage of the debate. It contains a provision to combat acid rain, toxic a ir pollution and three pollutants that exceed Clean A ir A ct health standards in many cities: ozone, carbon monoxide and fine particles. The bill also requires a phase-out of chem icals that deplete the stratospheric ozone layer, regulate m unicipal waste combustors and establish carbon dioxide tailpipe standards to com bat global w arm ing. N aturally, a wide range of industries are touched by the legislation, but the most vocal opponents are autom akers and oil company executives. While all aspects of the legislation w ill be debated intensely, three areas w ill trigger the greatest controversy, they are as follows: •Acid rain legislation that mandates polluting electric utilities to fund the purchase of technology resulting in a 10 m illion ton. per year reduction in sulfur dioxide emissions by 2000; •The future of cleaner-fueled vehicles that operate on m inim ally polluting alternative fuels, which are intended to cut motor vehicle emissions in cities not com plying with national air standards; •Several provisions that are intended to control more than 100 toxic pollutants em itted by U . S . industries. E n v iro n m e n ta l P ro te ctio n A g e n cy o ffic ia ls suggested on Ja n . 19th that approxim ately $40 billion would have to be spent yearly to im plem ent all aspects of the Senate b ill. But industry lobbyists predict the private sector and government can expect to underwrite as much as $104 billion a year to facilitate the legislation. To m ake sure that its interests are not short changed, the Clean A ir Working Group, a consortium of 2,000 companies com prising a wide range of industries, has been fie r c e ly lob b yin g m em bers of Congress to move cautiously in amending the Clean A ir A ct. The group has even produced national television ads warning citizens to learn about the costs of com plying with a strict clean a ir bill. One of the industry dram a pieces alerts sm all businesses th at errors in paperw ork requirements alone would yield a fine of $25,000 per day, per violation. In recent weeks, CAW G put together a group of 40 senators to ask related agencies to develop detailed stafe-by-state, industryby-industry cost estim ates on im plem enting the reauthorization. As part of its stalling strategy, W illiam F a y , the adm inistrator of CAW G, adm its to resorting to any plan that w ill pressure senators to slow down the legislative process on this m atter. He has ch arged the Sen ate lead ersh ip w ith “ railroading” the bill through com mittee without discussion. Now he wants a fu ll, deliberate debate. In the middle of this high-stakes poker gam e sits President Bush trying to befriend a ll parties. But how can the president look out for the public interest while protecting industry’s pocketbook? Aren’t those roles conflicting? O f course they are. Since the beginning o f the year, President Bush has taken two steps to please the environm ental com m unity. He endorsed the elevation of the Environm ental Protection Agency to cabinet level status and signed a proclam ation to com memorate A pril 22 as “ E arth D a y .” In the later cerem ony, he hedged his environm ental passions by warning Congress that he intended to veto any clean air m easure that was “ too re s tric tiv e .” R esponding to delirious criticism by industry groups that S1650 would impose overly stringent and costly controls on business, Bush made it clear he was only going to approve “ carefully balanced (legislation) to restore clean air for a ll Am erican while sustaining job creation, com petitiveness and economic grow th.” Unfortunately, President Bush can’t be the eternal accom odationist. A t some point he’s going to have to move beyond the politics of cosm etics and em brace CQ2 emissions reductions in autom ibiles, as opposed to letting them be decided upon in an international forum 10 years from now. Whether he exudes such leadership in private or public m akes little difference. But he can’t have it both w ays. The president says he wants the Clean A ir A ct passed in tim e for the A pril 22nd commemoration of the 20th anniversary of Earth D ay. But should the legislation not be approved by then, one can conclude that the vested hands of monied interests have soiled th e p u b lic w e lfa r e o n c e a g a in . S tate Press Tuesday, January 30,1990 1 -H O U R f o 12 exp...... 15/24 exp 36 exp 2.99 4.99 4.99 6.99 6.99 8.99 a s te e « # * •FAST S H r.'S ervtee or as volume permits. 110.126. 35mm o r disc full fram e C-41 color p rin t film . Coupon must accompany order (no reproductions). Not pood on reprint orders o r any other coupon/offer/ discount. Disc and 4 " may be longer. 3228 S. M ill ..... 930 W. Broadway.. r o L data systems . POSTERS »1 2 *» 20 X 30 color poster. From 35mm heg. Sorry No cropping Good Thru 5-31-90 965-2379 O R C L H IN T E R N A T IO N A L " 829-1350 EDUCATIONAL DISCOUNT PROGRAM W IN T E R S P E C IA L S !! SME S u p e rS p o rt M odel 2 laptop Is a XT compatible with dual speed 8/4.77 M hz 8088 processor, two 3.5* 720K drive, 640K RAM , hill size backlit sapertwist LC D screen, L is t $5.51 »999 E D P R IC E SRG-36-100 W hile S upply Lasts Z-28 6-LP /1 2 Is a 12 M H Z 80286 u ro wait state, small footprint desktop with a 20 M B harddisk, 1MB RAM , one 3 J" noppy drive, a M O U SE, parallel port and 2 serial ports and 14* FTM C O LO R monitor. With M S D O S and I_____ Z Z _____ 1 1 _ _ _ ________ I s j Microsoft Windows with Write and Paint L O W C O S T , Y E T P O W E R F U L , W IT H A M O U S E COUPON GOOD THRU 5-31-90 | S u p e rsp o rt 286 is an 80286, switchnble 12/6 M hz, zero wall slate laptop with 20 M B harddisk, one 3.5* 1.4 M B floppy drive, 1 M B oi RA M , parallel port, serial port and a fall size backlit supertwist LC D screen. Software in­ r cluded Is Microsoft D O S. F A S T , P O W E R F U L A N D P O R T A B L E !! Su p e rsp o rt 286e is an V G A 80286, switchnble 12/6 M hz, zero wait state laptop with 20 MB harddisk, one 35* 1.4 MB floppy drive, 1 M B o f RAM , parallel port, serial port, and a hill size backlit supertwist LC D screen. Software included is $1999 $1999 $3399 utfmonocMome monitor $1749 $2998 $2299 $3999 *victr-40 nib harddisk $2599 $2999 $4999 '“'with 40 mb harddisk Microsoft D O S. B A T T E R Y P O W E R E D V G A P E R F O R M A N C E !! Z -3 8 6 S X M o d e l 40 Is an 80386 S X desktop running at 16 mhz with 2 mb of RAM , mouse and a 3.S* 1.44mb diskdrive, The system comes with a color 14" FTM monitor.. Com es with M S DOS and Microsoft Windows with Write and Paint R E T A IL $999 parallel, serial and RGB ports, four hour battery, and an A C ndipter/cbarger. D O N 'T L E A V E F O R C L A S S W IT H O U T IT !! 36 exp 35mm 839-6834 820-7154 CO M PASS, M OEUR B U ILD IN G , ROOM 108 ' rm Vaiusato 2 -H O “ mm UNION M V T O M ft N O W *5 £ o rl VMUSSto sa I B M ü s eSslfe® ff9STi@ A THE UNDERGRADUATE» LAW CLUB New Members Meeting ASU College of Law Tuesday, January 3 0 , 1990 Armstrong H all, Room 1 IT , 4 p.m. Everyone W elcom e ALL THE BEST FROM THE BEST IN TEST PREP. S T A N L E Y H K A P L A N E D U C A T IO N A L C E N T E R L T D . I S T H E B IG G E S T A N D B E S T T E S T P R E P O R G A N IZ A T IO N IN T H E W O R L D . C O U R S E S IN : S S A T , P S A T , S A T , A C H IE V E M E N T S , A C T , G M A T , G R E , G R E B IO , G R E P S Y C H . L S A T , IN T R O T O L A W S C H O O L , B A R R E V IE W , M C A T , D A T , T O E F L , N A T IO N A L M E D IC A L B O A R D S , M S K P , F M G M S , F L E X , N C L E X -R N , C G F N S , N A T IO N A L D E N T A L B O A R D S, C P A , N TE, S P E E D R E A D IN G , A N D M ORE. 1 KAPLAN E n r o ll in n e x t te s t a n d ne t th e n e x t tw o te s t d a te s F H K K • tWTCMiZ TUESDAYS O ím iÁ d g Men’s Code> fateti MEN’S FILA & VUARNET ACTIVEWEAR SHIRTS, MOCKS, FASHION SWEATSHIRTS A CARDIGANS PANTS TOO! Reg. $28.00 g g io s to «»go M e d & « te r a If Perfect $24.00Value NOW * 7 " R eeb o k f CAUPMN»41 MEN’S llu m f t i RUGBYSHIRTS TEES! TEESl TEES! MEN’S SWEATSHIRTS & SWEATPANTS G reat For WINTER! If Perfect $13.00 NOW Stripes & Solids Great Styles Special Assortaient Reebok Tees • $18.00 NOW Casual Pants MEN’S OCEAN PACIFIC AND HOB1E SHORTS Great Assortmento f Colors & Styles. Get A Cheap Jum p On S pring! *« $Q 99 Reg. $29.99 SSL adkJas *"•*“ JP ': M en’s & Ladies’ All Cotton—Made For Better Storps *2” or2(o,*500 /A G & / |^Q yy turtleneck s Assorted Styles $599 $099 M EN ’S DOCKERS SPORTSWEARaOSEOUn REEBOK SPORTSWEAR Reg. *35.00 NOW NOW JUNIOR S’/LAD IES’ Men’s b st MOCK TURTLENECKS 4 TEES Life's A Beach - Sundek - California Beach Co.- Surf Fetish MEN'S TEES - Great Collection of California Surf and Athletic prints Values to $18:00 ■ R e g .$20.00 NOW $ 2 9 * MEN’S - LADIES’ E t o n i e Leather Basketball «Tennis • Running • Aerobic • Track' Now Balance *19»» sh o e s Hi Tops & L o Tops values to $6s.oo , * MEN’S TURTLENECKS-TURTLENECKS m AB Cotton From Champion. Values to $24.00 MOW TODAY ONLY ■ Woodshed I Baseline & Mill 831-WOOD Woodshed II Enjoy Sports on our 2 Satellites Dobson & University and 9 Screens 844-SHED TUESDAY, JANUARY 30TH 10:00 A .M .-7:00 P .M , ■ m VBA9 ■ S tate P resi m Tuesday. January 3 0 .1990 SH \P W CM EK .» Mall Services and Check Cashing, Etc. Student Publications MAIL SERVICES • UPS • AIRBORNE POSTAL SERVICE • P.0. BOXES COMPLETE SHIPPING CENTER — SEND IT OR RECEIVE IT PACKAGING SUPPLIES « COPIES 5C • NOTARY PUBLIC FAX TRANSMISSION AND RECEIVE CENTER— FROM $1 A PAGE M O N IV State Press Sun Devil Spark Yearbook 1989 INCOME TAX CORNERSTONE MALL UNIVERSITY Hayden’s Ferry Review Student Handbook 9 4 0 E . U N IV E R S IT Y N o . E l OS in Th e C o rn e rsto n e FAX 968-6737 W ASTING AWAY AGAIN IN MONDAY: .25 Drafts 7-9 p.m ., $1.25 Any Drink 9-Close 1/2 l^ ce Appetizers TUESDAY: Male Review Night (Male Dancers) 7-9 p.m. $1.00 Bud & Bud Light $2.25 Iglchers, . 50 Drafts $1.50 Ufóell, Wine & Margaritas WEDNESDAY Ladies lig h t , 25 Well, Wine & Drafts All Night w/No Cover THURSDAY: Any Coirft»ny Drink 7-9:30 p.m. $2.50 Long Island Ice Teas 9:30-Close FRIDAY: By HOBART ROWLAND S tate Press C R A M • C H E C K C A S H IN G • P A Y R O L L AD VANCEM EN T 1Ê !EFUAfD Architecture dean hoping to improve school’s programs .2 5 WedlgYine & Drafts 8-10 P.ni. Reverse Happy Hour 10-Close p-for-1 Weft^Wme & Drafts SATURDAY Ladies N ig flll • 25 W dl| | | ine & Drafts 8-Close, No Cover $1.25 Bud & Bud Light for Everyone, All Night! SUNDAY $1.25 AgÊf Drink 7-Close 1/2 Prippipppetizers H A iP V HOUR Monday; through Friday 5-7 p.m. 2-for-1 W^ll, Wine, Drafts & Pitchers This is the fifth in a series o f articles profiling the 10 m ajor colleges at A SU , with special emphasis on the goals each wishes to accomplish in the 1990s. When John M eunier took over as dean o f A SU ’s College of Architecture and Environm ental Design in September 1987, he set out to improve the program s he believed were falling far short of their potential. “ When I arrived here, the college had a well-established school of architecture,” Meunier said. “ Other program s needed more attention.” O f the four subject areas the college offers, only architecture and interior design are accredited. Approval or accreditation of program s in industrial design and urban and regional planning is pending. Students can choose concentrations in landscape architecture and . urban development. When he first arrived, M eunier sail) he was particularly disappointed with the department of planning, a program he hoped would play a m ajor role nationally. But since planning Professor Fred Steiner took over as head of the department last sum m er, M eunier Said he has seen steady improvement and the department is w ell on its way to accreditation. Steiner said student demand for training in this field has contributed to the departm ent’s new found popularity sod academ ic status. W ithin the past few years, Steiner said, applications to the program have tripled. “ There is a demand for people with planning degrees,” Steiner said. “ It’s a unique field .” Steiner attributes the field’s popularity to an increased concern for the environment. “ Urban and environm ental careers are im portant and pressing,” he said. “ H ie issues are alw ays dram atic.” Steiner, who recently contributed his designs to the fin al plans for Tempe’s R io Salado project, is now studying ways to resurrect and beautify the V alley’s neglected canal banks. “ We would like to redevelop the identity the canals used to have years ago ,” he said, A SU professors M adis Pihlak and Edw ard Cook are also involved in the study. M eunier said that with these projects, the College of Architecture is destined to play an im portant role in shaping the com m unity. M eunier said he would like to see the minority situation im prove within the college. In 1988, m inorities m ade up 11 percent o f the college’s 1,266 students, up from 9 percent in 1984. “ The situation is im proving but we’re not where we should b e,” he said. Progress has been made in luring Hispanic men to Hie college, and M eunier adds that a push has been initiated to increase women in the faculty. “ We’re struggling with a cultural attitude toward architecture,” M eunier said. “ Women are discouraged from pursuing an education in the field .” In 1988,35 percent of all architecture m ajors were women, By increasing the number of women in the faculty, Mueunier said he hopes to draw more fem ale students into the college’s most popular program . The new Architecture building, M eunier said, is a real m orale booster and w ill contribute to the college’s academ ic growth. ' ,, ' " The $11.5 m illion expansion project at the com er of Forest Avenue and University D rive opened its doors to students this fa ll. “ The new building was a tremendous boost for u s,” M eunier said. “ It’S a world-class facility and we have to live up to its im plications.” Students view the structure as an added convenience and feel that it increases student and faculty unity. “ A ll of my classes are concentrated in qne or two buildings now,” said senior architecture student K arl Chavez. “ It makes things much e asier.” Senior urban planning m ajor D avid G ravel said the new structure has given students and faculty a sense of pride and togetherness. But then, Chavez said, the students and faculty have alw ays been close. ’’We’re a ll good friends,” he added. m m POUCE REPORT TERRACE & APACHE • 731-9182 STATE PRESS * Comics Page 10 State Press ^Juesday^Janua^^^IWO Calvin and Mobbes by Bill Wattérson The Far Side Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau' S O HOW A R E THE TROO PS, m r . v ic e PR ESID ENT* \ G O O D ! ThB V LOOKED TAN , R ESTED , H O T A TA LLU C E TH EY'D BEEN M A H IN V A ­ S IO N ! THE O N LY P R O B LE M IS TH E Y 'R E S T IL L H E R E . THE W H O LE R E A S O N 1 C A M E DOW N H ER E W ASTO R EASSU R E O U R F R IE N D S TH A T T H IS M A S A S H O R T­ TERM , O N E-TIM E INTERVENTIO N! IT S N O T EAS Y C ARR YIN G A M ESSAGE LIK E TH A T A LL CHER LA T IN A M E R IC A -T O CO UNTRIES L IK E ...L IK E ... W H A T 'S T H A T O N E W IT H TH E B E A C H E S ? Ivory Towers by Gary Larson R IG H T . E S P E C IA LLY IF YOU P O N T W HATEVER. by Mike Ritter TA ILO R ' G t E S S WHO CT/w ^ FORGOT TD CLEAN OUT TH£ REFRIGERATOR B E FORE CHRISTMAS BREftt<>l. H News: 965-2292 B R A D EN T O N , F la . (A P) — As if there weren’t enough scream ing, hood-pounding car com m ercials oh television, a Bradenton dealer has launched plans for his own network consisting m ostly of car ads 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Tom Stim us, known for his loud car ads and for offering a bounty on Libyan leader M oam m ar G adhafi, is introducing Stim usVision. It prem ieres M arch 1 on a cable outlet here with plans to expand to the Tam pa, St. Petersburg and Sarasota m arkets. Aside from advertising his dealerships, it w ill include public-service announcements on m issing children and wanted crim inals, lost-and-found ads, a swap shop and even rom ance advice segm ents starring — you guessed it — Tom Stim us. Stim us has been on T V before. It was on a national talk show in 1986 that he said he wanted to raise $10 m illion for bounty on G adhafi. H is cable channel w ill be leased for about $1 m illion over four yearn, Stim us said. U-LOCKS $9 9 5 * 1 8 S P E E D IN D E X E D “ Çreat ItaCian J-ood ’’ 894-M AM A 106 E. University Dr. EVEN IN G SPECIALS Watch for O ur Lunch Specials oz. Soft Drink or Draft Ice Cream Cone $ 2 2 9 »269 • Movies and Players 5 0 % F IN A N C IN G & L A Y A W A Y 3 $34 9" PERSONAL PIZZA 1 FREE TOPPING oz. Soft Drink or Draft $240 Ice Cream Cone SP A G H E T T I D IN N ER With Salad & Garlic Bread $299 14 oz. Soft Drink or Draft Icé Cream Cone 894-6852 14 o z. S o ft D r in k or D ra ft $ 2 5 9 Ice C re a m C o n e BUY A 14" PIZZA Receive a Pitcher a leer or Soda for . . . . £ Includes 2 free Ice Cream Cones k 'In a Hurry — Call Ahead" TERRACE s •■ t \ 1212 E. A P A C H E B LV D ! one block east of ASU • w/BIke Purchase (exp. 2/11 /90) 14 HAM & CHEESE SUB O FF FREE: AALLL U S E D B IK E S W A TE R B O T T L E & C A G E * 1 YEA R FR EE A D J U S T M E N T S * EXPERT REPAIRS O N ALL MAKES "KILLER CALZONE" 14 WE RENT VIDEO LASERDISC M TN B IK E S the BETA store D aily Fri.-W éd. 12-8 p .rti. Closed Thursday 2240 N. S cottsdale Rd., Suite 5 Tem po, AZ 85281 5 minutes fromASUl 990-9332 N Yb APACHE . * TH E ' ryjTTEfg) C $5 OFF ands B row se th ro u g h o u r 3 flo o rs o f: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette • S e ll o r Trade Regular Price Men $15 • Women $17 y o u r books a t C hangin g H ands. 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 7 0 9 S . F o re s t A v e . North of University Ave. Mon-Fri9-9 H BOO K STOR E w ith th is c o u p o n (Participating Stylists Only) OPEN EVENINGS: h a n g in g Sat 9-5 F o r q u a lity clo th and paperbacks (no te xt­ books, please) we pay;30% o f our resale price in cash o r 50% in trade-in cre d it w hich m ay be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M -F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 S u n . 12-5 414 M ill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 Sports « « . « ^ _ _ _ _ _ ,E 2 2 £ L Ü Riverside outslugs Devils in 11 innings, 8 -5 By SETH SULKA State Press Scott Troyanos/State Press ASU shortstop Anthony Manahan, who hit a two-run homer, sets to throw out a Highlander. The long ball had been a great friend of the A SU baseball team so far this season. The Sun D evil batters had hit a home run in each of their first five gam es and the pitching staff had yet to give one up. But that changed somewhat on Monday as UC-Riverside (3-0) out-slugged A SU , 8-5, in 11 innings of non-conference play at Packard Stadium . Although Sun D evil hitters kept their streak alive with three home runs, the pitching staff gave up its first home run of the year — along with its second and third ones, too. “ It kind of caught up with u s,” ASU Head Coach Jim Brock said of the long ball. It especially caught up with the Sun D evils (5-1) in the top of the llth inning. With two out, junior G ary Tatterson (1-1) gave up a w alk to freshm an Chad Townsend and a single to junior Troy P ercival. Sophomore M ark Saugstad then followed with a three-run belt over the left field fence. “ It could possibly be his only one of the y ear,” Brock said of Saugstad’s first home run of the season. “ H e’s their number nine hitter and I think that he just tries to m ake contact — but he jum ped a ll over that one.” Brock said that even though Tatterson, who relieved Tony Pena in the sixth, pitched an “ outstanding” gam e, he “ tired very badly” at the end which led to the game-winning homer. However, ASU jum ped on a few balls of its own. In the second inning, the Sun D evils had back-to-back homers by sophomore M ike Scialo, his second of the year, and junior BUI Faysak which gave them a 3-2 lead. Without a doubt, though, the biggest smash of the day belonged to A SU junior Anthony M anahan, who cranked one over the 30-foot-high “ Green Monster” in center field. M anahan, who said he got a low, slow, curve baU, became only the eighth player in Packard’s 16-year history to accom plish that. Brock said that he wasn’t sure that Manahan had that much power. “ It’s an unbeUevable thing,” Brock said. “ It wasn’t windaided at a ll. It was just a line drive that was crushed.” Despite the three home runs, A SU went seven for 39 batting for a .179 average. Brock said that he expected a drop-off after the long weekend series with Long Beach State, but felt the dam age was m inim al. “ In coUege basebaU, as far as hitting is concerned, you reaUy need to m ake an adjustm ent,” Brock said. “ Very rarely do you see a coUege basebaU player who can throw everything. T o . be successful offensively you m ake adjustm ents that you need to against the particular ‘onepitch’ pitcher that happens to be out there. “ We didn’t do that at aU. The right hander (BiU Jordan) was throwing 95 percent breaking pitches and we just did not m ake the adjustm ent. It was a very good lesson for u s.” The Highlanders were led by senior Pete Weber who had two home runs and drove in four runs. Weber gave Riverside the lead in the sixth inning when he foUowed senior M att D avis’ double with a homer. After the Sun D evils regained the lead with Manahan’s tworun shot, junior Ruben A yala singled off Tatterson to bring home Weber in the eighth and tie the score, 5-5, and send it into extra innings. ^ •ASU’s Anthony Manahan has got a hit in each of the first six gam es. He is nine for 23 (.391) and leads the team with 10 R B I. V i •Tommy Adam s, who reinjured his ham string in Saturday’s gam e against Long Beach State, has m issed the last two gam es. Brock said it w ill probably be a couple of weeks before Adam s is fully recovered and avaUable for action. M e n sw im m ers, divers g e t first w in ever at B erkeley By LARRY NEWELL State Press On the strength of its best performance in recent years, the 12th ranked ASU mens swimming and diving team managed to do what the Sun DevU basketball team couldn’t — upset the sixth-ranked Golden Bears on Saturday in a close contest, 71-69, marking A SU ’s first-ever win at Berkeley. “ This is the best team performance we have had in years,” A SU mens swimming Coach Ron Johnson said. “ The m ajor reason we won was our team ’s tremendous enthusiasm and focus during the entire weekend.” Sun Devil sophomore Keith Dennison had a career day Saturday against the Bears, recording a lifetim e best in the 100-yard butterfly (48.86) and winning the 200-yard butterfly (1:49.95). Dennison’s 100-yard butterfly tim e was also an N CA A standard m ark. “ Dennison was the oustanding swimmer o f the m e e t,” Jo h n so n s a id . “ H is perform ance w as re a lly excep tio n al, especially considering that he did it unrested and unshaven.” Complementing Dennison was freshman team m ate M agnes Eriksson, who was also a double winner, recording first-place finishes in the 50-yard (21,12) and the 100-yard (45.74) freestyle events. “ Over the weekend Eriksson won a total o f e ig h t in d ivid u al e v e n ts, and his performance on Saturday was definitely a shock to B erkeley,” Johnson said. Other ASU winners included sophomores Terry Flock aad D avid LeBlanc in the 100-yard backstroke (51.96), and 200-yard b re a ststro k e (2 :03.21), re sp e c tiv e ly . Freshm an Fran G rey also tallied a firstplace finish in the 200-meter backstroke (1:52.67). “ C al fielded its strongest lineup and we beat its best, Johnson said. “ This win was not a fluke.” “ This victory definitely ranks among one of the biggest upsets of the year,” Johnson said. The Sun D evil mens diving team proved to be the difference at Berkeley as they scored 12 points, to help A SU pull out the upset. “ The victory at C al w as definitely a team effort,” A SU diving Coach Ward O ’Connell said. “ We were very happy to help our mens team w in.” Freshm an B ill Conti lode top honors in the 1-meter dive (265.95), with sophomore team m ate R ick Saw tell placing second (245.10). In the 3-meter dive junior Drew Johansen finished second (280.875) and Saw tell recorded a third place showing (246.00). Friday’s meet at Stanford followed more to form , as the Sun Devils lost to the third-ranked Cardinal 74-39 in P alo Alto, C a lif. ASU winners were Dennison in the HÉ KjanstacVSta« Praia Sun Devil swimmer Keith Dennison practices Monday after setting a personal best in the 100-yard butterfly Saturday. '200-yard butterfly (1:50.06) and Eriksson in the100-yard freestyle (46.07). “ O verall, Stanford was just too deep,” Johnson said. “ They are a team that has no weaknesses and could possibly be an N CAA championship team .” The seventh-ranked A SU womens team found P alo A lto equally as inhospitable, losing 104-36 to the top-ranked Cardinal, freestyle. On Saturday, the ASU womens team was drowned 84-56 by sixth-ranked C al in Berkeley. Although A SU seem ingly had little to cheer about, Sun D evil womens Coach Tim H ill had nothing but praise about his team . “ I felt very good about this road trip ,” H ill s a id . ‘ ‘ Our a th le te s sw am very com petitively, nnd this has been two of our most successful losses ever. “ R ight now, I am very excited about our chances in February and M arch.” Ice Devils improve record, teamwork in sweep of Stanford By ROBERT LADD State Press The A SU ice hockey team improved its season record to 12-8 by sweeping the Stanford Cardinal 4-2 and 12-0 last weekend in P alo A lto, C a lif. Ice D evil Head Coach Jim Manguso said the team is b e g in n in g to work well together and is im proving each gam e. “ At the beginning of the year, everybody would just take the puck and g o ,” Manguso said. “ Now we’re beginning to move the puck around.” . ■ In Saturday’s gam e, the Ice D evils jum ped to a 3-0 lead in the first period by goals from sophomores Je ff Beske, Dave Sarp and Abel Moreno. “ During the first period it seemed like the sam e situation as F rid a y ,” Moreno said, “ but when we got some breaks and had som e short-handed goals, things began to click .” Once the second period began, A SU never looked back, scoring five goals and four more in the third. Contributing these goals were Sarp (3), junior K evin H icks (2), sophomore Ron Matthews (1), Moreno (1), and junior D ave Peterson (1). ' ; _ ' ‘ “ Once we took the lead, our m ain goal was to get the shut­ out for (goalie) M att (M alec),” Moreno said. “ We wanted to concentrate on tough defense, but we kept putting up goals.” M alec, a junior, contributed to a strong ASU defense by saving 24 of 26 shots on goal in the series. Coach Manguso w as happy with the w ay the Ice D evils spread the puck around and said it is im portant to continue this type of hockey. “ We want to keep im proving our passing,” Manguso said. “ To do well against good team s we m ust be effective at passing tiie puck.” > ' _•*! ’ £ In Friday’s gam e,, sophomore Rob M cClelland scored the first goal with 9:58 le ft in the first period on Beske’s assist. Minutes later, Peterson assisted H icks on a goal that put the Ice D evils on top 2-0. Stanford closed the gap to 2-1 by scoring with 1:02 left in the first period. “ During the first period, we didn’t have m uch intensity,” Moreno said, “ but once they scored, the intensity cam e back and we played a good gam e.” E arly in the second period, the Ice D evils took a 3-1 lead when Peterson stole the puck from center ice and scored unassisted. Hicks finished the scoring for A SU with 13:15 left in the third period. Matthews and Moreno were credited with the assists. Stanford added a late goal in the third period to m ake the fin al 4-2, Ice D evils. The Ice D evils take a four-gam e winning streak to Colorado this weekend when they play Southern ColoradoPueblo. Tüesdnjjjam «ry3^990 Page 12 I® p »IW ig ?"' 11ÏII g/l j 11 A WÈk § é»®ìlÄS PSPS# "e tj Strawberry charged with assault m ft J :'Æ'‘ ASSOCIATED P R E SS COLLEGE BA SKETBALL POLL * The top 25 in The Associated Press college basketball pod, w ith first-pla ce votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 28, to ta l points based on 25-24-23-22-21-20-19-18-1716-15-14-13-12-11-10-98-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 and last weak’s ranking: 1. M issouri (59) 2. Kansas (4) 3. Arkansas 4. M ichigan 5. Duke 8. G eorgetown 7. Syracuse 8. Purdue 9. O klahoma 10. Louisville 11. Illin o is 12. UNLV 13. Connecticut 14. LSU 15. La Salle 16. UCLA 17. G eorgia Tech 18. St. John’s 19. M innesota 20. Loyola M arym ount 21. O regon St. 22. Indiana 23. X avier, O hio 24. Arizona 25. N orth C arolina RECORD 19- 1 2 0 -1 17- 2 1 5 -3 16- 3 15- 2 14- 3 1 5 -2 1 4 -2 14- 3 1 5 -3 14- 4 17- 3 14- 4 15- 1 14- 3 1 2 -4 17- 4 14- 4 1 5 -3 15- 3 13- 4 15- 2 12- 4 15- 6 . PREV 1 2 6 7 8 3 11 13 9 4 10 5 20 16 18 23 13 15 PTS. 1,569 1,510 1,349 1,285 1,223 1,190 1,141 1,034 993 991 969 936 819 779 634 547 522 502 480 391 305 301 185 180 175 .. ^1 22 17 12 25 19 PACIFIC 111 W ;;L - Pet. .889 8 1 AU. GAMES w L P et 883 15 3 GB Los Angeles Police Cm dr. W illiam Booth said Straw berry posted $12,000 bail “ and is back with his w ife.” “ It was very basic type stuff, a fam ily dispute,” Booth said. B aca read a police statem ent that said West V alley officers were called to the Straw berry home at 3:45 a.m . after a report of “ domestic violence.” Lisa Straw berry, 25, said she and her husband had argued and that D arryl, 27, hit her in the face with an open hand, the statem ent said. According to the report, Lisa grabbed a m etal rod and hit Straw berry in the ribs and w rist. Lisa alleged that Com e G e t A Tan. A s F ast A s You Can. U-TAN SUN YOUR BUNS GET THAT DARK TAN N O W !! I P P N 6 S P E C IA L S 1 mo. unlimited only S 39.99 2 wk. unlimited SE7.99 3 2W 12 14 4- ; .750 .737 5 3 3% . 10 8 .500 12 5 .706 6 .333 5 10 1 .556 6 .333 9 .111 9 6 to .500 8 5 7 .375 1 • 8 .111 7 /• 7 12 .368 8 i .889 - 6 3 .667 2 California 5 3 .625 Oregon 5 4 4 .556 Stanford 4 Arizona State 3 . . 3 " - 1 • W E ALSO HAVE EUROPEAN BODY WRAPS 9 66-66 5 0 .824 14 UCLA Arizona Southern Cal Washington State Straw berry was arrested at his home in Encino and spent a “ very short tim e” in ja il at the W est V alley station early Friday m orning, Sgt. Woody B aca said. in beds and booths • A ll new bulbs PAC-10 GAMES Washington E N C IN O , C a lif. — New York Mets star D arryl Straw berry was arrested and charged with assault with a deadly weapon last week after allegedly threatening his w ife with a pistol, police said Monday. 030 m inute sessions PA C -10 STANDING S Oregon State By The Associated Press IT’S HERE AT O ther receiving votes: M ichigan St. 150, Alabam a 106, New M exico St. 77, N. C arolina St. 44, Texas 23, BYU 15, Idaho 11, Providence 7, Clem son 5, P ittsburgh 5, C olorado St. 4, V irg in ia 4, Hawaii 3, Louisiana Tech 3, VHIanova 3, E. Tennessee S t. 1, G eorgia 1, Holy Cross 1, M em phis St. 1, Southern U. 1. CONFERENCE Stele Pres» .556 University Straw berry got a handgun and threatened h er, the report said. A .25-caliber sem i-autom atic pistol registered to Lisa was found in the house, police said. Thé statem ent said Lisa showed “ no visible injury” and that Straw berry had bruises on his ribcage and w rist. “ There was a pistol in the house. I don’t rem ember all of the circum stances,” Booth said. “ He was taken into custody because there was a dispute. We have prim a facie evidence that he had violated the law .” Booth said he did not know whether a court date had been set on the assault charge. An investigation by West V alley officers is continuing, police Said. Straw berry and his w ife were separated in 1987. She has alleged in the past that he has hit her. L ast W ednesday, blood tests established that Strawberry was the father of a child born in 1988 to a woman in St. Louis. Straw berry did not contest the finding and a judge in St. Louis County Circuit Court took under study the amount of child support the A ll-Star outfielder is to pay. COLLEGE TOURS MAZATLAN SPRING BREAK 8 Days w « AC* Holiday 7 Nights 6 I Train Trip Dates: T ri p 4A - M ar. 16-23 T rip 4B - M ar. 17-24 T rip 4 C - M ar. 18-25 FLY TO MAZATLAN 2 e x tra n ig h ts in M a z a tla n . T rip d e p a rtu re d a te s a re th e s am e. C a ll a C o lle g e T o u rs re p listed b elo w fo r fly e r and in fo . 2 1 5 East 7th S treet iM B O fft e ft e e k a g t o ffe r valid w ith c o u p o n only Dave McCarthy........... 921-9543 Greg Abbott. 784-0591 Karen Luxom 951-3078 Laura Marszowski.....„894-1791 Dan Weldon...............784-9592 Erik Hanson................784-9932 Keith Mady ....... 730-1246 S ee o u r big ad in Frid ay’s paper. State Preti Page 13 J u r a d a ^ J a n u a r y j^ iÇ W S tate rivals drop track team at N AU By MATTHEW KA8TER State Press Strictly speaking, A SU hurdler Lynda Tolbert was the top perform er in last Saturday’s track meet at N AU. The most em otional victory, however, went to A SU senior sprinter E d Lovelace, who anchored a dram atic relay win in the last event. But the outstanding perform ances by Tolbert and Lovelace weren’t enough toovercom e the all-around depth of NAU and U ofA . The Sun D evil m ens team lost 84-43 to the W ildcats and 73-46 to the Lum berjacks. The mens losses were softened by the 4x400 relay win. Although he grabbed the baton 20 feet behind U ofA ’s M arc O livier, Lovelace chased him down and won the race. E arlier in the m eet, O livier beat Lovelace in the 200-meter dash. It was enough to beat O livier,-th e 200-meter Pac-10 cham pion, but he also ran his 400-meter leg in 46 seconds fla t, a personal best. D errick Moore and Lenny M cG ill were the only other ASU men to w in. Moore won the 55-meter hurdles (7.64 seconds) and M cG ill finished first in the triple jum p with a leap of 48-feet-U%. ASU distance runner Todd Lew is also put in an exceptional effort in the 3000-meter run. Lew is placed second with a time of 8:47, two seconds behind U ofA ’s Marie D avis; the NCAA cross country champion. “ I think I m ade my move a little too early ,” Lewis said. “ He followed m e and I didn’t have it .there at the end. It’s still a pretty fast tim e for the first m eet of the season and for the altitude. I know I can im prove on it.” The A SU women managed slightly better than the men, winning four of 11 events. As expected, Tolbert dominated in her specialty, the womens 55-meter hurdles. Her winning tim e of 7.70 seconds qualified her for autom atic entry into the N CA A indoor fin als. Tolbertvalso made a surprise appearance in the womens 200-nreter)dash. Although it was her first collegiate 200 ever, she ¿till vron easily in 24.52 seconds. “ Tiiey put me in the outside lane and you can ’t see anyone else unless they get ahead of you,” Tolbert said. “ When that happens, you ju st have to go out hard and keep pushing.” L ife & C a s u a lty T h e A etna C om m ercial Insurance D ivision w ill be recruiting on cam pus Thursday, February 15 W e are recruiting for these positions: •Property & Casualty Claim s Representatives •Property & Casualty Underwriters •Bond Representative Regional relocation required after training. Pre-selection taking place at Career Services K A E T /C h a n n e l 8 American Bartenders School Celebrates 29 years KAET takes the occasion of its anniversary to thank you — donors, volunteers, staff, students and friends — for m aking a nurturing difference to Channel 8 during its first 29 years of service to Arizona. Special recognition will be m ade today to the following for their outstanding support to Channel 8: TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 •F U L L OR P A R T-TIM E JOBS •F LE X IB LE HOURS & PERSONALIZED TR A IN IN C •S TA R T AN-Y D A Y OR EVEN IN G •TER M S — COED COURSES •SER VIN G AG E IN A R IZO N A IS 19 Robert H. Ellis ASU University Relations Warren Goodrich Blue Cross/Blue Shield of AZ b Bruce Hernandez $100 OFT TUITION pate. ¿g .-L'íffj F VALLEYW IDE JOB PLACEM ENT ASSISTANCE N A TIO N W ID E Behavior Research Center EARN EXTRA MONEY Pauline Leveque Retiring KAET office supervisor . , t ' . r - '* ' » '" *§* s, Jonathan and M axine M arshall M arshall Fund of Arizona Robert M atthews Security Pacific Bank Stephanie Now ack Valley of the Sun United W ay Dr. Gerald V. Olson Washington Elementary School District Tim Sullivan Outstanding Volunteer Friend of Channel 8 ■ on STATE PRESS VALENTINE AD ORDER ■Name : v Phone. $1.25 for 15 words or less 15* each additional word Cash m Check • Visa • M asterCard ($6 m inim um on credit cards) Ja ck and Carol Whiteman Empire M achinery '« y j KAET A part o i Arizona State University and serving Arizona since 1961 $1.40 $1.55 $1.70 $1:85 $2.00 $2.15 $2.30 $2.45 $2.60 A d deadline is February 9 , S p .m . jjM a tth e w s Center Basement 965-6731 . Classifieds Page 14 Slate Pic«» Tuesday, January 30,1990 CLASSIFICATIONS: 1. Announcem ents 2. Autos fo r Sale 3. Trucks for Sale 4. M otorcycles fo r Sale 5 B icycles fo r Sale 6. Furniture fo r Sale 7. T ickets for Sale 8 M iscellaneous fo r Sale $. Com puters 10 R eal Estate fo r Sale 11. Apartm ents fo r Rent 12 Townhom es/Condos 13 Homes fo r Rent 14. R ental Sharing 15. Roommate Services 16 Business O pportunities LINER AD RATES: 17 H elp W anted 18. in struction 19. Jew elry 20. Free Lost/Found 21. O n-Cam pus 22. Personals 23. Pets 24 R estaurants/Bars 25. Services 26. Transportation 2 t. Travel 28. Typing/W ord Processing 29 W anted 30. Adoptions 31. M iscellaneous 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for i-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day for 10 + days 15* each additional word The firs t 2 w ords are capitalized. No bold face o r centering. 965-6731 HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: In P erson: Cash, Check (w ith guarantee card), VISA o r M asterCard. W e're located in the low er level o f M atthews Center, room 46H. O ffice hours are 8 a.m .-5 p.m . M on.-Fri. You can also place your ad a t the N orth MU Inform ation Desk (fa ll and spring sem esters only), between the. hours of 9 a m .-2:30 p.m. M on.-Ffi; B y M ail: Send your ad (w ith paym ent) to: State Press C lassifieds M atthews Center, Rm 15 Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 REAL ESTATE APARTMENTS LOOKING FOR the ordinary- You. We need 300 television , com m ercial, and m ovie extras! C all 631-0631. 1988 Benotto R acing Cycle, Shim ano Compo, Dura-Ace. Under 500 m iles. $200. M ark 829-8184 $100 DOWN fo r 3 bedroom , 2 bath, Los Prados townhom e, w ith a ll appliances. W alk to cam pus and pay less than rent! O nly $47,000 - save over $35,000! G reg, R ealty Executives, 941-7705. A S U AR EA ,: 2 b ed roo m , 2 b a th , $ 3 5 0 /m o n th p lu s e le c tr ic ity . A irconditioning, jaccuzzi, no pets, deposit. 967-4789. W IN A H aw aiian vacation o r big screen T.V. plus raise up to $1,400 in ju st 10 days!!! O bjective: fundraiser. Commit­ m ent: m inim al. M oney: raise $1400. Cost: zero investm ent. Campus organizations, clubs, fra ts, sororities c a ll OCMC: 1(800) 932-0528/1(800)950-8472, ext. 10 C lassified s \\ ork for 1 ou AUTOMOBILES 1963 HONDA Accord Sedan. Tan, tinted window s, air-condition, autom atic, cruise, AM /FM cassette. $3,500! 839-3148. 1988 HONDA CRX, SI (new shade). A ir-conditioning, stereo, pow er sun roof, new tire s , 27,000 m ites. A very attractive car fo r $10,500. CaH R obert a t 9214143. W a n t lo w a u to in s .? M o n th ly p a y m e n ts . 9 6 7 -6 5 0 0 FURNITURE FOR SALE, pine dresser and lam p, $75. Light oak coffee table , $100. Am y, 966-2192. W AREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49. chairs from $14, com puter tables from $39, file s , bookcases and m ore. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 5064 South 40th S treet (VV m ile south o f Broadway). MondayFriday, 9-5, Saturday 10-2. 437-12224. TICKETS 4 ROUND trip ticke ts, Phoenix to Los Angelos. February 10-12, $35 each. 966-4934, Jam ie M IAMI VIC E ?. O ne-way tic k e t to M iam i, 2/8/90, leave 9:25am . $200 o r best offer. 543-6033, 941-5431. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AU TH E N TIC PERSO N ALIZED s tre e t signs: W ithout the hassle!! O nly $19.95. W e’Hp rin t “ alm ost” anything. O rder yours today. Best tim e: 6am to 4pm . V isa/ M astercard accepted. 1-800-526-0870. CUSTOMIZED T-SHIRTS fo r organiza­ tions o r individuals. Screen printed o r a ir brushed. Realm 3 A rt Studios, 438-0735. 1965 HONDA Spree. B lack. O nly 400 m iles. P erfect cond ition. $250/best offer. CaH Rob . 764-0600 1967 HONDA E lite 150. Low m ileage, sky blue, recently tuned up. Purchased fo r $2,300, you can drive it away fo r $1,350. O rig in a l ow ner ra re ly used it. C all 967-1010 day, o r 731-3519 night Ask fo r M ichael. G PZ 750 Kawasaki, '8 3 , low m iles. Good running condition. $1,000. Tim , 838-9661. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. N ewly rem odeled. Close to MCC. $53,000 o r best offer. New fin a n c in g , im m e d ia te o c c u p a n c y . 827-8949. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath tow nhouse, im m acu­ la te , a ll appliances, poo l. Close to ASU. Zero down to q u a lifie d buyer. Cali 827-8949. ASU 1 block, $3,500 buys m obile home at 1010 East Lem on, no.14. 12x40, 1 bedroom ; cle an, ready fo r m ove-in. 997-6421 EASY TO ow n, 2 bedroom condo; 13th and Hardy. Like new, furnished, No qua lifyin g, assum e $567/m onth; $2000 dow n. O wner 921-1438. EXQ U IS ITE ' CO NDO, near ASU. 3 bedroom , great am enities. Ideal rental. O nly $63,000. By ow ner, 839-0228. NOVELL 2.15A, SFT. Program m er, m ust have know ledge o f N ovell 2.15A, SFT. Be able to in stall operating system and application packages. Job involves setting up m enus, security; and tape back-up. Send resum e: O cean E nterprises, 5627 N orth 12th Avenue Phoenix, Arizona 85013. HONDA ELITE, 80cc. G ood condition. Helm et arid cover in cluded. CaH 963-8890 XT-COMPATIBLE ZENITH, 512k, 20m HDD, m ouse, m odem , MS-DOS, MSwindow s. $899/offer. C all Velu, 965-2518, 968-5872. KAW ASAKI, KZ750. G ood, fast transporta­ tio n . C lean, and runs very w ell. $650. Call Frank, 966-2261 ZENITH, XT com patible, 8 m hz, 2-360k floppys, m onochrom e. Epson prin te r, softw are. A ll $500 M ark, 834-3272 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS GOOD GRADES... great deal, rustic red b rick, 2 bedroom , V bath, fenced back yard, graduate preferred. 894-8348. LARGE 2 bedroom apartm ents,$350 6643 E. Cheerylynn, S cottsdale. C all Sammy, 994-9242 o r Pueblo 992-RENT. LARGE ONE bedroom apartm ent, V i m ile to ASU. G reat fo r student. C all Suzanne, 967-6Ò00 STAFF, FACULTY, graduate students: m ove’ in special, b e a utiful rem odeled apartm ents. G reat location* W estridge Apartm ents, 894-6468. S tudios & 1 bedroom s a v a ila b le in a s m a ll, peaceful com m unity in North T em pe. FR EE u tilitie s , FREE basic cable! Call for specials. LAMPLIGHTER 946-5523 STUDIO AND 2 bedroom apartm ents. 6643 E. Cheerylynn, S cottsdale. C all Samm y, 994-9242 o r Pueblo 992-RENT. AT 286-12, 1MB RAM, HD/FD. com plete System , $995. AT 386-16 SX, com plete, $1295. Lektronics Arizona, 827-0688. FREE, ONE m onth, from $310. W alk to ASU. Pool, w asher/dryer. B u tterfie ld Park, 1215 South Dorsey. 966-6755. on 4 bedroom house. C lose to A S U . Now $77,900. Custom home. Call Roma Realty • 968-6890 QUEEN-SIZE W ATERBED, good condi­ tio n . Headboard, m otionless m attress, and heater included, $100. A ria diam ond bass w ith case, and Fender am p head, 210 w atts, $450/offer. 649-0409. before 10 pm COMPUTERS BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. W alk to ASU, pool, laundry room . 1 block south o f U niversity on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartm ents. 968-5238 fo r special. APARTMENT HOMES: APARTMENTS SK IS FOR sale. RD Puma’s, 200 centim e­ ters, 1988. Like new. T yrolia, 390-D bindings. S taci; 784-0716. ASU AREA. Studios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartm ents fo r re n t. $260 and up. 966-8838. Big Price Reduction PASSPORT RADAR detector. Best you can buy. Paid ¿ 0 0 new; $150. 829-9281. MOTORCYCLES 1965 HONDA E lite 1250 Scooter. Red. low m iles, never w recked. Fully m aintained $900 M ark, 829-8184 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartm ent, covered parkin g, m odern appliances, laundry h o o k -u p s . 9 4 9 S o u th M c C lin to c k , (betw een Apache / U niversity), Jess Sotom ayer, 897-0516. TOWNHOMES / CONDOS 2 BEDROOM condo fo r rent. V icinity Kyrene/Baseline. W asher/dryer, refrigera­ to r, ra n g e in c lu d e d . $ 5 5 0 /m o n th . 931-6752. S U N R IS E A P T S . Large 1 & 2 bedrooms. $330/$400. 1 block to ASU, DW, laundry, pool. 1014 E. Spence 968-6947 2 B E D R O O M , 2 V i b a th ; T e m p e townhouse. Poolside location, bike to ASU. No pets. Clean and ready to move in to . $650. C all 892-0117 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, w asher/dryer, pool. C lose to ASU. $610/m onth. 921-0279. E N JO Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1 /2 B lo c k F rom C a m pu s B e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th : 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a rt­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le T V . h e a te d p o o l, a n d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. St op by to d a y ! T e rra c e R o ad A p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S. T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 NATIONAL SCHOLARSHIP ASSOCIATION Millions of dollars still available in grants and scholarships for Spring and Fall '90. Award minimum for 2.5 GPA is $500( 4): Send GPA, major, level and $10 approval fee to NSA, 2303 N. 44th St., #161, Phoenix, AZ 85008. Don’t delay! Liner ads m ust be canceled before noon, 1 day prior to publication. No refunds w ill be given. Ads may run fo r any length o f tim e. Canceled ads w ill be credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. ASU AREA. Large, 2 bedroom , 1 bath condo. Fireplace, covered parking, pool. 966-2186. HO T DEAL! A ny part o f town you w ant to liv e in , we have condos. Two bedroom , d in in g room , new ly rem odeled, neatly decorated. P rivate parking at your front door, private pàtio. M ove-in special: $325 p e r m onth. W ith student ID, one m onth fre e . 265-0470, 921-1100 LU X U R Y TO W N H O M ES. 2 and 3 bedroom s. W asher/dryer. V i m ile to ASU. Pools, Tennis courts. 967-4908. S tate Press E rro rs : Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. C all 965-6731 w ith any corre ctions b e fo re noon. The S tate Press is only responsible fo r the firs t day the ad runs in correctly. C orrected ads w ill be extended one day. Changes called in a fte r the firs t day w ill not qua lify fo r a m ake-good. C ustom er E rro rs : * V C orrections m ust be made before noon. C om pensation w ill not be given fo r custom er error. RENTAL SHARING TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS PAPAGO PARK- 2 bedroom , 1 bath. $600/m onth. Available im m ediately. Close to cam pus. M ust see. 921-9421. SPECIAL $100 o ff m ove-in. Charm ing Cape Cod near ASU. 2 bedroom , 1Vi bath, fireplace, pool, refrig era tor, $450/m onth. Desert W ide P roperties 8366631. TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, near ASU* W est o f M ill, quiet residence, covered parking* pool, excellent condition, good insulation- $475. 966-0962. RENTAL SHARING 0 RENT January and February. Close to cam pus. 1 fem ale to share room . Fully furnished. A ll am enities. $180/m onth plus V i u tilitie s . W orthington P lace. Kirsten, 8946173. 1111 East U niversity, no. 114, sem i-private bath. $175/m onth, $175 deposit, Vk u tili­ ties. Pool, ASU close. 966-6308. 12x10 BEDROOM needs non-sm oking ro o m m a te . W a s h e r/D ry e r, c a b le , $205/m onth, plus share u tilitie s . 8366743 14x10 BEDROOM needs nonsm oking ro o m m a te . W a s h e r/D ry e r, c a b le . $215/m onth, plus share u tilitie s . 8366743 BEAUTIFUL HOME, one .b lo ck South o f ASU, desperately needs room m ate. Alan, Y 731-9251.1420 South College CHRISTIAN FEMALE room m ate to share condo. $145/m onth, V* u tilitie s . 968-2472, o r 966-3589, leave m essage. FEMALE, NON-Sm oker. Own room /bath : in fo lly furnished condo. $250 plus V i u tilitie s . H a rd y/U n ive rsity. 965-1854, 9676901 FEMALE ROOMMATE, attractive room in* house. Pool, w asher/dryer, close to ASU. $250/m onth. 966-2360 FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share 4 bedroom , 2% bath townhouse. W asher/ dryer, ow n room. $152/m onth plus Va u tilitie s . C all M ary o r B rigid, 946-1218. Leave a-m essage, w e w ill c a ll you back. FEMALE TO room w ith sam e, nonsm oker. 3 bedroom , 2 bath apartm ent, w asher/dryer, furnished. M any extras in cluding 2 pools, tennis courts, jaccuzzi. 10 m inutes from ASU. C a ll Kim i at 945-7019. ,W HAYDEN SQUARE, M aster bedroom fo r rent. $350/m onth. C a ll 8296160. MALE/FEMALE, to share 4 bedroom hom e. $175/m onth plus Vt u tilitie s . C all 897-8587. NON-SMOKING, Fem ale needed to share m y 3 bedroom , 2 bath, hom e near Fiesta M all. Large bedroom and bath, washer/ dryer, cable, m ircowave. $300, including u tilitie s , phone, etc. 844-1746 PRIVATE BEDROOM at The Towers. Fem ale to take over lease. Ask fo r Kelly, 3506338. PRIVATE ROOM, shared bath, w asher/ dryer in unit, furnished. A ll appliances, pool, fem ale preferred. $180. 965-2184, 893-2577. ROOM IN house, $205, Va u tilitie s . Pool, cable, pool table, w asher/dryer/ Next to cam pus, great location. 967-7150. ROOMMATE TO share house in N orth Tem pe, $225/m onth. 949-1240. SEVEN M INUTE bike to ASU! Own room / bath, share study!! $250 plus V i u tilitie s . Contem porary tow nhouse! Fem ale, nonsm oker. Am ber, 921-2575, 968-9275. SPACIOUS 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartm ent near cam pus. Non-sm oker. C all 968-2278. VERY QUAINT 1 bedroom apartm ent, close to ASU. C all Suzanne, 9676000. ROOMMATE SERVICES IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllll FREE A p artm en t Locating Service A p a rtm e n t E xp ress 437-1048 R oom m ate M atching Service 437-1048 iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiuiiiiiiiiii BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MALE/FEMALE, non-sm oker, 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Fireplace, $250/m onth. 829-4909. UNIVERSITY OFFICE spaces, 400 square feet and up spaces available. Com er of Apache and R ural. P roject m anagement divisio n o f incom ing calls. Free u tilitie s and use o f FAX and copy m achines. Sign lease by January 31 and only pay $1 per square foot fo r Janu ary's re n t. Sign up for 800 square feet, get a m onth’s free rent. 921-9344/921-1100. HELP WANTED HELP WANTED M ALE/FEMALE room m ate to share nice, quiet, 2 bedroom apartm ent. 16th S treet/ G lendale. $265/m onth, u tilitie s included. 3716612. PAPAGO PARK I, 2 bedroom , 1V i bath. A vailable now. Call Tom , 714-840-5593. APARTMENTS ; Money for ASU C lassified lin e r ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). A d v e rtis in g P o lic y : The Sfafe.Press reserves the rig h t to edit or reject any advertising copy subm itted. BICYCLES STAR SEARCH auditions. The television show “ S tar Search” w ill be com ing to Tem pe to hold auditions, specifically seeking talent from Arizona State Univer­ s ity. W e w ill be auditioning students that are interested in appearing on our show who w ould com pete in one o f the follow ing categories: M ale V ocalist, Fem ale Vocal­ is t, Band, Fem ale and M ale Spokesjw rson, Dance, Comedy (individu al d r group), A ctor, and Actress. Anyone w ho is in ter­ ested in an audition should act im m ediate­ ly as we w ill be holding these auditions soon. Please contact: M onte Thomas, C asting D irector. S tar Search, 650 North Bronson, Los A ngeles, C a lifornia, 90004. 213-960-4023. HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: C lassified display ads can begin 2 d a ys after they are placed (if placed before 10 a.m .j. B y P hone: 965-6731 Payment w ith VISA/M C only. $6 m inim um On a ll phone orders. ANNOUNCEMENTS SING LE? MEET new people over dinnerjo in The Dinner C lub. C all 230-4135 fo r free inform ation. WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? V • U B S H O IC S ^ IRVINE PARK 8521 E. M cD o w e ll Rd. O P E N IN G S O O N One &. two bedrefom apartments, ideal roommate situation, pool, spa, tennis, washer/dryer hookup. ■V' in Cinnamon Tree Center [9 0 3 S. Rural Rd.) $399 B N Ö $499 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Seven days per week CALL FOR MOVE-IN SPECIAL 946-5315 Now hiring fo r all positions Accepting applications Monday-Thursday 1 :3 0 -4 :3 0 p.m . Page 15 Tuesday, January 30,1990 S tate Press HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS TRAVEL ADVERTISING SALES R epresentatives needed fo r the S tate Press. No experience necessary, but good com m unication s k ills are. C all Jackie E ldridge 9 i 6-6555. ASSEMBLY PROGRAMMERS, part-tim e R apidly grow ing com pany is looking for students w ith strong m ath aptitudes to w rite softw are fo r Real Tim e/M ulti-user operating system applications fo r VAX and the 68020. To apply, c a ll Ticketm aster at 279-2822. ________ G IRLS, G IRLS, g irts, boys, boys, boys. B icycle rickshaw drivers. Up to $10 per hour. Part-tim e, full-tim e. Apply in person. 224 W est U niversity, No. 109, Tem pe, M onday or Tuesday only, 2pm sharp. STUDENT JO BS: F ull-tim e, $300/week, P a rt-tim e , $15 0/w eek. O penings in Custom er S ervice and R etail. Scholar­ sh ip s availab le. C a ll 9am to 5pm . 838-2633. Located in Tem pe. JUST ONE M ore day till the big kick-o ff of G reek W eek 1990: Them e Announcem ent at Flakey's. AIRLINE TICKET, Phoenix/San Francisco, non-stop. Southw est, departs 10:45am , 2/9, and retum es 7:05pm 2/12. $75. 968-8860 HOSTESS POSITION available, part-tim e, evenings. S alt C ellar R estaurant, 550 N orth Hayden Road. 947-1963. Apply after 4 pm. SUMMER JO B: C ounselors- boys cam p. W estern M a s s a c h u s e tts /g irls cam p, M aine. Top salary, room /board/laundry. T ravel allow ance. M ust love kids and have s k ill in one o f the follow ing activities: A rchery, A rts and C ra fts, B aseball, B a s k e tb a ll, B ic y c lin g , C h eerlead ing, Dance, Dram a, Drum s, Fencing, G olf, G uitar, G ym nastic^. Hockey, Horseback, Karate, Lacrosse, N ature, Nurses, Photo­ graphy, Piano, R adio, Rocketry, Ropes, Sailboarding, S a iling, Scuba, Soccer, Tennis, Track, W SI, W aterski, W eights, W ood. Men c a ll or w rite: Camp W inadu, 5 G len Lane, M am aroneck, New Y ork 10543, (914) 381-5983. Women c a ll or w rite: Camp Vega, P.O. Box 1771, D uxbury, M aine 02332, (617) 934-6536. ARE YOU enthusiastic, le rg e tic and extrem ely reliable ? If you a i 21 plus, w ith evenings and weekends open, w e have an opp ortunity fo r you! Earn g ie a t $ w orking as a part-tim e D J fo r priva e parties. We w ill tra in . 968-7100 CR AZY!!! NEW York style o f sale. Make real m oney. Part-tim e job, full-tim e pay. C all 968-2141. CRUISE SHIPS Now h irin g a ll positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For inform a­ tion C all (615)779-5507 E xt H-178 CO LLEGE STUDENT war ted to s it a hom e m om itoring T.V. progr lm s, 15/hours per w eek. $7.50/hour. M ust have dim en­ sio n cable. No la bor, no sales. Just w atching T.V . fo r technical d iffic u ltie s . Call R ick, 829-3808 or 272-3796. CURRENTLY SEEKING enthusiastic and personable individuals fo r the follow ing positions: R etail cle rks, fu ll and part-tim e m orn ings. E x c e lle n t o p p o rtu n ity fo r grow th-oriented, am bitious people. Apply in person, 6107 N orth Scottsdale Road, H ilton V illage. COOK AND d rive rs needed fo r ASU pizza parlo r. F utt/part-tim e. 966-429;’ , a fte r 3 pm. CORK’N CLEAVER accepting applica­ tions fo r; lunch w aitress and lum $t hostess. W ill tra in . S hort shifts. Conve­ nient hours. Fun atm osphere. Concern w ith appearance, ,re lia b ility and perse ty are im portant. A pply in person, Mono Friday, 2-5 pm o r by appointm ent. 5101 N orth 44th S treet. (44th and Cam elback). 952-0585 ★ EXTRA MONEY* Is nice, but you can help people too: Earn $120+ a month Safer, faster plasm a donation at A B I Centers due to automated procedure. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation with this a d . A s k a b o u t a d d itio n a l bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). U n iversity Plasm a C en ter Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tem pe H EY YOU! Searching for 300 or­ dinary people to fill local positions in modeling, acting (TV, movie ex­ tras). Call 631-0632. DISCOVER YOUR future! If you desire a part-tim e position w ith predictable hours, m orning or evening s h ift, in a fast paced o ffice environm ent, D iscover Card may have a career fo r you! A pply your strong interpersonal and problem -solving s k ills in our w jnning collection team . F u ll training and com petitive salaries are provided. E nthusiastic, goal-oriented individuals are encouraged to apply in person at: Discov­ er Card Services, Los Arcos M all, Sears B uilding, 1313 N orth Scottsdale Road. For m ore inform ation, c a ll 481-2460. MARKETING FIRM seeks reliable, m oti­ vated student to m anage cam pus prom o­ tions. Flexible hours. H igh earning poten­ tia l. Excellent w ork experience. No sellin g. 800-366-6498 M ODELS-SW IM SUIT, calenders, and p rin t projects fo r top European m agazines. David Schoen Productions, 870-3043 NEW HOTDOG restaurant, across from Sky H arbor. Part-tim e weekday lunches. $4/hour. 244-1022. PART-TIM E W ORK to do business surveys. Excellent com m issions. C all for d e ta ils : 423-7767. A dvance E nergy System s. PART-TIME PERSONAL care attendant fo r P.V. East student. $6.50/hour. C all H eather. 784-8070. PART-TIME AFTERNOON, Clerk typists, e xp e rie n ce d re q u ire d , $ 5 .0 0 /h o u r,. M onday-Friday, m inim um o f 20 hours. Per week 268-4800 An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant, EASY W ORK! E xcellent pay! Assemble products at home. C a ll fo r inform ation. 504-641-8003, ext. 7836. ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN, fu ll or parttim e. 1 year engineering or technology. Some experience required . 956-8200 968-6139 HOTEL/BEACH R esorts: m anagement, entry level, career, seasonal, and school break positions. C om petitive wages and tra ve l benifits. 303-444-5585. AFTER CLASS HOURS T. C. Eggington’s is accepting applications fo r hostess positions weekdays, 9 a.m -1 p.m. Apply in . person after 2:30 daily. 1660 S. Alma School Rd. (South of the Freeway) P a rt-tim e Mesa $8 to $ 1 0 /h o u r W e fu lly tra in $ 5 .5 0 g u a ra n te e d /h o u r. T h e n a tio n 's fin e s t and la rg e s t te le m a rk e tin g firm is n o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r s h ifts in th e: •Early A, M. •Afternoons •Evenings W e have te le m a rk e tin g p o s itio n s a v a ila b le in several d e p a rtm e n ts in c lu d in g : •P u b lis h e r S ervices •B o o k C lu b P ro gram s •N o n -p ro fit p ro g ram s STAY-HOME m other w ith 3 pre-schoolers needs part-tim e help. N ice home and fam ily, South Scottsdale. Flexible hours, m ust have car and references. C hildo rie n te d m a jo rs , p le a s e .. $ 5 /h o u r. 947-1044. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now h iring fu ll-tim e , rib and lin e cooks, lunch w aitres­ ses and hostesses. A pply iri- person, 10-11:30am and after 1:30pm . 500I East W ashington. O u r eas y sc h e d u le s and a p ro fe s s io n a l s ta ff all a d d up to an e n jo y a b le an d lu c ra tiv e jo b . O u r T e m p e o ffic e is 5 m in u tes fro m cam p u s. D ia la m e r ic a 894-0264 SELL T-SHIRTS in frat$, sororities. A part­ m ents, ' dorm s. R ealistic, $10-$15/hour. 921-0051. SUM M ER EM PLO YM EN T. S u p e rio r, P e n n sylva n ia sum m er cam p seeks counselors and specialists. A ll sports, lake, pools, je t skis, w ater sk i, video, radio, dram a, com puters, and m ore. Camp A kiba, a great sum m er. Interview ing on Tuesday, February 20th, 10am to 4:30pm . For inform ation and appointm ent, call Student Em ploym ent O ffice at 965-6318, o r 965-6305. SUMMER JQ BS, outdoors. O ver 5,000 openings! N ational parks, forests, fire crew s. Send stam p fo r fre e details. 113 East W yom ing, K alispell, MT 59901. are seeking dynamic, outgoing individuals for the following challenging positions: TRI DELTA Pledges, love th e ir actives and can’t w ait u n til they take us through “ }•’ week. TR I-SIG M A, CONGRATULATIONS on your Spring pledge class! Love, A lpha Phi. W ESTERN RESERVE C lub C ourtside C afe, part-tim e, am and pm positions available as cafe counter person. Free m em bership fo r good w orker. A pply in person, 2140 East Broadway, Tempe. Ask fo r M ark. ÉOE. JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. M ill, S uite 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. CASH PAID, jew elry o f a ll kinds, in cluding gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. R are Libn; 921 S. M ill Aye, Tempe Center. 968-6074 M EN 'S DIAMOND ring fo r sale. G reat V a lentine's g ift. 2 m onths old, barely worn. $300. Shannon, 890-0550. PERSONALS ALL FRATERNITY and S orority Presi­ dents: Planning fo r G reek W eek has now begun. Make sure your house is repre­ sented in G reek Sing. M andatory C hair­ m an m eeting is Thursday, February 1st, in the Payne Education B u ilding, room 206. Please rem ind your chairm an they m ust attend! ALL GREEKS: greek week pub licity and advertising com m ittee tonig ht! 9:30 on the C hi Omega flo o r. Rem em ber to wear your le tte r for pictures! $$$$$ ALL greek treasures: Plan your greek week budgeting m eeting fo r tonig ht, January 30, a t 7:45pm in Palo Verde m ain cafeteria. ALPHA PHI Pledges- your active sisters are proud o f you. AOE, o r is it AEO. W ith love; your sisters. ATO TOM: Thanks fo r an awesome weekend. I love you. Jeanette CHI OMEGA Seniors- K elly, H eidi, Lisa, M ary, and J ill- Thanks fo r helping m e get through my stupid problem s. Your friend­ sh ip has given me stren gth to believe in m yself again. I’m lucky to have you! Love, Tara. CORSON, STAY happy and have some apple ju ice and pizza, pizza for me. GREEK SING C hairm an: M andatory m eet­ in g on Thursday. February 1st, from 5pm to 6:30pm , in the Payne Education B uild­ ing, room 206. Every house m ust be RESERVATIONS A VAILABLE N O W ! NirTMUKKH JfM f* SOUTHPUDUISUUD *129' * „* 1 0 ï „* 1 3 2 ' 7 NtCHTS 5 OR 7 NtCHTS CTEAJMMT 2. S OR 7 NtCHTS rooTuuDnoMie 7 MCHTS unionu n isuuu 7 NtCHTS corpus cuuisn/ MWfiUKISUJW *127' ,.„*9 9 S OR 7 NtCHTS CALL TOU FREE TODAY 1- 8 0 0 - 321-5911 'Depending on break dotes and length o f stay. TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING THE ROSE com pany is now h iring for rose sales in restaurants and nightclubs. C a ll fo r interview , 921-8855. Food & Beverage W ater Safety Groundskeeping Guest Relations Please apply at the following locations: TOMORROW NIGHT is the night fo r G reeks, Them e Announcem ent, Flakey’s, 8pm . RESTAURANTS/ BARS BOOKLET COM MITTEE- m andatory, very im portant m eeting, Tuesday, January 30th, 8 pm, Flakey’s. Please bring pens, pencils, ruler, la st year’s booklet if you have it, and w ear your tetters) I’m so excited to really start w orking on th is w ith you a ll. Also hiring: cashiers, cooks, beer servers, lifeguards, groundskeepers, secretaries, and security. THEME ANNOUNCEMENT, G reek W eek 1990, Flakey Jake's, jBpm. TENNIS PRO Shop em ployee at the A rizona C ountry Club. W eekends and evenings. C all M ike o r Dave at 946-7509. W ANTED: 15 highly m otivated sales people. No experience necessary, w e WHI tra in you. C all 461-3123 fo r interview . Leave name and num ber. FLY ANYTIM E! C ontinental USA. $375 roundtrip. Leave today! Northw est USA, $275! A laska-th ree weeks notice, . $525. O ther destinations available. W e also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. SUSSIE, HOW about a date in June when you come hom e. W ANTED: TALL,^ handsom e, dark-haired Australian E nglish m ajor. C an't w ait to see you again! I love you! H eidi. Internships- Food & Beverage Fi nance Recreation Supervisory- S.T.A.R .T.- STUDENT Adm issions Rela­ tio n s Team is now accepting applications! If you're interested in helping to re cru it prospective students, p ick up an applica­ tio n iri U ndergraduate Adm issions, SSB 113. Inform ation session, W ednesday at 4, in SSB Am phitheater. TEM P TO Perm , 20 hours/week, m ust be PC lite rate, m ust be h ighly accurate iri 10-key and typing (50 w ords per m inute m inim um ) m ust be com fortable w ith figures. Please c a ll N orrelt 345-8212. A-PHI PLEDGES- A ctives can't W ait for you to activate! W ear orange...alw ays. W ith love, M artha. Waterworld USA and Big Surf PORTLAND, PORTLAND, I can’t believe you go to school in Portland. 1*1/7,A & 1*1 B T a n k Up T u e sd a ys $1.78 6 0 o z. P itc h e rs 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 Free Delivery to A SU Area $1.50 AAA W ord Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. M arion 839-4269. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resum es, etc. A t Y our Service W ord Processing, Linda, 839-6167. $1.65 AND up. P rofessional word proces­ sor and form er E nglish teacher. Laser prin te r. C laudia, 964-6012. A I WORD processing, experience on a ll types o f papers. Latest equipm ent. North C entral Phoenix location. 943-3552. (ABS) YOUR word processing profession­ als. Student discounts, pick-up and deliv­ ery. Phone Lori, 963-2096. ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, e diting, a ll included. Q uick turn­ around. G all 894-6074. ACCURATE RESUMES com posed and typed ($25); guaranteed. C all Carol, 924-8064. East Mesa. SERVICES CUSTOMIZED T-SHIRTS fo r organiza­ tions or individuals. Screen printed o r air brushed. Realm 3 A rt Studios, 436-0735. E LE C T R O LY S IS -P E R M A N E N T h a ir rem oval. Remove unw anted h a ir forever. Student discount. C alM or more inform a­ tion, 969-6954. “ Z ” TOUCH W ord Processing. Fast, accurate. Law students and theses welcom e. C all M arilyn, 833-5559. ENJOY! Cleaner, Fresher, B etter Tasting Water. All you can drink Only S12.50 per mo. Call now! G ourm et Water 829-1511 Thin and Natural Sculptured Nail Strong bonding made w ith fiberglass resins. Doesn’t yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. Full set $25 • Fills $18 C actus N a il Company Scottsdale 423-5504 TRANSPORTATION AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to m ost m ajor citie s. G as allow ances available. 21 o r older. C all 279-2000, then 4530. TRAVEL APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. C all anytim e. Prices com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186. FAST RETURN! Experienced ty p is t w ill e d it spelling, punctuation, gram m ar. Accu­ racy guaranteed. Joan, 827-9625. PAPER, RESUMES, le tters, transcribing, e d itin g , m a ilin g s . G ra m m a r/sp e llin g chocks. C ollege graduate using IBM com puter. 964-0994. REMEMBER: FLYING R ogers gives your papers th a t "profession al” look. M acin­ tosh and Laser prin t. Susan, 945-1500. RESUMES, COVER tetters, term papers, custom w ritin g . Reasonable prices. Call 839-3305, 8-5 pm. TYPING/W ORD processing. Q uick turn around w ith tetter q u a lity. $1.25/page. Can C heryl at 924-9208. WORD PROCESSING- resum es, papers, typing, etc. C all Dawn a t 899-9879, home, anytim e. WORD PROCESSING—$1.50 per page. Resumes & e d iting available. R eliable. C all 921-377Q evenings & weekends. ADOPTION ADOPTIONS: LOVING couple wished to adopt in fan t. W e have so m uch love to give. Expenses paid, tegal/confktential. C all Janet and Bob co lle ct, 718-891-7497. LOVING COUPLE lo oking fo r newborn baby to adopt. P lease c a ll co lle ct. 209-226=0567. TUTORS ENGLISH TUTOR, paper editing. Exper­ ienced, reasonable rates. 829-6712. THERMO TUTOR needed fo r ETC340, MET432. M ust be reliable and have re fe re n c e s . C a ll 8 9 4 -6 2 2 3 , le a v e m essage. TUTOR NEEDED. M ust have com pleted CSC 180. R eference required. Fee? Leave m essage at 947-9124. 'B ig S u rf 1500 N M cClintock Rd • Tempe. AZ 85281 (602) ‘947-SURF (7873) • FAX (602) 423-9737 fW a te rw o rk i USA 4243 W Pinnacle Peak Rd, • Phoenix, AZ 85310 (602) 266-5200 • FAJO(602) 780-0869 PHOTOGRAPHY JASON SILVER/KID-M AN Photoworks. M odels', actors’, and a rtists’, portfolios. Reasonable. 990-1818. Page 16 State Press Tuesday, January 30,1990 POTTERY OF THE MOUND BUILDERS A 4-day workshop taught by local artist, Matt Thomas February 3,10, 17, 24 9 a m.-Noon Register by calling 495-0901 Pueblo Grande Museum 4619 E, Washington Phoenix, AZ 85034 You’ve Got W hat It Takes! BLOOD PLASMA / # No ’ T h is c o u p o n is w o rth N 'A BI $35.00 The Q uality Source Shampoo/Cut Appointment Necessary ntreeuotory R©g. *13M for 2 donations in one week, for new donors and repeat donors who have not returned in 2 months. ASU Students Always $10 w /I.D . Closed Sunday & Monday En/oy watching movies while you donate! Our fully automated donor center is medically supervised by a friendly, professional staff. W l22ARD$ matrix Your Donation May Save A Life! Tempo Plasma HOURS Mon.-Thur. 8 a.m.-6 p.m 933 E. University 894-1338 Fri- aSat. 8 a.m.-4 p.m 1041 E . L e m o n ' 967-2380 ASSOCIATEDUSTUDENTS O f • A H 12 0 N A • M E M O « i A l u N IO N S T A T E # i 0 8 A T EM PE U N IV E R S I TV A 8 IZ O N * 8 5 2 8 7 Attention Campus Clubs and Organizations A ssociated Students is givin g a presentation ex­ plaining how to use your present funding and how you can obtain m ore for this semester and n ext. If you have received funding for this semester it is essential that you be present. I f you have n o t, but are interested in obtaining fu n d in g, you are also en­ couraged to attend has come to DATE: Tuesday, January 30, 1990 TIM E: 3:30 p.m.-5 p.m. PLACE: Pima Room, Memorial Union N ow there’s a diet pizza th a t’s cholesterol-free w ith low sodium , high fiber, less calories, less fa t-a n d it’s heavenly delicious! Sound like a m iracle? It’s P izza M iracle and w e ’ve opened four stores in the P hoenix area. C all us now! O ne taste and you’ll sa y “ It’s a m iracle!” A U Clubs and College Councils Welcome If you have any questions C A L L 965-3161 T O N Y ’S N EW YORKER RESTAURANT » no NIGHTCLUB * , * 4 I **“*'*«' X - The Fiae*t Pizza and Ita lia n Food in th e Valley * Call Ahead fo r Take-Out Orders * Dine-ln o r Take-Out * WE DELIVER AFTER 5:00 P.M . * Handmade New York Style Pizza * Homemade Italian Dinners * U rg e Dining Area \ we® New Tim es Best o f Phoenix 1989 B est Inexpensive ItaUan Restaurant “ ...all th e good thing s an Ita lia n re s ta u ra n t should be: friendly, inform al, com fortable, sincere & reasonably priced. O f course, it doesn't h u rt th a t it serves a righteous pizza and a red sauce th a t you could consum e by the q u a rt." '■ " '• ■■ ,■ ~ •. ' - TRY O UR A L L -Y O U -C A N -E A T S PE C IA LS Delivery Areas to -* * * i Ä O p e n M ik e T a le n t N ig h t W oSO -**»* * 8* * * * * F e a tu r e s th e B e s t B an ds in th e V a lle y B lu e s T h o -* * * R h ythm & B lu e s w ith G ra te fu l D ead N ig h t w ith Sm all P au l & D riv in ’ W h e e l N o H o b o Band Tempo’s Hom e fo r d ie Blues 99* Happy Hour — 7 P*ys * Week 15$ New Yorker Wing» AU Nlgbt 9 6 7 -3 0 7 3 1 0 7 E a s t B ro ad w ay, T am pa 9 6 7 -3 9 4 1 1 0 O y a r d s a a s t o f Mill A v s n u a East Phoenix North Phoenix 4623 E ast Thom as Road 3617 E ast B ell Road # 7 840-7400 992-3333 Scottsdale Tempe 10135 E a st V ia Linda Space A109 2107 S outh R ural Road v -o v i 966-1800 451-1200 FREE DELIVERY O R 10 MIN. CARRY-OUT Franchises available. CaH 602*991-1151. I I m O ffe r g oo d th ro u g h 3 /1 5 /9 0 . G ood a t p a rtic ip a tin g P izza M ira cle o u tle ts N o t v a lid In co m b in a tio n w ith a ny o th a r Pizza M ira d a O fta ra : L im ite d d e live ry area. fi 1990 Original Diet Pizza Co.. Inc. i/2 0 e cash redemption value, Please present coupon when ordering.j ; § I I I I I I I I I I I I