é Copyright, S tate Press, 1990 Vo*. 7 2 N o. 110 Tem pe, Arizona A rizona S tate U niversity’s M orning D aily Thursday, M arch 15, 1990 Regents fa il to discuss aid to fo reig n students By NICOLE CARROLL State Press An Arizona Board of Regents committee has no plans to discuss at its Friday meeting the plight of international students in the wake of the steep out-of-state tuition hike. The Resources Committee will meet to approve the state university system ’s local fund budget, which includes the special financial aid fund for non-resident students that was promised by the regents last month when they approved the $1,000 out-of-state student tuition hike. After the tuition vote, the regents also unanimously agreed to look into ways to help international students, who would not qualify for aid from the special pool for other out-of-state students. But for Friday’s session, nothing is included in the recommended local fund budget to help international students affected by the fees increase, and no time is allotted for discussion of this problem on the Resources Committee agenda. ASU is allowed to keep approximately 30 percent of the tuition revenue raised by its student body. This money is put into a local fund, which is used to fund student programming, to pay off construction debt and to support programs such as a special financial aid pool. The legal stipulations of a student visa prohibit tee use of public funds to provide financial aid to international students. The approximately 2,200 foreign students on Turn to Budgrt, page 11. Baseball relics stolen Thief takes 18 signed baseballs from office By MIKE BURGESS State Press S undi K Jenstad/S tate Press New Alliance J e o rg e tta D ouglas/S tate Press Cimi Boone (above), 27, and her 1-year-old son Jahfonz listen to Lenora Fulani (left) speak Wednesday in front of the Student Ser­ vices Building about the New Alliance party. See related story, page 14. Someone stole something other than home plate at Packard Stadium earlier this week. It seem s that a burglar slid into ASU baseball Coach Jim Brock’S office and swiped $1,035 worth of baseball clothing and memorabilia. Included in the loot, which ASU police said was taken between 6:30 p.m. Monday and 1:15 p.m. Tuesday, were 18 baseballs that were autographed by Reggie Jackson, the former ASU and major league star. The balls were going to be sold for $50 each to raise money for tee team ’s end-of-theseason banquet, Brock said. Candidates face off in final forum By HOBART ROWLAND State Press Tempe City Council hopefuls stressed the need for better relations between ASU and its surrounding neighborhoods and limited terms for government officials at Wednesday’s candidates forum — the last chance for candidates to rally voter support before Tuesday’s election. “We need to work toward neighborhood preservation and pride of ownership,” Council candidate Marilynn Smith said. “I am speaking not as a politician but as a concerned citizen.” The event, which was sponsored by the Mill Avenue Merchants Association and the Tempe D aily News Tribune, gave candidates the opportunity to sum up their platforms and to reflect on their campaigns before voters hit the polls on March 20. Prior to the informal debate, candidate Neil Giuliano said the forum would be the perfect time for candidates to sum up their strengths and not dwell on their opponents’ weaknesses. The Tempe City Council candidates are: D ennis C ahill, Vivienne C am pbell, N eil G uiliano, Chuck M alpede, Frank P lencner, D ick R yan, C arol Sm ith, M arilynn Sm ith, R oger V arn es and P rentice W illiam s. During the proceedings, Giuliano was the first to stress tee importance of a dialogue between ASU and the city in regards to campus expansion projects. “I know that the University ban work better with the city and the community,” he said. Giuliano also said he believes new ASU President Lattie Coor will bring a new era of improved communication to the city of Tempe. But incumbent Frank Plencner said that no matter how smooth the lines of communication become, “the city doesn’t have a heck of a lo t of control over tee University’s decisions.” Although several candidates voiced their concern over the city’s policy of unlimited terms for government officials, none doubted tee integrity of Tempe’s current office-holders. “I have no complaints about anyone in office at this tim e,” candidate Dick Ryan said. Candidate Dennis Cahill objected to the tactics of former Tempe police officer Fritz Tuffli has used to attack the incumbents. Tuffli distributed phony “Harry dollars” — fake currency bearing Tempe Mayor Harry Mitchell’s picture — in tee lobby before the debate to protest what Tuffli deems the government’s fiscal irresponsibility. “Seme of the allegations that you have aimed at the city also lack integrity,” Cahill told Tuffli. Other candidiates vying to fill three empty seats in city council include incumbent Carol Smith, Vivienne Campbell, Chuck Malpede and Roger Varnes. Candidate Prentice Williams did not take part in the forum. Busted: ASU's top man, Lat­ tie Coor, is anything but the typical hardnosed, inaccessible administrator. Analysis. Authorities have cracked an auto theft ring that has been responsible for $500,000 of stolen cars in the state. Page 6 Page 15 Turn to Theft, page 11. Coor inauguration to begin at 2 p.m. ASU will officially make Lattie Coor its 15th president today. The inauguration will be held at 2 p.m. at Gammage Auditorium and is open to tee public. Faculty, dressCd in academic regalia, will lead a procession from the fountain on Cady Mall to the auditorium at 1:45 p,m. Coor’s inaugural address will center around tee four issues that top his agenda: undergraduate education, cultural diversity, research and development. A reception w ill be held outside the auditorium immediately following tee ceremony to give everyone in attendance a chance to meet the new president. Representatives from universities nationwide and other academic organizations will be in attendance. More than $20,000 in University funds have been spent planning inauguration week activities. The L attie F . Coor Inauguration Committee began preparing for this occasion last September. Harold White, committee chairman and president of tee Faculty Senate, said students are encouraged.to attend tee ceremony. Coor took over as the University’s president Jan, 1. Comeback? Presidential: “Evidentaliy it was a fan,” Brock said, referring to the fact that the suspect overlooked an expensive radio and several kitchen appliances. Brock said that among the things taken were his pitching jacket and a University of Texas baseball hat given to him by Longhorn Coach Cliff Gustafson, who is a close friend. “I really hate to lose (that),” he said. Investigators have no suspects in the baseball burglary, Police Chief Bill Bess said. “It appears they knew what they were looking for,” Bess said. “They must have known what they were looking for because what they took was out of their sight. ” Police said tee suspect forcibly entered Brock’s office, which is located under Despite health pro­ blems and discouraging words, ASU student Rob Sale hopes to return to the boxing ring someday. Page 18 Today*! weather: Sunny, with light winds and a high In ths lowar 70s. Tonight's low will be In the lower 50s. CtaasMIeds....... 22 Comics...............................................» .1 0 PoHoe Weport...........................................1g 8porte.....................................................1 7 State Press Trial fo r paper boy’s murder ends Today M eetings •American Society of Women Accountante w ill h ave a P arent C hapter m eeting w ith G ov. M offord at 6:15 p.m . at th e Citibank Building, P laza C lub, 3300 N . C entral A ve., Phoenix. •Americans For Bozo w ill have a farew ell celebration for president Curt R itter a t 3 p.m . at the Tow ers, Room 205. •A nd) Student GlubfThe Committee of Palestinian Students w ill show th e film "In tifa d a ” at 5 p.m . in P.E. W est, Room 158. •B eta Alpha Psi w ill h ave firm , industry, an d governm ent representatives answ ering questions from 3 to 5 p.m . on the D ean 's P atio, C ollege of Business. •Christian Students Fellowship will have a bible study on M atthew C h. 23 “ D etecting A Hypocrite!” from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m . at 1315 S. C ollege Ave. •C o lle g e R epublicans w ill h ost g u e s t s p e a k e r gubernatorial candidate Bob Barnes at 7:30 p.m . in SS 211 •Esperanto A SU win continue beginning classes a t 7:15 p.m . in th e M U , Room 214. •Lesbian and Gay Academic Union w ill m eet at 7:30 p.m . in th e M U , Y um a Room. •Public Programs College Council w ill m eet at 3:30 p.m . in S tauffer A 237. •S P M A A presents Dr. Pastin on “ Ethics in Purchasing” at 3:3 0 p.m . in BAC 218. •Th e Emerging Pacific Era w ill hold a symposium on “ W orld P eace in the 21st Century?” from 3:30 to 6 p.m . at th e Holiday inn a t Apache Boulevard and Rural Road. •United Students of Arizona for Choice w ill show video “ Abortion for Survival" and discuss recent legislation at 12:30 p .m . in th e M U , Santa C ruz Room. •University Toastmasters w ill m eet at 5 p.m . in th e M U, M ohave Room. •W ildlife Society presents Don Turner on “ Tricks to getting a job” at 5 p.m . in LS 183. Correction Jury decisio n of ‘innocent* follow s 3 - w e e k -b re a k fo r ju d g e ’s vacation PHOENIX (AP) — A Maricopa County Superior Court jury concluded a bizarre murder trial Wednesday by finding a Phoenix man innocent in the 9-year-old case of newspaper carrier whose body has never been found. Stephen Michael Wilson, 40, had been charged with firstdegree murder in the disappearance of 12-year-old Brian Bleyl. The youngster vanished Feb. 28,1981, while collecting for The Phoenix G azette. The jury, which deliberated briefly Tuesday afternoon, returned the verdict after just over two hours of deliberations the next day. “The evidence wasn’t there,” said juror Dale Perkins, who expressed sympathy to Bleyl’s family. Wilson thanked the jurors, saying, “The nightmare is over for my fam ily, finally.” , Phil Bleyl, Brian’s father, said he had hoped the trial would reveal the whereabouts of the body. “We still have the mystery of not knowing where Brian is. We’d like to know so we could give him a proper burial,” he said. The case featured an unprecedented interruption between the testimony phase and final arguments because of Judge Kenneth Fields’ three-week vacation. Defense attorney Bruce Blumberg had moved for a m istrial when Fields dismissed the jury Feb. 20 after two weeks of testimony. Fields denied the motion, telling the jury what he had told trial attorneys in advance: His nonrefundable plane tickets to Great Britain and Ireland required him to leave Feb. 22. H ie judge also said he didn’t want to rush the jury. Cleve Lynch, a deputy county attorney, said he doubted the break had anything to do with the acquittal. “They were out only two hours,” Lynch said. “I think the three-week delay may have shortened the deliberations — they may have had time to think it through in their minds before the judge got back—but in the long run I don’t think it was a problem. We (attorneys) agreed to it in advance.” During closing arguments Tuesday, Blumberg argued for acquittal based on a lack of evidence. He said there were least 15 areas casting reasonable doubt on Wilson’s involvement, including the absence of a body and the fact that Wilson was slightly built and could not have overpowered the boy. Blumberg had called Wilson a "fragile, hardly masculine homosexual” when the trial began. In allowing the trial to proceed, Fields had ruled that the boy’s absence and the discovery of his bicycle near where he was last seen alive were ample evidence for presuming that death had occurred. Lynch argued for conviction based upon confessions Wilson offered to three people. Two friends of Wilson and his personal physician testified that he confessed to the slaying, he said. Grocery magnate Basha confirmed as state regent By NICOLE CARROLL State Press Arizona grocery-chain owner Eddie fiasha was confirmed as a member of the Arizona Board of Regents Wednesday, by the state Senate. Gov. Rose Mofford appointed Basha to the board last month along with Tucson attorney Art Chapa, whose confirmation is expected next week. Basha, 52, is a former member and past president of the Arizona Board of Education. He has also served as president of the Chandler Unified School District. In the March 14 issue of the State P ress, the date that campaigning in the Associated Students of ASU elections will begin was incorrect. The correct date is Sunday, March 18. Siate Press Classifieds A spokesman in the governor’s office has said that Basha, a Chandler-native who graduated from Stanford University, w ill be the “ASU regent” because of his proximity to campus. Mofford was critized by Tempe legislators last month for not appointing an ASU graduate to the Board. Four current regents are graduates from the UofA. Basha is replacing Salt River Project General Manager Jack Pfister, whose term expired in January, and will join the board at the March 16 Resources Committee meeting. SERVICES W e’re at your service! _ GRAND OPENING TODAY!! Look for us at» University Drive and Rural Road, in the Cornerstone Mall across from Arizona State University You will find great fashions for everyone. Career dressing, sportswear and accessories. We've got the latest and greatest clothes found in many department stores for 20%-50% less. And during our Grand Opening Sale, T ake A n E xtra 25% O ff O ur A lready L ow D iscou n ted P rices. Special offer good March 15-March 31,1990 with this coupon only. One coupon per customer please. Not valid with any other offer. CLOTHES TIME Designer Brands At 20%-50% Off. It Pays To Shop Around. IHIHIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimNlllllllllIHUUWIIIHIIIlllUIIIIIHilllllliHlilllllilHIIliHIUIIliilllUllimillilllllillliliillUililiilUllllllllllllllUIIHillilllllimi A N N O U N C IN G B O O K S , E T C .'S ANNIVERSARY SALE We're celebrating our 12th Anniversary by making our biggest sale of the year, bigger than ever! STARTING TODAY FOUR DAYS ONLY - MARCH 15-18 30% OFF EVERYTHING! (Magazines & newspapers excluded. No Coupon Necessary) Plus register to win FREE BOOKS in prize drawings each day of the sale. ”thanks” 967-1111 Hours: M on.-Sat. 9-8 Sun. 10-6 W o rld /IM a ü o n SW » Press Page 3 Thursda£^rcM5|J990 Gorbachev w ins S oviet election MOSCOW (AP) — Mikhail S. Gorbachev won election today to a new executive presidency with the powers he says he needs to prevent the Soviet Union from crumbling under the weight of economic and ethnic crises. The official Tass news agency said fellow Communist Party Politburo member Yegor K. Ligachev told repor­ ters before the Congress of Peoples Deputies reconvened that its members had elected Gorbachev in the secret ballot. The official announcement was expected later Today. Gorbachev had run uncontested -Prem ier Nikolai Ryzhkov and Interior Minister Vadim Bakatin were nomi­ nated but refused to run — but could have failed had he not won the approval of 50 percent of the deputies. Tass gave no vote figures, The new president will have wide powers to propose legislation, negotiate treaties, veto bills and decisions of the Council of Ministers, appoint a Cabinet, declare war if the country is attacked and under certain conditions impose presidential rule. Gorbachev will serve a four-year term after which this country will conduct its first nationwide presidential campaign. r Before the vote for president the Congress decided that it, and not the Soviet people, would choose the first president with such expanded powers. A respected scholar had warned that a nationwide election campaign would lead to civil War. “ I remember the revolution of February (1917) very well, and I know where émotions can lead,” said 84-year-old Dmitri Likhachev, referring to the revolution that ended more than 300 years of rule by the Romanov dynasty. The uprising plunged the country into eight months of unstable provisional government before the Communists took over in October and wiped out their opponents in thé ensuing civil war. “Understand our conditions. Direct election of the president w ill lead to civil war,” Likhachev said. The Soviet Union is beset by ethnic strife, economic paralysis and strong independence movements that threaten to break up the union. Lithuania declared independence on Sunday, and Estonia, Latvia and Georgia have all moved in that direction. It was clear many deputies believed a strong President Gorbachev would immediately take action at home with the sam e kind of world-shaking results he achieved in foreign policy. There, he has dramatically reduced the threat of war by releasing Eastern Europe from the bonds of Stalinism and by making East-West deals on arms control and troop reductions. The new president was expected to speak about his plans after being sworn in today. The presidency created on Tuesday concentrates in one person many of the powers now held by a collective Presidium on paper and by the Communist Party Politburo in reality. The reform, along with Tuesday’s historic switch to a multiparty political system , is part of Gorbachev’s long-term plan to transfer power from the Communist Party to the government. AuodaM P nm photo Tom ado Dam age Á neighborhood house In Hesston, Kan., Ilea in ruin alter the community was hit by two tornados Tuesday n ig h t The twisters ran through the downtown area, flattening businesses and homes. At least 300 people were left homeless after the destruction. North continues testimony in trial WASHINGTON (AP) r- Oliver North testified Wednesday that he didn’t “feel good” after lying to Congress to conceal secret aid to the Nicaraguan Contras even though he was praised by his boss, John Poindexter. North concluded 3% days of testi­ mony at Poindexter’s Iran-Contra cover-up trial by insisting that he violated no laws by lying during the Aug. 6, 1986, meeting at the White House with members of the House Perm anent S elect Com m ittee on Intelligence. But the former National Security Council aide told prosecutor Dan Webb that he didn’t “recall having any N orth emotion” when he received a note from Poindexter after the meeting that said: “Well done.” “When John Poindexter told you ‘well done,’ did you expect he had been happy you had carried the water?” Webb asked. “Did you think you did well?” “No, I’ve told the world I don’t feel good about that,” the retired Marine lieutenant colonel said, his voice cracking with emotion. Poindexter, a retired Navy rear admiral who was President Reagan’s national security adviser in 1986, is accused of obstructing congressional inquiries into the U. S.-Iran arms sales and the secret operation set up to channel aid to the Nicaraguan Contras. In other testimony, North’s former secretary, Fawn Hall, testified she altered a series of documents to delete references to covert assistance to the Contras. Hall said she destroyed the originals, which bore notations by Poindexter or markings indicating he had read them. North insisted that his lies to Congress were wrong, but not illegal. “You thought you could go in front of those 12 congressmen and lie and lie and lie?” Webb asked; raising his voice for the first tim e while questioning North. “I was not under oath, I have never lied, it was an informal m eeting,” North said. “Did you think this was a tea party going on over therein the White House Situation Room?” Webb asked. “No, counsel, I knew it wasn’t a tea party,” North said. North, who was declared a hostile witness when he began testifying Friday, earlier said Poindexter told him “you can handle it” when he object«! to going to the meeting. But he balked at Webb’s suggestion that he Was under orders to lie. “I never thought it was a good idea to start the process of answering their questions,”’ North said. “You’re not going to change your testimony that you gave this jury two days ago to help your former boss?” Webb asked. “No sir,” North said. North said Poindexter was one of the few people who knew he lied. T u rn to N o rth , page 10, News Briefs L ib y a n c h e m ic a l p la n t re p o rte d o n fire WASHINGTON (A P ) — A Libyan chem ical weapons plant branded a major threat by the United States was reported on fire Wednesday, according to diplomatic sources quoted by the White House. President Bush said the United States had heard rumors that the plant was on fire. However, Bush told reporters in a hallway at the White House “we didn’t know” what had happened. White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the United States could not confirm the report, which also said Libya had sealed its borders. Fitzwater said, “ We deny we had any involvement” in the reported fire. A diplomatic source said the United States learned of the fire from Tunisia, which borders Libya. It relayed its information to Italy and the United States, the source said. ABC News quoted unidentified Libyan security sources as claim ing that the plant was burned to the ground by the action of U. S. and Israeli agents. “We have no information tq indicate that,” said Roman Popadiuk, a White House deputy press secretary, about the ABC report. The plant is located about a mile from Rabta, in a new industrial complex about 60 m iles south-southwest of Tripoli. W e e k e n d e le c tio n w ill s e t p a c e fo r u n ific a tio n EAST BERLIN (AP) Forged by the pro-democracy movements that shook the Soviet bloc last year, East Germany’s historic weekend elections will help set the pace of reunification with West Germany. What started with thousands of pro­ democracy activists taking to the streets of Leipzig in September has led to Sunday’s nationwide balloting for a 400-member Parliament. Voters in the nation’s first free elections are being presented with a dizzying array of 24 slates of candidates, ranging from conservatives to radical leftists. In one region, the new Beer Drinkers’ Party is running candidates. B o sto n s u ffe rs b lo o d ie s t 2 4 h o u rs o f th e y e a r BOSTON (AP) — It was the city’s bloodiest 24 hours this year: A mother was gunned down wielding a pitchfork to protect her son from suspected gang members and a woman was fatally shot at her store over a jar of Easter Seal coins. Six separate shootings and stabbings left three people dead and four wounded between l p.m. Tuesday and 1 p.m. Wednesday, and pushed Boston’s murder rate 50 percent higher than during the sam e period last year. P o litic a l c h a n g e is o n fa s t tra c k in M o n g o lia BEUING (AP) — Three weeks ago, a Mongolian opposition leader predicted that the pace of political change in Ulan Bator would be faster than in Moscow. The events of the past week have proved Sanjaasuren Zorig right. The leadership has bowed to opposition demands for sweeping political changes, and those who just a few w eek s a g o talk ed about th e id ea l government and economy for Mongolia must now find ways to realize those dreams. On Monday, the Communist Party P o litb u r o d e c id e d to a b o lish it s constitutional guarantee on power, replace the Politburo and party General Secretary Jambyn Batmonh, hold early legislative elections and write a new constitution. S u rv e y re v e a ls s tu d e n ts o fte n lie to h a v e s e x BOSTON (AP) — Here’s an insight that may fail to shock dedicated students of the mating game: People often tell lies in order to have sex. Honest. Two California researchers reached that conclusion about dating behavior after taking a survey of college students. They say it’s a point worth keeping in mind when trying to decide whether potential sexual partners have ever done anything to put themselves at risk of AIDS. In the survey, 34 percent of m ale respondents and 10 percent of women admitted they had “told a lie in order to have sex.” Opinion State Press Thursday, March 15,1990 P £e4 ictapy»«. E d ito r ia l JapaneseMinimalism Super Bowl Gam e brings opportunity This is a Japanese poem. This is a 2po year-old Japanese tre e . •blossom of .chrysanthemum on wintry wind fingers fa ll down go boom The Valley of the Sun scored a touchdown on Tuesday when the the NFL announced the 1993 Super Bowl will be played at Sun Devil Stadium. It is both an honor and an economic boon to hold football’s annual blowout here in Tempe. Economists predict that the game and related activities will pump about. $200 million into the Valley’s economy. But there’s a little more to the matter than the congratulatory brouhaha suggests. One caveat in the NFL owners’ agreement to hold the the ’93 Super Bowl here is that they have reserved the right to change their minds — if, for example, there is no Martin Luther King Day holiday in place by then. In fact, the head of the NFL Super Bowl Site Selection Committee, Eagles Owner Norman Braman, said that if there is no King holiday enacted, he would try to move the game to another location. Only Arizona would let an important issue like the fate of a holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader rest on whether the state gets to a host a football championship game. It’s unfortunate that the people of Arizona have been unable to grant a holiday honoring this great man baSèd solely on his merits. While the work King started is far from complete, he began the transition of our society from a segregated, racist one to a desegregated, non-racist one. It is important that Valley leaders keep up the pressure for the King holiday even with the immediate prize — the Super Bowl — in their grasp. Let’s hope the $200 million carrot that the Super Bowl represents is more effective in getting the holiday passed than the stick of negative national opinion on the state has been. Assuming either the Legislature or the voters decide they want to have the Super Bowl badly enough to enact the King holiday, the next question is what the impact will be of the Super Bowl on ASU students in spring 1993. How will the University deal with the thousands of students who will be forced to give up their parking spots on Lot 59 for the entire week before the game? Where will these students park and how w ill they get to their classes? And, of course, there are questions concerning the big day itself, above all: How w ill ASU handle alcohol in the stadium? Presently alcohol may be served in the skyboxes of Sun Devil Stadium during Cardinal games but not at ASU gam es, and never in the stands. The NFL requires that at the Super Bowl alcohol be made available to the patrons in the skyboxes, So once again, we may have the situation of the big boys enjoying a drink while the little guy in the stands goes dry. Is the average Super Bowl fan going to tolerate game-time prohibition? Now would be an excellent tim e to resolve once and for all the question of what ASU’s alchohol policy is. No doubt, landing the Super Bowl is a tremendous opportunity for the Valley to gain nationwide exposure and an economic shot in the arm. It is also a chance for Arizona to do the right thing, even if for the wrong reasons, and approve the King holiday. But it will also pose some specific problems for ASU. It is important that these issues be solved long before the first camera crew arrives. We decided to play ball with the big boys and we scored some points. But the game isn’t over. There’s still a Super Bowl to put on. I f This is a Japanese c a r ad •• A .,..; This is a Japanese Trade concession i f ' H ' ’F ' x :•*>-.; M\ i ; T :r : Letters Military must meet changes Editor: This letter is in reference to Brian Tassinari’s editorial in which he faults the Faculty Senate’s decision to lobby the military to eliminate its discrimination against homosexuals in the military. He plays some semantic games with the defin ition s of “ d iscrim ination” and “prohibition,” but ends Up stating that if the military legalized homosexuality, “it would be so detrimental to morale that it would hamper the fighting - efficiency of the m ilitary.” Then he goes on to talk about trust in units of fighting men and the introduction of sexual tension. I can’t speak for Mr. Tassinari’s military background or his expertise on sexual preference, but I can speak for my own. In the four years I served in the U. S. Navy, I saw only one example of a gay sailor whose conduct was unbefitting that of a U. S. fighting man, and that was largely due to his involvement with alchohol and drugs. He was dishonorably discharged after repeated attempts at medical intervention, and I agree with that action. The other gay and lesbian officers and sailors that I worked with are considered to be 4.0 (4.0 being excellent) by their superiors, peers and subordinates. I’m not talking about a bunch of “closet cases” either, as most of these people were secure in their sexuality and knew how .to act appropriately for their performance of military duties. Mr. Tassinari speaks of the suspension of rights of members of the military. Last year a Defense Department Research Center released a study that looked at school, employment, criminal'and drug and alcohol statistics and found that homosexuals are as well-suited to military service and positions of trust as heterosexuals. The center went on to say that “the m ilitary cannot indefinately isolate itself from the changes occuring in the wider civilian society.” The Pentagon rejected the findings and continues in its current policy. Mr. Tassinari makes parallels between the gains of minorities and women in the military service to that of gays and lesbians. The same arguments were used before the wide-spread integration of the armed forces, and they have been proven to be false. I am proud of my military service and experience, but I am ashamed to see that in 1990 discrimination (or prohibition, Brian), continues to exist in the U. S. Armed Forces against gays and lesbians. Patrick Scroggin junior, Political Science Homosexuals don’t just think about sex Editor: My question is to Brian Tassinari who wrote that homosexuality should not be condoned in the military. Have you ever heard about Leonard Maclovich (a personal friend of mine) who won a celebrated case in an appeal against the USAF? It was determined during the trial that his homosexuality had absolutely no bearing in his job pevformance in the USAF. He was a Do you think that homosexuals — gay m ales and lesbians sit around having sex while they are working? I think not. If they did, maybe someone would have reason to squawk. But we do not. Donna Taylor Faculty Associate, Communications STATE PRESS Quotable “Love doesn’t m ake the world go ‘round. Love is what makes the ride worthwhile. ” —- Franklin P. Jones EDITORIAL BOARD Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do hot reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: Darrin Hostetler EDITOR Suzanne Ross ASST. MANAGING EDITOR sergeant who taught, interestingly enough, a civil rights class in the military. Carolyn Höfig MANAGING EDITOR Brian Tassinari OPINION EDITOR DARRIN HOSTETLER E ditor CAROLYN HÖFIG M anaging E ditor K im berly H arris, M ichelle H enry, C hristopher Horak, Kelly A sst. M anaging E ditor SUZANNE ROSS C ity E ditor ... ... ....... M ICHELLE ALLMAN BURGESS J a in , M ichael LaM antia, Deborah Nemko, Francine S tahl, M ish O pinion E d itor................................................ BW AN TASSINARI Ted, Kram er W etzel. Asst. O pinion E d ito r......LYNN VAVRECK CARTOONISTS: M ike R itte r, Ju lie Sigw arti M agazine E d ito rs ........ ..... ............. . SHARON KÄNEY ......................................... MEG HALVERSON COLUMNIST: Jade Danner Assoc. E nt. E ditor...........................CHRISTINE HERBRANSON INTERNS: S helly LeV ick, Chad Redwing. M usic E d ito r....................................... .. DAN NOW ICKI PRODUCTION: Dane C h rist, Nancy Ness, M ark N othaft, Listings E ditor............................................... M ICHELLE CRUFF Robyn P inkston, Lynne Senzek, T .J. Sokol, Stacy Tow ar, E ric News E ditor................. .....* .............. .................STEVE KRICUN Zotcavage. S ports E d ito r......... ............................................... PAUL CORO A sst. Sports E ditor..... ........................ ..................SETH SULKA ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Jay E ckhardt, Dan Copy C h ie f........ .............................................. NICOLE PERRON EUstrom, Keri Fisher, Jessica Irw in, Paul Lee, Karen U siew ski, Photo E ditor................................................. SCOTT TROYANOS Todd M artin, A llison M urphy, Pete N ichols, T erri Sm ith, REPORTERS: G rem lyn Bradley, M ike Burgess, N icole C arroll,. C harlotte Tang, Ray Z ickel. C arolyn Huffm an, Sonja Lew is, Dan N ow icki, H obart Rowland, Kevin Sheh, Tenny Tatusian, Vanja Thom pson, K ristie Young. The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academ ic year except holidays and exam periods,, at M atthew s C enter, Room 15. A rizona State U niversity, Tem pe, A rizona 85287. Newsroom : (602) 965-2292. W e do not answer questions o f a general nature. A dvertising and Production: PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jeorgetta D ouglas, Jam ie Lytle, Sundi (602) 865-7572. ' • ' K jenstad, T J . Sokol. The State Press is the only new spaper exclusively published fo r and circulate d on th e ASU cam pus. The news and view s COPY EDITORS: C harles G ranieri, K risten Johnson, JM Tibke. published in th is new spaper are not necessarily those o f the FREELANCE W RITERS: Joseph C raw ford. H eidi Donat, ASU adm inistration, faculty, sta ff o r student body. SPORTS REPORTERS: V icki C ulver, M atthew K aster,Larry N ew ell, K ris Tim m ons, Dan Zeiger. Opinion Who’s the hypocrite? Rooney’s critics trying to save freedom of speech Joseph Sobran Universal Press Syndicate WASHINGTON — So Andy Rooney is back on the air. The significance of the episode is this: TTie general public saved freedom of speech from the very liberals who are always pretending to save free speech from the general public. CBS ended Andy Rooney’s scheduled three-month suspension from his slot on “60 Minutes” after only three weeks. The reason was that viewer mail ran more than 90 percent in Rooney’s favor, and the show’s ratings had fallen during his absence. Once again liberals showed a remarkable indifference to the curtailment of free speech, provided it’s done in the name of “sensitivity’’ — meaning sensitivity to pressure groups with good progressive credentials. In this case that meant blacks and, especially, homosexuals. Censorship is OK as long as it’s in the service of tolerance. Tom Shales, the TV critic of The Washington Post, claims that Rooney,' in his reappearance, delivered his statement without “actually apologizing” to homosexuals. It seem s to me that any apology should come from the other direction from the touchy fanatics who managed to extract such a heavy price from Rooney for the crime of speaking his mind. Has it ever occured to these people to try refuting what Rooney says instead of calling him names and demanding his head? . Shales goes on: “It seem s to have been Rooney’s in national television.” And he who occupies a pulpit must supposition all along that the only people annoyed by the preach nothing but Hie purist orthodoxy. Indeed he must be remarks were members of the groups besmirched — as if no orthodox even in his heart: “You wouldn’t want to put in a whites or heterosexuals take offense at foolish slander unless spot as conspicuous as that a man who was a bigot — even a it is directed at them.” closet bigot or a secret bigot.” Maybe lie detector tests Groups besmirched? Foolish slander? All Rooney did Was should be administered, just to make sure that those who warn against self-destructive forms of behavior. But this occupy the pulpit quote nothing but the most chaste attitudes. “annoyed” (heaven forbid!) what Shales calls “rightAfter all, Shales explains, “viewers” — liberal viewers, it thinking” people, Liberals Unanimous. It never occurs to goes without saying — ‘‘like to think that under Rooney’s Shales that anyone but liberals read The Post, or has other crotchety and cantankerous exterior is a bright and rightsensitivities, or gets annoyed for other valid reasons. thinking fellow, it was a kind of betrayal, like learning thé quiz shows of the ’50s were fixed.” ‘Has it ever occured to these people to try refuting w hat Rooney says instead of calling him names and demanding his head? ’ If some conservative religious groups had pressured a network to suspend Bill Moyers or to drop a Norman Lear production, Shales, it’s safe to say, would have adopted a different tone — in fact, a whole different vocabulary. He’d have warned about a threat to the First Amendment, the rise of extremism, the danger to the rights of viewers who want to choose their own fare. None of that seem s to matter, though, when certain “sensitivities” are at stake. So instead of hailing Rooney’s return as a victory for the cause of free expression — a cause liberalism intermittently holds most dear — Shales objects that “Rooney occupies a unique pulpit At this point someone needs to tap Shales on the shoulder and remind him that on the evidence, nine-tenths of the real viewers took offense less at what Rooney had reportedly said than at what had been done to him by his employers at the behest of minority pressure groups. They give little indication that they felt a sense of “betrayal” by Rooney. Many liberals have a bad habit of assuming they speak for all of us, even when the polls, the election returns and the market all clearly say otherwise. At the same time, they want to monitor everyone’s attitudes and banish those that aren’t sufficiently “right-thinking.” Somehow we have to balance the claims of free speech against the right of liberals and their clients not to be annoyed by what other people say. The obvious solution is warning labels. “Viewer discretion advised” — that sort of thing. Then Tom Shales could just turn off his set, and the general public could go on watching such controversial personalities as Andy Rooney. Cartoons John s u n u n u , environmental, «r hums adjustment enginee?. COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE W O TJM K8? Stale Press Thunda^totíjMS^IWO^ Page 6 Lattie Coor The new president gets high marks at home, on the job By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press All eyes are on Lattie Coor today, but that is something he has grown used to over the past three months. He has been analyzed, studied and scrutinized continuously by a cautious University community since he took over the top spot at ASU, and has left them all wondering: Is he too good to be true? Even at the University House — a drab, impersonal environment provided by the University for presidents and their fam ilies to reside in — Coor exudes warmth. “Let’s sit outside — it’s such a beautiful day,” he suggested during a recent late-morning interview. By this time, Coor, 53, had been awake for hours. During the week he starts each day at 4 a m. and finishes just in time to catch the 10 o’clock nightly news. The weekends belong to his kids. “They’re my best friends,” he said confidently. “They’re the most important thing of my life. A parent’s responsibility is to give thèir children two things: roots and wings.” Kendall, 25, Colin, 18, and Farryl, 14, currently reside in three different states — but that hasn’t diminished the closeness each has with their father. Farryl is the only child living with Coor. “He is the most incredible person I know,” Farryl said of her father. “I respect him more than anyone. We’ve never had a bad time together.” She is proud of her dad, but doesn’t hesitate to bring up a story that embarrassed them both — when her father asked, in front of all her friends, if Tom Cruise Was a new boy in her class. “That was the tim e when you had a contest to see whose dad was better and he was at the bottom of the list,” Farryl said. “But that was the only tim e.” Coor learned his lessen. He preaches now that “the single most important responsibility a parent has is not to embarrass their daughter.” • • • When the weekend is over, he carries the popularity he has With his kids with him to the office. He does not fit the mold of the typical hard-nosed administrator — just ask anyone who has worked With him. “There are many leaders who are very ^competent and very intelligent who have attitudes to go with that description,” Associated Students of ASU President Paul Larson said. “He’s very competent, very intelligent but he doesn’t have that attitude.” Perhaps the most striking fact about Coor is that it is almost impossible to find anyone who is critical of him — a characteristic rare for the usually controversial post of university president. Larson, who works directly with Coor several days each week, knows him well — perhaps better than any other student. “ When he makes a decision, even if you disagree with him, you feel good about Mm. You know he’s gone through the issues thoroughly and that’s not the case with many administrators. They usually seem to be looking past you. He acMeves a higher level of confidence.” The key difference between Coor and other administrators is his accessibility, Larson added. ■ “It’s easy to attain a level of openness and trust with him ,” Larson said. “Someone as intelligent as he is is not (usually) as accessible as he is. It’s easy to disagree with him and feel good about it.” Lattie Coor •tanda next to his prize silver 1963 Porsche 356B, which he calls Ms “upside-down bathtub.” Each morning, Coor is greeted with a 3 X 5 index card listing his itinerary for the day. “They hand me this little card, wind me up, and send me off,” Coor said. His roomy, well-appointed office has been scarcely used since Jan. 1. There are days when he has made as many as four public speeches in addition to his usual rigorous routine of countless meetings with University and community officials, But in between his engagements, Coor tries to find the time — whether from his car phone or a pay phone — to return m essa g es from various V alley m edia and other organizations. He is down-to-earth and so easy to work with that Arlene Hershenson, Coor’s right-hand woman, moved to Tempe from Vermont to continue working for him. “I don’t think he realizes the authority he has,” she said. “ He uses the authority in such an honest way. Administrators tend to be stuffy, but not Lattie. Everyone is on the same level. One does not work for Lattie Coor, one works with him .” Coor moved to ASU three days before the new year, after he gave up his position, wMch he held since 1976, as the president of the University of Vermont. He succeeded J. Russell Nelson, who left ASU last spring and was replaced temporarily by Provost Richard Peck. • • "'my . • • Coor, unlike most Valley residents, was born and raised in Arizona. He attended NAU and graduated in 1958 with togh honors, earning a bachelor’s degree in political science. His m asters and doctorate degrees are from Washington University in St. Louis. His roots still influence his tastes and lifestyle. One of Coor’s favorite pieces of art is a copper sculpture, an asymmetrical green and black wall hanging. It is important to him, he says, because mining was vital to the Arizona economy and because he earned his undergraduate degree on a scholarship from Phelps Dodge, an Arizona mining conglomerate. Degrees in hand, Coor began his career in education as a professor of political science in 1967 at Washington University. The ’60s and early ’70s were turbulent tim es for Coor, as they were for most of the country. “It was a deeply traumatic moment in American society," he recalled. “Students were deeply involved in the issues of the tim e.” Coor remembers tim es he spent counseling young men who were thinking about leaving the country to avoid being drafted into the Vietnam War. “Something had gone wrong in the system and a set of values were being pursued that were fundamentally damaging to the country,” Coor said. He recalls buildings being burned to the ground and people being arrested in protest. “I hope we don’t have to live through that again. I don’t think we w ill.” Those tim es have instilled within Coor a desire for openness on a university campus. He favors questioning authority and intelligent arguments about policies. Scott Troyanoa/Sut* P m * Coor and Ms daughter Farryl relax at homo. “As long as it’s not intentionally damaging, voices have a right to be heard,” he said emphatically. “LeadersMp means a responsibility to listen, it doesn’t mean one has to agree or join forces of discourse. As annoyed as society gets about the First Amendment advocates, that’s what freedom is about.” For Coor, the more things change the more they stay the sam e. And, to him, college students have hot changed much since his days as a student. “There are greater sim ilarities than differences. There are all these issues such as the environment and fundamental humanity concerns wMch have remained pretty constant.” The few changes in young people today are due to the environment, Coor believes. “Society is much more sensitive to things than it used to be,” he said. “Students don’t get hatched when they get to campus. They mirror larger values of society. But I find, day in, day out, a much deeper sense of life. “Now there is less opportunity for students to have had some of the real life experiences such as growing up in the depression and World War II. But now the horizons of young people are so much greater. They have more of a sense of what’s possible.” And in his eyes, there is little that is not possible. His passion is flying gliders, his dream to take off for six weeks and just coast along mountain ranges. It is a goal he hopes to aeMeve — if he can ever find thé time. He purchased his other distraction, a silver 1963 Porsche 356B, in 1969 and has not been able to part with it since. “It’s my upside down bathtub,” Coor joked, referring to the car’s unique shape. But there are some topics the amiable Coor cannot joke about. The most important of these is his divorce, wMch happened three years ago. On that subject, Coor says simply, “these things happen in m arriages.” Coor chose to go on with his life, and is quick to add that his posts as presidents of two universities have only brought his fam ily closer together. “ When I became president at UV it created a tightness in our nuclear fam ily,” he said. ‘‘They've always had to reckon being them selves, not a shadow of me. I’m not an anonymous citizen.” Coor said he expects nothing of Ms cMldren other than for them to be the best at whatever they choose to do. “Each of my children w ill do something different than I,” he added. “I don’t sense that any of them have defined themselves under the influence of who I am .” Kendall agrees. “He’s been extrem ely supportive,” he said. “He doesn’t care what I do. He would be supportive and expect me to do it well. He’s kind of like a super dad.” Kendall is an arcMtect who graduated in 1988 from Washington University. Kendall said he believes his father left UV because he was reddy for the challenge at ASU. “He’s a builder. Hè takes a place and builds it into something. He doesn’t like a maintenance position. He really likes to create. Once the thing is created as much in his power he moves on. He saw in ASU a lot of stagnation with a lot of potential to explode,” Kendall added. Coor is following in the footsteps of J. Russell Nelson, but has taken a different approach to (he post. In sharp contrast to framer President Nelson, a distant leader seldom seen in person by students on campus, Coor has already become well-known and well-liked around the University. The most important job he has, Coor is quick to point out, is to listen to the students. “The most fundamental value of a university is to hear the voices of the students.” In spite of his position, Coor seem s to remain a bit in awe of himself and his powerful post. “It never occurred to me in my life that I would do what I am doing now,” Coor said, shaking his head and smiling. Page 7 Thuradoj^gfdilSilWO Stale Prest O.K. A S U ... Where do you go to get something typeset$ STUDENT PUBLICATIONS rig h t here on compile! In the basement of Matthews Center lies a complete Graphics Services Department where versatile professionals are eager to help with your special projects. D E S IG N • LAYOUT• TYPESETTING CAMERA W ORK • PASTEUP REPRODUCTIONS CALLTODAY and A SK FOR D O N N A B O W R IN G , Production M g r. Com m itted to excellence 9 6 5 -5 1 0 6 She'll answer all your questions Page 8 State Press Thursday, March 1 5 ,1990 ASU professor to attend p re-trial for public sexual indecency charge By CAROLYN HUFFMAN State Press An ASU art professor who is charged w ith public sex u a l indecency in connection with a series of arrests in the Fanner Education Building last year w ill attend a pre-trial Conference Wednesday. Anthony Gully was charged Feb. 22 with public sexual indecency, a Class 1 misdemeanor that carries a maximum penalty of six months in prison. He was originally arrested on suspicion of sexual abuse of an undercover police officer. The October arrest was one of 15 that ASU police m ade in response to complaints about sexual activity in a mens restroom in the building. According to a police report, Gully exposed him self to the officer in the Fanner restroom, then arranged to meet him in the nearby lecture hall. The alleged assault occurred in the lecture hall mens restroom, according to the report. After the arrest, Gully was reassigned to off-campus activities but has returned to teaching this semester. ^s t u d e n t ! AND FACULTY AIRFARES Suspect in faked kidnapping scheme to receive sentencing for theft charge By CAROLYN HUFFMAN State Press A suspect in the alleged phony kidnapping of former ASU student Shantih Schmid will be sentenced next week on one count of theft. Mark Lowery Terry, 18, will be Sentenced March 20 by Superior Court Judge Robert Hertzberg on the Class 5 felony, which carries a maximum of two and a half years in jail. Terry was arrested in August, along with Schmid and Dawn Gladem, on charges of conspiracy to commit extortion, felony theft and armed burglary. Terry pleaded guilty last month to the theft charge and avoided trial. Schmid is to be sentenced March 26, also on one count of theft. The Class 3 felony carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail and fines, but probation is also a possibility. In February, Schmid pleaded guilty to theft and avoided trial. The agreement included Schmid’s promise to pay up to $25,00(1 in restitution to the Mesa Police Department and the video store. The police investigation into the kidnapping case cost the city $20,000. Gladem was sentenced to three years’ probation last month after pleading guilty to one count of facilitation. The trio was accused of staging Schmid’s abduction from the video store where she worked, and hiding (H it for two days in a hotel in an attempt to extort ransom money from Schmid’s parents. They reportedly gave up the plan after 52 hours, with Schmid claiming that her kidnappers had panicked and released her. 1st ANNUAL 31 Roundtrip from Los Angeles M o d c o ö ty Hawaii New Voric City Caracas London Parts Bortin Ball Bio $«50 $890 $33S $370 $400 $570 $590 $050 $050 Hestrictions apply. Farns subject Io change Fares sfighSy higher from Arizona America'! oldest and largest Student travel Organization. va Ceundl Trand 14515 Ventura Blvd #250 Sherman Oaks CA, 91403 800-888-8786 Thousands of shirts from over 100 m ajor colleges: Michigan, UCLA, Nebraska, Iowa, ASU, U of A, Georgetown Bring ’em ’round State Press Classified Reg. 965-6731 LAS VEGAS, NEVADA (Clark County School O I s Adult T's/Tanks Adult Regular Sweats/Hoods 12.00 -17.00 25.00 - 35.00 SALE 6.99 11.99 t r í e t ) projects 77 new schools for the 90s. Our growth m ea ns a n opportunity for you. Recruiters will be on your c o m p u s on A pril 3. Schedule an interview ! Liter­ ature and applic at ions are available in your PI a c e me nt Office. W e ’ re an E E O / A A Employer. Adult Heavy Sweats/Hoods Youth T's Youth Sweats 38.00 - 50.00 8 . 0 0 - 1 2 . 0 0 16.00 - 30.00 19.99 4.99 8.99 HURRY IN - SALE ENDS MONDAY Located in th e C ornerstone at R ural & U niversity, Tem pe Hours M -S10-9 PM Sun. 12-6 PM Thursday, March 15,1990 State Press YOU ARE INVITED ASU doctoral student wins 2 awards for Indian curriculum ........ By KRISTIE YOUNG State Press ^Thursday, March 15 - Undergraduate Education j8:30 a.m. Auditorium, Architecture Building, N orth.' »Dr. F ra n k N e w m a n , P r e s i d e n t , E d u c a tio n ^ Commission of the States ¿Address- Understanding the Urgency of Changing theZ American Undergraduate Education. No reservations required. No admission charges. Fot fu rth er information, contact the Office of Special Events, 5-2116. The C h a n g in g H a n d s BOOKSTORE Browse through our 3floors of: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette • S ell o r Trade your books at Changing Hands. For quality d o th and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or S un,! M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 Mill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 Arizona Board of Regents and the A doctoral student in the College of Education’s division of Psychology in Education has won two national awards for her development of the Heard Museum’s “ N ative P eoples of the Southw est” curriculum for grades 2-6. Susan Shaffer-Nahamias, an instructional technology student and education associate at the Heard Museum, is the first person in the eight-year history of the awards to win both. “I was extraordinarily surprised to win both,” Shaffer-Nahamias said. She received the awards from the Association for Educational Technology in February in two categories of Outstanding Practice in Instructional Development. Shaffer-Nahamias’ unit of curriculum that prototyped Indians of the Sonoran Desert, funded by a $100,000 grant from the Flinn Foundation, won the graduate award. Out of this unit, grew five more units exámining the Apache, Hópi, Navajo and prehistoric Pueblo and Anasazi Indians, which won the contest open for members in the field. Shaffer-Nahamias wrote the curriculum because she feels that “teachers in Arizona have very little appropriate information to teach on Indian culture.” “A lot of textbooks in our schools have wrong information about Indian heritage,” she said. “The Heard Museum is publishing my materials and they are now being used in Arizona schools, eastern states and states in the four corners region.” Shaffer-N aham ias’ curriculum w as nominated for the awards by Dr. Howard S u llivan , actin g acad em ic program coordinator and professor of psychology in education. Shaffer-N aham ias has 12 years of professional experienOe as a museum specialist in Arizona and Michigan and has taught “The Heard Museum as a Resource” in summer school at ASU for the past five years. She received her masters degree from ASU in anthropology. Faculty, Staff. Students and A lu m n i of .R I Z O N A ST ATE U NIVE R SITYJ request the honor of your presence at the inauguration of L A T T I E F. C Q O R as Fifteenth President of the University on Thursday afternoon, the fifteenth of M arch Nineteen hundred ninety at two o'clock IFRI. NITE MÀiïéôriiÂs 1PLAYS GUITAR R E C E P T IO N IM M E D IA T E L Y F O L L O W IN G w m a m n m m m m m Just pick up th e phone 644-1233 1530 N. Country Club *#8 » BANDERSNATCH 5 th S t 4 F o re s t m NO H A SSLES NO COVER Grady Gammage M em orial A uditorium Tempe, Arizona E X C E L L E N T B IC Y C LE S 9 6 6 -4 4 3 8 BREWPUB E st. 1988 $ 1 0 °° OFF TUNE-UP SUMMER STORAGE $ 2 0 °° OFF Overhaul Now $ 1 4 " R eg. $ 2 4 " with prepaid Fall Tune-Up Now $ 4 9 " R eg. $ 6 9 " Free Pick-up & Delivery Free Pick-up & Delivery N ot valid w ith any other offer Exp. 3-31-90 Free Pick-up & Delivery Exp. 3-31-90 WWEN YOU PARTY WARD, YOU NEED TO TRAIN WARD. SO GET DOWN TO J P'S GYM A N D TRAIN TWOSE PU PPIES! 2 LO CA TIO NS TO SERVE YOU! * OFF NEW MEM BERSHIP TEMPE: 1835 E. 6th Street 894-1331 GILBERT: 75 W. Baseline Rd 892-9042 Page 10 Stata P m » Thursday, March 15,1990 North_________ Continued from page t . “Did Ronald Reagan, George Bush, the generals or the admirals, did any of them send you m essages that said ‘well done’ after you lied to Congress on Aug. 6, 1966?” Webb asked. “No,” North replied. The documents Hall said she altered included a Feb. 6, 1985, memo by North proposing ways to help the Contras seize or sink the merchant ship Monimbo, which was delivering arms from the Soviet Union to Nicaragua. Poindexter penned a notation to the memo that said: “We need to take action to make sure ship does not arrive in Nicaragua.” Poindexter also wrote a separate note saying that he would propose taking action “except for the prohibition (enacted by Congress) doing anything to assist the Freedom Fighters.” T he State P ress M agazine A W E E K L Y C O L L E G E T O W N J O U R N A L The State Pres» Magazine has an immediate opening for the salaried position of Editorial Assistant. The job duties include: • • • • • T yping and editing syndicated m aterial C reating/M aintaining staff archives M aintaining files D istributing daily m ail General production assistance No This coupon is worth Appointment The Ouafcty Source Date Christian Students Fellowship Memorial Union Building & 1315 S. College, Tempe Thursdays, 12:30-1:30 p.m. The Gospel of Matthew Bill Freeman of “Ministry of the Word” radio broadcast on KHEP 1280 AM Subject D e te ctin g a H ypocrite! Mar. 15 O ur fully autom ated donor center is m edically supervised by a friendly, professional staff. Mar. 29 Apr 5 Apr 12 Apr. 19 Apr. 26 May 3 The E nd o f the W orld B eing Ready to r th e L o rd 's Com ing The M eaning o f the Croes The E xperience o f th e Cm ss The R eality o f R esurrection O ur M ission o f the W orld Chapter 23 24:1*44 24:45-25:46 26 27 28:1-17 28:18-20 ; ; • Place 1315 S. College 1315S. Coltege MU Santa Cruz MU SantaCruz MU SantaCruz MU SantaCria MU Santa Cruz Your Donation May Save A Life! Tempe Plasma 9 3 3 E . University 894-1338 WORRIED WHERE TO START, WHAT TO D O ? A Thursday Noon Bible Fellowship Sponsor: Place: Tim e: Subject: Speaker: A ll a n W elcome! Enjoy watching movies while you donate! HOMEWORK SHUDDERS? THESIS JITTERS? SEND CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO: M S. TECHNO LO G Y W ILL RUSH 2968 W. Ina. Suite 145, Tucson, AZ 85741 Spring Sem ester — Gospel of Matthew (18-28) — Part II for 2 donations in one w eek, for new donors and repeat donors who have not returned in 2 months. A+ A+ U N D ER STA N D IN G TH E BIBLE Necessary $35.00 X A B I A+ A+ DO YOU HAVE TERM PAPER BLUEST F ollow o u r pre-tested form ula and save tim é, e ffo rt and im prove yo u r grades. Don’t pay fo r papers you can create yo u rse lf! Use ou r easy to fo llo w form ula.,.a convenient pocket guide th a t w ill end you r w orries fo r o n ly $6.95 + $1.00 shipp ing and handling. REFERENCE GUIDE included. The position is a good way to break into working at the Magazine. All interested persons Can pick up an application at the front desk of the State Press in the basement of Matthews Center. Address all applications to Meg Halverson arid Sharon Kaney -*■ Editors, State Press Magazine. Y ou’ve Got W hat It Takes! BLOOD PLASMA PO C K ETTEA C H ER PLEASER ^ Mon.-Thur. S a.m.-6 p.m. Fri. & gat. 8 a.m -4 p.m. Christian Students Fellowship Box 66 - c/o Student Life, MU-48 Arizona State University, Tempo, AZ 85287 For further inform ation call 948-4488 or 967-5220 P IZ Z A 2 LARGE £■■ CHEESE PIZZAS a < ** Toppings $1.50, Covers Both Pizzas 966-4292 966-1003 Limited O ffer The Inauguration of Lattie F. Coor SAM Û Be part o f the celebration as Channel 8 brings you live coverage o f the inauguration o f A SU ’s fifteenth President, Lattie F. Coor, with university representatives from around the country. The pageantry begins at 1:45 when university faculty in full academ ic regalia promenade to Grady Gammage Auditorium. Voung & Restless THURSDAY Get a headstart on the weekend with D.J. Joe Trevino and A SU officials Robert E llis and James Creasman w ill provide commentary and guide view ers through this colorful and rare ceremony. Today at 1:45 Presented by Club U.M. 415 S. Mill Ave. 966-8888 KAET Part ofArizona State University Stete Press Page 11 Thursday, March 15,1990 Budget— _ C o n tin u e d fro m page 1. campus each had to provide documentation that they could fin a n cia lly support them selves before being admitted to ASU. However, the documentation was based on the tuition rate the students paid for the initial sem ester they enrolled at ASÜ and does not take into consideration the hike. Arizona Students Association Executive Director Brad Golich said the regents should have considered these facts when approving the $1,000 increase. “The end result is that (the universities) w ill have to ignore any concerns of international students, and international students w ill have to pay the increase,” he said. He added that the regents promise to help these students was just “a nice statement to make with the TV cameras on.” M argaret Tang, a senior computer science major from Singapore, said she is not surprised that no action to help international students has been taken yet or is planned for in the near future. “I didn’t think the regents really meant anything by (their promise to help) — it was just a good thing to say,” Tang said. But Regent Esther Capin said the foreign students have not been forgotten. “It’s something that hasn’t left my mind,” Capin said. “It’s still my hope that we’ll be able to do something.” Regents Executive Director Molly Broad said the board asked the three university presidents to look into the matter but has not yet received any response. ASU President Lattie Coor said helping these students is still one of his top prion ties and that he would look into the matter before the meeting on Friday. Leon S h ell, actin g a sso cia te Vice president for Student Affairs, said there are currently 49 m erit-based scholarships available to international students from private donations. Theft ..— To deal with the problem, Brock said, officials have changed the locks to the building and installed lockers and a gate with a combination lock that leads to the players’ area. Bess said that in this week’s burglary, selling the stolen item s may be the motive. “That’s a distinct possibility,” he said. “What does someone do with 18 baseballs — put them on a mantle? But Brock said he believes it would be hard for the suspect to confirm to a buyer that the autographed balls were authentic. Meanwhile, Brock said he plans to move any valuables he has at Packard to his other office in the Intercollegiate Athletics Complex. ConthHMKl from pagt 1. Packard Stadium, by removing a ceiling tile and dropping into the room. The burglar fled through a door after taking six ASU baseball caps and several hats from other teams in addition to the autographed balls. “It’s just disturbing,” Brock said of the theft, adding that it is not the first to occur in that office. “I’ve had everything in the world stolen out of there.” Last year a thief stole a lap-top computer that contained scouting programs. Brock said baseball players traditionally have been theft victim s at Packard. “They used to steal the kids blind,” he said. SIN DEVIL SPARK YEARBOOK Matthews center, hascmcii • 965-6551 SUNTAN 500 Oil or Lotion Good thru 3-18-90 Quetlien almi Student Putficafaw? Catt 965-7572 LAST TWO DAYS G o ld F u tu re s THEORIGINAL A M A m en ica * “Denen, & D an ■ ■ M M ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ M ■ M ‘p n e s a f b FACULTYNIGHT! LAST THURSDAY O F EVERY MONTH W ELCOM E ASU and MCC FACULTY & STAFF f e o h if lt a Q •7 5 * Cocktails Save Up To *80 O n G old. Invest In Your F u t u r e H ^ H H H Buy an ArtCarved college ring. a Full Lifetime Warranty. "aM I It’s a smart investAnd ArtCarved offers a for Faculty & Staff 5-8 p m. •F R E E Full Dinner Buffet 5-8 p.m. •Ladies Night ’ $1°° Any Cocktail •N O COVER Serving Tempe For 6 Years 23 Music From Yesterday, Proper Dress Preferred Required Today and Tonight T e m p e C o rn e rs to n e 829-8617 i w H t i n S ment • Because variety o f men’s and v»W*WW a ArtCarved wom en’s styles with |i j |p gold rings *ots o f options. Choose a W ^ ' are crafted with college memento the kind o f quality that grows more m jK r a a l gk you can put stock into.^^^ valuable with time. M K H j y g jk Each A rtC a rv ed ^ ^ S ^ ^ teA sk how you can ^ P ji|jfg sw i college ring save on gold H H H tek com es with accessories, too. /ÌRTC1RVED \ 7 0 5 S o u th R u ra l R d . A SU B ook store Location COLLEGE JEWELRY M ar. 1 5 -1 6 - Date 9 a .m . 4 p .m . Time Deposit Required •’ Payment Plans Available m m m Page 12 State Press Thursday, March 15,1990 TIRED OF STUDYING? CLOSE THE BOOKS and CUP THESE COUPONS! AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE $1 oo O F F fa * * ' ATLAS PR O D U C TS For m ost cars. Includes a 22-point inspection. Expires M arch 3 1 , 19 90 FR E O N E X T R A EJfcON ANY 10” SUB FLAVORS DAILY Coupon good through 3-25-90 Not good with any Other offer Including: Straw berry » Pineapple C herry * Lemon Sun Devil Exxon Corner of Lemon & Rural •9 6 7 -1 1 1 4 967-1114 M ill & S o u th e rn GOOD FOOD & COOL COMPANY 96 6-0 79 7 TRANSMISSION SERVICE O IL E X T R A A TLA S P R O D U C TS Includes filter and 22-point inspection. Expires M arch 3 1 , 1 9 9 0 W IT H PU R C H A S E O F A N Y 6 ” SU B Coupon good through 3-25-90 Not good with any other offer FLAVORS DAILY Including: Straw berry • Pineapple C hérry • Lemon Sun Devil Exxon EXON FREE LARGE SODA & CHIPS Corner of Lemon & Rural • 967-1114 967-1114 M ill & S o u th e rn GOOD FOOD & COOL COMPANY 9 6 6 -0 7 9 7 RADIATOR FLUSH & FILL FREE SNO! W e'll pressure te s t and flush the cooling system install up to 2 gallons of arrtifreeze/coolant — in­ spect belts and hoses. Includes a 22-point inspec­ tion. O ther p a rts additional if needed. ATLAS PR O D U C TS Expires March 3 1 , 1 9 9 0 Sun Devil Exxon EXO N BUY ONE SNO AND GET 2ND ONE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE! Coupon good through 3-25-90 Not good with any other offer FLAVORS DAILY Including: Straw berry » Pineapple C herry » Lemon Corner of Lemon & Rural • 967-1114 967-1114 M ill & S o u th e rn GOOD FOOD & COOL COMPANY 9 6 6 -0 7 9 7 FRONT BRAKE SERVICE SPRING BREAK PARTY SPECIAL W e’U install brake linings o r disc pads, resurface disc ro to rs o r drum s, inspect wheel cylinders or disk brake calipers, bleed and adjust brake system , and inspect, clean, and repack front-w heel bear­ ings. Also includes a 22-point inspection. ATLAS PRODUCTS For m ost ca rs and feght tru c k s P rice is higher fo r vehicles requiring m e ta ic pads. Expires M arch 3 1 , 1 9 9 0 EXON Sun Devil ~ FLAVORS DAILY Including: Straw berry ♦ Pineapple C herry • Lemon 3W ^ s ^ ^ “ ===== : Comer of Lemon & Rural • 967-1114 . 6 ’ Sub Orders Need GOOD FOOD & COOL COMPANY 9 6 6 -0 7 9 7 WÊÊÊgg ÊÎ t, wg O n e 10” O n e Item P izza & O ne C a lZ O n e (meat, cheese or pepperoni) with 1 Large Pepsi $ 6 " Limit one coupon per person, 1420 N. per day. Not good with any Scottsdale Rd. other offer. (Exp. 3-28-90) mile north of University 945-8850 W e D e liv e r Two 10” One Item Pizzas with 1 Large Pepsi for $ 0 9 9 1420 N. Limit one coupon per person, Scottsdale Rd. per day. Not good with any 1 mile north of University other offer. (Exp. 3-28-90) 945-8850 W e D e liv e r IT T T T T n ^ N N « ¿ g j '¿ S g l m [ W ith co u p o n : not g ood w ith [ o th e r specials. Exp 3-21-90. $ B L IY A 6 F O O T S U B & G E T A FR EE 5 G ALLO N SN O Coupon good through 3-25-90 Not good with any other offer 967-1114 M ill & S o u th e rn y L | I W «£ r> Y;v's'K 36 Hours Notice Page 13 Thursday, March 15,1990 State Press CLOSE THOSE BOOKS! TAKE A STUDY BREAK! CUP THESE COUPONS! S 5 0 0 O F F ANY SHO RTS C lu b • O N e ill » S tu b b ie s V u a rn e t • S u n s Void on sale item s N o t valid w ith o th e r o ffers Racket Restringing C an of t e rin is B a lls P e n h - W ils o n Leona. 66 (R e g . * 1 4 " ) -L im it 3 - i l i v e f ê i t i j S 7 5 0 O F F ANY VO LLEYBALL $ 2 5 o r m o re T a c h ik a ra • W ils o n • M u z in o V oid on sale item s N o t valid w ith o th e r o ffers SUNG LASSES V u a rn e t • S u n c lo u d G a rg o y le s • O a k le y FREE SALAD BAR BEACH CLUB WEST With coupon Expires 4/30/90 w ith coupon Exp. 3 -3 1 -9 0 p i r n ft p u b 1301 East University 9686666 BEACH CLUB WEST ■ $5 OFF Raisin or Lelani Sandals Reg. $19.95 Not valid w ith any other coupons or discounts. T em p e S co tts d a le F ry’s Valley P laza Expires El Pueblo M all 839-9600 3-31-90 998-7566 Mon-Sat 10 a.m.-6 p.m . • Thürs 10 a.m.-8 p.m . • Sun 12-4 p.m. $ 5 OFF Regular Price Clothing Not valid w ith any other coupons or discounts. T em p e S co tts d a le Fry’s V alley P laza Expires El Pueblo M all 839-9600 3-31-90 998-7566 Mon-Sat 10 a.m.-6 p.m. • Thurs 10 a.m.-8 p.m. • Sun 12-4 p.m. 1301 East University 968-6666 With coupon Expires 4/30/90 One coupon per pizza " B a rz a—ft p u b ) 4 FREE DRINKS W ith any 16” Pizza • (*3“ value) / — o r— Any Pizza 2 FREE DRINKS (12” or 16”) W ith any 12” Pizza • i*!50 value) One coupon per pizza 1301 E. University 968-6666 With coupon Expires 4/30/90 r o i l C o lo r D e sk to p 0 r ■ P u b lis h in g G e t noticed with color prints, slides, and overheads from Kinko's. C olor provides im pact & increases inform ation retention as much ■ as 5 00% . Kinko's can m ake a spectacular presentation fo r you. 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W ith any 12” or 16” Pizza ’ (Limit 1 order • *1“ value) *1“ OFF ( $5 OFF Raisin or Lelani Sandals BEACH CLUB WEST With any Pizza • Value) (12” or 16”) Dine in only One coupon per pizza T em p e S c o tts d a le Fry’s V alley P laza Expires El Pueblo M all 839-9600 3-31-90 998-7 566 Mon-Sat TO a.m.-6 p.m. • Thurs 10 a.m.-8 p.m. • Sun 12-4 p.m. w ith coupon Exp. 3 -3 1 -9 0 # 1 5 ° ° O FF Void on sale item s N o t valid w ith o th er o ffers Not valid w ith any other coupons or discounts. w ith coupon Exp. 3 -3 1 -9 0 Void on sale item s N o t valid w ith o th e r offers H Regular Price Clothing w ith coupon Exp. 3 -3 1 -9 0 $100 O FF $ 9 " $5 O FF BEACH CLUB WEST » o o -ic u « smbri»» One coupon per pizza SEN D YO U R BABY A PERSO NAL! Bring in this coupon and g et a free 15 word personal in the Tues­ day, M arch 27 State Press Classifieds. With coupon Expires 4/30/90 Page 14 Stale P i n Thursday, March 15,1990 Female black leader speaks on new political party By GREMLYN BRADLEY State Press Lenora Fulani, chairwoman of the New Alliance Party, told an ASU audience Wednesday to study, get their degrees and forget everything they have leam ed. “Nothing of it has anything to do with how to change this country,” Fulani said. A developmental psychologist, she said she left academics behind because she was “tired of researching tilings there were already answers for.” The New Alliance Party, according to Fulani, is a blackled, pro-gay independent political party. The NAP also advocates to end racism, sexism , anti-Semitism and anti-gay bigotry. Fulani’s speech, sponsored by the Associated Students of ASU Political Union and part of Women’s History Month, touched on several topics, like the NAP itself, “We’re extrem ely controversial,” she said. “The reason (fdr the party) is the dismal failure of the two-party system in America.” She said the United States ranks 76th among 76 “so-called democracies” in voter registration, not because people are apathetic, but because they do not have the chance to choose the people they want to support. “In 1988, people look at a Michael Dukakis and George Bush and say ‘If, indeed, these are our choices, we’ll go fishing.’ ’’ She said the barriers to democracy were apparent when she was toying to get on the 1988 presidential ballot. “All of this is contrary to what you read in our seventhgrade civics books,” she said. “They leave out that you have to be a rich, white straight man.” But all the “attacks, assaults and injustice” she received simply because she is and independent politician only inspired her to strengthen the NAP. “If folks are that frightened of independent politics, it must be very hot.” Fulani said the black community has two groups of leaders which correspond to class differences in the blaek community. One group is mostly black professionals, the “crossover Democrats.” D YN A M IC EXCHANG E CLUB D EX TA K E S A C U LTU R A L VIEW O F L A T IN A M E R IC A T H U R S D A Y , M A R C H 15, 8 :0 0 P .M ., P IM A ROOM, MU If you are interested in finding unique people who are curious about different cultures, why nof become a member?!! She said the other group “speaks for the m asses” and includes herself, the Nation of Islam ’s leader Louis Farrakhan, Rev. A1 Sharpton and Rev. Jesse Jackson. “It is the phones of us that ring in the middle of the night,” she said. “While the NAACP is debating . . . Sharpton is on the streets, leading the fight.” As for women’s issues, Fulani said feminism must be politicized, and not just by electing women into office. “Obviously Margaret Thatcher is a woman and that’s an unfortunate reality,” Fulani added that politics needs to be more inclusionary so that women — especially poor ones — and the young people “who don’t make it onto campuses” can have some influence. She said she hopes someone at ASU will begin a NAP chapter and choose her as a leader. After announcing that she will run again for president in 1992, Fulani added, “I think people in this country are so fed up with this crap.” ' thêm eâl TîeâIP G et a S m all S andw ich Sm all Soda and Bag o f C hips fo r O NLY... For more information on our upcoming cultural events please contact Karen 224-9288 or drop by our tablé on the mall. Ad funded by ASA SU If you earn less than >2-1.600 ' per year, you may qualify to get a monthly rental discount! Call Now! Sandw iches • Soups • Salads r : .... > Tempe Center Tempe Village Square 18 E. 10th Street Comer of Priest arid Southern Tempe Tempe 968-0056 966-7672 ^ 1 ■' __: V __ -J Valid through SPR IN G BREAK ‘ O ne coupon per person per visit. *N ot valid w ith any other offer. L im ite d T im e O ffe r ONE BEDROOM AS LOW AS $3 9 9 FREE LUNCH! Buy One, Get the Next One of Lesser or Equal Value FREE! Every Day, 11-4 • Expires 3-26-90 Not Good With Other Specials • Free cableTV 30static®*! QUADRANGLES VILLAGE 1255 University Drive Tempe. Arizona 85281 9 6 8 -8 1 1 8 East of Rural on Iniversity NOW TAKING RESERVATIONS FOR AUGUST HURRY! DON’T MISS OUT! PRANKSTERS A R U B R O Li, 1024 E. Broadway • 967-8875 BEST BOOD & FEVERACE IN TEMPE! DISTINGUISHED TEACHING AWARD NOMINATIONS College of lib eral Arte and Sciences N o m in a te y o u r M ost D istin g u ish e d T ea ch er ELIGIBILITY: A N Y COLLEGE O F LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES FACULTY MEMBER A N D TEACHING ASSISTANT/ASSOCIATE D E A D L IN E : M a r c h 2 8 , 1 9 9 0 Nom ination forms can t>e picked up at the Memorial Union Information Desk, in the Office o f the Dean, C ollege o f liberal Arts and Sciences ( SSI 0 7 ), and in each department office in the College. Page 15 Thursday, March 15,1990 State Press Police break sophisticated auto theft ring Police Report By MIKE BURGESS State Press ASU police reported the following incidents on Wednesday: •Police impounded a machete Tuesday from an ASU student’s room at Manzanita Hall after a residence assistant reported seeing the weapon there. •A burglar stole a $150 pair of earrings sometime between Monday and Tuesday from an ASU student’s room at Manzanita Hall. She reported that she had lost her room key last Friday. •An ASU student’s vehicle sustained $2,800 in damages Tuesday when it struck a wall in Parking Structure Two. •A thief stole an ASU student’s $375 bicycle Tuesday from the Physical Science B-Wing. •A thief stole an ASU student’s $410 bicycle Tuesday from the Student Recreation Complex. •A burglar pried open a locker and stole an ASU student’s $95 drawing board sometime last weekend from the Architecture Building. Compiled by State Press reporter Mike Burgess Police agencies in three western states have smashed a sophisticated, multi-state auto theft ring that was based in the East Valley and ripped-off more than $500,000 worth of new cars, authorities said Wednesday. Two suspects were arrested in Texas last Friday and police agencies there, in addition to ones in Arizona and New Mexico, still are looking for three additional suspects. The ring operated since October 1989 with the suspects creating a list of fake identities from the names of deceased people. The names were then used to forge financial documents so the cars could be obtained, police said. Police said the suspects obtained two vehicles from California and about 19 from Valley dealerships. Five of the cars were stolen from Tempe. “It’s a really interesting case,” said West Gilbreath, an investigator with the Dona Ana County, N. M., Sheriff’s Department. Gilbreath Said the suspects would take bogus car titles STATE PRESS from California and use them on cars obtained in Arizona. The cars would be taken to New Mexico where the titles were “washed,” or changed.. The cars were then sold in El Paso, Texas where the two suspects in custody were arrested Friday when they allegedly tried to sell a 1990 Ford Mustang. The arrest came after an employee at a dealership became suspicious because the car’s tide had been changed that day. The dealership, along with others in the area, had been notified about die ring by the New Mexico Department of Motor Vehicles. Arrested in connection with the incident were Robert Lee Ferrell Sr., 43, and Elizabeth May Smith, 30. After the arrests, Tempe police, along with three other law enforcement agencies, served a warrant at a Chandler apartment at 3400 N. Alma School Road and recovered $50,000 in property. “It’s a pretty big deal,” Tempe police spokesman Sgt. A1 Taylor said. “It’s not your typical ring of guys taking cars off the streets.” Classified Advertising: 965-6731 T he State P ress M agazine A $ 2 00 Pitchers $1°® W ell Drinks $ 1 60 Bow ling/ p e r g a m e \\ E E K E Y CO I G E T O \Y \ SMUG BREAK n ig h t H o u rly Rates A v a ila b le . $1.00 Per Gam e Advance reservations re quired . O ffe r n o t va lid in co n ju n c tio n w ith any o th e r special o ffe rs, g ro u p rates o r discount program s. U p to 4 persons' p er room . O ffe r e xp ire s May 15,1990. (plus tax) T E N ÍP É 1 3 0 W L Entertainm ent Centers $12.00 Value $ 2 .0 0 O F F * Miniature Golf or * Golfland W atarSlldea All Day Admission (open spring break) or ‘ SunSplash W aterPark (open May 26,1990) Valid up to 6 A dult Admissions the phone and make your reservation today for a comfortable room at a great price! SPORTSMENA 1 1 0 0 E. A P A C H E • 9 6 7 - 1 6 5 6 3737 Sports Arena Blvd. . San Diego, C A 92110 .......................X. (619)226-3711 In vitation to apply fo r Or call 1-800-255-3050for reservations todays The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Wednesday, April 4, 1990. B ra c e D . I title D ire c to r, S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s M atth ew s C e a te r, B oom 13 3 s 3 é S -7 f7 2 • • • .• Beer and Soda Photo Developing Health & Beauty Aids Compact Discs 712 S. COLLEGE AVE — NEXT TO COLLEGE STREET DELI M-F 7:30 a.m.-TO p.m. Sat 9 a.m .-10 p.m. Sun 11 a.m .-10 p.m-. Phone:967-4049 24 exposure K O D A K F IL M 10% WATCH FOR OUR FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL AFTER SPRING BREAK! AS A SU /G AMM AGE PRESENTS Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing ( not on academic or disciplinary probation); must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the S tate Applicants must pick up application forms at the M ate P rate office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. [C ampusLC orner G ood thru 3 - 19-90 The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State Press editorship for the Fall Semester 1990. Applicants must also: submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses, submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story or editorial written for the M ate P ress or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the Ma te P ress or other newspapers. k OFF STATE PRESS EDITORSHIP must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism courses, including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. À Coupon cannot be used fo r purchase o f ch ild , spectator o r P.M . Splash tickets, conjunction w ith any other discount, prom otion, group rate, or pre-sold ini conjunct tickets/Fun M oney. E xpires A p ril 1991 • PLU 115 Take E xit 8 o ff S uperstition Freeway, north on C ountry C lub D rive, then east on W est Ham pton Avenue in Mesa. Open daily. For m ore inform ation ca ll 834-8318. Is it time to escape for a mini vacation? Travelodge can make it affordable. Just pick up cm . R X A MESA M o n -T h u rs . 9 p .m .-M id n ig h t M on-Fri ^ Noon til 6 p.m. I O U G eo r g e W a in s t o n Solo P iano C oncert ♦the S i immer S how G AM M AG E CENTER Arizona State University Thursday, March 15 • 8:00 pm Tickets are $16.50 and $14.50, available at Gamm age, ASU Activity Center and all D illard's outlets. Charge By Phone 965-3434. Please join us in support of the St. M ary's Food Bank by bringing a can of food to the concert. A DANCING CAT PRODUCTION T h e C o ffe e P la n ta tio n T h e D e fin itio n o f G o o d T aste c o f*fe e ( k o ’f e ) , n. 1. a rich, dark beverage extracted from the roasted seed o f a tropical tree. 2. a liquid w hose history dates back m illenia and w hose magical properties are legendary. 3. the very best cup you’ve ever tasted, freshly roasted, ground, and brewed at the Coffee Plantation. H a tp me w lrtm fr n w mmmi maramry . G ramt apae imia mi l taaahi NewTimes-Best of Phoenix, 1989 Coffee Roasters Tropical Coffeehouse » C O P B E E # O p en from 7 a.m . L unch D aily Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. M-F Half Price Drinks i Live Entertainment PLANTATION C o m e r 6 th & M ill Com ics Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson by Mike Ritter Ivory Towers H.P.... xve MAPS a p e c is io N ... r k n o w TUAT VOU REALLY COtJ'T W ANT ME To GO TO MEXICO WITU YOU AMP TAYLOR ANV M ik e -.. \ State Press Thursday, March 15,1990 Page 16 NO-NO... WUATGJWeVOO THAT I0£ A ? IW G 0IN6T0 MAKE IT EASY ON you... im not GOIN& TO /MEXICO WITH YOU! N O ...N O ... SAY IT ISN'T TRUE... (aJWe o J? O .0 ■/. FREE CHECKS (When you become a member at Tempe Schools Credit Union) by Gary Larson The Far Side ADAMSTOWN, Pa. (AP) Two-way wrist TVradios will still be tough to find, but this summer’s 'suave man-about-town hunting for the Dick Tracy look should be able to get the comic book sleuth’s trademark fedora. George W. Bollman Co. Inc., a hatmaker in Adamstown, about 20 m iles west of Philadelphia, is pinning its hopes on the success of a new movie about the square-jawed crime fighter. The movie starring Warren Beatty and Madonna is to be released June 15. The company, which claim s to be the world’s largest maker of wool felt hats, is busily turning out 40,000 pale yellow hats with wide black bands. The hats will be shipped to stores next month. The company is the sole contractor for Dorfman Pacific, the Stockton, Calif., firm that owns the license for Dick Tracy hats, and Bollman hopes they become a fashion Craze. “Dick Tracy could be as important as Indiana Jones,” said Bollman president Curtis A. Glass. A fter Indiana Jones captured m oviegoers’ imaginations in “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” Bollman sold more than 300,000 hats styled after the archeologist’s fedora. Several other companies also made the hats. N ew est M em b er o f the O rien tal A ll S tar T e a m . . New Seagull Select VC-RP — / Students and faculty are eligible / Convenient location to ASU on Mill just South of Broadway / No-fee checking account that earns interest Complete line of financial services photographic paper | ORIENTAL OneiTAL PHOTO MD.CQ, LTD. m u * \ lo in N o w R eceive: FREE checks Interest on funds No monthly fees N ew Seagull S elect V C -R P is a resin protected variable contrast paper of the highest caliber. Select V C -R P m aintains the com m itm ent to quality characterized by all of O riental’s black and white paper products. D azzling whites. Lustrous blacks. Spectacular m idtones. The convenience of a full 0 -5 contrast range produces dynam ic prints from a variety of negatives. Prove it to yourself. N ew Seagull S elect V C -R P — the rising star in black and white. (O ffe r good through Decem ber 31, 1990) oTcmpe Sclioois C re d it U n io n 28 00 s . M ill 9 6 7 -9 4 7 5 O R IE N T A L PHOTO DISTRIBUTING CO . 3701 W. MOORE AVE. Sports State Press Page 17 Thursday, March 15,1990 Rucker takes track season in easy stride By MATTHEW RASTER State Preea It is a Cloudy spring day at the track and the ASU-Sun Devils are winding up another day of practice. Most of the team is wanning down, but the hurdlers have one last sprint, a timed 300-meter dash. One sprinter stands out from the group as they accelerate down the front stretch. He is taller and faster than the rest, but what distinguishes Robert Rucker from the pack is his stride. It is long and smooth, almost a glide, with the slightest shoulder rock. He looks as if he is locked into a permanent cruise mode, but the manager is calling out split-times that are several seconds faster than the rest. It is hard to see the effort, but taking things in stride is what Rucker is all about. Like his stride, Rucker’s personality hides the effort he puts into track and field. He is easily the most outgoing member of the team. Between laps he is usually talking, more often laughing, with teammates. Fun is the rule and even coaches are fair game, provided their stopwatch is not running for him. “I’m pretty much the joker on the team ,” Rucker said. “So whenever they get a chance to tease me they go for it.” Everyone on the team has had a taste of Rucker’s humor at one tim e or another, but each has returned the favor as well. Teammate Maicel Malone calls him a “spud,” while Head Coach Tom Jones jokingly refers to him as “lovedaddy.” Rucker takes the ribbing in stride, knowing that the humor is secondary to his goals on the track. “We all know what we have to do, so we kind of joke around to ease the tension,” Rucker said. “Coach Jones is really good about that, but we all know that when it conies down to ‘go’ we’ll get ran it like we’re supposed to.” Cutting tension is a must for Rucker’s event: the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. In recent years, it has developed into the most demanding event in track and field, Competitors must have all the speed and guts of a top-flight quarter-miler, but still maintain enough control for 10 hurdles along the way. “I’ve run everything except the mile, but I love the 400-meter hurdles.” Rucker said. “It’s tough, but it’s the best. “When you run the open quarter, you either have it or you don’t. You got to go all out. But with the hurdles you have to have to combine technique with the strength. You have to be consistent over the hurdles and maintain the speed and strength. It is really three things in one.” Rucker added that staying focused is important, especially in the last 100 meters. “Hurdles can grow on you,” he said. “When you come Scott Troyanoa/Stato Prose Sun Davll hurdler Robert Rucker sits on the Sun Angel Stadium Infield following the track team’s practice Wednesday. down that last straightaway it can seem like they’re a few inches higher. It’s not something that really bothers me anymore.” Few things could bother Rucker, especially considering the prpblems he has overcome since coming to ASU. Rucker cam e to Tempe in 1986 from Montebello High School in Denver, Colo. He was a prep All-American pick in his senor year and still holds the Colorado high school record in the 300-meter hurdles at 36,57 seconds. “In high school, I felt like I was the big stud,” Rucker said. “I had all the trophies and stuff. I was the first guy to go out of state and accomplish something. But, when I cam e here I was the second or third fastest man.” ‘ Luckily, Rucker adjusted well to his new role as an underdog, thanks in part to help from older teammates like Gordon Bugg and Malone. Bugg still holds the fourth fastest ASU tim e in the 400-hurdles (50.03) and Malone is this year’s NCAA indoor champion at 400-meters. Rucker forged ahead during his freshman year, finishing sixth in the Pac-10. His biggest problems, however, happened in his junior year. In 1989, the Sun Devil track team was penalized by the NCAA for recruitint» violations. Soon after, Rucker developed a stress fracture that sidelined him for a whole year. He was also one of three track athletes who were attacked during a racially motivated brawl on Alpha Drive in April of that sam e year. Rucker said he tries to look past the incident, but still thinks about it frequently. “I’ve never really been too serious with track,” Rucker said. “I’m just trying to get serious now, to put my 100 percent into it and see what I can do.” This year, that focus is already showing some early returns. Rucker qualified for the Pac-10 championship in his first race of the season, a 51.87 second effort in last weekend’s All-Comer meet. The time only wetted Rucker’s appetite. He is already aiming higher, for the NCAA qualifying mark of 50.75 seconds. “Hopefully, I want to qualify for NC(AA) ’s early, and get it over with,” he said “I want to get it over with so I won’t have that added pressure.’’ ASU womens swim and dive team starts NCAAs By LARRY NEWELL State Press After completing a grueling 11-win season and fourth-place finish at the Pac-10 Champ­ io n sh ip , th e ASU w om ens sw im m ing and diving team looks to uphold its eighthplace national ranking at the NCAA Champ­ io n s h ip to d a y in Austin, Texas. , “On paper our team could finish anywhere from eighth to 12th place,” ASU womens swimming Coach Tim Hill said. “Our goal is to finish in the top 10.” The Sun Devils will field 13 athletes at the three-day competition, which traditionally hosts the nation's premier swimmers. “This is the toughest m eet to win and score at,” Hill said. “The only tougher competition is at the Olympic trials.” Leading ASU w ill be sophomore Heidi Hendricks and juniors Nancy Osborne and Michelle Thompson. At the co n feren ce cham pionship, Hendricks recorded a fourth- and eighthplace finish in the 100- and 200-yard breaststroke, respectively. Hendricks also placed seventh in the 50-yard freestyle and will compete in relay events. “Over the course of the season Heidi has been our most consistent performed and we look for her to score well for us at the NCAA Championship,” Hill said. Hill said that Osborne and Thompson, who both are two-time All-Americans, will be looked upon to perform w ell in the relay events as well as the 100-yard freestyle. “The relay events are the key to our success,” Hill said. “If we score well in the relays and some of the top team s don’t do as w ell as they are capable, we w ill give them a run for their m oney.” Hill said that Stanford and Texas will fight it out for top national honors, with California and Florida vying for third- and fourthplace. Competing for fourth through seventh should be Michigan, Tennessee and UCLA. A quintet of freshmen, who also recorded NCAA qualifying tim es, w ill be looked upon to contribute to the Sun Devils’ scoring efforts against these team s. Betsi Hugh in the 200-yard butterfly and the 100- and 200-yard intermediate, with Eva Nyberg, Tia Rains, Meg Rich and Baukje Wiersma competing in the relays. Sophom ores Pam D u ryea, Jan ae Lautenschlager and Therese Lundin will also compete for ASU. Duryea will swim in the 400-yard medley relay, Lautenschlager in the 1- and 3-meter dives and Therese Lundin in the 100- and 200-yard butterfly and relays. Rounding out the Sun D evils’ contingent are seniors Susie Mortenson in the 100-yard breaststroke and Bente Rist in the 200- and 400-yard medley relays. Sun Devils womens tennis rolls Tide, 8-1, in schedule break By VICKI CULVER State Prase After a series of tough Pac-10 matches within the last month, ASU womens tennis Head Coach Sheila Mclnerney said Wednesday’s 8-1 victory over Alabama was a good break from the hectic schedule. All of the Sun Devil players won their singles matches, and the doubles team s of Krista Amend/Laura Glitz and Luann Klimchock/Pam Cioffi defeated the Crimson Tide in two twoset matches. ASU’s No. 1 doubles team of Karen Bergan and Jill Hamilton lo6t to Alabama’s Rachel Marrow and Jane Phillips, 6-3, 6-4, 3-6. Mclnerney said although she never felt threatened by Alabama, she felt the match was actually closer than its 8-1 score indicated. “The final score doesn’t always indicate a competitive battle,” she said. “We were clearly the better team, but it was not an easy win.” Sun Devil No. 1 player Amend, who won her singles match against Beth Marrow, 6-1,6-2, said ASU’s success may have been due to the preparation put into the match. “We knew it was going to be tough and we were ready for it,” she said. “I think that is why we pulled through and won, because we were ready for a fight.” After securing a win following the singles competition, Mclnerney said she was proud to see that the Sun Devils in no way let up the pressure for the doubles. “No matter what the situation, we are going to go out there apd play as hard as we can,” she said. “The adrenalin may have not been going as much, but the competitiveness still cam e out.” Even though both of Amend’s Tuesday matches were only two-setters, she said she was forced to compete just as hard and ended up just as tired as she does against higher caliber teams. The reason Amend said she kept pushing hard for a win in doubles was for personal satisfaction. Also, she said she and Glitz wanted to maintain their good record of only two losses in order to get into the NCAAs. “Sometimes it’s hard to get up for doubles after you are up 6-0,” she said. “But after you have won the team match it becomes more of an individual battle.” The highlight of Tuesday’s match, Mclnerney said, was the fact that the altered doubles lineup, which she incorporated due to injuries, pulled together and competed well. No, 2 player Kristi Jonkosky was recovering from strep throat and No. 3 Rojohn reaggravated a sore knee Wednesday. “With the depth we have, I feel comfortable no matter who we put in,” she said. “I feel confident that they will go out and win.” Page 18 Thursday, March 15,1990 State F irm Knockout Sale rolls with punches to top of boxing world By DAN ZEIGER State Press Ring Pros, Inc., a compact but complete boxing gymnasium in North Tempe, is ASU student Rob Sale’s home away from home. Behind the front office, which is replete with autographed pictures of the sport’s most successful stars, is a cubicle with just enough room to house three heavy bags, two crazy balls, a life cycle, shower and Competition-size ring. Somehow, the setting is a perfect contrast for a man who, despite fighting tremendous odds, refuses to accept any restrictions in his life. While battling glaucoma and the negative opinions of others, Sale has become a successful boxer, trainer and adviser who someday hopes to return to the ring. Sale, 23, became familiar with the sport while growing up in a low-income apea of central New Jersey. His father died when he was a little over a year old, so the first role model in his life was his grandfather, Sal Massi, who had fought professionally in Italy and New York. “ I was indoctrinated into boxing by my grandfather,” Sale said. “I was two years old and he took the role of father in my house. As soon as I could talk, a boxer was all I ever wanted to be.” While Sale was growing tip in the early 1970s, Muhammed Ali, Joe Frazier, Ken Norton and George Foreman were the heroes of the era. However, his bedroom wall contained photos of legendary fighters such as Tony Canzoneri, Mickey Walker, and Rocky Marciano. “All these old Italian guys,” Sale said. “My grandfather would put Rocky Marciano on this ridiculous pedestal. He made him almost god-like.” Sale remembers that while most of his friends would be engaged with typical childhood activities, he would spend tim e in his garage with a used heavy bag. “1 would get the garbage gloves out and punch that bag until my knuckles were all scratched and bloody,” Sale said. After hitting the heavy bag for a while, Sale would then turn to hitting the bodes. For almost every birthday and Christmas, a boxing publication was always near the top his list. “By the time 1 was eight, I was a Walking dictionary,” Sale said. “I would ask for those books, and I would just read.” Sale did not enter organized boxing until he was 14, but by then he had already been recognized as his neighborhood champion. By beating the neighborhood bully for the “title,” Sale began to take notice the true meaning of the m essage his grandfather kept telling him. Massi said those who box and do it well are put on a pedestal and treated with prestige and respect by others. “If you are a successful baseball or football player, you get treated good, but if you are a successful boxer, you get treated really different,” Sale said. Sale did fight and won his match, but following his senior prom, the pain worsened. He went in for his third surgery 10 days later. “I was crying; it was the only tim e I remember being in tears,” Sale said. “All I saw was me being totally blind in one eye. So boxing took a back seat, temporarily, to the fact that I could lose my eyesight.” His third operation was performed by Manhattan, N. Y., glaucoma specialist Robert Ritch — “the Marvin Hagler of glaucoma surgery,” as Sale calls him — in November of 1985. The operation was a successful one, but Sale’s eye began to heal too quickly. In an attempt to slow down the healing process, Sale underwent treatment which involved. the insertion of an anti-healing agent into his eyeball through a After Sale’s glaucoma was diagnosed at birth, he had syringe daily for four months. surgery performed at the age of 3 and again when he was 6. “The pain was astronomical,” Sale said. “I’d been in pain Following his second operation, Sale had lost 20 percent of his eyesight, but his condition was declared stable. For 12 before, but nothing like that. When you were a little kid you’d years, Sale lived a normal life, although his mother was say, ‘Stick a needle in my eye,’ and you don’t think about what a horrendous thing it is.” strongly opposed to his returning to boxing. The daily agony did result in a remarkable improvement in “My mother hated it, ” Sale said. “She despises the sport to Sale’s vision. Not only did his eye heal as expected, but he this day.” Sale was forced to sneak to and from the gym, as well as actually regained 2 percent of his eyesight. However, Ritch hiding the trophies, awards and black eyes he accumulated strongly advised him not to fight again. while a teenager. In high school, Sale split his time between : “I said ‘No way,’ ” Sale said, “I wanted a Golden Gloves boxing and wrestling, after not fighting for almost two years. title, I wanted to be a professional tighter and nothing was He was able to return to his first love with a match scheduled going to stop m e.” the night before his senior prom. However, in the weeks Sale moved to Arizona in pursuit of that dream in January preceding the contest, the pain in Sale’s eyes returned. of 1986 to train with his brother Johnny under trainer A1 Sato prepares Louis Rodrigues in M s room prior to a fight last week. Rodriguez. “After all the treatment, I got off the plane and had no qualms about coming back,“ Sale said. “I said to my brother, ‘Take me to the gym .’ I didn’t even think tw ice.” Sale resumed his amateur career shortly after arriving in Arizona and in April of 1986, he advanced to the finals of the Arizona Golden Gloves tournament at 147 pounds. His opponent, Pete Chavez, continually tried to intimidate him prior to the match. “He was trying to get to my head before the fight,” Sale said. “When we stepped into the ring, we hated each other’s guts, and the people knew it.” Chavez continually butted and shouldered Sale, who retaliated by delivering several shots below the belt. The fans voiced their opinions by showering thé ring with paper cups and programs. “He was butting me and the referee wasn’t doing anything,” Sale said. “I overhooked his head with my arm and drilled him below the belt a few tim es.” Sale was winning the fight, but he was disqualified when the officials removed the second and third rounds from his overall score. “What I did was not to say that I was a dirty fighter,” Sale said, “I was doing what I had to do to survive. The referee refused to take control of the bout, so I took control.” Sale came out the runner-up for the Golden Gloves title, but trainers and scouts began to take notice that he employed more of a professional than amateur style in the ring. Jimmy Montoya, manager of former IBF lightweight champion Hector Camacho, offered Sale a contract. “I deliberated over the situation,” Sale said. “They offered me the money and a chance to work with Montoya, the trainer. So in August, Xsigned the contract.” The former neighborhood champion was now a pro at the age of 19. Three professional fights is not an extensive career, but Sale feels that his overall experience in boxing surpasses his record. “Three pro fights is minimal, but my experience is so much more vast,” Sale said. “I’m educated in this sport. I’ve studied the strategic side of it since I was five years old.” Sale won his first professional fight with a third-round knockout against Anthony LaRussa on Sept. 23, 1986, in Tucson. One month later, he traveled to California to face Ronny Ray, the Central California Golden Gloves Champion, who was making his pro debut. The trip to the Golden State proved to be one filled with distractions. “I was lax,” Sale said. “I was studying all the way up there and had trouble making weight. Things just weren’t clicking.” By the tim e Sale truly realized what he had traveled west for, Ray had knocked him out of the ring in the first round. “I woke up and*they were pushing me back into the ring,” Sale said. “That’s when I realized that this is a bitter sport.” Although he was still stunned when he came back to his corner at the end of the round, Sale eventually cam e back and won the four-round match by a unanimous decision. State Press “I sucked it up for the next three rounds, closed one of his eyes, and won the match,” Sale said. “That showed a lot of guts to a lot of people.” Sale was supposed to fight again in December, but he broke his ribs while sparring against a Bulgarian who competed in the 1984 Sum m er O lym pics. He eventually returned for his third pro fight in February 1987, a draw against Latin American Mario Lopez in Mexico, Shortly afterward, the. camp of North American Boxing Federation Lightweight Champion Nico Perez was interested in obtaining Sale as Perez’s No. 1 sparring partner. Sale worked with the NABF champ for seven months. “I learned a lot from him (P erez),” Sale said. “That was my education. It was like going to school.” After ending his experience with Perez a little wiser and prepared for a comeback, Sale was offered a sparring job with former I n te r n a tio n a l B o x in g F e d e r a tio n lightweight champion Greg Haugen. However, Scott Mating, co-owner of Ring Pros, Inc., convinced Sale to retire from boxing and become the head trainer at the gym, which is located at 2015 E. Fifth St. “Training is something I do very well and I like it,” Sale said. “My guys are happy with the work I’ve done.” At 23, Sale is the youngest trainer of professional boxers in the United States. The Americana Hotel in Phoenix is not exactly Caesar’s Palace, but the setting th ere does rep resen t boxing’s true prosperity. While the superfights replete with Las Vegas glitter garner the most attention, the sport thrives on cards which pit young fighters against one another. Sale was involved with three of the m atches on last w eek’s card at the Americana. In addition to overseeing the fortunes of two of his fighters, he was one of the cornermen for Wilfred Benitez, the three-time world middleweight champion. “ I’m alongside my fighters whenever they com pete,” Sale said. “They’re also very loyal to m e.” Louis Rodrigues, a lightweight Sale recently acquired, was 6-2 with four knockouts going into his match with Rudy Holquin. “Louis has got Blunder and bolts in his hands,” Sale said. “He’ll hit you to the body and you see God. He’s showing that he can hurt people with either hand.” Sure enough, in the second round, there was Rodrigues, pummelling Holquin to the ropes w ith continuous shots to the midsection. “ Pace yourself for two more rounds,” Sale said to Rodrigues, but the advice was unnecessary. The referee stopped the fight between the second and third round, awarding Rodrigues with a technical knockout victory: After a 15-minute intermission, Sale was back ip the ring with Steve Damon, his second fighter. Damon, a light heavyweight nicknamed “Broken Feather,” was 7-2-1 ” Thursday, March 15,1990 Page 19 entering his figh t w ith last-m inute replacement Keith McMurry. “Steve is a guy 1 have a lot of faith in,” Sale said. “He reminds m e of me because he w orks-his ass off in the gym. He’s a 50 percent better fighter now than when he first came in.” Damon appeared to take control early in the fight with an aggressive style against McMurry. “Be aggressive and stay consistent !” Sale yelled to Damon during the second round. “Be a smart fighter!” Watching Sale in a match involving one of his boxers is an accurate barometer of the match itself. The more crucial the moment becomes for his fighter, the more intense Sale gets. “Combination, One, two, three!” Sale screamed over the roar of the crowd. At the end of the fourth round, Sale, always making sure that Damon sat in a p osition providing m axim um blood circulation, put the goal in perspective. “It’s a two-round fight now,’! Sale said. “Suck it up for six more minutes.” Damon listened and continued to slug it out with McMurry. At the end of round five, the fight was extremely close. “It’s a three-minute fight now,” Sale said before the last round. “So how bad do you want it?” The sixth round respresented the entire fight. Both men recklessly went at each other. Both Damon and McMurry survived the three minutes and were confident of victory as the ring announcer prepared the decision. After announcing the judges’ scores (59-56, 59-56, and 59-55) to the restless crowd, the ring announcer claimed that Damon had won the fight. For Sale and his fighter, a long, tough night of work appeared to be finally over. But it wasn’t. “May I have your attention?” the ring announcer said shortly afterward. “I’m afraid there has been a mistake. The winner is McMurry.” A near riot took place in the stands. Damon’s brother, who was at ringside, needed to be restrained following the reversal. According to Sale, it was only the second loss he had suffered as a trainer. Sale sees him self as wearing three hats: those of a student, trainer and a young boxer preparing to fight again. He has proven him self in the ring, but the one acheivement that Sale is most proud of is outside of boxing. As a senior sociology major, he is on schedule to graduate in May. “I’m going to be able to maximize both ends of the spectrum,” Sale said, “and be a great, intelligent, successful fighter and trainer as well as a college graduate, conducting m yself ip other aspects of life.” Sale likes to use his education to his advantage by contradicting the stereotype that most boxers are all brawn and no brain. “ I can go to social gatherings and discuss the Middle East and other current events with people, then halfway through the Louts Rodrigues sets him self to fight with Sals by his side. conversation, tell them what I do,” Sale said. “It shocks them. I’m not a rocket sc ie n tist, but I can handle m y self intellectually.” Sale had been intelligent enough to realize that the best sparring competition he could give his fighters was himself. The idea also led to Sale’s discovery of his newfound boxing skills, which may carry him to another comeback. Sale’s hand movement was sharper and quicker and he was physically stronger. The result was that he had no difficulty facing his fighters. “What happened was that T matured physically,” Sale Said. “I was quicker, I knew how to react, and I didn’t even do anything. H ie time off actually benefitted m e.” Sale sent the videotape of the sessions to Wes Wolfe, who managed Haugen to a world titleand is co-owner of Ring Pros, Inc. Wolfe contacted trainer Lou Duva’s camp, and Sale was offered the opportunity to spar Meldrick Taylor, who will fight Julio Crear Chavez later this month to unify the world junior welterweight title. “It’s probably the fight of the year,” Sale said, “Taylor is 33-0 and Chavez is 66-0, and both are pound-for-pound two of the best fighters in the world today.” Although Sale has not signed any contracts to work with Duva and Taylor, he feels that this is an indication that his reputation is surpassing him. “To be asked to work in their stable is the pinnacle of the sport,” Sale said. “Any connection with Wes Wolfe would be the biggest break of my career because he has already taken one guy to a world title.” With this opportunity as a springboard for a comeback, Sale hopes to find the answer to whether or not he has the ability to compete as a professional again. “Some things never go to rest in your heart and soul,” Sale said. “I don’t want to have to reach inside my soul later in life, when it’s too late, and say, ‘How good were you? ’ because I never took the time to find out. Photos by Scott Troÿanos “And if a guy of Wes Wolfe’s status is interested, that must mean that Sale truly has something. ” “It’s ironic that I even think about coming back,” Sale said, “because I really started to get a distaste for the sport.” Sale will always carry thoughts of his brother, Johnny, as inspiration for him. “1 give a lot of my credit to Johnny,” Sale said, “because he opened a lot of doors for m e.” In his Uth victory in as many matches, Johnny cam e back and won despite suffering a serious cut above his eye. Undefeated with nine knockouts, Johnny was hailed as the next great junior middleweight. “In his next fight, he had an entourage, and man, he was looking beautiful,” Sale said. “But he took a hard loss. What do you Blink happened to that entourage? I was the only one in the locker room after the fight.” His brother’s experience has prompted Sale, either as a boxer or trainer, to always uphold honesty and committment. “I got a distaste for the sprat because some of the people who run it are very uneducated, snake-like individuals,” Sale said. “You watch Rocky and its ‘rah-rah,’ but then you see the other side of it.” Sale likes to say that he wants to use boxing as a vehicle for him, not the other way around. “I was looking for the right thing to come along where I could come back,” Sale said. “I wasn’t about to do it for the wrong reason. You don’t fight justto fight, or you’ll get hurt. You don’t drink just to drink, or you become an alcoholic.” Sale has all the right reasons to come back, and now appears to be the right time. The former neighborhood champion soon may be in a position to become world champion. Page 20 State Press Thunday, March 15,1990 ASU bowls over UofA, headed for sectionals By KRIS TIMMONS State Press All the pieces, or rather the pins, seem to be falling into place for the ASU mens bowling club. The Sun Devils, coming off a 21-pin victory against UofA at regionals in Tucson two weeks ago, áre headed to Fresno, Calif., to compete in sectionals March 23-24. ASU took first place at the Southwestern Intercollegiate Masters League tournament Feb. 24 at UNLV as its first step to sectionals. The victory at the SWIML earned the Sun Devils an automatic bye into sectionals as w ell as advancement to regionals. R egionals included 10 team s from Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming. Going into the final frame at regionals, senior Randy Keller needed and threw a strike to capture the victory for ASU. “I knew that Randy needed a strike,” Coach Mike Landrith said. “I just didn’t tell him. When it came down to the end, I just told him we need everything we can get.” Landrith has coached the Sun Devils for six years and was a former USA Bowling Team member. Out of the 16 dub members, six travel. Along with Keller, Josh Cobleigh, Tom Ebbitt, Rob Riojas, Dan Saltich and Chris Valdivia will be traveling to Fresno. Landrith said he feels confident about sectionals and a victory there would give ASU a bye into nationals in Portland, Ore., in April. “I think we have a good chance to make it to nationals,” he said. “To get from sectionals to nationals you have to be in the top two teams. “For where the other teams are and, for where we’re at, I think we have a pretty good chance. We need more work and we wish sectionals were further down the road, but we have a good chance.” Ebbitt, a sophomore business major, said that although the Sun Devils were not bowling as well as they could have been at the beginning of the year, they still have a chance at sectionals. “We peaked at the right tim e,” Ebbitt said. Junior Chris Valdivia said that winning at regionals and advancing to sectionals has taught the Sun Devils that they can win. Besides the team event at regionals, there was individual competition in Tucson. Saltich, a senior history major, won the individual at regionals and earned the chance to com pete in an individual competition in Reno, Nev., in May. “Individually, regionals was my best tournament of the year,” Saltich said. “I’ve been working really hard since the beginning of the year, but it hasn’t paid off till just lately.” The womens bowling club has also earned a bid to sectionals in Fresno with a secondplace finish in a tournament early in the season at UC-Davis. Bid will aided Super Bowl win By The Associated Press PHOENIX — Cardinals owner Bill Bidwill is being credited as a major factor in the NFL’s selection of Phoenix as the site of the 1993 Super Bowl. What turned the tide hasn’t been made public, but Super Bowl XXVII, expected to generate a $200 million bonanza for the Arizona economy, will be played at ASU’s Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe. San Diego was out in the initial voting behind closed doors during the NFL winter meeting in Orlando, Fla., and the 28 owners were tied over Los Angeles and Phoenix till the fifth ballot that gave it to Phoenix. Los Angeles had been considered the favorite because the Rose Bowl has a seating capacity of 102,083 — nearly 27,000 more than Sun Devil Stadium. San Diego also was highly regarded because it got rave reviews from owners for its handling of the 1988 championship game. “The National Football League is almost as political as the (Vatican’s) College of Cardinals,” said Bill Shover, chairman of the Phoenix ’93 Super Bowl Committee. “The owners do a lot of wheeling and dealing, but of course I wasn’t there for that.” He said he and Gov. Rose Mofford were standing outside the meeting room talking when “we heard this round of applause. Then Bidwill came bounding into the room, doing a sort of Irish jig, and he hugged the governor. “He does not normally show a lot of emotion,” Shover added. “I ’ve never seen him so euphoric.” San Diego and Los Angeles had sent their m ayors; Phoenix lobbyists had the governor and Arizona’s two U. S. senators in their corner. But “the main thing in our favor was Bill B id w ill,” said Shover. “ He worked diligently behind the scenes. ” Bidwill is considered an old-guard owner who doesn’t rock the boat and willingly follows the NFL line. Observers say that means many of the owners were in his debt and Bidwill actively sought out repayment. “Bidwill was lobbying the other owners,” said Charlie Stephens, a member of the Phoenix ’93 Committee and him self a lobbyist at the Capitol for a variety of interest. The Cardinals won’t benefit greatly from hosting the Super Bowl — they only get 10 percent of the available tickets, for instance. But Bidwill’s image had been tarnished by a ticket-price controversy, a poorly handled coaching change and fans disguised as empty seats at home gam es, and his success in this endeavor is considered to go a long way toward rehabilitating his popularity at home. “I think he (Bidwill) needed this for his sta tu r e in th e c o m m u n it y ,” said Sen. William De Long, R-Tucson, who served on the Super Bowl Committee. VfeUGive You SomethingTo Write Home About SPORTS & SPIRITS WITH STYLE * |5 0 WELL, WINE, K A M IS $000 DOMESTIC, WATERMELONS k„ ^ ers STIFF JOHNSONS W NIGHT L I . Ic e T e a s O S J 0 0 PITCHERS ^2 ®® ,( S M If you’ve always wanted to get away for the Summer, Disneyland can offer you the experience of a lifetime. We currently have excellent opportunities throughout the Magic Kingdom and the Disneyland Hotel for bright and enthusiastic individuals. You’ll enjoy all the benefits of working at Disneyland mchiding; • Good Money—1Wages starting at $5.05 per hour • Fun After-W nk Activities • Lasting Friendships You will also be able to experience all the great things Southern CaUfomia has to offer—from the beaches and mountains to the exciting dty life. We currently have opportunities in: • Food Service • Merchandising 0 O t 8-ciose P o n y P it c h e r s W h i t e R u s s ia n s B lu e H a w a iia n s • Attractions • Custodial • Travel Reservationist " W • Front Desk/BeU Services Coronas Shots of Gold Margaritas Mie Drysi°Pm • Costuming • Distribution •T icket Sales You must be at least XI years old and fully available to work through the end of the Sum­ mer. Housing wiD be available. Get ready to make some memories this Sum­ mer, AS interested individuals should plan on attending an evening orientation prior to the inter­ view. Please see your Student Placement Center for more information and sign-ups. ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS March 2 8 ,2 9 ft 30 Disneyland Equal Opportunity Employer — LADIES NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY— "B R E A T H L E S S " M A L E D A N C E R S £ 75tww *1 •-lOpm DRAFTS 10-Close 50 DRW $3S 0 ^|_|_ NIGHT ETCHERS 10-Close STIFFJOHNSONS 4 for 1 COUNTDOWN 50* 75< 50< ym Beer I X Ice Teas HAPPY HOUR 4 -7 p .m . W e ll, W ine Margs & Schnapps • DJ DA NCING DAILY POOD SPKIALS RURAL & APACHE968-0243 Page 21 Thufsdjj^ard^l^IWO State Press D ctT t let Sprina C re a k S p rin a U p a n d C ra k e Y o u Trip Check with O il and Filter Change $12,95 TH E H O N D A D O C T O R —~ | W e now service Acuras 967-7282 pi -ft n* t € -ft fi t H TH E NITECLUB Suns run home w in streak to 18 By The Associated Press PHOENIX — Tom Chambers scored 31 points while Kevin Johnson had 29 and triggered a decisive third-period run as the Phoenix Suns beat the Denver Nuggets 138-106 Wednesday night for their 18th consecutive victory at home. Dan Majerle added 20 points and Eddie Johnson 19 for the Suns, who won for the seventh straight time overall and are challenging the all-time club record for consecutive homecourt wins — 21 set from March 2,1980, to Nov. 30,1980. They already have broken the franchise’s previous single­ season mark of 16 in a row, set in 1977-78. Denver suffered its most lopsided loss ever against Phoenix. The previous worst defeat was 137-109 on Dec. 3, 1981. Michael Adams and Walter Davis scored 16 points apiece and Danny Schayes had 15 to lead Denver. The Nuggets, trailing 63-58 at halftime and 75-65 with 8:15 remaining in the third quarter, got five points from Adams in a 9-0 spurt and forged a 77-77 tie on Schayes’ layin with 5:57 left. Kevin Johnson started an 8-0 Phoenix run on a jumper with 5:26 to go and ended it on two free throws for an 85-77 Suns’ bulge with 3:50 left. Denver closed the gap to 97-90 by quarter’s end, but the Suns opened the fourth period with a 7-0 surge and then had an 11-0 run for a 121-96 lead with 6:24 to play. Chambers had 16 first-half points and keyed a 7-2 run that gave Phoenix a 63-58 lead at intermission. The Nuggets led 29-27 after the first period on Adams’ nine points. The Suns made 58 percent of their field goals (52 of 90) en route to a season-high point total. They are 31-6 since Jan. 1. “This team has a lot of courage and a lot of spunk about them,” Phoenix Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. “They truly want to win. They’re a little selfish in that regard. “But I thought we were a little tired after our five-game road trip and I had to push them a bit tonight. They responded and did a good job in the second half." “We needed this win and I wasn’t about to let it get away,” said Chambers, who hit 12 of 20 field goal attempts. “I did whatever I could to keep us ahead until we could put them away.” Denver hurt itself by shooting just 40 percent — 42 of 105. Alex English had only eight points, all but one coming in the first half. “We self-destruct every gam e,” said Nuggets Coach Doug Moe. “We’re getting better and playing pretty good in spots, Am o c M m I P rn s photo but the Suns are playing so well that if you screw up at all Jeff Homacek dribbles ahead of Blair Rasmussen in the Suns’ against them, it’s over. 138-108 win Wednesday. “Kevin Johnson is a genuine superstar and he opens up 16 points but limpèd off the court with 9:38 remaining in the everything to everybody. He makes their whole team .” Johnson finished with 12 assists and three of the Suns’ eight game after re-aggravating his sore left knee. Fitzsimmons said Hornacek is questionable for Friday’s home game steals. His starting backcourt mate, Jeff Homacek, finished with against Miami. 76ers break 6-year skid against Lakers By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — There are easier ways in the NBA to end a losing streak than doing it against the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers, the team with the best record in the league. Especially when you haven’t beaten the Lakers in 11 games over more than six years. But the underdog Philadelphia 76ers found a way. “We really needed this gam e,” said Charles Barkley, who scored 35 points, grabbed 19 rebounds and had six assists as Philadelphia snapped a three-game losing streak with a 116-110 victory over the Lakers Wednesday. The victory also ended the Lakers’ six-year mastery over the 76ers. “It was a huge Win for us,” Philadelphia Coach Jimmy Lynam said. “They (the Lakers) are the best in basketball. They have the best record.” Johnny Dawkins tied his career high of 30 points and Hershey Hawkins had 24 as the Sixers held off a final-period Lakers’ rally. “Their guards (Dawkins and Hawkins) just killed us,” said Lakers Coach Pat Riley. “We just let them get confidence outside. We focused on Charles (Barkley) too much and Johnny and Hersey just drilled us. “Tonight we caught a good team that is on their way to be a great team. They were in a desperate situation and came through.” Magic Johnson scored 34 points, had nine assists and grabbed six rebounds as the Lakers had a four-game winning streak snapped. Jam es Worthy had 28 points and Orlando Woolridge 16. “Dawkins and the gang shot the ball w ell,” Johnson said. “We were right there at halftime, but they had a big third quarter. The only thing I can say is that we had our chance and didn’t convert. When you are on the road you have to convert.” With Philadelphia leading 99-97, Dawkins scored on a S W C ,o f S c o t t d s a le C a m e l b a c R o a d s Sc l< 6 0 2 . 9 4 5 . 2 3 4 5 driving layup to start an 8-1 spurt that boosted the 76ers to a 107-100 lead with 1:29 remaining. But the Lakers pulled to 109-106 with 34 seconds left on Magic Johnson’s ^-pointer. After Hawkins hit two free throws with 29 seconds to go, giving the 76ers a 111-106 lead, Johnson hit a driving layup to pull the Lakers within three points again with 24 seconds remaining. Dawkins missed two free throws, but he grabbed a rebound of a Johnson m iss and was fouled with 15 seconds to go. This tim e, he made both shots. Barkley then stole the inbounds pass and converted a three-point play. Barkley went into a dance as the game ended. “Johnny Dawkins has done a good job for us all year,” Barkley said. “He and Hersey are two very important players for us. I’ve said that all year.” Philadelphia, with Hawkins scoring 11 and Barkley nine points, led 30-27 after one period and 59-55 at halftime. Los Angeles pulled ahead 51-49 with 2:37 left in the second quarter, bjit Derek Smith’s short jumper began a seven-point Philadelphia rally. Philadelphia was in front 87-79 after three quarters. Dawkins said he was a lot more aggressive. “I was feeling it early,” Dawkins said of his shooting touch. “The shots were going in. It was a big win. It gets us back on the right track.” The 76ers’ Rick Mahorn was injured with 3:04 left in the game. After blocking a Los Angeles shot, he collided with Barkley and crumpled to the floor. The Sixers said Mahota, who was wearing a protective bandage on an injured left elbow, suffered a strain of the lower back and contusions of the left hip. Lynam said that initially Mahorn had no feeling in one leg. “But it’s coming back now,” he said. It is believed that Mahorn bruised h is sciatic nerve. You can charge your classified ad over the p h r STATEPRESS CLASSIFIEDS 965-673 Page 22 State Prêt» Thursday, March 15,1990 Classifieds STATE PRESS Clasalfiad Advertising Matthews Center South Basement 965-6731 ANNOUNCEMENTS AUTOMOBILES CONCERT TICKETS APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING A FREE g ift ju s t fo r ca llin g . Plus raise up to $1,700 in only 10 days. Student groups, fra ts and sororities needed fo r m arketing proje ct on cam pus. For details plus your f r e e g if t , g ro u p o ffic e r s c a ll 1-600-765-8472 ext. 50. 1980 PORSCHE 931 Turbe. S ilve r/ D olom ite, loaded. Low m ileage, looks and runs lik e new. $6,800. 940-0363. 2 GREAT seats to the Paul M cCartney concert. Section 30, row 2. C all R ick or D iane, 821-2391. 1/10th M ILE to ASU. Spacious 2 bdrm 2 bath. 1000 s q .ft., pool, laundry. $475 in cluding u tilitie s . 910 E. Lem on 966-8704. ROOMMATES W ANTED to share 3 bedroom , 2 bath. Los Prados Townhom es, 1 3th/H ardy. P o d, courts and m ore. C all Jay, 921-7059. 1981. MAZDA 626 sports coupe, tan, 5-speed. E xcellent cond ition. $1,950/offer. C all Debbie at 966-3792. PAUL MCCARTNEY tickets. North-west com er, low er level. Make offer. C all 962-6347. 1 BEDROOM, $275 in cluding u tilitie s , near ASU 966-5596. 1962 COLT, 2-door, auto, AM /FM , casset­ te , AC, new brakes, 2 new tires, low m iles, m ust see. $1,650. Home: 966-8627, work: 345-3506 COMPUTERS CINDERELLA CARRIAGE rides fo r tw o in rom antic O ld Town Scottsdale, Friday/ Saturday nights. $22.50. 381-0576. FREE BEER!) On a S pring Break sailboat ride in Rocky P oint. C all Larry at 439-0122. LINER A D RATES: 15 w ords o r less: $ 3.00 per day (o r .1-4 days $2.75 pe r day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 pe r day. fo r 10-r days 15* each a d d itio n a l w ord The firs t 2 w ords are capitalized: No bold fa ce o r centering. Personals are only $1.40! FRESH BAKED cookies and m uffins everyday at B.G . E in ste in 's Bar and G rill,, upstairs, com er of 6th and College. H A N G G LIDE! G ently sloping man-made h ifr'S q fe and exciting. G roup rates and g ift c e rtific a te s a v a ila b le , W in d s p o rts , 897-7121. LOVE TO dance? H ate the bar scene? V o u 'll love the A il S ingles Dances, every Friday and Sunday at be tte r V alley hotels. Recorded inform ation, 946-4086. ANNOUNCEMENTS SING LES’ EVENTS, advice, personals S ingle Scene new spaper. Free sam ple, 990-2669. W E HAVE Vienna Beef Chicago Style H otdogs! B.G . E instein’s Bar and G rill, upstairs, com er o f 6th and College. BUY, SELL, TRAM A good place to sell is a great place to buy! Clothes Peddler 966-2300 (By Drug Emporium) Student funding Search SCHOLARSHlPS»GRANTSeLOANS 1986 CJ7 fu lly loaded, many extras, runs and looks lik e new, m ust see. $9,800. Call 969-5696. 1987 RENAULT A lliance, 4-speed, ac, one ow ner. G ood cond ition, very reliable. $2600 or best offer; 491-3057. 1987 SUZUKI Sam urai JX, 27,000 m iles, w hite, soft top, AM /FM cassette, AC, $5,500/offer. Call T on i between 8-4:30, M onday-Friday, 991-8342. 1988 BLACK Suzuki SBm urai, soft top and b ik in i top. Low m ileage, super condition. $6,200/offer 491-2131. AUTO AUCTION, open to the public. G overnm ent-seized vehicles from $100. Corvettes, Chevys, Porsches, and other c o n fis c a te d p ro p e rtie s . F o r in fo , (615)779-7111, ext . Rt237. CASH FOR cars or trucks, 24 hours, 7 days/week. Bob, 531-6600 CONVERTIBLE TIM E ! 1970 M ustang conve rtible. H igh m ileage, but rim s perfect. $6,000 C a ll 786-4814, leave m essage. HONDA’S, NEW and used. ASU student and sta ff/fa cu lty discount. For m ore in for­ m ation, c a ll 274-7800, ask fo r Henry. COMPUTER FOR sale. D isk drive and modem included. L ike new. $300. C all 957-1618 today. REAL ESTATE HAYDEN SQUARE condo, 2 bedroom , 2 bath. $10,000 dow n, assum e/no qua lify­ ing. A ll upgrades. D avid, 839-3371. Q UESTA VIDA condo 3 bedroom , 3 bath, 8Vfc% FHA assum able. $648 per m onth plus $72 home ow ner’s dues. Excellent lo cation. C om pletely, furnished. $79,990. C all 945-3160. “ THE COMMONS on Lem on” for only $100 dow n! W ^y rent when you can save over $30,000 oh th is 2 bedroom , 2 bath u n it w ith a ll appliances, only w alking distance to cam pus. O nly $47,000 — paym ents low er than rent! Darren, R ealty E xecutives, 941-'7705, B U Y O F T H E W EE K Patio Home 2 bedroom/loft, 2 car garage, vaulted ceilings. $105,000. Bob Bullock • Realty Executives 998-2992 Ask Us About Our S i 00 U.S. Bond Guarantee We Know Where To Find The Money MOTORCYCLES 1983 HONDA Nighthaw k 550, excellent c o n d itio n . 6 .0 0 0 m ile s . C a ll G ary, 241-6591, days or 395-0874, nights. 4 4 2 5 N . 78th Street, Suite 2 6 2 B Scottsdale, Arizona 8 5 2 5 1 -2 5 5 8 (602)423-5397 APARTMENTS STEPHEN D. A D D Y 1985 HONDA E lite 250. Good condition. Need to s e ll fa st, $700. C all Brent, 784-0877 1986 YAMAHA 600 radian, 4,000 m iles, needs w ork. $600. 921-2517. 1988 YAMAHA m otorcycle, 600ccs, runs great. Fast, m uch fu n on/off road. ASU sticker $1,600 firm -966-7922. 750CC. $700. 1982 Honda V-45 Magna. Looks, runs good, Clean. 890-1280 or 554-2407. KAW ASAKI KZ750, good, fast and reliable transportation. M ust s e ll, need m oney for Spring B reak! $450. C a ll Frank, 968-2261. M OPED. LOW m iles. $30Q/offer Frank, 230-9591 Call BICYCLES ramun MARCH to 26-30 ETHNIC D o n ’t m iss th e fabulous k ick o ff on M on d ay, M a rc h 2 6 w o m en pidne^n ond poet? lectdirig the. *oy M ONDAY, MARCH 26 11:30 a.m .-1 p.m .- Opening Celebration on Cady Malt •W elcom e by Dr, Lattie Coor, President, ASU and Dr. Jo Anne O ’Donnell, Assoc. Dean of Students and Com m ittee Chair •G ail Gruen, “ Reading from Maya Angelou” •M argo Reed - Vocalist with the Michael Reed Band, “ Jazz at Its Best” BENOTTO TRIATHILON, lik e new. Need to sell. New $500, s e llin g fo r $225 or offer. 967-4873. ' ' - ! V" \ ‘v " FOR SALE, a ll or part, 27” Schw inn racing bike. 21 speeds, Cam pagnolo brakes. M avic rim s and sew up tires. AesaJ pum p. $125. M itch, 438-2863. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE GLO W ORM glow in the dark condom s. Light up your love life . Send selfaddressed, stam ped envelope fo r inform a­ tio n to: C&C M erchandisé, 1801 W est ChoHa, no. 106, Phoenix, A rizona 85029. ONE SEGA G enesis 16-bit gam e system . One m onth old. $160 firm . 966-2571. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedroom s 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. STUDIOS $295. S m all, qu ie t com plex w ith pool. Close to ASU. U tilitie s included. Please c a ll 966-8597. M €€ RENTAL SERVICE A partm ent Anders Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 N. W. Phoenix 841-5055 IDEAL FOR ROOMMATES Perfect 2-bedroom floor plan lo t ASU students. Newly redecorated apts., sp lit bedrooms for privacy, pools, lighted tennis court, and much m orel! E astrid ge A p artm en ts 1522 E. Southern Ave. 839-9 947 (Present this ad lo r additional $25 savings) FREE Apartment locating service. Apartm ent Express 437-1048 SOLOFLEX FOR sale, $650/offer. Contact 784-4539, a fte r 5pm . 10 a.m .-3 p.m . “ A rt Perspectives’ ’ Cady Mall B u y it, sell it, fin d it, tell it, in S ta te Press C lassifieds •A multi-media display presented by ethnic women artists from the community. 4:30 p.m . “ My Recent Projects” A rchitecture (AED 60) 198 7 S C H W IN N V o y a g e u r M e n ’ s 15-speed touring bike. Halogen lights, rarely used, perfect condition, m any extras $275. W ayne. 838-5405. ASU AREA. S tudios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartm ents fo r re n t. $260 and up. 966-8838. AUTOMOBILES MARGO REED •Featuring architect: Victoria Cosasco Co-sponsor: School of Architecture •Reception to follow presentation Sponsor: Women in Architecture Sponsored by Student Life Cultural Diversity Com m ittee and University Women’s Council 2 BEDROOM special, $325/m onth. ASU 4 blocks, 1014 South Farm er. Refundable deposit. 731-3127. Fully Modern Move-In Special F a c u lty /S ta ff/G rad g ate S tu dents. D elu xe studio, 1 and 2 bedroom a p art­ m e n ts . S p a , 2 p o o ls , co u rtyard . AUTOMOBILES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES NEED SOME extra cash and have some spare tim e? W hy not try an MLN com pany that’s in the beginning stage o f e xcdlerating grow th. This opportunity can give you fin a n cia l freedom . Be your own boss, m ake your own hours, create your future. 225-8894. C lo se to A SU Hayden Place 625 W. 1st St., Tempo (1st & Roosevelt) 968-5444 E N J O Y T H E Q U IE T ! 1 /2 B lo c k F ro m C a m pu s B e a u t if u lly f u r n is h e d , h uge 1 b e d ro o m , 1 bath: 2 bed ro o m . 2 bath a p a rt­ m ents. A ll b ills paid. Cable T V , h e a te d p o o l, and sp a cio u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by today! Terrace Road Apartm ents 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS 2 bedroom duplex, 1 m ile/ASU. Fenced yard, pets o.k. $325/ m onth. 265-2066. 3 BEDROOM condo, near ASU. A irconditioned, firepla ce, p o d , washer/dryer. Reasonable. Phyliss, C21/RAN Realty. 844-0600 LU X U R Y TO W N H O M ES, 2 and 3 bedroom s. W asher/dryer. Vs m ile to ASU. Pools, Tennis courts. 967-4908. ONE AND tw o bedroom , 1 bath' condos, w alk to ASU, w asher/dryer/refrigerator. 345-1919. PLUSH 3 bedroom condo. Two room s for rent, 1 3/4 m iles east o f ASU. M ale or fem ale, non-sm oker. Phone: 990-0169, nights, and 947-7261 ext. 583, days. TEMPE/ASU, spacious one bedroon, a ll appliances in cluding washer, dryer, pod . $360, O wner/agent, 396-9877. VACATION IDAHO M ountains, Spring Break. 2 bedroom resort condo, $300 or best offer. 968-9422. HOMES FOR RENT 3 BEDROOM, 1 bath, carport, a ir and e va p , p a tio , y a rd , c lo s e to ASU. $500/m onth. 678-4797, a fte r 6. RENTAL SHARING 1 BLOCK o ff cam pus. Need room m ate. $250 a m onth plus Vs u tilitie s . Alan 731-9251. 63RD AND Indian School, Scottsdale. M aster bedroom , p o d , w asher/dryer, dishw asher, ce ilin g fans, covered parking. $270 p lu s VY u tilitie s and deposit 423-8027. FEMALE NON-SMOKER to share 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo. M esa/Tem pe border. K elly, 834-7916 o r 838-4254. Roommate matching service. 437-1048 STUDENT FOR 1 o f 3 bedroom s. W asher, dryer, 2 bathroom s. 10-m inute bike ride to ASU; $195 966-0019, HELP WANTED AIRLINES HIRING now! Im m ediate entry level positions available. E xcellent sala­ ries and benefits, in cluding trave l passes. No previous a irlin e exf>erience required. Some college preferred. 303-441-2449. A M EDICAL o ffice in S cottsdale needs an in te llig e n t fro n t and back o ffice person, perm anent, fu ll-tim e , w ith ' e xce lle n t secretarial s k ills , type 50 words f>er m inute. WHI tra in . A pply in person, 7701 E. Indian S chod Road. S uite E. AN IDEAL on-cam pus jo b fo r students! Can w ork 8-16 hours per week, SundayT hursday even ings, 5:30-9:30. Earn $4.1Q /hour plus bonus plus com m ission, great nightly in centives, gain valuable telem arketing experience speaking w ith alum ni nationw ide. If you have sales a b ility , c a ll 965-6754 a fte r 1:00pm . ANSW ERING SERVICE, part-tim e, tele­ phone and typing experience required. 1-7pm M onday-Friday, and 8-5:30 Satur­ day. Scottsdale. 947-7351. ASSEM BLY 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 R eal Tim e/M utti-user operating system applications fo r VAX and the 68020. To apply, c a ll Ticketm aster at 279-2822. ATTENTION STUDENTS: N ational corpo­ ration fillin g fu ll-tim e and part-tim e open­ ings in custom er service and re ta il. G reat s ta rtin g pay. S ch olarships available. Located in Tem pe. C all 9-5 838-2633. AUSTRALIA STUDY Abroad A pply now fo r sum m er o f fa ll 1990,1 or 2 sem esters: classes or internships. 4 week sum mer program to the G reat B a rrie r Reef. For in fo on the BEST study abroad program in the w orld: C urtin U niversity 1-800-245-2575. BARRO’S PIZZA, B aseline/H ardy. H iring evening delivery drivers. Earn good m oney. Apply in person. BE ON T V. m any needed fo r com mer­ cia ls. Now h irin g a ll ages. C asting in fo (615)779-7111 E xt. T+130 BOBBY MCGEES-SCOTTSDALE has an im m ediate opening fo r a tem porary, possi­ ble long-term entry-level reception ist/relief bookkeeper. 25-35 hours a week. Some experience helpful b u t not necessary. M ust be able to w ork weekends. Inter­ view s Thursday, M arch 15, from l2-4pm . 7000 EL Shea B lvd. EOE. HANDS ON volunteer experience in G uatem ala th is sum m er. C all 966-3877. HIRING SALES cle rks fo r Phoenix, Mesa swim shop. Experience w ith wom en’s swim wear helpful. M ust be able to work part-tim e, fuH-time. M arch 15 thru J u ly 31. C all 264-7774. INTERVIEW ERS OF business m arketing, and com m unication m ajors look prim arily fo r experience. Travel in a 12-week paid sum m er internship. 894-5283. LIFEGUARD NEEDED. P art-tim e and fu ll­ tim e. Arizona C ountry C lub, 56th Street and Thom as. 947-7666, ext. 243. MAKE $4,OOOPLU$/MONTH w orking 5 hours/week. W rite: Rodes Associates, 950 S o u th T e rra c e , D 170, T em pe, AZ 85281-3868. FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted to share 4 bedroom , 2 bath house. $180/$250 plus ¥5» u tilitie s . Non-sm oker, m ust love anim als. 481-0510, a fte r 6pm . MAKE MONEY. Expanding Tem pe home im provem ent com pany im m ediately. Need students to go door-to-door ta lkin g to hom e ow ners. No se llin g - we tra in . Pay cash. C all Bob, 966-3094. FEMALE TO share 3 bedroom house. M ille r and Thom as. O wn bedroom , bath. $20Q/month plus W u tilitie s . 994-5647, evenings. M O D ELS-SW IM SUIT, calenders, and p rin t projects fo r top European m agazines. D avid Schoen P roductions, 870-3043 LOVELY ROOM available, large Scotts­ dale hom e. Close to ASU. W asher/dryer, p o d . 947-2884, leave m essage. ★ EXTRA MONEY ★ Is nlcs, but you can help people too: M ALE/FEMALE, 3 bedroom . 2 bath apart­ m ent. P o d, w asher/dryer, etc. R ural/ Apache. $215 plus W . 437-1048. NEAR CAMPUS, 15th S treet. 3 bedroom /2 bath, p o d and rec room . $225/m onth. Full house privileges. 967-9226. NON-SMOKER, 2 bedroom , 2 bath townhouse w ith m any am enities. R ural and G uadalupe. 491-6841, days. PRIVATE BEDROOM and bathroom . Use o f hom e. $225 p lus W u tilitie s . M ale. N ear ASU. 263-1210. Earn $120+ a month Safer, taster plasma donation at ABI Centers due to automated procedure. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation with this ad . Ask ab ou t ad d itio n al bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). University Plasma Center Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tempe 968-6139 State Press Page 23 Thursday, March 15,1990 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS PERSONALS SERVICES LOCAL, PRIVATE university seeks a part-tim e ¡assistant m ail clerk. Flexible a fte rn o o n h o u rs , M o n d a y -F rid a y . $4.85/hour. V alid A rizona d rive r's license required. Phoenix/Tem pe border. Send resum e to: P.O. Box 60515, Phoenix, AZ 85082. PART-TIME SUMMER recreation posi­ tio n s available: Sum m er R ecreation Lead­ e r I, II and III. $5.52-$8.84 hourly. A pply in person by M arch 23, 1990. Tempe C om m unity Services D epartm ent - Recre­ ation, 3500 South R ural Road, 3rd Floor Tem pe P ublic Library, Tem pe, AZ 85282. (602) 350-5200. ATTENTIO N— CLEAR the gam bling tables and the C a lifornia roadways, evacu­ ate the trolleys, stock the w ine at the w ineries and brews a t the bars! Prepare fo r an in cred ible vacation! I can’t w ait! Love you guys!! Jen. PI PH I’S Ju lie , Am y, Ana, Kim , Elizabeth. W hat w ould I do w ithout you? Friends Always, Keira. E L E C T R O LY S IS -P E R M A N E N T h a ir rem oval. Remove unw anted hair forever. Student discount. C all fo r m ore inform a­ tio n , 969-6954. SPORTS CAREERS three day N ational Jobs Fair: M ay 17-19, Phoenix, Arizona. Top executives, real jobs, over 50 speak­ ers. R egister today. 954-8106. TRAIN TO becom e a m obile DJ. W eekend w o rk, dependable ve h icle . C a ll fo r appointm ent, 820-8220: NEED EXTRA cash? P art-tim e position available, telem arketing, evenings and weekends. No s e llin g , sim ply m ake a p p o in tm e n ts fo r o u r c o n s u lta n ts . $6-8/hour C all M r. French at Lamb Finan­ c ia l, 996-6767. OVERSEAS JO BS $900-2000/m onth. Summ er, year-round, a ll C ountries, a ll fie ld s. Free inform ation w rite : UC, P.O. Box-AZOS, Corona D el M ar, C a lifornia 92625 P A R TV F Ü L L - T I M E . M A K E $1.OOOplus/month M anagem ent trainee position, no experience. Ask fo r E ric, 968-6636. PART-TIME OFFICE assistant w ith some typing and com puter s k ills . Good phone voice. $5/hour plus bonuses to start 437-1048 PART-TIME SUMMER recreation posi­ tio n s available: Pool M anager, $8.23 hourly; A ssistant Pool M anager, $7.44 hou rly; W ater S afety Ihstructor/Lifeguard, $6.41 hourly; R ecreation Swim Team C o a ch , $ 6 .7 3 h o u rly ; S y c h ro n iz e d Instructor/C oach, $6.73 hourly; W ater A erobics Instructor, $6.73 hourly and C ashier, $5.25 hourly. A pply in person by M arch 30, 1990. Tem pe C om m unity S ervices Departm ent - R ecreation, 3500 South R ural Road, 3rd Floor Tem pe P ublic L ib ra ry , T e m p e , A Z 8 52 82. (602) 350-5200. TELEM ARKETERS $ 5 -$ 8 /h r. to start + com m . N o s e llin g , ju s t setting appointm ents. N o experi­ e n c e n e c e s s a ry . J o b hours: M -F , 4 -9 p.m . and S a t., 9 -2 p .m . W ork close to cam p us in R io S alado B ld g ., 2121 S . M ill A ve., S te . 2 2 0 , T e m p e , A Z 85 28 2, a t M ill & B road ­ way." A p p ly a fte r 2 p.m . C a ll an ytim e . 25 3-1 237 . SPRING FESTIVAL o f the A rts, downtown Tem pe, M arch 30, 31 and A p ril 1. Now h irin g fo r cleanup, kidzone, layout, setup, parkin g, survey takers, security arid soda booths. $4 to $6 per hour. C all 731-3040 or c o m e in to intervie w F riday, M arch 23 from 12 to 6:30pm , 21 E. 6th S t SUMMER 1990. YM CA Camps in oracle A rizona, is lo oking fo r sum m er staff. Good salary, plus room and board. Positions availab le are: counselors, archery, arts and cra fts, nature, rifle ry , horseback rid in g , sw im m ing specialists, kitchen staff, nurses, o ffice m anager, and m aintenance s ta ff. C all 1-884-0987 fo r inform ation, or w rite YM CA T rian gle Y Ranch Camp, 516 N orth 5th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona 85075. S U M M E R E M P L O Y M E N T a b ro a d ! “ Sum m er Jobs, B rita in 1990” , or “ 1990 D ire cto ry o f O verseas Sum m er Jobs (from A u stralia to Y ugoslavia- 41 C ountries)” . Each 240 plus page book contains c o m p le te d e ta ils (in c lu d in g nam es, addresses, phone num bers) on over 80,000 jobs. F or inform ation, w rite to EUROCAL, 1900 South Sepulveda Boule­ vard, S uite 224-1, Los Angeles, C alifornia 90025 TRAVEL, BE in the sun, see the w orld, have fun, and get paid! Now? College students cruise ship jobs: stewards, stew­ ardesses, m aintena nce. $ 9 0 0/salary w eekly. G uaranteed openings. C a ll us n o w fo r s u m m e r e m p lo y m e n t. 1-800-926-8447, ext.C -1279. WALKER DATASOURCE is h irin g enthu­ sia stic, reliable individuals fo r national te le p h o n e in te rv ie w in g . N o s e llin g . Requires average reading skids, w ill train. S tarting wage, $4.25/hour. Evening shifts, 3:30-9. Apply in person, M onday-Friday, 10am to 4pm , 4515 South M cC tintock D rive, suite 101; Tem pe C orporate build­ ing. M cC tintock and S uperstition Freeway. 831-2971, m ale/fem ale. EOE. JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diam onds. M id Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. M ill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967 CASH PAID, jew elry o f a ll kinds, in cluding gold, sterling , gem s, pearls, antiques, e tc .. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mid Ave, Tem pe Center. 968-6074. ON-CAMPUS A TR IB U TE to E th n ic W om en — “ Pioneers and Poets Leading the W ay." A week-long celebration o f ethnic women, sponsored by ASU C ultural D iversity C om m ittee and U n ive rsity W om en's C ouncil. M arch 26-30. Events schedules available at the Student Life O ffice, 2nd flo o r of the Student Services B uilding. A ll events are free and open to the public. PERSONALS ALL GREEKS: Have a great Spring Break! Love, Gamma Phi G irls! ALPHA PHI Ldi Acosta: I have watched you from a distance. It has lowered my resistance. I have got to m eet you soon. How about Tuesday at noon? Y our covert adm irer. A-PH1ADRIANE— Happy B irthday. I hope th is is the best one yet. Love ya, Tom. A-PH I LARA— G et psyched to rage a ll over C a lifornia! You w ill return w ith pictures o f the B ridge, Bay, Buds, Bums and Boofoo boys on the C astro. Let's party, w e’d have lo ts o f fu n ! Love, Bugbear. A-PHI W *P/TH: In a ll types o f weather, w e’ll be together even in S.D. G reat 8 m onths. Y es, were good fo r each other! Love, your S .J. Secure Thing. HELP WANTED (tab k' CCeam Accepting applications for evening cocktail, lunch waitress, and lunch hostess. Part-time. Excellent atmosphere. Concern with ap­ pearance, reliability and personality are impor­ tant. Apply in person Monday-Friday, 2-5 p.m. or by appointment. 5101 N. 44th St. (44th St. & Camelback) 952-0585 city of scottsdale recreation division WANTED: BEAT THE rush, experience a m id­ sem ester rush, Beta style. 967-8385. PUBLICITY AND advertising com m ittee, m eeting tonig ht at PV M ain Cato, 8:00pm . See you a ll there. SINGLE? MEET new people over dinnerjo in The D inner C lub. C all 230-4135 fo r free inform ation. CH I-O TRAMP: N otch notch! W ho's there? Score. Score who? Score-eem and cheer, S pring Break is alm ost here! BYOMC, Hussy SCOTTA D arin. Sunday— Mae W est at low tide using bicuspid fo r pastry. W ear your crewnecks and bring glue and candelsticks?! It'll be sw eet! This is your brain on drugs... The CW ord. Bon voyage. The Hoe’s. Private, confidential counseling. Insurance accepted. CHRIS TAG— Thanks fo r being a great R .A.! Love, the DeeGees. SHORTER PLEDGESHIP, longer brother­ hood. C all 967-8385. G innie M onroe, ACSW D ESP ER A TELY SE E K IN G b e a u tifu l blonde at Sno O asis la st Friday a t 6 o'clo ck. Please leave a m essage in the personals. From the guy on the red bike. SlG EP Pledge Paul— “ Please don’t go g irl...” New Kids forever! Just k id d iri'. I hope you have an awesom e break. Love, the other Chicago g irl w ith big hair. DEZ: 11 to 10? There m ust be one m ore! B ut who? Love, your C hi-tow n forest friend. SIG EP pledge Paul: See you in C hicago soon! Thanks fo r being here and putting up w ith me. W ho can I tease in Eng. now? Love, Brenda. P.S. N ice p in !!!! DINOBURGER AND C oorsxtragold— We know it’s early, but we don’t w ant it to be old, so Happy B irthday! B ut we’re ju st going 2 have to w ait; Cuz when we get back w e’re going to celebrate! "E levator Jam m ers” — C oll and W end. DO N 'T BE le ft out of the e xciting collegeproduced shows on NCTV! The Arizona State Cable C onnection is your a ffilia te in Tem pe fo r NCTV plus Southw inds, AS U 's W eek in Review news program produced here on cam pus. W atch NCTV and Southwinds weekdays on Tem pe C able Channel 34 CO-ED VOLLEYBALL TEA M S/IN D IV ID U A L PLAYERS SUN. AFTER­ NOON - 6 WKS. RECREA­ TIONAL LEVEL. INFO: 233-9293 GAMMA PHI S herri— I’m so excited that you are my cresent sis. H ere’s to the m em ories we’ve m ade and the m ore to com e. Love, Jen. JUICE PIG (Am y): “ G et out o f the ca r!” You w ill be m issed in M exico by your buddy, the S olid G old dancer. Have fun next week! Love, C aroline. LARRY, HAVE fun to Havasu! I’d m iss you and be thinking o f you tons. Don’t forg et I love you m ore!! M artha’s friend. TO BAZ, hot Raz or Daz. I’m not mad or avoiding you. Ju st try in g to survive. Can I m ake you dinner one night over Spring Break? You know the num ber. SLB. 897-0444 468-3850 TO THE sick m an o f S ig Ep, have fun in bed over S pring Break. W ish I could be under the covers w ith you! Love, cold m edicine. TRI-DELT RA Jen— W e love you, you’re awesom e! Happy appreciation week!! TR I P .T.’S. Congrades new num ber one house. G et psyched. M r. Black. TRI P .T.’S—* You are the best late-night study buddies. Thanks fo r a ll of the great x-chaniges. Love, Jen. TRI-SIGM A CYNDEE is the best dot and room ie anyw here! I'm so happy to spend m y la st Semester w ith you! Love, A lison. TRI-SIGM A LARA: O .K . The countdown begins.....O nly 2 m onths le ft u n til the BIG day. W e need plans, FAST! Love, your sis. LATONYA, THE b ig 20!!! Hope th is becom es your best sem ester yet, • keep g iving it back to G od! Psalm 55. From the heart, RET. GOURMET PIZZA at its absolute finest. O nly available at P izza Doug O ut, 411 S. M ill, 921-4277. MISTER W ONDERFUL, the past year w ith you has been the m ost w onderful year of m y life . Happy Anniversary, D avid, I w ill always love you! XOXOX, M ichelle. 966-662 1 $12 per month plus $50 one­ tim e member­ ship fee. TRANSPORTATION AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to m ost m ajor c itie s. Gas allow ances available. 21 or older. C all 279-2000, then 4530. $68 ROUND-TRIP tic k e t to Burbank, C alifornia. 3/17 through 3/22. C all even­ ings, 921-2032. ATTENTION: 3 one-way tickets, Phoenix to B uffalo, New Y ork, 5x2. $175 each. M arlene, 981-8316 or 985-0517. FLY ANYTIM E! C ontinental USA, $375 roundtrip. Leave today! N orthw est USA, $275! A laska-th ree w eeks notice, $525. O ther destinations available. W e also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. LAST CHANCE fo r S pring Break in M azatla ri. $195, includes transportation, hotel. C all 949-8339 fo r reservations. LEAVING MARCH 23. going to C onneticut. Need d rive r. H eading north-east from O klahom a C ity. 230-9591. R O U N D -TR IP T IC K E T to O rla n d o , 3/16-3/26, $238. R ichard, 964-4506 or 834-7018. SAN FRANCISCO, S e attle or Anchorage; one-way, from Phoenix. Departs M arch 18. Best o ffe r. 491-1918. NEW YORK Tony Cass— Hope you’re having fun, hope to see you here in the fa ll. G uess who? H int: Eyes. boys and g irls W ANTED: STUDENT to d rive autom obile to A kron, O hio, area. Expenses plus paid. 946-7786. PI PHI Debbie Z,- C ongratulations on being nom inated fo r G reek W oman o f the Year. W e a ll so proud o f you and think you’re the best!) $6 - $8 per hour ASU AREA. Typing, w ord processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytim e. P rices com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186. PAPER« RESUMES, le tte rs, transcribing, e d itin g , m a ilin g s . G ra m m a r/sp e llin g checks. C ollege graduate using IBM com puter. 964-0994. REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your papers th a t “ professional” look. M acin­ tosh and Laser p rin t. Susan, 945-1500. RESUMES, COVER le tte rs, term papers, custom w riting. Reasonable prices. C all 839-3305, 8-5 pm. RESUMES/ M ACINTOSH/ Laser. Letters, re s e a rc h p a p e rs , tra n s p a re n c ie s . 839-3305, 8-5pm . TYPING, ANY size report. $1.0G/page. C all Jan, 897-1744. W E’RE BACK! Form er ASU staffers w ill p rin t in le tte r qua lity from your W ordPer­ fe c t or ASCII disk or w ill enter fresh text. 947-3262, Joan o r Donna. WORD PROCESSING- resum es, papers, typing, etc. C all Dawn at 899-9879, home, anytim e. WORD PROCESSING fo r your typing needs. Fast turaround. Close to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne, 966-2825 ADOPTION ADOPTION: ACTIVE, loving couple ready to share our love w ith newborn. W ill provide m any outstanding opportunities. C a ll c o lle c t; (4 1 5 )8 4 3 -2 1 1 1 , o r (415)855-0111., ADOPTION. OPEN arm s, loving heart and hom e. I’m hoping to share my life w ith a ch ild . Let’s help each other. C all Debbi anytim e c o lle c t a t 215-752-3604 o r 802-235-2312. ADOPTION ON your m ind? Are you looking fo r the best possible hom e fo r your baby? A beautiful life aw aits, w ith loving couple who w ill give your baby everything you w ould if you could. Expenses paid. To get to know us, ca ll co lle ct, S ylvia and Ed, (914)338-4712. LET US fu lfill your dream s fo r your baby. Loving, professional couple praying to adopt and love healthy newborn. C all our attorneys, Ravel and Lach, collect, at (408) 288-7100, reference A236. SERVICES CREDIT REPAIR S ervice— Bankruptcy, slow pays, chargeoffs o r c re d it problem s— I can rem ove them from your credit. Low rates. 345-9763. FULL SIZE COLOR SOUVENIR MAP POSTER AND COMPLETE GUIDE TO PUERTO PENASCO VIRG IN IA COUPLE, form erly o f Arizona, seek new born. W e are a kind, devoted couple who w ill provide a warm , loving fam ily to the baby w e adopt. Expenses paid. S tric tly legal, confid ential. Let us help yo ti through th is d iffic u lt tim e. W e are w aiting fo r your co lle ct ca ll. Patty and Dave, (703)255-9794. “ Don’t cross the border MISCELLANEOUS without it" STUDENTS- ENTREPRENEURS: instant cash: grants, and loans. G overnm ent g u a ra n te e d ! 1 -8 0 0 -9 2 6 -8 4 4 7 , e x t. G L-127-13, \ O r send $5,50 to : Rocky P oint G uide 2051 S. Dobson, #5-234 Mesa, AZ 85202 M (m easurers A scorers) For ap p lica tio n inlo rm aU o n contact th e Student Em ploym ent O ffice, job re fe rra l * 2 4 0 2 - ] ApplicaUons w ill be accepted u n til F rid a y . A p ril 9. 9 9 4 -2 4 8 2 APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it ja s t? C all Jessie, 945-5744. SUNRISE SKI lift ticke ts. 7894)755. TRAVEL EUROPE th is sum m er and earn upper divisio n business c re d it! C all I.B .S . at 830-0902 fo r m ore in fo! PAUL PELTEKIAN (the S ig Ep M an): W e’re sick o f hearing your lie s, the footb all scholarship, etc. W ant you to know we know your life is a lie. CALL TODAY 345-9475 track coaches meet officials A1 WORD processing. $1.50/page. A ll types o f papers. Laser p rin te r. Phoenix location. 943-3552. RESUMES- $10 High-Res Laser Imager. G reat fo r theses, reports. C all Joe, 839-2770. TRAVEL R O U N D -TR IP T IC K E T to O rla n d o . 3/17-3/24. $180/offer. 784-9781 M .U. M ELANIE— Hope you had a great tim e aat ASU. W e loved having you here! Love, your pals, K, A, N and H. $1.65 AND up. P rofessional word proces­ sor and form er E nglish teacher. Laser p rin te r. C laudia, 964-6012. A KINKO’S paper m akes the grade. K inko’e typesets papers, resum es, flie rs , e tc... Self-serve M acintosh com puters and Laserprinter too. 933 E . U niversity, call 966 -20 35. 960 W . U n iv e rs ity , c a ll 921-0168. Open early, open late, open seven days! ROUND-TRIP TICKET to Indianapolis A irp ort. Leaving 3/29/90, returning 4/1/90. $99. M ust s e ll. P lease c a ll C indy, 784-8137. MID-SEMESTER Rush events at the Beta House, 967-8385. $1.50 AAA W ord Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. M arion 839-4269. ACCURATE RESUMES com posed and typed ($25); guaranteed. C all C afol, 924-8064. East Mesa. ROUND-TRIP TICKET to M iam i, 3/16/90 — 3/20/90. Cost: $200. C all B ridged. 897-8220. LIBBY NICOLE M onte: Thanks fo r corrupt­ ing me. D ottie, pick up th a t napkin! Thum b. $1 00/PER PAGE typing o f theses, reports and d is s e rta tio n s . O th e r w o rd /d a ta p ro ce ssin g s e rv ic e s a v a ila b le . C a ll 273-7774 or 897-9255. ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, editing, a ll included. Q uick turn­ around. C all 894-6074. TO M Y w onderful ding-a-ling, the one to whom I d in g ; w ithout you I w ould lose, w ind up broke and turn to booze; w ith you I’ll always w in, rich as h e ll and cle ar o f gin; yo u 're m y lig h t and I lo ve you as such, you Could never know ju st how m uch! Nerd-2. RESTAURANTS/ BARS SERVICES There is a solution! SIGMA NU J. C lark, even though yo u 're a pain, I s till love you! W e’ve com e a long way and it's only ju s t begun. K. LAST CHANCE! REACH applications due M arch 16. Don’t m iss the chance to be a part o f ASU! A pplications available a t the REACH desk PI PH I’S have “ changed” and w ant our awesome team to know th a t w e’re psyched fo r w inning G reek S ing! B U L IM IA TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING TUTORS C A tC U LU S TUTOR needed, weekends only. Fee negotiable. M ust have own transportation. 8784)633, 488-5117. Rick. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING PHOTOGRAPHY WORD PROCESSING — $1.50 per page. Resumes & e d iting available. R eliable. C all 921-3770 evenings & weekends. JASON SILVER/KID-M AN Photow orks ; M odels’ , actors’, and a rtists’, portfolios. Reasonable. 990-1818, 946-2475. State Press Thursday. March 15.1990 Page24 Se 25-40% OFF A Career in Chiropractic? hiropractic is one o f the world’s m ost fulfilling professions. • • A ccording to The Jobs Rated Almanac, it is one o f the 10 best professions, e • Sunglasses by BauschA Lomb We also carry these fin e sunglasses: G argoyle Serengeti Sun Cloud Vuarnet Scott Bolle Revo 680 S. M ill, Tempe • Centerpoint • Next to Coffee Plantation 968-9912 wom en. • • It provides an excellent incom e and great personal satisfaction. • • It is a profession that lets you be your own boss. • • A nd it is a profession that lets you help people. If you would like to know m ore about a career in chiropractic, please call D r. Terry A . Rondberg. H e w ill be glad to discuss your future in chiropractic. free o f ch a ry e. D r. Rondberg is a licensed A rizona doctor o f chiropractic and an experienced chiropractic career guidance counselor. Call (602) 899-0882 & MORE! G R A N D O PEN IN G SA LE! R easons to OUR NEW EST STORE IN PARADISE VALLEY RAYBANS JoinTiW i R on th e B each 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. It is a profession that is open equally to men and 30% 40% 50% DubFactor, Grant Man and Shadow Talk The Farce Side Performs. It’s on Saturday! The best price...FREE! Many COOLMUNGOS Prizes OFF!! 1. H O U S E Q U A K E , G IN B L O S S O M S and the Sidewinders SAT., MARCH 31 NOON-9 PM PV BEACH FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 965-MUAB SAVE 30,40 & 50% on all RAYBANS SAVE 30% on RETROS SAVE 40% on METALS SAVE 50% on WARFARERS All feature scratch resistant glass lenses, 100% ultraviolet protection. ‘pacific £yes & T R<&k‘rìW39SÌf&T’9° The California A ttitu d e Oiristotun M ail 19th five. Si Bethany Home fid. UJastridg« M oll 75th fW S Thomas Tower Plaza 38th St. & Thomas Rd. Temp« Comanton« Center 72 5 S. Rural fid. 433-2949 873-2607 844-9119 966-5560 DOORS OPEN AT 6 AM 1st 98 people get a Free St. Patty’s Tee ✓ — Dawn to Dusk D rink Specials — ^ 2.98 Pitchers of Coors Light 3.98 Rio’s Island Party Drinks S T P A T R IC K ’S _____ DAT______ 10am~1 pm jk jjlfjP s RobTrygg will be giving away 98 more St. Patty s Tees 2pm ~ 6pm Brian Page & the Next w/ the Michael Torrez Band 6 p m -C lo s e CLASSIC MUSIC NIGHT The best music from the 60 s, 70s & 80’s M ARCH 17,1990 2.98 Pitchers of Coors Light LADIES’ NIGHT ■No Cover A ll Night for Ladies 8pm ~10pm 894 0533 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. • Tempe 25C Drinks for the Ladies & 2 for 1 Everything for the Guys