(^Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tempo, Arizona Vol 72 No , 119 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Thursday, April 5,1990 ASA director ousted over ‘differences’ B y N IC O LE C A R R O L L S ta te P re s s The executive director of the Arizona Students Association will not be retained after his term ends May 30 because of “ philosophical differences” with ASA’s student representa­ tives, the ousted d irec to r said Wednesday. “I’m not willing to do what I feel is not in the best interest of the students just to please the (ASA) board of directors,” ASA Executive Director Brad Golich said in explaining the rift that has developed between him and the students. “It’s been a frustrating year.” ASA is a lobbying organization formed to represent the more than G o lic h 85,000 students in the Arizona universi­ ty system. Each university appoints three students to serve on the ASA board. Golich’s role is a paid position designed give administrative support to the student leaders. He has served in this capacity for two years. ' Golich said he believes the board should not only encourage students to be involved with their individual student governments, but should organize students to participate in “positive activism.” He said this includes having students call members of the Arizona Board of Regents and legislators regularly and registering and encouraging students to vote in city and state elections. “There are members of the board that do not feel it is our role to organize students for this purpose,” Golich said. Shannon Sellers, an ASA delegate from ASU, said the board’s decision came out of an evaluation process of Golich. “Ihave watched Brad for a period of two years; he’s very efficient,” Sellers said. “But I personally did not vote to retain him next year.” Last year ASA was instrumental in obtaining voting privileges for the student member of the regents and supported a new student financial aid fund that was approved by the Legislature. Sellers said the board was expecting similar student Victories this year, which might have put added pressure on Golich, Amy Kramer, an Associated Students of NAU senator and delegate to the ASA board, said she and ASNAU President LeeAnn Spangler voted to retain Golich. “We did not see any problems with Brad,” Kramer said. “We’ve worked well with him all year.” She said other members voted against Golich because “of conflicts with personalities that couldn’t be ignored.” o f lit* Flow ers In th e D irt tour. M cC artn ey ro cks A S U stadium B y T E N N Y T A TU S IA N State P ress The long and winding road of the Beatle era came to Sun Devil Stadium Wednesday, when the most successful musician in history gave a sold-out performance to more than 64,000 fans. R elated stories, p a g e s 7 ,8 an d 13 The Paul McCartney 1989-90 Flowers in the Dirt concert began at 8 p.m. with a 15-minute video history, beginning in 1964 and ending with the ex-Beatle’s current solo success. McCartney, clad in black, made his first appearance on Stage with a performance of “Figure of 8,” a single from his Flowers in the Dirt album. The crowd was diverse but predominantly composed of people who were probably fans when McCartney first came to the United States in 1964 with the Beatles. Dave Phillips was at the Beatles concert in San Francisco in 1966 and said Wednesday night’s performance was “indescribable.” “My destiny was fulfilled when I saw the Beatles, but musically, tonight was the highlight of my life,” Phillips said. The fans could often be heard drowning out McCartney’s voice as they sang along to such Beatles hits as “When I Saw Her Standing There,” “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” and “Can’t Buy Me Love.” The show offered spectacular visual effects, which flooded the entire stadium with a rush of red lighting ' Turn to McCartney, page 12. A SA SU winners to be named today; high turnout lauded B y D A N NOW ICKI State P re ss The winners in this year’s Associated Students of ASU executive and Senate races will'be announced at 5 p.m. today on the mall north of the MU. It is predicted that this year’s election will have had the highest percentage of student voter participation in ASASU history. “ I’m anticipating that it will be the highest (turnout) in history,” Boley said. “ I was surprised at the lines at some of the sites. “It was kind of overwhelming for the workers.” More than 50 student volunteers worked at the eight voting sites around campus during the two-day elections. Boley said the white tents — used this year for the first time — gave the poll sites increased visability and recognition. “Before (the poll sites) were just a bunch of tables, like any other club on the mall, and people would tend to shy away from it,” he said. “Basically, that tent set-up was half of our advertising budget.” Boley said that for the most part, he,was HoMdaze: Plane Seated: Political writer P . J. O 'R ourke tells a T h e new FA A “ ru les" for airline group of about 200 students about the high points of tour­ security personnel could pose a deadly shortcom ing. Cody ing war-tom Beirut. Shearer colum n. Page 2 Page 5 pleased with the campaigns run by the candidates. “It kind of got nasty in the end,” he said. “It’s to be expected though, because there’s a lot of money involved. “There are egos on the line.” One incident involved the distribution of fliers urging students to “Vote Greek” by backing the three listed executive office candidates. All candidates listed on the flier deny involvem ent in th e ir p rin tin g and distribution, which was a direct violation of Out of Right Field: Starting right fielder Tom m y Adam e quits the winning A S U baseball team with 22 gam es left in the season. Page 15 four election policies and could lead to disqualification from the race. Boley said it is unclear if total campaign expenditures will be the highest on record. As of March 27, candidates had spent a total of more than $7,200. All candidates are required to submit a final campaign disclosure by Friday, regardless of whether they win the election br not. T his y e a r’s elections bo asted 47 candidates — the highest number ever to run in a single year. Last year, only 24 students ran for office. Today's weather: Variable cloudiness, with a 30 percent chanca of showers or thunderstorms and a high In the upper 70s. Tonight: Decreasing clouds, with a high In the upper 80a. Clssslflscls ............... 10 Condes to Police Report...........................................1 0 Page 2 StatePHtw Thursday, April 5,1990 Humorist O’Rourke speaks at ASU Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus dub or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity , and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries Is 1 p.m. the previous business day. .'Meetings »A lcoh o lic s A nonym ous will have an open meeting at noon in the basement of Newman Center. •Amnesty International will meiet at 3:30 p.m. in LLA 225. New members welcome. •Baptist Student Union is having a free lunch at noon at 1322 S. M ill Ave. •Christian Students Fellowship w ill have a bible study from 12:30 to 1 p.m. in the M U Santa Cruz Room. •Clinical Laboratory Sciences Program will have a open house to present information about this challenging career program entrance requirements and job opportunities from 4:40 to 5:30 p.m. in L S C 496. •College of Education ASU Chapter of Phi Delta Kappa hosts C. Diane Bishop, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, In its series of “ Conversations with Leaders in Education” at 7 p.m. at the Architecture Lecture Room — AED 60. •Esperanto ASU continues beginner's classes at 7:15 p.m. in the MU, Room 214. •Sigma Tau Delta w ill meet at 8 p.m. at the W arehouse, 130 E. University Drive. •Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers w ill vote for officers for next year at its 4:30 p.m. meeting in P S A 106. •Society of Professional Journalists will have a very important meeting Friday, April 6 at 1 p.m. in Stauffer Reading room. Please call if you cannot attend. •Students Orientation Services w ill meet at 4 p.m. in the Student Services Building Amphitheater. A ll members wishing to continue mentoring in the fall must attend. •University Toastmasters will have an open clu b meeting at 5 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room 222. A ll are welcome. S p eech revolves around holiday in hell— M iddle East excursion B y D A N NOW ICKI State P re ss Noted political humorist and w rit« P. J. O’Rourke spoke to a crowd of more than 200 students in the MU’s Arizona Room Wednesday about his holiday in hell — a 1984 jaunt to war-torn Beirut, Lebanon, “the Paris of the Middle East,” O’Rourke’s lively hour-long speech, which was flavored with anecdotes and humorous reflections on Lebanon during wartime as well as 6n the collapse of international communism, was followed by an impromtu question-andanswer session with the audience. The lecture was presented by the Associated Students of ASU Political Union. O’Rourke’s recollections about his “vacation” in Beirut are collected in his latest book, Holidays in Hell, He said that he was amazed that water skiing and pool clubs still flourish in the middle of the war zone. “I told the bartender at the St. George’s Pool Club — I said ‘aren’t people a little scared of sniper fire?’ He goes ‘No. (The) militia are armed with automatic weapons. These are not very accurate.” He also said he was surprised to discover that an amusement park, complete with ferns wheels and tilt-awhirls, was operating throughout the Lebanese civil war. “People would go to this right in the middle of the fighting,” O’Rourke told the crowd- “They’d get scared on the rides.” The scenario shifted from the Middle East to Eastern Europe halfway through the lecture. ‘JÉv I h iI T.J. SokoVStaMPra** O ’Rourke O’Rourke called the récent collapse of communism in Eastern Europe the signal that the West has won the Cold War. However, he said he wishes the nation’s political pundits and “discredited peace creeps” would “just zip it.” “They think Mikhail Gorbachav is a Visionary”’ he said. “Yeah, he’s a visionary like Hirohito was a visionary after Hiroshima.” O’Rourke, 43, is currently the International Affairs Desk Chief of Rolling Stone magazine and the author of four books — “The Bachelor Home Companion”, “Republican Party Reptile”, “Modem Manners” and “Holidays in Hell” . Man shot to death in Tempe after quarrel police said. ' “ It looks like self-defense,” said Officer Roger Austin, a A 36-year-old man was shot to death early Wednesday at a Tempe police spokesman. Cook was shot after police said he went to Dorchuck’s home Tempe residence after an argument, police said. Jeffrey Cook, of the 8200 block of East Piccadilly Road, after he threatened Dorchuck during a telephone call. He Scottsdale, was pronounced dead at Scottsdale Memorial arrived at the home with a MAC-10 rifle and pointed it at Hospital-Osbom shortly after he was struck once in the chest Dorchuck. Dorchuck, who was armed with a .45-caliber automatic by a bullet about 1:15 a.m. at 602 E. Vista Del Cerro Drive. Richard Dorchuck, 22, who lives at the residence where thè handgun fired two shots at Cook, hitting him once, police shooting occurred, was questioned in connection with the said. It was Tempe’s first homicide of the year. slaying but was released pending further investigation, B y M IKE B U R G E S S ~ , S ta te P re ss IF” A S A S U WITH I PIZZA & PUB ’ S P R IN Ç ■ i *90 *1.50 JAGERMEISTER SHOTS Drop 968-6666 1301 E . University Hours: 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun-Thurs 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri-Sat S A T U R D A Y , A P R IL 7 N o o n > 5pm featuring m usic by... M O N KEY MEET ZUM ZUM ZUI THE MORTAL« in DeliveryAm 13 >• 3 SC Univaralty 1 Broadway at P .V . B E A C H 1r s 1 2 * * j» c * o û ° ssW" SPONSORED BY: C H E E S E BR EAD with any 12” or 18” Pizza with coupon • 1 coupon per pizza any12” or 16” Pizza w/coupon • 1 coupon per pizza ASASU CO N CERTS RHA j W o r ld / N a t io n Page 3 Gorbachev tells Estonia to back off declaration TALLINN, U.S.S.R. (AP) - Mikhail Gorbachev told Estonia it must back off from its declaration that it is an independent country illegally occupied by the Soviet Union, the president of this Baltic republic said Wednesday. Estonia is cautiously following the lead of its neighbor Lithuania, which declared independence on March 11. Estonian President Arnold Ruutel said Soviet President Gorbachev indicated he might react in the same tough manner. Ruutel, interviewed by Estonian radio, quoted Gorbachev as saying, “When I heard of your resolution I was completely beside myself . You must declare the resolution null and void. It is an invalid one.” “It seems to me that I have to introduce sim ilar measures as those taken in Lithuania,” he quoted Gorbachev as saying. Soviet soldiers occupied public buildings in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, arrested some Lithuanian deserters and sent convoys through Vilnius as a show of forcé. Gorbachev ordered Lithuanians to hand over their weapons. Lithuanian legislators on Wednesday accu sed Moscow of th reaten in g to overthrow their independent government, dampening some heartening talk of compromise from officials on both sides. Both Lithuanian and Soviet officials on Wednesday praised a meeting the night before between a delegation of Lithuanian officials and Soviet Politburo member Alexander N. Yakovlev in Moscow — the first direct contact between leaders of the two sides since the day after Lithuania declared independence. In Washington, Secretary of State James A. Baker III said Wednesday he was encouraged that Moscow seems to be considering a referendum in Lithuania to determine the republic’s future. Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman Yuri Gremitskikh on Wednesday called the Lithuanians’ meeting with Yakovlev “a positive sign” the two sides will be able to resolve their confrontation. Gorbachev said Saturday that Lithuania m u st re n o u n ce its d e c la ra tio n of independence before negotiations can begin on ending the dispute. Ruutel did not elaborate when asked by the radio interviewer what steps Gorbachev might have in mind regarding Estonia. Gorbachev also spoke Wednesday at a meeting in Moscow with Communist leaders of Latvia, the third Baltic republic. All three Baltic republics were forcibly annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940 following a secret pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in 1939. The Latvian party will hold a congress this weekend. It follows a congress in Lithuania in December and in Estonia in March at which their Baltic comrades decided to split with the main Communist Party. Tass, the official news agency, said the discussion centered on ways to increase Latvia’s sovereignty and increase the role of the Latvian Communist Party. It gave no details. Estonia’s declaration calling itself a sovereign but occupied country came Friday and was aimed at laying the groundwork for a return to independence at the end of a still-undefined transition period. On Tuesday, the 105-member Estonian Supreme Soviet elected Edgar Savisaar, now chairman of the People’s Front, as the republic’s new premier. Marju Lauristin, deputy speaker of the Estonian Supreme Soviet, said Estonia would not back off. She said she was optimistic Moscow would prove willing to discuss Estonia’s bid for independence. “In spite of this first negative reaction, it is a contact and every contact is needed for negotiations,” she said. Lauristin is a leader of the Estonian People’s Front, the political movement that advocates complete independence from Moscow. Savisaar said the main task of his Cabinet w ill be to r e s to r e E s to n ia ’s fu ll independence. He said Communists would not be excluded from the government but indicated their role would be d im in ish in g ■ÉM É ^ I *««•£' H an d ica p p e d ch ild re n dem onstrate fo r in d ep en d en ce in V iln iu s, Lithuania, W ednesday, w ith oth e r d isa b le d citize n s. T h e ir s ig n sh ow s th e in itia ls o f th e form er Lithuanian S o v ie t S o cia lis t R e p u b lic ch a n g ed to Lithuanian R e p u b lic w ith th e d eletion o f tw o in itia ls. Notorious Wall Street felon Boesky ends prison term NEW YORK (AP) — Ivan Boesky, the disgraced Wall Street speculator who made insider trading a household term in the 1980s, completed his federal prison sentence Wednesday when he signed out of a halfway house. Boesky, 53, signed release papers and left the Brooklyn House Community Corrections Center at 5:05 a.m., said Richard Luna of the U. S. Bureau of Prisons in New York. Boesky moved to the halfway house Dec. 6 from a minimum-security feder­ al prison in Lompoc, Calif. He ended up serving just over two years, with time off for good behavior. On Nov. 14, 1986, Boesky .paid $100 million to the Securities and Exchange Boesky Commission and agreed to plead guilty to one criminal count of lying to federal regulators to settle insider trading charges. The penalty was a record at the time. Boesky’s confessions of a rat’s nest of illegal stock dealings using confidential information stunned Wall Street during its greatest boom time since the 1920s. Prosecutors used information supplied by Boesky, who cooperated in exchange for leniency, to bring charges leading to a record $650 million settlement by Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. and an indictment against Drexel junk bond division chief Michael Milken. Court documents alleged that Drexel, which collapsed last month, and Milken had a secret arrangement with Boesky that violated securities laws in at least 16 transactions from 1984 to late 1986. Boesky began his term at the Lompoc Federal Prison Camp in April 1988. He was granted a month-long furlough in New York last November — when he was photographed by the New York Post with shoulder-length hair and a Rip van Winkle beard — before his transfer to the halfway house. Starting Feb. 5, Boesky lived outside the center, reported in twice a week and called in daily, Luna said. Boesky now must to report to a probation officer until September, said Eunice Jones, chief federal probation officer in New York. Boesky’s attorney, Robert McCaw, declined to comment on where Boesky has been living or his plans. Boesky owns a 75-acre estate in Westchester County, north of New York City. While living outside the halfway house, Boesky was required to have a paying job. Officials declined to say what that was. Halfway house staff members visited Boesky once a week at his home and job, Luna said. Under his settlement with the government, Boesky is barred for life from the securities industry. But a loophole in federal law reportedly could allow him to serve as an investment adviser for as many as 14 people. The silver-haired Boesky also faces more than two dozen shareholder lawsuits and other litigation. Under the first civil settlement of Boesky-related cases, reached in January, the 46 investors in Boesky’s partnership will receive $248 million in liquidation proceedings. News Briefs Studies conclude cancer screen test doesn’t work BOSTON (AP) — Four years ago, a new test that seemed to detect all forms of chneer from tiny blood samples appeared destined to revolutionize the way doctors screen people for the disease. Now, many specialists doubt the method will ever live up to its promise. For reasons they cannot explain, the test seems to work only in the hands of the physician who invented it. In 1966, Dr. Eric T. Fossel of Boston’s Beth Israel Hospital said he had found a way to tell whether a patient had cancer simply by examining a bit of his blood in a nuclear magnetic resonance scanner, or NMR. It would detect tumors too small-to feel, or spot on X-rays! Fossel continued to work on the method and reported more encouraging results as he tested thousands of blood samples. The discovery was so important that many other doctors hurried to try it out. Apparently without reported exception, they failed. Editors told to go after establishment again WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s press is too comfortable, too well-paid and too much part of the establishment for the country’s own good, the president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors told colleagues Wednesday. “We often think of ourselves as Davids, fighting the establishment, but the public sees us more and more as status-quo, establishm ent Goliaths,” said Loren Ghiglione, publisher and editor of the Southbridge (Mass.) News. He cited a poll showing most people think that news organizations are under the influence of “ powerful people and organizations.” Ghiglione, addressing the society’s 67th annual meeting, proposed that editors each “adopt an institution that makes us uncomfortable — a prison, a mental institution, a noisy, overcrowded, big-city school, an AIDS hospital ward — and try to work in that world or at least understand it.” . Secret disservice: G ov’t hushes 6.8 million yearly WASHINGTON (AP) —After seven years of trying, the government thinks it finally has an accurate count of how many secrets it creates: 6.8 million a year. That's a 35 percent decrease from the previous count, but nearly all the drop came when the Navy decided it really didn’t originate more secrets than the rest of the government put together. It’s still just an estimate but it appears that the “ top secret,” ' ‘secret” and “ confidential” stam ps were wielded 6,796,501 times in the fiscal year which ended last Sept. 30. Opinion State Press Thursday, A pril 5,1990 Page 4 Wilkinson Acting Student Affairs VP goes to bat for students Lynn Vavreck A s s t Opinion Editor We’ve said it many times this year. “If it ain’t broke, don't fix it.” The selection committee meeting this month to help fill the position of Student Affairs vice president at ASU should keep this simple philosophy in mind. The administrative position of Student Affairs VP became vacant one year ago at this time, when then Vice President Betty Asher accepted the responsibilities as president of the University of South Dakota. Since that time, Christine Wilkinson has served as acting VP. Dr. Wilkinson, an alumnus and former Outstanding Graduate of ASU, has proven her commitment to students and to ASU during her last 20 years on this campus. In fact, Dr. Wilkinson has been an intergral part of the creation of many programs, which benefit students and the quality of life at ASU. The job of Student Affairs VP involves students. More importantly, it involves caring for students. Programs and departments such as Student Health, Residence Life, Student Union, Student Life, Registrar, University Admissions, Career Services, Financial Aid and the Student Recreation Complex are just Some of the examples of the responsibilities of this position. These are all areas of campus which involve services. Student Affairs is service. Through her work as a student activities advisor, director of Undergraduate Admissions and acting VP, Dr. Wilkinson has proven that she is committed to maintaining the high level of student services that already exists at ASU. In fact, while other universities boast of excellence in academics, research or instruction, ASU’s finest selling point is its commitment to student services. As much as students complain about large class size, closed classes or instructors who can’t speak English, at least Student Affairs is dedicated to listening to students’ concerns and making the students feel like the most important entity on this campus. Even though students often don’t get what they want from the University, it is seldom that students are not at least listened to. Many universities don’t let students sit on university committees. Some don’t have comprehensive health facilities for students or don’t take care of their residence halls. Few universities provide students with free tutoring like ASU’s Educational Support Program or free emotional counseling like ASU’s Counseling and Consultation. “ The Student Affairs VP is the student’s batter when the administration wants to play ball. A n d Dr. Wilkinson has an excellent batting average. ” One of the greatest selling points of this University is its commitment to student services. This is somewhat ironic, considering tbe average age of an ASU student is 26 and many students are re-entry or part-time students. These students may not feel they need the services of residence life or the rec center. But, even if these student services don’t touch every aspect of every student’s life, they touch at least one. The Memorial Union is an example of a student service that everyone uses. The student union, complete with 14 restaurants, a post office, travel agency, bowling alley, video arcade, art gallery, movie theater, gift shop, dining hall, lounge space, meeting rooms and banquet facilities, is one of the most dynamic buildings dedicator) to student use on any campus in the nation. Career Services is another example of an ASU program that is nationally emulated. Even if some students have never benefited from these two programs, maybe they have benefited from the office of financial aid — another department of Student Affairs. It is easy to see that the person hired as Student Affairs VP must understand the commitment that ASU has made to student services and student respect. The Student Affairs VP is the student’s batter when the administration wants to play ball. And Dr. Wilkinson has an excellent batting average. She has demonstrated a genuine concern for the welfare of all students at ASU. There is one moment in particular that illustrates Dr. Wilkinson’s caring. This moment occured during the February tuition protest/sit-in in the Student Services Building. As students chanted and beat against the walls of the building, many administrators gathered to make comments about the morning’s events. Students were dissatisfied with all the administrative pandering and continued to disrupt the flow of business in the building. When these administrators became frazzled, they called the University Police just to keep, things orderly. DPS took its time arriving, and the administrators began to worry. “Where are they (DPS)?” was a common question. Amid all this confusion, Dr. Wilkinson said: “These are students. Why are they (other administrators) afraid of students? This is my job,” she asserted, “I deal with students everyday. They’re not going to hurt anybody.” And so we see the true colors of Christine Wilkinson — an ASU administrator dedicated to serving the needs of students. She is someone that students need on the administrative team. When the selection committee makes its recommendation to President Coor this month, students can only hope that the choice will be Dr. Wilkinson. And, in case it’s not, it is only fitting that students thank her publicly for her efforts at ASU. Dr. Wilkinson, thank you. Letters V a v re c k d im in ish e s ca m p u s life Editor': Oh, the privileges of the journalist Class ! They sit in th eir sh eltered worlds pronouncing judgment upon anything and everything with little attention to reality. I speak of Lynn Vavreck, who has gone out of her way to show her true ignorance. The recent slamming Ms. Vavreck gave the Honors College does nothing more than show her resentment and jealousy of a valuable asset to this University. So she had a hard time getting into a class. My heart bleeds. I transferred to this University too late to take full advantage of the Honors College, but I know people who are members, and they work very hard to get the recognition that comes from membership. It is not handed to them of a silver platter once they sign up. Some of the students in the Honors College will be at ASU an extra year just to take all the courses requried to get their degree. Most of the “regular” students I STATE PRESS DARRIN HOSTETLER Editor CARO LYN HOFIG Managing Editor .......... ....... SUZANNE RO SS .....MICHELLE ALLM AN BURGESS ...................... ..BRIAN TASSINARI Asst. Opinion E d ito r....... ..................... . . LYNN VAVRECK ....................... M EG HALVERSON ........................SHARON KANEY Assoc. Ent. Editor........... ..... CHRISTINE HERBRANSON ..............................DAN NOWICKI ............... .....MICHELLE CRUFF ............ .....STEVE KRICUN .............PAUL CORO ........... .....SETH SULKA Copy Q iie f................... ................;V.....;.,...NICOLE-PERRON Photo E d ito r.......„................,.............S C O T T TROYANOS Kim berly Harris, M ichelle Henry, Christopher Horak, Kelly Jain, M ichael LaMantia, Deborah Nemko, Francine Stahl, Mish Tell, Kramer Wetzel. know would never be willing to work that hard (or give up their party nights) for the honors. None of the Honors College students I know are “elitist” or “pompous,” just very intellegent and willing to go the extra mile for a good education. Since some of them cannot leave Arizona to do so, their extra mile must be taken here. I agree that the quality of education at ASU is not what most of us would like, but to blame that on the Honors College is irresponsible and uneducated. Most of this country’s “great academic institutions” are honors colleges in aqd of themselves, and therefore do not need such a department. While it would be wonderful for ASU to be such a place, the fact remains that it isn’t, , and to deny a chance for a better education to those who are willing to work for it is wrong. Stacy L. Smith Senior, History Quotable ‘M a n 's b u sin e ss here is to kn o w for th e sa k e o f living, n o t to live for th e sa k e o f kn o w in g ." — Frederic Harrison CARTOONISTS: Mike Ritter, Ju lie Sigwart. COLUMNIST: Jade Danner INTERNS: SheHy LeVick. Chad Redwing. PRODUCTION: Dane Christ, Nancy Ness, Mark Nothaft, Robyn Pinkston, Lynne Senzok, T.J. Sokol, Stacy Towar, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Jay Eckhardt, Dan EKstrom, Keri Fisher, Jessica Irwin, Paul Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Todd Martin, Allison Murphy, Pete Nichols, Terri Smith, REPO RTERS: Gremlyn Bradley, Mike Burgess. Nicole Carroll, Ray Zickel. Carolyn Huffman, Sonja Lewis, Dan Nowicki, Hobart Rowland, The State Press is published Monday through Friday during Kevin Sheh, Tenny Tatusian, Vanja Thompson, Kristie Young. the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at SPO RTS REPO RTERS: V icki Culver, Matthew Kastor,Larry Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Newell, Kris Timmons, Dan Zeiger. Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2202. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jeorgetta Douglas, Jam ie Lytle, Sundi (602) 965-7572. Kjenstad, T J . Sokol. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published CO PY EDITORS: Charles Granieri, Kristen Johnson. JW tibke. for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the FREELAN CE WRITERS: Joseph Crawford, Heidi Donat, ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. LETTER POLICY The State Press welcom es and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287-1502. Opinion SW ePress Wiunday^AprilSJWO Page 5 ‘You are w hat you e a f takes on new meaning Je ff G reenfield Universal Press Syndicate NEW YORK — Well, it was bound to happen sooner or later. Lacking any coherent political argument, Americans are now defining themselves ideologically by the food they consume, or reject. It started, of course, when President Bush declared that he did not like broccoli, and that, as president of the United States, he did not have to eat broccoli if he did not like it. Since this was the boldest, perhaps the only bold comment Mr. Bush has made about anything during his presidency, the issue-starved press seized upon the broccoli controversy with glee, barely noticing the brilliant political manuever being executed by the Bushes. Mrs. Bush, widely seen as more liberal than her husband, aligned herself With the Eastern liberal Volvo-brie-and-tofu crowd by declaring her love of the vegetable, while her husband nailed down the Bubba-brewski-pork-rind set so crucial to the Republican presidential coalition. Then came the great Idaho potato debate. Angered by the Idaho Legislature’s passage of a highly restrictive antiabortion law, some women’s groups announced they would boycott Idaho potatoes unless the governor vetoed the bill. One media-savvy Michigan pol flew to Idaho and onto network TV screens, bearing a sack of Idaho pota tes. In a brilliant countermove, one of America’s leading traditional-values spokewomen announced that she and her anti-abortion allies would hustle their children off to McDonald’s and stuff them .with french fries — thus affirming the right to life by increasing their loved one’s chances of developing coronary heart disease at an early age. While this gastronomic version of the Lincoln-Douglas debates was raging, college liberals across the country were continuing to boycott Domino’s Pizza because its boss is a contributor to anti-abortion.causes. Those seeking to switch from extra cheese to a tuna la rris TO«UVtltUAT! sandwich found more bad news: Because certain kinds of tuna are caught using dolphins as bait, tuna has become a forbidden food among right-thinking people. And don’t even think of ordering veal, unless you like being a co-conspirator in the torture of innocent animals. It used to be much simpler, you know. You didn’t eat grapes because Cesar Chavez was ordering California farm workers; then you didn’t eat lettuce for the same cause. Now, however, you need a scorecard to figure out what political statement you are making with every bite you take. For instance, if I go to McDonald’s and order a Big Mac and fries, am I helping the pro-choice cause, to which McDonald’s owner Joan Droc is a big contributor? Or am I giving aid and comfort to the anti-abortion folks in Idaho by consuming potatoes, which at $640 million a year, is that state’s single biggest agricultural product? Or suppose I goto one of those gentrified pizza parlors and order a large pie with broccoli topping? Is this my statement of political opposition to Mr. Bush? Or does the fast-food aspect of the rest of the pizza put me in the president’s camp? Of course, there is one major danger in all of this that the pro-choice forces have not considered. Imagine standing in line at a fast food outlet and telling your kids that they have to have a salad instead of an order of fires in order to support the pro-choice cause on abortion. I can’t think of a quicker way to turn a 10-year-old kid into a fervent right-to-lifer. A irlin e se cu rity a b ro a d : Is it sa fe for A m e ric a n s ? Cody Shearer North American Syndicate FRANKFURT, WEST GERMANY - One has got to be concerned at this late date with the security conditions the Federal Aviation Administration announced two weeks ago to protect the flying public. Effective this sum m er, security screeners at U. S. airports will need to meet these strict standards. They’ll be required to speak English, have obtained a high school diploma and stayed awake long enough to pass a 12-hour training course. Who is Uncle Sam kidding with these paltry regulations? Is this some kind of practical joke? It sure seems like it, especially if one considers that-the FAA also intends to soften its policy of fining commercial airlines every time weapons go undetected by contract security screeners. For those of us who travel a great deal, the sight of Slothful, inattentive, security personnel, lazing in chairs at airport X-ray machines, is discomforting and all too commonplace. Having traveled for years with a portable fax machine, I’m constantly amazed that my electronic machinery is rarely inspected by security personnel in the U S. or abroad. Should one feel uneasy about security on U. S. airlines? I can only answer this question like a politician. One ought to fly with a clearer conscience on domestic flights that when traveling on U. S. carriers abroad. The FAA, after all, is still working on higher standards for security inspectors at foreign airports like the one here in Frankfurt. In all fairness, it is not as if the FAA has done nothing to improve airport security abroad. It’s just that it hasn’t introduced comprehensive enough security procedures. After Pan Am Flight 103 disintegrated over Lockerbie, Scotland in December, 1988, the FAA announced the following new security measures: — Airlines were ordered to X-ray or physically search all checked luggage. — Passengers were not permitted access to checked baggage following security searches. — Suspicious passengers could undergo additional screening. — All small packages shipped through passenger ticket counters had to be physically examined prior to Shipment. Yet in spite of these efforts, the FAA acknowledges that it cannot be assured its requirements are being properly carried out. This may be the understatement of the year. A friend of mine works part-time as an undercover security agent for a major U. S. commercial air carrier in Western Europe. His numerous responsibilities include checking out suspicious looking passengers and reviewing baggage to make sure no improper luggage is place on an aircraft. On several occasions he has told me that he has discovered more bags in an aircraft freight bin than the computer indicates have been offically checked in. When he has called his superiors with this alarming news, usually 15 minutes prior to a plane’s departure, he has been instructed to forget about it, that his count surely must have been in error. In such cases, my friend says he spends the next eight hours in a state of terror, fearing the worst. My airline security friend also tells me that to save time boarding, many airlines don’t bother to inspect bags that come from fe e d e r flig h ts. M oreover, he say s background checks on airline personnel are non-existent. He says that he and his law school pals never had their personal histories investigated even though they’d all been involved in political activities as undergraduates. If this information startles some people, there is further unsettling news on the airline security front. Czechoslovakian officials are now admitting that despite previous assurances to the contrary, the export of the plastic Czech-manufactured explosive, Semfex, took place as recently as last year to other members of the Warsaw Pact, particulary East Germany, which is known to have had strong ties with Arab terrorists. The current U. S. panacea in tackling the terrorist bomb threats involves total reliance on the introduction of TNA (Thermal Neutron Analysis) detectors. Unfortunately, the present designs of this machine do not detect bombs as small as the device that brought down Pan Am 103. Billy H. Vincent, the former head of the FAA security branch, has told Congress that “the use of TNA hyperbole to quiet the fears of the public, ill serves the best interest of all passengers.” He claims this mechanism is wrongly being put forward as a cure to the ills of civil aviation security. “It can never be any more than a supplement,” he argues. The excessive confidence of consumers in airport security technology is a grave mistake, especially when one considers the quality of the current staffs that are supposed to identify sophisticated sabotage gear. The key to any effective airport security system is thé people element. Unless U. S. airlines are willing to pay and train security personnel on a more professional basis, few of us will be safe to fly. One need only examine the superior aviation security system Israel has in place to realize that it invests a minimum of five weeks in training each individual, not 12 hours. The complacency that now guides U. S. air travelers abroad is misplaced. Over­ reliance on intelligence reports, prior warnings and mediocre security personnel is sufficiently well documented^ to suggest the FAA is not taking appropriate enough m e a s u r e to c o m b a t t h i s d e a d ly shortcoming. have noticed that these same two ads have been used under various names and addresses. I recently sent SASEs to find out if they were linked together (the two “businesses” ). I received the exact same leaflet (just different colors) from bqth “businesses” and both had the exact same information on them (both asking me to send $15 to begin my “job” ). Please be more careful in the future about what you decide to print in the Classified section. After all, would you people print an ad for stolen cars and bicycles? M artLaliberte Electronics Engineering Technology More Letters C a re fu l c h e c k of advertisin g n e e d e d Editor: I regularly read the State Press and I check out the classified advertisements alm ost every tim e. I have noticed something a bit disturbing. Every single issue I have seen, there has been two ads placed for companies looking for people who will stuff envelopes for “thousands weekly. ” Don’t you people check out anything that you receive for classified ads? The Better Business Bureau has said that they do not know of one single legitimate home mailing job in the country and yet the State Press continues to print these companies’ false claims. I have watched this closely and I State Press ThunHau Anril « 1000 STATE PRESS Classifieds By Phone • 965-6731 Visa • M asterC ard • Sorry, n o b illin g special Lu n c h eo n com binations 1. Sweet and Sour Pork. ..................... $3.75 2. Almond Chicken........................... ,,......3.75 3. Beef with Snow Peas............................. 3.95 4. Mongolian Beef..................................... 3.95 5. Sweet and Sour Shrimp......................... 4.25 6. Shrimp with Lobster Sauce................... 4.25 7. Pork Egg Foo Young....... ......................3.75 *8. Rung Pao Shrimp..................................4.25 *9. Rung Pao Chicken.................. 3.75 •Indicates hot and spicy dish All the above Luncheon Specials served with Egg Roll, Fried Wonton, Fried Rice, and Fortune Cookie. jiL 968-2167 69 E . Broadw ay Tem pe, A Z 85282 Soup not included with take out lunch. Complete mehu available. TO GO ORDERS AVAILABLE 1 -K rrt / ''v i i 15% OFF LU N C H OR D IN N E R N o t v a lid w ith a n y o th e r o tte r. S u n d a y th ru T h u r s d a y o n ly . E x p ir e s 4-11-90. Broadway A D D E N D U M T O T H E F A LL 1990 S C H E D U LE O F C LA S S ES The changes in the follow in g cla ss lines were inadvertently om itted from the printed F a ll 1 9 9 0 S c h e d u le o f C la s s e s . F or the m ost com plete inform ation, please use this addendum in conjunction with the S c h e d u le o f C la s s e s and closed/added cla ss lists w hich are posted at each Registrar Site- Happy Hour 11-7 pm Daily 75* Drafts & *3M Pitchers Sunday N ights Pool Special Features *6 per table front 6-Close •Daily Specials M tW o W n n u iiE iß w I.D. Required j> - «•viiMaN.»V*• 9 " ? io 3 0 5i #ru Cl lig 2; u U4- SCH ED CO U RSE CO U RSE FOO TNOTE SEM MEETING LIN E PFX NO. TITLE FLAG S TIME 92729 ARS 406 ROM AN ART HRS DAYS B LD G & (GS.5) 3 1:40-2:30 (5) 3 6:40-9:30p.m, 3 2:40-3:30 3 3 INSTRUCTO R ROOM / MWF ART 220 N SERW INT SECTIO N IS CAN CELLED 87929 ARS 598 ST:AM ERICAN ART 1 92732 ARS 598 ST:ART & REVOLUTION (5) 24904 ART 494 ST:GD/PHO TO G RAPH ICS (1¿5,14) ART 246 4 SW EENEY MWF ART 220 A G U LLY 1:40-4:30 TTH ART 302 NEW STAFF 1:40-4:30 TTH ART 132 NEW STAFF NEW S f A FF 25208 ART 598 STiSPECIAL PRO B/SCU LPT (1,5) 25253 ART 598 STiNO N-PERM S C U LPT 3 7:40-10:30p.m. MW ART 132 93391 ART 621 SPT:FIBERS 3 4:40-7:30p.m. W ARWH114 C VERSTEGEN 1:40-4:30 W WHALL206 NEW STAFF (1,5.6) 38653 ENG 210 INTR C R tV WRT-FIGTION 3 91384 ENG 210 INTR CRTV W RT:FÍCTlQN 3 4:40-7:30p.m. w L L C 109 NEW STAFF 91496 ENG 411 ADV CR T W RT:FIGTION 3 1:40-4:30 TH LLB 225 NEW STAFF 39788 ENG 494 STrSTHRN RENAISSANCE 3 9:40-10:30 MWF LLB 137 D KEHL 3 12;15-1:30 TTH LLB 137 R MURRAY FAULKN ER/PERCY Can’t Wear Contacts? HC:19TH G TR AG IC NO VEL (19) ENG 497 H CrSH AKESPEARE ENG 497 HC:GENO ER IN ENG 547 SIALrSTHRN RENAISSANCE / (19) 3 10:40-1.11:30 MWF LLC 146 S DO EBLER (19) 3 4:40-7:30p.m. T LLB 137 J BRINK 3 9:40-10:30 MWF LLB 137 D KEHL 3 4:40-7:30p.m. W LLC 32 D BATES 3 4:40-7:30p.m. T LLB 137 J BRINK 3 6:40-9:30p.m. W LLB 338 T . M ORGAN 3 10:40-11:30 MWF L LC 50 NEW STAFF SH AKESPEARE $28.00 40142 FAULKN ER/PERCY 40366 ENG 591 S:SPEECH ERRORS/ LAN G GAM ES 93292 ENG 591 S GENDER IN SH AKESPEARE May Prove Otherwise! 93317 ENG 598 ST STR U C T U R E OF KNOW LEDGE 93333 If you’ve been told you can’t wear contact lenses, chances are that with today’s new advanced technology, you can be properly and com fortably fit. HUM 494 ST:ITALIAN LIT O F" REN AISSAN CE 3 • " ' 9:40-10:30 J M CCARTER MWF PSA 306 50624 MAT 118 PR EC A LC A LG EB R A & TRIG (GS) NOTE: A GRAPHIN G C A LC U LA TO R IS REQ UIRED FOR THIS CO U RSE, PR EFERABLY CASIO 7000G, OR 7500G. O TH ER M AKES A R E ACCEPTABLE. 3 10:40-11:55 PSA 6 TTH J M CCARTER 50749 MAT 118 PR EC A LC ALG EBR A & TRIG (GS) NOTE: A GRAPHIN G C ALCU LATO R IS REQ UIRED FOR THIS C O U R S E PREFERABLY CASIO 7000G. OR 7500G. OTHER M AKES ARE A C C E P T A B LE M ake an appointment today to m eet our Contact Lens Specialist, Dr. Bruce Bridgewater. He w ill determ ine if you ’re a good candidate to wear the latest designs. If you are, the visit charge applies toward the lenses. If not, you pay just $28.00! 51407 M AT 274 ELËM DI FF EQ U ATIONS 3 12:40-1:30 MWF PSD 202 D HERRERO 67879 M AT 598 ST: DISCRETE STRU CTU RES I 3 1:40-2:55 TTH PSA 309 H KIERSTEAD M GALICIAN (GS.3,26) 3 1:40-2:55 MW LS 191 5:40-8:30p.m. W AR CH I 5 B M ERRILL 3:40-4:30 T MUSIC 094 K CO ATES : Ï- 1:40-2:30 T M USIC 094 K CO ATES 2 3:40^5:30 M M USIC 427 J MEYER 12:40-1:30 TTH GGMA107 J HAEFER 12:40-1:30 TTH MUSIC 51Ò R O LDAN I 64782 M CO 120 MEDIA & SO CIETY 64865 MCO 494 ST: PO LITICAL COM M 28788 M U P 371 M USIC THEATRE:W RKSHP BROADW AY 1 (1) N ever say never. Try the new est lenses available. If anyone can make you a contact lens wearer, w e can! 28791 M UP 371 M USIC THEATRE:W RKSHP BROADW AY II (1) 30574 M UP 581 PER F PED: PIANO 30587 M UP 582 C O LL MUS: INSTRUM NTL (1) 1 Call 957-6799 Today! 30590 M UP 582 CO LL M USrCHO RAL (1) 1 93346 NUR 598 ST:NUR O F CHILD THRY 3 9:40-12:30 '' T -' ' NUR 317 0 RO BERTS 93359 NUR 598 ST:CHILDBEARING FAMILY THEO RY I 3 9:40-12:30 ,T ':'.. NUR 314. J KENNEY G VANO RDEN Ckirv Hall Eve Surgery I EN G 497 N S T I T U T E RC. 2501 North 32nd Street Phoenix, Arizona 85008 3 57256 PSY 494 ST:PSYCH O F LAN G U AG E (1) 3 1:40-2:55 MW LLB 37 57454 PSY 591 S:PSYCH O F LAN G U AG E (1) 3 1:40-2:55 MW LLB 37 G VANORDEN 58534 SH S598 ST:HEARING CONSERV. 3 8:40-9:30 MWF LLA ip e G C LU FF 58576 SH S598 ST:CO M PUTER APPLCATN 3 2:40-3:30 MWF LLA 108 G C LU FF 92718 SH S598 ST CHILDHOOO LANG OIS 3 5:40-8:30p.m. W L L A 109 STAFF Q u M tio n i m ay be directed to any o l the five R egistrar S ila s. Page 7 Tfrurtday, April 5,1990 Die-hard fans continue quest for glimpse of ex-Beatle B y T E N N Y TA TU S IA N Sta te P re ss Paul McCartney fans displayed their undying loyalty to the ex-Beatle Wednesday afternoon while waiting for his limousine to arrive at Sun Devil Stadium. Holding a sign reading “Mac we’re back;’’ Tina Suca and Patty Pitkan, both from Los Angeles, prepared to see McCartney for the fifth time during this tour. “He knows who we are,” Suca, 22, said, adding that she and her friend have seen his conceits in Boston, San Fransisco, Los Angeles and Chicago. The duo said they have paid up to $200 per ticket to attend one of McCartney ’s concerts and are always next to the stage. “ He can't miss us,” Pitkan, 25, said. “We’re hysterically pulling out our hair and crying. He has to notice us.” The duo get time off from their jobs by telling their boss they are having surgery or a family member has died. “I’m in a wedding today,” said Pitkan, who works as a waitress, of her latest tale. It was certainly a festive occassion. Almost 50, mostly female, fans did not let constant orders from security to “stay off the grass” and to “keep off the asphalt” discourage their quest for a glimpse of McCartney. Another die-hard fan, Betty Ford, brought a cake and flowers for McCartney and hoped to catch his attention by carrying a self-made look-alike doll of him on her sh o u ld e rs. The doll w as w e arin g McCartney’s signature tiger-striped yellow and black shirt, a Beatles watch and a gold bracelet with “Paul” engraved on it. The cake is decorated with the yellow and black ■stripes. . “ Paul is my favorite Beatle,” Ford, 39, said, adding that she was at his concert in Los Angeles in November. That concert proved to be lucky for Ford and her friends, who were spotted by a Visa representative. The credit card company was impressed enough with their blanket­ like “so glad to see you here” sign that the group found its way into McCartney’s endorsement commercial for Visa. Better than that, Ford said, was that the group got to meet McCartney during the filming for the commercial. “It was like a dream,” Ford said. “He is so down to earth, and he still looks sexy.” But not everyone was waiting to see McCartney arrive — some were using the A bou t 50 fa n s greet P a u l M cCartney a s he a rrives at S u n D evil Stadium W ednesday evening . event for purely capitalistic gain. “I don’t want to see him,” said ticketscalper Irene Robertson of Chandler. “I just want to sell my tickets and make some money.” Roberteon, 50, arrived at thè stadium at 11 a m. to sell her 18 tickets at $60 a piece—the original ticket price was $30. Within an hour, Robertson had sold four tickets, making a comfortable $120 profit. But as the day wore on she had to lower the price, to $40 because of lack of sales. Republic has press passes revoked for M cCartney concert B y M IC H E LLE B U R G E S S S ta te P re ss It didn’t take long for Dennis Love to get noticed at his new job. His first column for the Arizona Republic, a scathing, no-holds-barred commentary, on Paul McCartney, angered the ex-Beatle’s tour promoter so much that he revoked press passes held by Republic reviewers and photographers to attend the afternoon press conference and 8 p.m. show. A cco rd in g to Amy C a rlisle, the newspaper’s features editor, officials at the paper were told that there was a “conspiracy at the Republic against Paul McCartney and that we’re barred from the concert.” The column, titled “This Paul-try former Beatle won’t give up,” appeared in the Life & Leisure section Tuesday and praised John Lennon as “ the leader of the (B eatles),” and called McCartney a “hopeless, bloodless, shallow baladeer.” . “McCartney managed to obliterate every last iota of respect he accrued with the Beatles,” the piece read. “He sold out, bombarding us with enough schlock and hucksterism to leave Beatle purists cynical well into the next century.” Love called the lockout—■the first such occurrence since the tour began last fall “sort of silly.” “I don’t take it personally or anything,” Love said. “I think it’s a real overreaction on their part. “Let’s face it, we’re talking about 20 inches of copy that was buried in the interior of the paper after we gave them reams and reams of positive coverage and plastered his picture all over newspaper dispensers around town,” “It’s no skin off my nose,” he continued. “ I mean, I’ll be able to get a good night’s sleep tonight.’’ Republic staff members had purchased private tickets and were able to cover the event. State Press reporters Nicole Carroll and Dan Nowicki contributed to this report SAHA on Balfour Gold CollegeRings. Brain wave! Special savings on Balfour Gold College Rings going on right now! Save $30 on 10K, $50 on 14K and $80 on 18K Gold College Rings. Have a smart attack-hurry in soon! Because tins intelligent offer won’t go on forever, and you’re too smart to miss out! April 2-5, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. STUDENT BOOK CENTER 704 College Ave. • 966-6226 Deposit required Balfour. Y o u n g Si R e s t l e s s THURSDAY Get a headstart on the weekend with D.J. Joe Trevino and $1 D rinks 8-1 0 p.m. Presented by Club U.M. 41 5 S. Mill Ave. 966-8888 Páge8 Ptett Undercover police officers battle concert drug users B y C A R O L Y N H U FFM A N S ta te P re s s About two hours before Paul McCartney took the stage at Sun Devil Stadium, hundreds of early fans were lounging in the parking lot beside their cars, many with picnic dinners, tables and chairs. It seemed an unlikely site for a battle in the drug war. But by the night’s end, more than 30 people would be in jail on charges of drug possession. About 50 undercover police officers from throughout Maricopa County made the arrests as part of a User Accountability Task Force. Such Valley task forces have made almost 400 arrests since their inception a year ago. The forces are a tool of thé year-old Maricopa County Demand Reduction Program , which was inspired by a President Bush speech encouraging schools and police to make drug users accountable for the drug problem, as well as sellers. The program is better known as the “Do Drugs. Do Time” campaign. Wednesday night saw the largest Arizona task force assembled to date, with the Tempe Police Department in charge. The goal was to arrest drug users outside the McCartney concert; each person arrested would spend the night in jaU. The long-term goal of Demand Reduction is to get users into treatment programs. “We hope the message is beginning to sink in th a t d ru g use of any kind is unacceptable,’’ said Lt. John Buchanan of the Phoenix Police Department. For the arresting officers who patrolled the Stadium and parking lot, it was a fruitful evening. For about 33 others, it was a night they’d probably rather forget. About a half-hour after the groups of undercover officers began scouting the lot, arrests began coming over the police radio. At 6:15 p.m., Tempe Officer Vince Boerbon’s group caught a strong whiff of marijuana smoke while Walking down an aisle. The three men made an about-face and zeroed in on a white compact car with two passengers. The policemen had seen the driver pass a joint to the passenger, who then took a smoke from it. Boerbon opened the driver side door, identified himself, and handcuffed the tongue-tied driver. A search of the car found a cassette case holding about four more joints. The men were walked quickly to Sun Angel Stadium, where police had a temporary booking station set up. There were already about six others being booked, including one crying woman. One handcuffed 30-year-old woman was teary-eyed, and watched as her husband was carted into a holding van. She sat quietly at a booking table. , “I’m so scared,” she said. “I don’t ever want to experience this again. “We paid $40 for our tickets. This is the first concert we’ve been to in 10 years,” she continued. “ I’ve got kids at home with a babysitter . . . I don’t know what’s going to happen.” At least one ASU student was among those arrested. He said he hadn’t heard of the Demand Reduction Program. “I wasn’t really aware of it,” he said. “I can’t say it’s ineffective.” After being booked, those arrested were told that they would spend the night in the Madison Street Jail in Phoenix. Instead of seeing McCartney tonight, they would see a judge in the morning. John Coppock of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office said that ASU students who come from states with less harsh drug laws than Arizona may not realize the penalties. Boerbon’s team made more arrests before the night was through, nabbing four suspected users. llie suspects protested “For half a joint? For a half a stupid joint?” “That’s what we’re here for,” Boerbon said. DUDLEY MOORE • DARYL HANNAH Crazy People ACCOMPM CAUTIO N: YO U MUST BE IN THE THEATER TO SEE THIS M OVIE. F R E E S C R E E N I N G MANN SUN DEVIL SIX APR. 6, FRI-3PM FIRST COME FIRST SERVE f ATTENTION NEW PARKING POLICY S Changes to current parking assignments can be made beginning at 8 a.m. on April 9,1990, and ending at 4 p.m. on April 20,1990. This change m SPORTS & SPIRITS WITH STYLE ¡* 1 » WELL, WINE, KAMIS $ 0 0 0 P itc h e rs DOMESTIC, WATERMELONS ALL NIGHT STIFF JOHNSONS L.I. Ice T eas $ < > o P o n y P itc h e rs W h ite R ussians 8-Close Blue H aw aiians 0*300PITCHERS 2 ■ A A V o nn a a ss Coorro Shots 01 o f G o ld a n o v s * f# r Margaritas Mic Dry 8-10 p.m. - L A D I E S N IG H T EVERY W E D N E SD A Y — WELL WINE •-10pm DRAFTS £ 75Í g ^ "BREATHLESS" MALE DANCERS t% ,AT « 4 BA ANY ^ DRINK DRINK WATERMELONS $ 3 5 0 PITCHERS 1(KIos' 1(Klose STIFF JOHNSONS DRAFTS ALL NIGHT 4 for 1 COUNTDOWN 50< 75< 50< B eer L I. Ic e T e a s W e ll, W in e _________________________________ M a r g s & S c h n a p p s H A P P Y H O U R 4 - 7 p . m . • D J D A N C IN G D A ILY P O O D SPECIALS RURAL & APACHE968-0243 period is limited to decal holders who have a decal on file as of January, 31,1990. It will be held at the Parking Services Office, Campus Inn, Center Building, Room A101 and the Payne Hall or Business Building registration ' sites. If you are on the current (1989/1990) waiting list for a lot/structure, you will retain your place on the waiting list until the end of the upgrade/change period . You must, however, contact P arking and Transit Services decal sales (965-6124 or 965-6406) to express you r desire to rem ain on the w aiting list. If you are not currently on a waiting list, you may request to be added to the waiting list of your choice at one o f the three registration sites. Waiting lists will be processed in the order in which they are received. Please note that this means you do not have to “camp out" in line to change/upgrade this year! You may add your name to the waiting list or renew your place on the waiting list (if you are currently on the list) at any time during the two-week upgrade/change period. At the end of the upgrade/change period, the names of persons who have not contacted Parking and Transit Services to be continued or added to waiting lists will be purged. Available spaces in lots/structures will be filled from the waiting lists. Important information: •No spaces arc available for upgrades/changes to either Parking Structure 1 or Parking Structure 3. It is anticipated that the currentwaiting list will fill all available spaces in these two structures. If you wish to upgrade to either of these structures, you must sign upon the waiting list. •Your application will not be processed if you have an outstanding University debt. •N o paym ent is necessary at this time. Individuals who are successful in changing lots will be contacted by Parking and Transit Services. Payment will be required at the time of change. Please call 965-6406 or 965-6124 for more information or any other decal-relatecl assistance or service. Thank you for your cooperation! Page 9 Thunday, A pril 5,1990 Undergraduate LawClub is sponsoring a NOCKLSATadministered by Stanley H. Kaplan Saturday, April 7,1990 in COB 361 $ 2 0 for members, $ 3 0 for non-members Call Michael Marcheschi, 784 -8 2 9 4 for registration $14«o H a ir c u ts Reg. $17.00 S A V E $5.00 Shampoo & Cut (With Coupon) $2oo Pitchers $1°° Well Drinks $160 Bowling/ per ga H ourly $1.00 Per Game R a te s A v a ila b le (plus tax) In clu d e s Sh am p o o. C o n d itio n e r & C u t One Coupon With Coupon fo r F irst Time Customers O nly C ello p h a n e . . . . . . $ 2 2 .0 0 H ig h lig h ts .................... .. $ 4 0 .0 0 W ith Coupon fo r F irs t Tim e Customers O nly Mon-Fri Noon til 6 p.m ^ *45“®P e r m s $ 5 .0 0 O ff Regular $ 1 0 .0 0 Off Spiral Wraps ALLSWIMWEAR 15%OFF! One Coupon ALSO KILLER SHOE SALE! $4” & up! . Sale merchandise excluded. Not good with any other offer inlSMTM p » Marts & AOnms Har 9 yWg 1100 E. A P A C H E M on.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 11:30-4:00 966-6111 Call For Appointment 933 E. University M-F 10-6 PM SAT 10-5 PM SON 12-4PM U n iv e rsity T ow ers C e n te r a c ro s s from S u n D e vil 580 S. College Ave 968-4940 SE Corner Rural & University ALL MODELS ON SALE $ 599! from T H U R S D A Y S : L A D IE S N IG H T •1 0 D R IN K S For Ladies 8-10 p.m . • For 2 5Guys ° D8 -1R0 p.m I N. K S N O C O V E R F O R L A D IE S A fter IO p.m . Ladies Drinks are $1 P O W E R 9 2 & P L A N E T E . w ill b e p la y in g t h e h o t t e s t d a n c e m i x b y a o n r ia o f t h e V a l l e y ’s f i n e s t D . J . ’s . W e ’ ll b e g i v i n g a w a y l l m o r i d e s a w e e k e n d g e ta w a y s! F R ID A Y a n d S A T U R D A Y R e tu r n o f th e 2 H o u r L u n a r H o u r D o lla r D r in k s 8 - 1 0 p . m . N o C o v e r fo r L a d le s S W C o f S c o t t s d a l e & C a m e lb a c k 6 0 2 * 9 4 5 * 2 3 4 5 ■ y *First time Buyer Plan for College Students Freight & handling additional M CUI vTiiv D D A M H new HONDA SCOOTER lin n a (HO PUftCHASF To Be Given Anmy GNr»Campus At The “Splash Bash” in the Ree Center April 21 Entry Forms & Display at the Student Ree Center western tionda of Scottsdale Come ride with usl 6717 E. MCDOWell Rd. 994-8400 w estern Honda P ag elO State Pros Thursday, A pril 5,1990 Police Report ASÜ police reported the following incidents Wednesday: •Police warned a man of trespassing and loitering after he was observed in the area of Cady Mall at 3 a.m. Wednesday. •A thief stole an ASU student’s mens black formal suit from 402 Adelphi Drive between March 16 and March 25. Hie room was entered through an unlocked window. Loss is $350. •A thief stole an ASU student’s gold ring and bracelet from her unlocked roomatSahuaro Hall between 10:30 p.m. Sunday and 3 p m. Tuesday. Loss is $675. •A thief stole an ASU student’s mens bicycle from Life Sciences C-Wing between 3:30 and 4:15 p.m. Tuesday. Loss is $538. •A thief stole an ASU student’s Sony Walkman and a gray ASU sweatshirt from a room at Palo Verde West between March 16 and March 25. Loss is $190. •A thief stole an ASU student’s mens cruiser bicycle, valued at $150, from the east side of the MU between 12:30 and 2:20 p.m. Tuesday. The bike was locked to itself with a U-bolt. •A thief stole an ASU student’s purse and contents from an unattended locker in the Student Recreation Complex womens locker room between 1:05 and 2:05 p.m. Tuesday. Loss is $211. •Police impounded an illegally parked bicycle from the stairwell on the east side of the MU at 1 p.m. Tuesday. Traveling’s easier w ith STATE PRESS Classifieds! Be a part of A S U tradition... THE SUN DEVIL SPARK YEARBOOK STAFF NEEDS YOU! P ositions a re n o w available o n T he Sun D evil S p ark y earb o o k staff, 1990-91 ed ition. A pplications are n o w b ein g accep ted for th e follow ing positions: Coordinates and edits all copy, handles all copy assignments. M A R K E T IN G M AN AG ER S E C T IO N E D IT O R Coordinates mar­ keting scheme to sell books. Coordinates layout design and sec­ tion content. •25• i o n! something great at la s A reas M all this spring! Jump into any Los A rcos food store and collect your instant w inner gam e piece. You'll have two chances to w in a brilliant one-carat total w eight diam ond ring from G o ld A rt Creations o r K a y Jew elers, and every chance to w in something :iou$ o r laquitos Real. So, be sure to hop on over and experience our incredible atmosphere. W hite supplies last. G am e rules on back of each gam e piece. State Press Sports Thursda^AprjUi^WO Page 12 McCartney_ ConOnuad from paga 1. first hour that fans were let into the stadium. Many fans said they left the stadium after seeing a show th at exceeded their expectations. “ It was worth the wait because what we had here tonight was one of the greatest musicians of all time,” said Wayne Arnett, 41. McCartney plugged his public concern for the environment once dining the three-hour show. “Next time you get a chance to vote, just tell your politicians you want to live in a clean world,” McCartney said. He also mentioned Arizona’s lack of a state paid holiday for slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. “How many people here in favor of a Martin Luther King day?” McCartney asked. “OK, motion carried,” he added after the crowd applauded. during the beginning of “Back in the U .S .S .R .” During the performance of “Live and Let Die,” the theme from the James Bond movie of the same name, a brilliant flash of l ig h t e m a n a te d fro m th e s ta g e , momentarily blinding thousands of fans. The sound also had a powerful effect, and at times, the base was turned up to create a vibration throughout the stadium. “ It was just like listening to a CD in my living room,” Steve Klaproth, 39, of Mesa, said of the sound quality. Police said the concert crowd was relatively peaceful and law-abiding. Police ejected 15 people for minor offehses, ASU police Sgt. Keith Bailly said. Vendors left the concert empty-handed but with satisfied grins after making more than $100,000 in sales at 12 booths. “It was outstanding,” said Dave Zall, supervisor of sales, adding that vending booths made about $15,000 each during the T h e St a t e A W E E K A JOHN L Y C O Scott TroyanoaSState Press T in a P renovoat (right) and S u n n y D avis o f Tam pa try to ca tch a g lim p se o f P a u l M cCartney befo re W ed nesd ay’s co n ce rt. D avis, w ho sa id her s is te r “ u sed to m ake m e k iss M cC a rtn ey's p ictu re every n ig ht and sa y th e B eatle p ra y er,” com m ented that the co n ce rt fu lfille d o n e o f her lifelon g dream s. P ress M a g a z in e L L E G E T O W N J O U R N A L WATERS FILM MWI Sell your ’puter Under “ Computers” in the State Press Classifieds Tonight Channel 8 Invites You to Join The State’s Highest Court. Today, The Arizona Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case of “Yetman v. English.” Former Pima County Supervisor David Yetman is seeking dam ages for defam ation after State Representative Bill English publicly referred to Yetman as a communist. At issue is whether such remarks about a public official are protected by the First Amendment. Tonight, hear both sides for yourself. Join Michael Grant and Paul Bender, of the ASU College of Law, for information and analysis about this day in court. ARIZONA SUPREM E COURT ORAL ARGUM ENTS T onight 7P M Hi! Programming like this is made possible by the support of friends like you. am & m r fatai Y o u r p le d g e c o u n ts ! OPENS FRIDAY. APRIL 6™ AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU. Part o f Arizona Slate University KAET S ta te P l W Page 13 Thursday, A p rils , 1990 Despite 64,000 fans, Tempe avoids trafficproblems hectic.” But concert-goers followed Haldane’s advice to arrive after 6 p.m. Sixty-four thousand people went to see Paul McCartney in ASU made its own efforts to reduce the number of concert Wednesday night and they all showed up at the same University employees still on campus after 4 p.m., two hours before the stadium gates were scheduled to open. time. But, according to George Cathcart of the ASU News But despite the last-minute throng of enthusiastic fans that converged on Sun Devil Stadium a half-hour before Bureau, no policy permitting employees to leave early was McCartney was to take the stage, Tempe police officers initiated. “We made an effort to get employees to leave early,” controlling the traffic flow said everything ran smoothly. “ It’s a really good crowd,” said Officer Roger Clay, who Cathcart said. “But the time has to be made up one way or was directing traffic outside the stadium. “They seem to be another.” Due to the high traffic volume and inevitable safety having a really good time.’’ Clay said that because most fans came to Tempe earlier in hazards, the ASU tram service was interrupted from 6 p.m. the day, traffic problems were minimal as showtime to 8 p.m. “We want our passengers to be safe,” Haldane said. approached. Haldane estimated that close to 150 ASU employees were In fact, most of the difficulties arose around 3 p.m. as on hand at the event, including 45 from the DPS staff. prime parking close to the stadium began filling up. Forty-two Tempe police officers handled the sea of inbound At the time, ASU DPS Assistant Director of Parking and Transit John Haldane said he “anticipated that it might be and outbound traffic before Wednesday’s show: B y M IC H E LLE B U R G E S S and H O B A R T R O W LAN D S ta te Preaa Clay; who was scheduled to continue monitoring traffic during and after the event, said he was looking forward to hearing the concert free of charge from outside the gates. “Everybody’s a McCartney fan,” he said. Others who enjoyed the show free of charge were some residents of The Towers at Forest Avenue and Fifth Street. Kim Anton, whose seventh-floor corner balcony gave her a decent view inside the stadium, said the arriving fans were almost as interesting as the concert itself. “I think it’s amazing,” she said of the throng that converged on the gates at about 7:30 p.m. “I just Can’t get over how many people are here.” Paying customers didn’t seem to mind the sometimes long walk and heavy crunch of fellow fans clamoring to get through the gate. “We parked about a mile away,” said Linda Kaser and Shirley Glanzberg, who drove in from Tucson for the show. “We just look at (the walk) as a good stretch for the legs.” We sh o u ld V e put a classified ad in theNo business? State Press. Slow business? We can help. State Press Classifieds taiiprn Sceatery “ Where everyday’s a special" 965-6731 fa c tjo meß m / W I T H Z E N IT H D ATA SYS TEMS 25f Drafts. $2 Pitchers 7 p.m .-Close $199 Burger Basket 2 p.m.-7 p.m. 50* Pint Drafts 7 p.m .-Close S * $199 Starving ' Student Special Ih» ' j k D ra fts * itchers 7 p.m .-Close $199 Burger Basket 2 p.tn.-7 p.m. 50* Pini '0Drifts S r y tenter u u r sweepstakes Today And Finish At H ie M ost Exciting Race In Europe.. .The Tbur De France! 7 p.m .-Cloaè^ f $199 starviijg As you race to the finish o f the school year be sure to enter our “RACE TO THE FINISH” Sweepstakes, where you could win one o f these great prizes: Student F R I S A T $1 Shooter Specials $175 Longnecks $ 1 50 Cocktails ^ 7 p.m .-Close GRAND PRIZE-ONE WINNER $ 2 leoz lrnpprt Drafts 25* D ra m $ 2 FIRST PRIZE-50 WINNERS A Raleigh Assault* or Finesse* All-Terrain Bike. SECOND PRIZE-500 WINNERS A go-anywhere Fanny Pack. THIRD PRIZE-1,000 WINNERS A sports water bottle. To entei; just race over to the campus contact listed at right and ask to take a free test drive on one o f our featured desktop PCs. Itju st might be the m ost rewarding test o f your college career! Arizona State University Moeur Building, Room 108 ZENITH DATA SYSTEM S INNOVATES AG AIN ” P i t c h e r ^ i n , ok». R U R A L Buy any of our qualifying desktop systems* at a great student price, and get a Raleigh All-Terrain Bike ABSOLUTELY FREE! Now at An all-expense-paid trip for two to Paris for the 1990 Tour de France. $199 BurgerBasket 2 p.m.-7 p.m. Buy APC, Get A Bike FREE ! & Z E N IT H data systems ! A P A C H E T E M P E \ Groupe Bui Form No. 1246 HURRY! SWEEPSTAKES ENDS JUNE 8,1990! Graphics simulate Microsoft* Windows, a product o f Microsoft Corporation. •Qualifying systems include Z-286 LP Model 20, Z-286 LP/12 Modal 20, Z-286 LP/12 Model 40 when purchased tffli any Zenith Data Systems VGA Monitor. . .. , ©1990, Zenith Data Systems Comics P a g e J4 _ State Press Thursday, A pril 5 ^ 9 9 ^ ^ by Bill Watterson The Far Side ■ " ' M STUPENDOUS LISTEN CHARLIE Calvin and Hobbes ANYWAY CHARLIE, I'M SORRY WE CDULDNT 90 OJT TONIGHT, BUT m s LVTTl£ CREEP'S PARENTS ARE SO DESPERATE TO GET AWAY FROM HIM ONCE IN A WHILE. THAT THEY... ¡/FREBWWAM D justice SHKL njkms ■ m l c n e r t îr n w ISITIER QRL- ....■ . GET OFF ME, CALVIN,YOU PEST* ON? LET <50/ QUIT IT.' by Gary Larson W ITH MM HAS THE STRENGTH OF A MILLION MORTAL MEN.' GIVE UP / Doonesbury Ï Ï ,M U SCLES OF I'M GOING TO HAVE 1/ kM AGNITUDE. TO CALL YOU BACK sw nnw s YOU WOULDN'T MM FIGHTS BELIEVE WHAT WITH HEROIC THIS CRETIN IS R E S O L V E .' WEARING. by Garry Trudeau ELMONT. I CANTQUrmMAKEOUT AU- YOUR ANSWERSHERE. SO L e ts 6 0 0 m THEM,OKAY? "HOW IS PERSON2 RELAIBWPERSON I * YES, WE ARE, BARE. ELMONT AND I ARE MARRIED. I WEARE NO T! HUEMOST CERTAINLY X ARE NO T! YES, WEAREI WEARE NOT! WEARS, HUN. I I OKAY, YOU HAPPILY YOU'REA m,DUCKS. SO! NINE LUCKY MAN, WE'RE YEARS! MARRIED. TWENTY, PERSON 1. I MAYBE! ! un nun , V#- P u i Ivory Towers by Mike Ritter Rainey Days by Julie Sigwart If you earn less than '24.600' per year you may qualify to »et a monthly rental discount! Call Now! L im it e d T im e O ffe r n \ E bf : d r () o m AS LOW AS $399 Special Agent Gumby fails into the frustrated hands of the enemy. NEW YORK (AP) — They may not chomp on pizza and fight teen-age hoods, but they do live in New York City’s sewers. Dank-dwelling snapping turtles have been pulled out front sewage treatment plants. Their diets sometimes consist of cold cuts. Some of the turtles recovered from the Bronx and Manhattan plants have weighed 50 pounds or more, according to Tina Casey, a spokeswoman for the city’s Department of Environmental Protection. '‘They're big enough to do serious damage to any hoodlum,” she said, but not quite die size of the characters of the new hit movie, “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.” The last time any of the big snappers came out of a New York sewer was 1988, when two were found, lean, mean and on screens intended to sift tree limbs and other large objects from sewage, Casey said. Periodically, younger snapping turtles or other, smaller breeds are found. Workers at the Bronx Screening station have kept a few of the greenish-brown reptiles around as pets, feeding them cold cuts and meatballs, she said. When a “monster” turtle surfaces, the department has the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals take It to upstate New York and set it free. But they have to be handled carefully — the turtle’s powerful jaws can “easily put a nasty dent in your body,” Casey said. Casey ran across the sewer turtles’ existence two years ago while researching the mythical blind albino alligators that don’t inhabit the City sewers after supposedly being flushed down toilets. While the sewers are too cold and too sparse of alligator food, they seem to be all right for freshwater turtles, she said. Tempe’s Newest...Tempes Best! GRAND O PE N IN G ! W eek -lo n g C eleb ra tio n ... th ro u g h F riday iUNGH P i c k - a - w i c h . . . . . . . . . » 2 .5 0 ♦ .O Any deli sandwich w/choice of side order. 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U n iv ersity Sports State Press Thursday, A pril 5,1990 Page 15 Steverson still struggling but stays swinger B y SETH SU LK A S ta te P re ss Perspective — it’s all a matter of perspective. For ASU baseball player Todd Steverson nothing could be more true. Steverson, who passed up a chance to sign with the St. Louis Cardinals for a reported $300,000 last summer so he could attend ASU, has had to learn to keep his baseball career in perspective during a freshman season that has seen him, to say the least, struggle offensively. While managing only a .189 average in his first 36 gam «, the Sun Devil third baseman, who entered this season as the No. 4 prospect in the country, has had to find a way to turn all of this year’s negative attention into something positive. “ I have to look at all this and come to the reality that, yeah, I’m struggling and not hitting as well as I want, but I can’t feel sony for myself because we still have 24 games left,” Steverson said. But despite his offensive woes, Steverson has not taken his offensive troubles to the field. Playing in right field at beginning of the season and at his three-week old position at third base, Steverson has been able to successfully use his speed and strong throwing arm to make his defense solid. “ I never let the two (offense and defense) mix,” Steverson said. “If I’m defensively sound then I’m happy that I can help the team that way.” Adam s quits team By PAU L CORO State P re ss Sophomore Tommy Adams quit the ASU baseball team Tuesday after a “personality conflict” between Head Coach Jim Brock and himself, Adams said. “I just made a rash decision,” Tommy Adams said Wednesday. “I just got upset and I am regretting it now.” Adams, a Mission Viejo, Calif., native, has started every game for the Sun Devils this season in right field. Adams was hitting .300 with 23 RBI and five home runs. In his last four games, he went 8-for-15 with five RBI. Adams said he planned on trying to talk to Brock but had “no comment” on his intentions or the player-coach altercation. Scott Dupree, ASU assistant sports information director, said that Adams is not on the team currently and his status will be evaluated periodically. Sundl KJ*fts«ad/8toto Press Freshm an third basem an T o d d Steverson turned dow n $300,000 from the S t.Lo u ls C a rd in a ls s o he co u ld p lay baseball at A S U . Sun Devil Head Coach Jim Brock said that Steverson’s ability to keep his confidence high on defense has been important for the team. “It is very difficult for a freshman to come in and play everday in the Six-Pac,” Brock said. “But if he continues to play third base as well' as he has, he will have, contributed greatly to this team.” However, Steverson said that sometimes a poor performance at the plate helps motivate him to play especially hard in the field. “If I can’t hit the ball, then maybe I can stop a ball that’s in the hole and throw somebody out to keep the other team from scoring,” he said. “ It saves our team from a run.” Brock said that Steverson’s upbeat personality has been a very encouraging aspect of his season. “Todd justhas a very positive attitude,” Brock said. “He’s having a good time. He just seems to have everything in a very good perspective.” Steverson has also been able to take a positive outlook on his troubles at the plate, saying that, along with the help of hitting Coach Jeff Pentland, his swing is beginning to look like the swing that he wants to have. “I’m still learning — but the baby can’t be a man before he’s a child,” Steverson said. “I need to take the baby steps right now. “I need to get up there and do the fundamentals, and do them consistently, before I can make it to the next stage of hitting.” Although Steverson’s progress has not been apparent on the stat pages (he has yet to lift his average above the .200 mark), he definitely showed signs of hope when he became only the ninth player in Packard Stadium’s 16-year history to hit a home run over center field’s 30-foot high Green Monster. “It felt really good, but the best thing was that I took just as good a swing the next time up,” Steverson said. “And that showed that I could do it back-to-back.” Even though Steverson was not able to stay in his groove as he went 0-for-6 in the Florida State series, he was able to continue looking at things with a positive perspective. “The name of the game is to have fun,” he said. “Even though striking out is not fun, baseball is a failure sport and if you take every failure too hard, then you’re never going to succeed.” If keeping failure in the right perspective is the key to baseball, then anyway you look at it Todd Steverson will succeed. C arpen ter sets sight on final goal B y VICKI CULVER State P re ss In her four years on the ASU womens gymnastics team, senior captain Molly Carpenter has achieved all of her personal goals but one — All-American status. With the NCAA Championships coming up in a week, Carpenter said her final goal is seeming that much closer to reality. “ Each year, I have wanted to be AllAmerican,” she said. “I would love to do it (this year) on vault.” Carpenter said that scoring at Nationals is traditionally lower for teams in the first round than teams in the second round. For this reason, she said she hopes the Sun Devils score high enough at the NCAA Regionals this weekend to make it into the second session. The goals that Carpenter said she has accomplished throughout her four years on the ASU squad are a good mental attitude, co nsistency and m ost im portantly, maintaining her health. “ I never felt confident with what I was doing (prior to college),” she said “I definitely feel like I have improved mentally and gymnastics-wise. “Now I can enjoy the sport rather than : worry about how I am doing. And at least I am going to walk away from it in one piece with my health.” Other goals she has achieved have been a seventh-place all-around finish in the 1989 NCAA Regionals and a fifth-place finish in the 1989 Pac-10 Championships in vault. This season, she has been the secondhighest competitor behind Suzy Baldock in the all-around. Her best scores have been on vault, her favorite event in which she has been working on a new trick to help her score in the Nationals. “I have had to learn a pike because if you make it to finals you have to have two different vaults,” she said. “I have checked it with (Head Coach) John (Spini) spotting me, and I feel like I could do it if I get all pumped up for it.” Assistant Coach Lisa Zeis said she has confidence in whatever Carpenter attempts to do because of her successful attitude. “Molly’s work ethic is great,” Zeis said. “She knows what she needs to do and if she needs to spend more time she will stay after. Whatever she wants to do in life she is going to do.” Zeis said that Carpenter has been a great team : captain who has motivated the younger gymnasts on the team. “She gets along great with the girls and the girls really loojc up to her,” she said. “This year, we have always had to count on her and she always pulled through.” Carpenter said that being named team captain with the other four seniors has made the team camaraderie even tight«. “On the larger teams they are bitter and they argue and have cliques,” she said. “But on our team, no one really pulls rank on anyone else.” Carpenter said she considers herself more of a mediator between the coaches and the athletes than a person in charge. Although she said she will remain supportive of the sport of gymnastics, Carpenter will stop competing when her . eligibility runs out at the end of this season. She said she will miss the team and coaching staff after she graduates in December of 1990 with her degree in business. “John Spini has carried on a great tradition,” she said. “He is a very fair coach Carpenter and he gives everyone the chance to compete. “All of the coaches are tough on you, but they bring a sense of humor and fun into it.” C o o k burns Utah State on no-hitter; softball travels to U C LA By D A N ZEIG ER S ta te P re ss ASU softball player Melinda Cook had earned a reputation as one of the Sun Devils’ stingiest pitchers, owning a season earned-run average of under one. However, on Monday afternoon in Logan, Utah, she couldn’t have been less generous. In the opening game of the doubleheader against Utah State, Cook tossed the first no-hitter of her career, walking three and striking out one in a 1-0 victory. After allowing all three walks in the first four innings, Cook retired 11 of the Aggies’ last 12 batters. Utah State’s only other baserunner came in the sixth inning when Cook committed an error. Becky Davis singled Ann Rowan home for the contest’s only run in the second inning after the shortstop had led off with a single and was sacrificed to second by second baseman Liz Phillips. Rowan, who leads the Pac-10 in hits, was 2-for-3 in the game and stole one base. “The first game we had opportunities to score one run,” Aggie Head Coach Lloydene Searle said. “It could have been easily a 1-1 ball game and then from there, who knows? TUm j o Softball, pig« 1®. Page 16 State Press Jh ü re d a ^ A p H l^ lW Q Softball Continuad from paga 15. The Aggies regrouped offensively and won the second game, 1-0, behind freshman DeAnna Earsley’s five-hitter. In the fifth inning, Utah State’s Linda Delacruz led off with a double against Terri Carnacelli, Who relieved Cook after four shutout burnings. After Delacruz was advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt, Terri Rice singled to center to drive in the game’s only run. ASU came closest to scoring in the sixth when the Sun Devils put together consecutive singles with two away. However, Rowan popped out to end the threat. “It’s always nice in a doubleheader to win that second game,’’ Searle said. “That was a big win for us.” The Sun Devils then traveled to Salt Lake City to take on Utah in another twin-bill on Tuesday. After dropping the opening game, 2-0, ASU came back to win the nightcap, 5-3, as Cook won her second game in as many days by pitching two more scoreless innings. The Sun Devils feature three stars at the plate while accumulating a dozen hits: catcher Christy Serritella went 3-for-5, third hawman Stephanie Mav was 2-for-3 and Cook went 2-for-4. The Sun Devils (30-22,4-4 Pac-10) now take their act to the West Coast to face one of college softball’s premier programs, UCLA, Saturday a t 1p.m. The top-ranked Bruins (34-5, 5-1 Pac-10) lead the conference in hitting with a .277 batting average. UCLA’s offensive production can be attributed to the productive infield of first baseman Kerry Dienelt (.320), second baseman Kelly Inouye (.290), shortstop Kristy Howard (.311) and third baseman Lisa Fernandez ( .294). Fernandez, also a pitcher, posts a 5-1 record with a 0.51 ERA. The Bruins, whose star is Lisa Longaker (124) with a 0.58 ERA), possess one of the conference’s best pitching staffs. UCLA can also call on Heather Crompton, 9-1 with a 0.48 ERA, and DeDe Weiman, 8-3 with a 0.68 ERA. UCLA will most likely start an outfield of Shanna Flynn (.262), Missy Phillips (.277) and Yvonne Gutierrez ( 347). Flynn is among the Pac-10 leaders in triples and Phillips leads the conference in runs batted in. WRESTLING ASU wrestling Head Coach Bobby Douglas and 167-pounder Dan St. John were named the Pac-10 Coach and Wrestler of the Year, respectively, Wednesday by the conference’s coaches. Douglas, who captured the award for the sixth straight time and his eighth overall, led the Sun Devils to their sixth straight Pac-10 title and Second consecutive NCAA runner-up finish; St. John earned Wrestler of the Year honors for his second time in as many seasons. He won Pac-10 and NCAA 167-pound class title this season on his way to a 40-0-1 record. He ended his collegiate career having not lost in his last 75 matches (74-0-1). St. John moved this season to the 167-pound class from the 158-pound division, where he won Pac-10 titles in 1988 and 1989 and the 1989 NCAA Championship. • P ttp kM M U St BUY A N Y P I Z Z A < S E T 2ND ' F iz z & ' DELIVERY I 1 V i PR IC E ttit'tilb'laff ea CMr p iz z a tii»' Om : & J£ « c NO HASSLES Just pick up the phone 6 4 4 -1 2 3 3 »am m.-m nm.-m*-**-aa-a* .m i EXCELLENT BICYCLES O FF ANY LARGE PIZZA 2n4raae'«Mtarl*MMrMM » ' 1530 N. Country Club #8 e M inW C M ittT ............ $ 20° ° $ 1 Q O O BUFFET > m m L- OFF TUNE-UP SUM M ER O FF STORAGE Overhaul N ow $14« Reg. $24« with prepaid Fait Tune-Up Now $49« Reg. $69« Free Pick-up & Delivery Not valid with any other offer Free Pick-up & Delivery Exp. 5-31-90 Free Pop R e fills • F resh Pizza M any V a rie tie s • Fresh Salad Bar A S U /T E M P E 'L im it e d D e liv e r y A re a 945 S. MILL at 10th STREET 894-1234 Free Pick-up & Delivery Exp. 5-31-90 FR EE Pregnancy Testing FREE Pregnancy & Birth C ontrol Counseling ALL ARIZONA WOMEN’S CENTER 563 S. Rural Read, Suite 106 FREE CHECKS &Grill. (When you become a member at Tempe Schools Credit Union) ✓ $4.99 SunDevil Deal. Now you and a friend can eat a full dinner a t Sizzler for the cost of a cheese pizza. It’s the Mill & Southern Sizzler’s Sun Devil Deal for only $4.99 w ith the coupon below or w ith your ASU ID. It’s so much food for so little money. The Mill & Southern Sizder’s Get your choice of a shrim p, chicken or $4.99 SunDevil Deal. sm all sirloin steak entree p lu s potato, rice or Eqjoy shrimp, chicken or small ririoin steak en­ vegetable plus a green dinner salad plus your tree plus potato, rice or vegetable and dinner salad. Or choose the famous All-You-Can-Eat salad, pasta, choice of non-alcoholic beverage w ith bottomtaco, fruit and desert Salad Bar. Includes non-alco­ loss refills. holic beverage with bottomless refills. O r for $4.99 our famous All-You-Can-Eat Offer good with coupon or ASU ID from 4pm to fresh fru it & muffins & taco & pasta & desert __Expires _ April 22, 1990. Offer also good at the close. & salad & fixins Salad Bar. Come and bring a I Bases™ and Mc’aintock sizzler. friend. O r ten. Take advantage of a deal so | O j ry ry T /v f» good it lu st had to beat the devil out of anyJ u lZ Z lC l, bleak, • beajood • òalad thing else around..1 I Steak •Seafood •Salad S tu d en ts and faculty are eligible / C onvenient location to ASU on M ill ju s t South of Broadw ay ✓ No-fee checking account th a t earn s in te re st ✓ Com plete line of financial services lo in N o w 's ? * « R e c e iv e : □ FREE checks □ In te re st on funds □ No m onthly fees (Offer good through December 31, 1990) ‘tJempe Scltoois C red it Union 2800 S. M ill J967-9475; Pasc 17 Thunday, April 5,1990 S ta te P ress C la s s ifie d s Sj [J i "P T h a t** th e tic k e t! 1 :J j __________ ___ C REGISTER NOW! FO R JEW ISH STU D IES C O U R S E S FA LL SEM ESTER , 1990 INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT? YOU SHOULD KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS! •FR E E C onsultation to stu d en ts a n d faculty •A u to Accidents •M otorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •W rongful D eath •F au lty Products •S lip & Fall •D o g Bites •In su ra n c e D isputes •R E D U C E D percentage fees for cases of dear liability or serious injury •H om e, evening & hospital appointm ents available BEFORE CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY CALL BAKER & MARCUS HISTORY OF ANTI-SEMITISM G. Weiner, History HIS 394 6:40-9:30 p m. TH SS 215 HEBREW BIBLE - OLD TESTAMENT J. Gereboff, Religious Studies REL 315 10:40-11:30 a m. MWF LL A18 JUDAISM IN MODERN TIMES: MODERN JEWISH THOUGHT B. Lee, Religious Studies REL 410 3:15-4:30 p.m. TTH LL C218 SEMINAR: FORM OF JUDAISM & CHRISTIANITY J. Gereboff & C. Emerson, Religious Studies REL 591 1:40-4:30 p.m. M L L C 4 2 MODERN HEBREW D. Ben-Gigi, Foreign Languages HEB 101 Elementary Modern Hebrew 9:40-10:30 a.m. MTWTH LL A38 HEB 201 Int. Modern Hebrew 10:40-11:30 a.m. MTWTH LL A38 HEB 313 Advanced Modern Hebrew 12:15-1:30 p.m. TTH LL B219 Personal Injury Lawyers D O N ’T GET HURT TWICE 438-1212 Call Jewish Studies Program for more information, 965-7145. (4 6 2 5 S. W endler Dr., Suite 1 1 1, Tempe) Camp, Ihr IM nw «, P.ychK Sra-ncr. -t-V nlram l .mporl.nl *•.. 1 M B? V -l-, THURSDAYS Spm—fam EUTAND MN MHO’S MILE ÏRIKE RACE FOR p W E E K F P R IZ E ANP QUALIFY ■ il FOR THE M0NTHIY GRAND PRIZES/ CyhIU Hhiphrra haa talkad opanly S Cliff J il r tn lia M m ' Worn# Jmmnml.p v.il, har a f t af w Greek Sing Rumor has it... TONIGHT 7PM NEVER EVER ii GAMMAGE AUDITORIUM COVER o ^ 115 SOUTH H A Y D EJÎ ftQAD, TEM PB, A Z 86281 • 966-1911 ^ Tickets may be purchased at Gammage or Dillard’s Box Office for $7.50 Page 18 Thursday, April 5,1990 ANNOUNCEMENTS AUTOMOBILES REAL ESTATE APARTMENTS HELP WANTED HANG GLIDEI Gently sloping man-made hUI. Sato and exciting. Group rates and gift ce rtific a te s a v a ila b le . W indsports, 897-7121. 1977 TOYOTA Corolla, 4-speed, new tires, $900 or best offer. 464-1003. SAVE $25,000 on 3 bedroom, 2% bath, Los Prados townhome, within walking distance to ASU. Only $100 down— why rent? Greg, Realty Executives, 941-7705. STUDIOS $295. Small, quiet complex with pool. Close to ASU. U tilities included. Please call 966-8597. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs full-tim e permanent secretary/assistant. Must have excellent clerical skills, type 50 words per minute minimum. Excellent salary. W ill train. 941-3812. S la te P re s s Classifieds 15 w ords o r lo s s : $3.00 p o r day to r 1-4 days $2.75 p e r day fo r 5-0 days $2.50 per day fo r 10 + days 15* ea ch ad d itio n al w ord T he first 2 w ords are cap italized . N o b o ld fa ce o r centering. Porsonola are only $1.401 965-6731 ANNOUNCEMENTS FRESH BAKED cookies and muffins everyday at B.G. Einstein's Bar arid Grill, upstairs, comer of 6th and College: HAVE YOU made plans for Passover? H iliei is having a seder on Monday, April 9 at 6:45pm. Call 967-75ÌS3 for information. BIY, SELL, TRA9E A good place to sell Is i great place to buy! C lo th e s Pedd ler 966-2300 (By Drug Emporium) IS REASON, not God, your guide? Freethinkers, Humanists, Athiests: Call 820-0320 to meet other thinkers. LOVE TO dance? Hate the bar scene? You’ ll love the A ll Singles Dances, every Friday and Sunday at better Valley hotels. Recorded information, 946-4086. 1980 M GB convertible, 40,000 miles, runs excellent, looks great, many new parts, perfect for summer. $3,500. Call Cam, 964-9731. 1981 MAZDA 626, 5-speed, excellent condition. $1,950 or best offer. Call Debbie at 966-3793. APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM, $65 per week, air condition­ ing, 5th and Hardy. 2 bedroom, $59 per week, evap cooling, Apache and McClin______ ' tock. 966-5596. 1985 HONDA hatchback DX. 5 speed, AC, AM/FM radio, 49,000 original m iles. Excel­ lent condition, new clutch and brakes. A must see! $4,900. After 6pm or leave message, 860-9017. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath trailer, $450/month, u tilitie s included. Near ASU . Pat, 829-6713. 1987 HYUNDAI, 4-door, stereo/cassette, tinted windows, cloth seats, automatic, 48,000 m iles. Great condition. Must sell, $2,800. 860-1216. ASU A R E A , 2 bedroom , 2 bath, $340/m onth p lu s e le c tric ity . A irconditioning, jacuzzi, no pets, deposit. 967-4789. r 1987 SUZUKI Samurai, 29,000 miles, air conditioning, AM/FM casette, 2-year warranty. $3,988. 226-2439, 461-1451. ASU AREA. Studios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments for rent. $260 and up. 966-8838. SUPPORT CAM P Sunrise and order a yearbook. Just mention Camp Sunrise on your order and $5 w ill be donated to Camp Sunrise for Greek Week 1990. For more information, contact The Sun Devil Spark at 965-6881. CORVAIR 1964 Monza. 4-door, factory AC. With shop manuals and parts catalog. $2,200. Evenings, 967-9224. GOOD GRADES... great deal, rustic red brick, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, fenced back yard, graduate preferred. 894-8348. W E HAVE Vienna Beef Chicago Style Hotdogs! B.G. Einstein’s Bar and Grill, upstairs, corner of 6th and College. I'll b u y y o u r c a r or tru c k , ru n n in g o r not! F re e to w in g . C a ll.n o w ... 2 5 6 -7 4 0 8 a.m . 3 8 1 -0142 p.m . REW ARD! FO R any information on persons involved in a fight at the Rockin’ Freddy’s parking lot (M ill Ave.), approxi­ mately two years àgo (October 1987): Call Griff or leave message at (80(5)745^4435. Your call will be reimbursed. SINGLES’ EVENTS, advice, personals Single Scene newspaper. Free sample, 990-2669, $$ QUICK CASH $$ MOTORCYCLES 1984 HONDA 250 scooter. New battery, new tires, good condition. Asking $850. 464-8068. 1985 HONDA Rebel. Red, 2,700 original m iles. Stored, never wrecked/ridden. Brand new. 968-0979. 1987 HONDA Elite 80, 700 miles, full cover and helmet. $ i,000 or best offer. 345-7106 GRADUATE STUDENT, staff and faculty. Fully renovated, quiet living. Close to ASU. Exercise room, expansive pool. 894-6468. LARGE ONE bedroom, Pool, dishwasher, laundry. Quiet complex, near ASU. $330. Sunrise Apartments, 1014 East Spence, 968- 6947. STUDIO AND 1 bedroom. $225440.1339 S. Sunset Drive, Apt. no.9:1 block west of Rural, 1 block south of Apache. 967-3658. R AN C H O L A S PA LM A S Best deal around — Walk to ASU! Move in for first month’s rent. Nodeposita/nofees! One month free with 13 month lease. One Bedroom/$355 month Two Bedroom/2 Bath $515 month Call now! 1249 E . S p en ce 829-9607 BLACK 1985 Yamaha 180Z scooter. Low mileage, excellent condition. $1,000. 921-7224. NOVENA TO ST. JUDE Oh. holy S t Jude, apostle and martyr, great in virtue, rich in miracle, near kinsman of Jesus Christ, faithful intercessor o f all who invoke your special patronage in time of need. To you I have recourse from the depth of my heart and humbly beg to whom God has given great power to come to my assistance. Help me in my present and urgent petition. In return. I prom ise to make your name known and cause you to be invoked. Say three Our Fathers, three Hail Marys and three Glories for n in e con secu tive days. Publication m ust be promised. St. lude pray for us all who invoke your aid. Amen. T h is n o v e n a h a s n e v e r b e e n k n o w n to f a il. LAST CHANCE! Honda Elite 80, perfect condition! 130 miles! New Battery! Unbe­ lievable deal, $675. 966-3296. . scrnncc A p a rtm e n t A n d e r s BICYCLES Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 HANDBUILT SAKAE 5000, $200, road ra c in g /tra in in g , D u ra -A ce /S u n tou r Cyclone drivetrain, great intro racing bike, chrome finish. Tom, 921-9413. MOUNTAIN BIKE, 10-speed. Good condi­ tion. W ith U-Lock. $50. C all Mark, 966-5121. ' V RIDE WITH the wind with a Cannondale racing bike. 53cm, hardly used. $400. 234-2429. AUTOMOBILES 841-5055 S u p e r Q u ie t Move-In Special Faculty/Staff/Graduate Students Lovely 2 bedroom apart­ ments. A ll amenities. Plus beautiful pool and covered parking. Beat the Heat M ove-in S pecial H idden G len n FURNITURE 818 W. 3rd St., Tempe (Hardy & 2nd Street) 968-8183 USED FURNITURE for sale. Couches, tables, chairs, lamps. Must Sell soon. Please ca ll 759-8785. ENTERTAINMENT CENTER for sale. $65 or best offer. 946-4816. GOING OUT of business sale. 40% off Mary Kay products. 431-9164, ask for Carmen. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE RUGER MINI-14 stainless, mint condition. Extra sights, brass and factory ammuni­ tion. $450. Trent, 345-8079. S E L L IT COMPUTERS______ HP 41QX advanced calculator with card reader and m ath m odule. Asking $280/offer. Phone: 894-9530. S p la tte r A rt — Unique designs, no tw o alike. G reat for dorm room , apartm ent, teenager's room and/or game room. 3 2 ” x4 2 ” ; no assem bly required, framable. Choose from red, blue, green, purple, black, yellow, orange and flourescent pink [5 maximum on painting]. For inform ationon ordering your Splatter A rt, send a self-addressed stam ped envelope to: 81 Designs P .O . Box 4071 Englewood, CO 80155 MACINTOSH AND Imagewriter. $500. MacPaint, MacWrite, all manuals, 128K expandable, great for term papers. Tom, 921-9413. REAL ESTATE ASSUM E 9% FHA loan, $68,500. $6,650 down. Luxury 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. Garage. 345-6583. O NLY $100 down for Questa Vida 2 bedroom, 2 bath unit, fireplace. Only $47,000! Dave Cohen, 829-3862, Century 21 Hememann. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, furnished; Rio Salado condo. Washer/dryer. $570/month. Contact Kelly Leid, (303)431-4772. 2 BED RO O M , 2 bathroom condo, com pletely furnished. For summer, females, % mifo from ASU . $260 per person. Free utilities. A ir conditioning, pool, etc. Very nice. 966-8989, Jason. ANSW ERING SERVICE, part-time, tele­ phone and typing experience required. 1-7pm Monday-Friday, and 65:30 Satur­ day. Scottsdale. 947-7351. ART STUDENTS. Can you draw water­ falls, ponds or unique spas? Limited only by your imagination. Hydrotech, 9966808. ASSEM BLY PROGRAM MERS, part-time. Rapidly growing company is looking for students With strong math aptitudes to write software for Real Time/Multi-user operating system applications for VAX and the 68020. To apply, ca ll Ticketm aster at 279-2822. 2 BEDROOM condo, 2 bath, River and U niversity. W asher/dryer, 2 pools. $585/month. 730-6709. ASSISTANTS. PART-TIME to help disab­ led students, campus area. Flexible hours. Dave, Disability Healthcare Services, 966-6873. 3 BEDROOM condo, near ASU. Airconditioned, fireplace, pool, washer/dryer. Reasonable. Phyliss, C21/RAN Realty, 844-0600. A V A ILA B LE IM M ED IATELY! M arket research phone interviews. Starting $4.40 per hoUr. Evenings/weekends. Tempe location. Susan, 967-4441. KILLER 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhome. Pool, spa, tennis and volleyball. W alk to school. 13th and Hardy. Available 15. First month only $400. $800 a month. Call 213-476-3012, Monday-Friday, 10am to 6pm. BARTENDER, FUN Tempe neighborhood, sports bar. 25-32 hours per week. $8 to $12 per hour. Apply 2pm-4pm. The Woodshed I, 19 West Baseline. Exper­ ienced only. HOMES FOR RENT B E ON T V., many needed for commer-; ciáis. Now hiring all ages. For casting inform ation, call (615)779-7111, ext. T-Í30 $350 RENT, deposit $350. 2% bedroom. Sm all, old house, large yard. 1134 E. Spence. 966-6308. CASHIER/COUNTER POSITONS avail­ able 10am-2pm. Shooting Star, 968-6708. SM ALL 2 bedroom house. Very close to ASU. $375 per month. First, last and deposit for move-in. 941-9219. CHANDLER YM CA is hiring part-time staff: Gymnastics instructors, $6-8/hour; Child care workers, $4-6/hour. Please call 899-9622 RENTAL SHARING 1 BLOCK off campus. Need roommate. $250 a month plus Vx utilities. Alan 731-9251. 4 BEDROOM, 3 bath house. 1 m ile to ASU. $225 per month; plus % Utilities. Call Joel, 968-6201 (home), or 371-6667 (work! FEM ALE TO share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment near Dobson/Main. $200/month plus % utilities. Pool, jacuzzi. Call 844-8674. HOUSE, 2 bed, 2, bath. Garage, washer/ dryer, fully furnished. $250 plus % utilities. 437-3837. LO S PRADOS, 2 females share master bedroom, furnished. $200/per person, p lu s u tilitie s . W ash er/dryer. (708)756-3052, Kelly. MALE/FEM ALE NON-SMOKER Share house, own bedroom. $225, V3 utilities. 5 minutes from campus. 967-8204. MASTER BEDROOM in 3 bedroon townhome. Pool, fireplace, washer/dryer. Own bathroom. $220/month plus Vs utilities. 894-5432. Available May 1. ROOMMATE, 3 bedroom house. Tempe. $250/month plus utilities. Fully furnished. Mature and clean. 990-2026. COOKS, PART-TIME weekend breakfast and weekday afternoons—short order. Experienced. Apply in person at Pete’s 19th Tee (Rolling H ills G olf Course), 1405 North M ill Avenue. CO RK ‘N Cleaver excepting applications for evening cocktails, lunch waitress and lunch hostess. W ill train, short shifts. Convenient hours. Fun atmosphere. Concern with appearance, reliability and personality are important. Apply in person, Monday through Friday, 2 to 5pm, or by appointment. 5101 N. 44th Street (44th and Camelback). 952-058$. COUNSELORS- Prestigious co-ed Berkshires, MA summer cam p seeks skilled college juniors, seniors and grads. WSI, tennis, sailling, waterski, canoe, athletics, archery, gymnastics, aerobics, golf, arts and crafts, photography, silver, jewelry, m usical directors, piano accompanists, science, rocketry, camping, video, news­ paper. Have a rewarding and enjoyable summer! Salary plus room and board. Call Camp Taconic, 800-762-2820. DELIVERY PERSON heeded, 11am to ??, Monday through Friday . Contact Elaine at' Pizza Stop in the Towers, 921-3611. EARN LOTS, $200 to $600 part-time working for local marketing firm. Looks hot on resumes in any field. C all Jim between 2pm and 4pm, 921-7755. EXCITING OPPORTUNITY for students! Tim e management/financial planning, excellent training: Set your hours. Call 4236739. Perfect 2-bedroom floor plan for A S U students. RO O M M ATE W ANTED. 3 bedroom house. M aster bedroom /bath. Very spacious, pool, washer/dryer. Dobson/ University. $235/month plus Vs utilities. 969-0342. Newly redecorated apts., split bedrooms for privacy, pools, lighted tennis court, and much morel! HARKINS CAMELVIEW Cinema in Scotts­ dale is now hiring a part-time assistant manager. Perfect job for students, great experience for business majors. Must be able to work Sunday, Tuesday and Thurs­ day night, 6pm to 12:30am. Apply in person, 7001 East Highland Avenue, north of Camelback Road behind Dillard’s. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES IDEAL SALES position. No experience necessary. $10 plus per hour. Work with the best. 954-9545. ENTREPRENEURS, BUILD great income marketing product used by- everyone. E x c e lle n t for o r g a n iz a t io n s . (415)256-6212, 24 hours. JU V E N IL E PR O BATIO N O ffice r I. Requires a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. Spring 1990 graduates w ill be considered. $1,939.60 to $2,620.80 per month. Apply in person to: Maricopa County Personnel Department, 111 South Third Ave:, Phoe­ nix, AZ 85003. IDEAL FOR ROOMMATES MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FEM ALE WANTED for room in stylish Scottsdale home. Own bedroom, bath, non-smoker, Vs utilities. $200/month. Kerry, 497-7936 or 423-9985. N. W. Phoenix ITALIAN RACING bike, Ciocc, SLX-frame. 56cm. A ll Campy, $800/offer. 731-3971 • SCHW INN W ORLD Sport, 12-speed, 16-inch frame touring bike. Good condi­ tion. $100. Call Steve, 731-9409, anytime. AUTOMOBILES FRC€ ftCN Tftl TIRED O F the noise? Tired of the dorms? Free air conditioning. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $475/month. 910 East Lemon, 966-8704. Eastrid g e Apartm ents 1522 E. Southern Ave. 839-9947 (Present this ad for additional $25 savings) HELP WANTED SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now For Fall! W A L K TO ASU! O n ly V i b lo c k fr o m cam ­ p u s . B e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d r o o m , 1.bath; 2 b e d r o o m , 2 b a th a p a r t­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV, h e a te d p o o l, and s p a c io u s la u n d r y fa c ilit ie s . Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S t o p by to d a y ! Terrace Road Apartm ents 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 $1000S W EEKLY stuffing envelopes! Proven, long-running program. Stamped envelope to: BM C Associates, 1216 E. Vista del Cerro, no.2099, Tempe, 85281. $1,000 W EEKLY. Stuff envelopes for $5 each. No obligation. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Am erican Direct Mail, Station A, P.O. B ox2504, Champaig­ ns, ILL. 61825-2504. $10-$660 weekly/up, m ailing circulars! Rush self-addressed, stamped envelope: Opportunity: 9016 W ilshire Blvd.. Box no.226, Dep. G, Beverly H ills, California 90211, '• ; ■ AIRLINES HIRING now! Immediate entry level positions available. Excellent sala­ ries and benefits, including travel passes. No previous airline experience required. Some college preferred. 303-441-2449. ALASKA CANNERY and fishing employ­ ment opportunities. Secure that summer job. Save time and effort. Complete directory. (200)771-3811 KINKO’S CO PY Center is seeking custom­ er service, self-motivated people Tor full­ time day shift. Cash register experience preferred. Production training available for qualified applicants. Apply in person at 933 East University, Tempe. TELEM ARKETERS $5-$8/hr: to start+comm. No sellin g, ju st setting appointments. N o experi­ e n ce n e c e ssa ry . Jo b hours: M-F, 4-9 p.m. and Sat., 9-2 p.m. W ork clo se to cam pus in R io Salado Bldg., 2121 S. M ill Ave.; Ste. 220, Tem pe, A Z 85282, at M ill & Broad­ way. Apply^after 2 p.m. C a ll anytim e, 470-1071. Page 19 Thursday, A p ril 5,1990 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS PERSONALS TRAVEL WANTED LOOKING FOR fraternity, sorority, or student organization that would like to make $500-$1,000 for a one-week oncam pus marketing project. Must be organ­ ized and hardworking C all Bode or Becky at (800) 592-2121. TRAVEL, B E in the sun, see the world, have fun, and get paid! How? College students cruise ship jobs: stewards, stew­ ardesses, m aintenance. $900/salary weekly. Guaranteed openings. Call us n ow fo r s u m m e r e m p l o y m e n t . 1-800-926-8447, ext.C-1279. BAOW: THANKS tor an incredible 7 months— I'm looking forward to the next sevel years— I'm never going to let you go! I love you to death, honey! Bunky Bunny. THINK RESPONSIBILITIES! TRAVEL EURO PE this summer and earn upper division business credit! C all I.B.S. at 8304)902 for. more info! W RITER SEEKS professional critics to read material and suggest appropriate literary agent. References requested. Call Mike at 8988653. LOOKING FOR weekend employment? W alker DataSource is currently hiring weekend personnel. Need enthusiastic, reliable individuáis for national telephone interviewing. Work two weekend days: either Friday, 5pm to 9pm; Saturday, 8am to 1:30pm or Sunday, 4:30pm to 9:30pm. Starting wage: $4,25 per hour. Apply in person, Monday through Friday, 10am to 4pm: 4515 South McClintock, Suite 101, Tempe Corporate Building.' 831-2971. EOE, male/female. MODE LS- S Wl M S U IT, calenders, and print projects for top European magazines. David Schoen Productions, 870-3043 PICK YO UR own hours. No experience necessary. Call Donna, 894-4614, for interview. No phone interviews. SPORTS-MINDED: TOP Gun Promotions hiring motivated, enthusiastic individuals. $10 hourly, flexible schedule. 921-8282. STO CKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch waitresses and night hostesses. Apply in person, 5001 East Washington, between 10-11:30am, or after 1:30pm. STUDENT JO BS. Great starting pay. Openings in customer service and retail. Scholarships available. Call 10am to 3pm, 838-2633. SU B SHO P hiring all position. Part-time, days. Monday through Friday, no weekend shifts. 921-7827. SUM M ER JO B interviews — Average earnings: $3,400. University Directories, the nation’s largest publisher of campus telephone directories, hires over 200 college students for their summer sales program. Top earnings: $5,000-8,000. Gain valuable experience in advertising, sales and public relations selling yellow page advertising for your campus tele­ phone directory. Positions also available in other university markets. ExpenSe-paid training program in Chapel H ill, NC. Looking for enthusiastic, goal-oriented students for challenging, well-paying summer job. Internships m aybe available. Interviews on campus Thursday, 4/12. Sign up at Career Services, or call 1-800-334-4436 for more information. SUM M ER JO BS outdoors. Over 5,000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews. Send stamp for free details. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispell, MT. 59901. MANAGEMENT SEARCH F T o r FT R a p id ly e x p a n d in g in te rn a tio n a l m arketing firm seeks m otivated profes­ s io n a ls lo okin g for a career. Resp on si­ b ilitie s w ill in clud e m anagement and developm ent of sales reps and other managers. W e offer an excellent com pensation p a c k a g e , c o m p le te arid c o n tin u o u s training, benefit package an d more. FT and FT entry level positions also. S a n d le t te r ,. in c lu d in g p a st w o rk experience, to: Career Marketing Attn: Mr. Gangloff 6615 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85250 TACO BELL. Now hiring all shifts.* Espe­ cially 11am to 3pm, 4pm to 9pm, 6pm to 2am. Apply in person, 936 East Apache Boulevard, Tempe. TELEPHO NE SURVEY, no sales. Parttime, weekdays 38pm >weekends 10-6pm. Start $4.25/hour. Behavior Research Center, 1117 North 3rd Street, Phoenix. Cadi Patty or Kevin at 258-4554, after 5pm. TEM PE CENTER for the Handicapped job hotline. Teach, care and assist disabled adults and children. Group homes; day programs. Part-time/full-time, all shifts. Other positions open, also. Cali 894?2704. EOE; TYPE ON my IBM P C. Flexible hours 2-3 hours, day. Near ASU. Patrick, 945-3737, W ALKER DATASOURCE is hiring enthu­ siastic, reliable individuals for national telephone interview ing. No sellin g. Requires average reading skills, will train. Starting wage, $4.25/hour. Day shifts, 8-2:30. Evening shifts, 3:30-9. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 10am to 4pm, 4515 South M cClintock Drive, suite 101, Tempe Corporate building. McClintock and Superstition Freeway. 831-2971, male/female. EOE WANTED: ENTHUSIASTIC people to market top brand skin care. $3008500 weekly. Woodard International, 259-0807. WANTED: STUDENTS for flyer distribu­ tion, Contact Scott at 438-2248. W ORK THE hours and locations you want. Easy money. FulMime or part-time. C all now! 1-800-627-2101. WRITER SEEKS typist to prepare manu­ script for publisher (non-technical writing). R eferen ces requested. C a ll M ike, 898-8653. ZIPPIN' ALONG is now accepting applica­ tions from young professionals, graduate students and college seniors for consumer direct and wholesale sales of our current line of active and resort sportswear. Contact Martha at the Career Services, 965-2350, or call (915)755-6362. ★ EXTRAM ONEY* Is nice, but you can help people too: Earn $120 + a m onth Safer, faster plasm a donation at A B I Centers due to automated procedure. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation with this a d . A s k ab o u t a d d itio n a l bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). U n iv e rsity P la sm a C e n ter Associated Bioscience, Inc, 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tem pe 894-2250 JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diamonds. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. M ill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967 CASH PAID, jewelry of a ll kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. M ill Ave, Tempe Center. 968-6074. FREE LOST/FOUND HAVE YOU lost something? Check the MU Lost and Found. LOST: W ALLET containing I.D., belonging to Heidi Sexton. Please call 966-0992, anonymous reply welcome. PERSONALS AAAAAA GREEKS. Beware the Alpha Gams, ATO’s, Kappas, Theta Delts and TKE’s are ready to win at Greek Sing tonight. ALL GREEKS: Greek Sing tonight at 7pm at Gammage! ALL GREEKS: An American Cancer Soci­ ety volunteer will be at the Greek Week Information Booth from 10 to 2, today, to answer your questions about cancer. A LL NON-GREEKS! Show your spirit and support Am erican Cancer Society—Camp Sunrise. Go to Greek Sing at 7pm at Gammage tonight! ANDIE ABKARIAN, aka “ Grampus," do you want to smoke or give a GSE. Signed, Nathan. ARE YOU charming, witty, outgoing?... Want a free date including dinner? Play the MUAB Dating Game April 18 at 11:30 on the West Lawn. Applications available at the MU Activities Center, lower level of the MU. ASU G REEKS interested in entering the Kappa Sjg volleyball tournament April 12-14, contact Don. 784-8426. BACHELOR NQ-2. if I were a popsicle, what would you do to me?... Could you answer a question like this? If so, come be a contestant on the MUAB Dating Game, April 18, 11:30. Applications available in the MU Activities Center, lower level of the MU. HELP WANTED M AR KET RESEARCH INTERVIEWERS Becom e a part of a dynam ic research company in north Scottsdale. •Start at $5 an hour «Monthly bonus •F T or P T •Afternoons/evenings •Flexib le hours weekends •Health care/vacation N o experience; will train on computer interviewing system . C all J.C ., 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Monday-Friday 483-8214 / 483-7544 BARBRA PORTER, where are you? I met you Thursday, then again Saturday. I have a note for you, if you-can find me! The guy with no voice. B E A friend to someone you haven’t met yet, donate blood! BUGBEAR! It’s been an incredible, stupendable, irrisistable, huggable, love­ able five! Love always, Lara. DANI— THANKS for being the greatest. I wouldn’t want to beer goggle or steal furniture with anyone else. Let's rage this summer. Love— Stevie. DEEGEES, ACHIOS, PhiSigs, Theta Chis, Apes and Dekes— We can win Sing, Just do it!!! TRI-DELT ELLEN Igmund— Congratula­ tions on being Greek Woman of the Y?ar!!! We are a ll so proud of you!!!! YOU HAVEN'T m issed all the exciting college programming on your Arizona State Cable Connection, have you? There's Jack Fist, the Roommate Game, Talk is Cheap and Video Underground. It’s a ll on your NCTV station, Tempe Cable Channel 34 — Monday through Friday afternoons. Watch it! GOURM ET PIZZA at its absolute finest. Only available at Pizza Doug Out, 411 S. M ill, 921*4277 $1.50 AAA Word Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. Marion 839-4269. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At Your Service Word Processing, Linda, 839-6167. $1.65 AND up. Professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. ACCEN TS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, editing, all included. Quick turn­ around. C all 894-6074. GIRLS-N’-GUYS: The man with the tan knows who he is! No need to state vitals— you can’t see them anyway!!! ACCURATE RESUM ES composed and typed ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, 9248064. East Mesa. GREEK EVENTS— Today’s our last day! I have love working with you all. None of the events could have been a success without your hard work. See you a ll at Greek Stag and Closing Ceremonies! Love, Missy. A C C U R A T E R E S U M ES / M acintosh/ Laser. Letters, research papers, trans­ parencies. 839-3305, 8-5pm. G R EEK S, CLO SIN G Cerem onies is coming soon! All winners of Sing, Games, Excellent Awards and" Banner w ill be announced! The party starts at 7:30! Take the bus— Don’t drink and drive. A KINKO’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, etc... Self-serve Macintosh computers and Laserprinter too. 933 E. University, call 966-2035. 960 W . U n iversity, ca ll 9218168. Open early, open late, open seven-days! GREEK SING Show tonight! 7pm at Gammage. Tickets w ill be sold at. Gammage for $7.50. G REEKS— W EAR your letters today and sign in at the Information Booth from 9-3 for points. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. SERVICES E LE C T R O L Y S IS -P E R M A N E N T h air rerrioval. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. C all for more informa­ tion, 969-6954. ALL PAPERS, resumes, letters, transcrib­ ing, editirig, mailings. Grammar/spelling checks. College graduate using IBM computer. 964-0994. H EY GREEKS! Look out for the winning sing team of TriSigma, Pi-phi, SigmaNu, Phi-psi, Kappa-sig and AKA Sammy! Our sing chairs are the greatest! Thanks for everything. Love, Tri Sigma. REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your papers that *'‘professional” look. Macin­ tosh and Laser print. Susan, 945-1551. RESUM ES—$10 typeset—quality laser imager. Free delivery. Also, theses, reports. Call Joe, EPS, 839-2770. ' LONG BRUNET girl, Bimson Library, 10:40-1:30 Tuesd ay/Th ursday. W hile you’re among your friends, I'm gazing at you, wondering if I’ll ever meet you. TYPING, ANY size report. $1.00/page. Call Jan, 897-1744. MARY MORAN— Best of luck with ASASU elections. You have all our support arid you deserve it! Love, your Chi-O sisters! W O R D P R O C E S S I N G , s e c re ta ria l services. 23 years experience. Student discount. Southwest comer, M iller and Chaparral, 9948145. ORDER A yearbook... Give $5 to charity. That’s right! The Sun Devil Spark has agreed to donate $5 to Camp Sunrise from each yearbook reserved during any Greek Week 1990 event. If you have not reserved your yearbook yet— now is the time!!! Order by phone at 965-6881. Just mention that $5 goes to Camp Sunrise. y ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. M ACINTO SH EQ U IPM EN T wanted. LaserWriter, ImageWriter, Macintosh, 19 inch or portriate monitor, trackball; disk drive. 957-8456. HEY ASU W est students! You can watch a ll the ASU news in review on Southwinds! Watch it Monday at 4:30 and Wednesdays at 5pm, Phoenix Cable Learn Channel 34. X; A RESUM E SPECIAL, $24.95, term paper discounts, fax service! C all Dr. Copy, 968-7771, 8am-8pm, for details. COMPUTER WORD processing— $1 per page. Fast, efficient. 9648361. GREEK WOMAN of the year Ellen Igmund— You’re awesome! We love you and are proud to be your sisters! Way to go!!! . • PHI SIG Gregory: Congrats Mr. President! I always knew you would be! Love, Madam WANTED: A driver to drive my car to Detroit Lakes, Minnesota, May 1 or 10. 830-4042. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING G EA— 6500 points justs around the corner. Figtree. GREEK SING Team B: W e’re going to win Greek Sing tonight! Let’s rage! Good luck! Sammys. ADOPTION AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. RESTAURANTS/ BARS DON’T MISS the Kappa Sig volleyball tournament April 12-14 with blowout Satur; day night. Questions? 967-9688. G R EEK SING team ATO, Kappas. TKE’s and Theta Delts, tonight’s Jhe night, get psyched. Love, the Alpha Gams. TRANSPORTATION ADOPTION NETW ORK. Inc. Please let us help you make that difficult decision. Adoption consultants. For information, call 180O88ADOPT. ADOPTION, AN alternative to abortion. Young, professional couple seeks dragfree mother-to-be considering adoption of her child. We are sincere, caring and offer a loving, secure home. Please call John and Dana in Sherman Oaks, California, collect, at 818-9908184. P R E G N A N T AD O PTIO N . A re you pregnant and considering adoption? Beware of “ desperate," pleading couples who may make false promises. Ask your­ self why are they so desperate? W ere they rejected by other adoption agencies? Do you know where you are callingw hen you call “ collect" and how that state’s adop­ tion laws may vary from Arizona’s laws? Avoid legal com plications or even a disruption of the adoption by dealing with competent professionals who know and understand the adoption laws. With South­ west Adoption Center, if you would like, you can choose the fam ily and even meet them, and be reassured that they are qualified to provide a loving, caring home for a child. Get the facts from a licensed adoption agency-Southwest Adoption Center, Inc. We can provide professional and confidential help with housing, counseling and m edical arrangements. For help, call Southwest Adoption Center, Inc; 234-BABY. UNABLE TO keep your baby? Let’s help each other. W hite/Hispanic couple can provide a wonderful home and future and lots of love. Expenses paid. Please caK, I’m a good listener and easy to talk to. Kitty and Mateo, (818)508-5728 (collect) after 5pm; anytime on weekends. VIRGINIA COUPLE, formerly of Arizona, seek newborn. We are a kind, devoted couple who w ill provide a warm, loving fam ily to the baby we adopt. Expenses paid. Strictly legal, confidential. Let us help you through this difficult time. We are waiting for your collect call. Patty and Dave, (703)255-9794. MISCELLANEOUS STATE-CERTIFIED DAY care providers With lots of tender toying care. One year plus. Southern and M cClintock, $70/week. 3458019. ^ ■ G ET A slice of life at Arizona State...ln The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook. Call our offices at 9658881 to reserve your yearbook today. TUTORS ECN 112 tutor wanted. Good money. Leave message, 7848341 or 9458175. TUTOR NEEDED for QBA502. Top prices paid. 7598363. WORD PROCESSING, reports, letters, forms and resumes. Mac with Laser printer. 969-1708, leave message. TRAVEL FLY ANYTIME! Continental USA, $375 roundtrip. Leave today! Northwest USA, $275! Alaska-three weeks notice, $525. Other destinations available. We also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. QUESTIONS ABOUT cancer? Come to the Greek Week Information Booth today, between 10 and 2. An American Cancer Society volunteer will be there to help you. RESTAURANTS/ BARS WORD PROCESSING for your typing needs. Fast turaround. Close to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne, 966-2825 PHOTOGRAPHY WORD PROCESSING -* $1.50 per page. Resumes & editing available. Reliable. Call 9218770 evenings & weekends. JASO N SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks. Models’, actors', and artists’, portfolios. Reasonable. 990-1818, 946-2475. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS SIG EP’S, A D Pi’s, Delt's, Sigma P i’s and F U l’s: We’re ready to m elt with you tonight at Greek Sing! Love, the Sigma Kappas! SIGMA CHI Ego— Thanxs for the Luau! But next time we’d like to see you in a grass skirt! Love, Gamma Phi— Nicole and Jddi. P .S .— You’d better watch out! And Quas, you rale! SIGMA NU Jeff— Thanks for being who you are) I know w e'll be together forever. Good lUck in the remainder of your pledging. Love— Booboo I TONITE! JAGER SHOTS! $ 1.50 I I I I I I ft SIGMA NU, KappaSjg, PhiSi. Sammy and TriSigs, the PiPhi’s couldn’t be more excited for Greek Sing. This is what Greek Week is ¿A about! TEDDY Z., I want your... blood! Danforth 11:30 stud. J-9. THINK RED, give blood! AED/United Blood Service drive, April 2 to April 6. my- E N G L I S H TU TO R, paper e d itin g Experienced, reasonable rates. 8298712. WORD PROCESSING/TYPING. Reports, theses, dissertations. Retired secretary with 25 years of experience. Marian, 9648334. PIKE HARMON? Dashing dancer with luscious legs and super smile, desperately seeking you! Crazy cancerian with wacky ways watching you if free with half hour to k ill respond! Overanxious admirer! SIG E P ’S are dominating Greek Week. Right on! Yeeaah! You can buy the banner but you can’t bUy Greek Sing. Good luck?! IF) I I MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA I OFF BANDERSNATCH BREWPUB Dine In or Take Out ■ 921-4277 S ÿ ë lS îS 4 1 1 $ . Min j 4 Page 20 JTTjJWda^^rjl5jJ990 « State Pica»