State Press v ' Voi. 72 No. 125 , : (t. Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tem pe, Arizona Friday, April 13,1990 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Ortega, Verhines, McCune win runoffs By DAN NOWICKI State Press ScoM T r o y w io «/ S I«l* P m Matt Ortega (right), flanked by supporters and campaign workers, reacts to the announcement that he won the Associated Students of ASU presidency. \ fte r j l j L lpha One year ago, a racially motivated incident on A SU 's Alpha Drive sparked week-long protests and forced the University to take a hard look at the state o f campus race relations. In a special 4-page section, the State Press examines what has happened in the months that followed the event as ASU struggles with the fallout from a clash that attracted the national spotlight. Pa ge 11. M other’s Day: Now here’s a celebration that . everyon e can relate to: Earth W eek. N eed less to say, it’s no small occasion. Page 2 Matt Ortega overwhelmed Chris Stiles in Tuesday and Wednesday’s run-off election to become the next Associated Students of ASU president. In other races, Frank McCune defeated M ary Moran for the position o f Activities vice president arid Cherie Verhines beat Morgan W. Reed in the struggle for Campus A ffairs vice president. ASASU Election Coordinator Brian Boley annouced the results Thursday at 5 p.m. to a crowd of 200 gathered in front o f the MU. This year’s election generated the highest voter turnout in ASASU runoff history — 3,998 students voted. President-elect Ortega said he felt “ fantastic” about his election victory. “ As I ’ve stated before, this has been a concerted effort from the start,” Ortega said. “ I ’m especially thankful to m y staff, especially m y campaign managers and m y whole management team. “ It’s been a long, hard fought campaign, but to me, this just goes to prove that if you run a positive, issue-oriented campaign, you’ll come up on top,” he continued. “ And if you concentrate on the people involved and what’s in it for them next year, there’s no way you can lose.’ ’ Ortega won the office with 59.8 percent of the vote, as Compared to Stiles’ 40.2 percent. “ The students have spoken, they’ve exercised their prerogative to vote,” Stiles said. “ It ’s the largest turnout in the history of ASASU and I applaud the students for making an intelligent choice.” In the controversial race for Activities vice president, McCune beat Moran, 61.1 percent to 38.9 percent. “ I don’t think anybody lost today because o f the process that w e all went through,” McCune said. “ I think that everybody’s a winner. “ As the new Activities vice president, I know one thing — w e’re going to start our hiring, w e’re getting qualified candidates going and w e’re going to be getting programming with purpose,” he added. Moran has maintained that McCune made a back-room Turn t o Elections, p a g e 9. Student Affairs finalist visits ASU Says involvem ent in growth, ‘rave review s’ draw him to job and Academic A ffairs should remain separate entities. The transfer of two programs from Student A ffairs to Academ ic A ffairs was suggested recently b y the University deans, but it was rejected by Coor. By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press Later in the day, Schroeder spoke at an open forum for students, but only four people showed up to hear him. Charles Schroeder Wants to be vice president for Student A ffairs at ASU because “ it is intriguing to be a part o f an institution that is so involved in growth.” He Said one of the most serious issues facing college students is that o f responsible drinking. “ There are very few schools I would leave St. Louis University for,” Schroeder said Thursday during an open presentation before a search committee in the Architecture Building. “ I hear nothing but rave review s about ASU,” Schroeder, vice president of Student A ffairs at SLU, is one o f three finalists for the Student A ffairs position. The other two are Thomas Aceto, vice president o f Administration at the University of Maine, and Christine Wilkinson, ASU interim vice president for Student Affairs. Schroeder said he views the role of Student A ffairs as a vehicle for the University to express itself. “ We know you (college students) drink and you w ill continue to drink but shouldn’ t you do it responsibly?” he ‘It is intriguing to be a part o f an institution that is so involved in growth. There are very few schools I would leave St. Louis University for. ’ —Charles Schroeder “ Student A ffairs must be sensitive to the support o f and committed to the institutional agenda,” he said. He discussed ASU President Lattie C ow ’s inaugural address and said that cultural diversity is not achieved by die University as a whole. “ I ’m not sure that the institution does a good job of making students aw are o f cultural diversity,” Schroeder said, adding that smaller programs on campus should initiate the process. H ie Student A ffairs division has the potential to be the dominant integrative force on campus, he said, adding that it said, adding that he spends time With students at SLU discussing drinking problems. Schroeder received his bachelor’s degree in psychology and a m aster’s degree in education from Austin College i n : Texas. He received his doctoral degree in education, from Oregon State University. He has written eight books on education. G o W est? 50 Years: T h e w a ve o f change in Eastern Europe is The Valley Art Theater on Mill washing in som e o f dem ocracy’s downsides, as well. A venu e w as born of Cody Shearer column. . Page 5 unconventionality. A half century later, it’s still pretty hip. State Press Magazine T o d a y ’ s w eather: S o m a high clo u d s but still sunny and unseasonably warm « w ith a high - In th e u pper 90s. Ton igh t: Fair, with a lo w in th e lo w er 60s. C la ssified s.... ......................................... 21 C o m ics ................................................... 18 P o lic e R e p o rt.............................................8 S p o r t s ....^ i» ..........« « .» M ,...M ^ ;....» ..,v ...19 Wortd/Nation..... Slate P ro s Friday. April 13,1990 Page g Earth Week event to be held at ASU B y G R E M LYN B R A D LE Y P A R T IA L L I S T O F E V E N T S F O R E A R T H W E E K State Press Earth Week celebrations begin Monday at ASU, and the week-long event may be one of the largest in the Southwest and the nation. The week w ill feature display booths, exhibitors, speakers and songs to educate people about the environment. “ It’s probably one of the longest,” , said Amanda Orman, a community energy planner for Ph oen ix’s Department o f Commerce. She added that the campus has “ a great crowd down there,” The events are being sponsored by the ASU Earth Day Coalition, which has 50-plus members. Wes Long, a graduate research associate in chemistry and a coalition member, said th e p u b lic has t y p ic a lly used the environment in a hostile manner. “ In m y own opinion, w e think the Earth is here for us to rape,” he said. Long said the emphasis on Monday will be the use of appropriate technology that can “ minimize man’s impact on our planet.” “ Everything that we as consumers buy or use, and every form of engery that we e x p e n d , h a s a n i m p a c t on o u r environment,” he said. Booths and displays will feature the use of appropriate technology such as solar power , hydrogen pow er, cooling towers and photosynthesis. Ian M c H a rg , one o f the o rig in a l organizers of Earth Day 1970 (the first one), will speak Thursday about “ The Global Ecosystem and Global Monitoring.” M O N D AY— W est Hall Lawn: 10 to 10:45 a.m, Lattie C oor’s dedication/tree planting for Earth W eek. 10:45 a.m., Native American dancers. Student Recreation Center: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., REl bike clinic. Old Main Park: noon, T V stoning. 2 p.m., El Polio Elastico band. 3:30 p.m., Johny-Q band. 5 p.m., Black-eyed Susan band. 5 p.m., A z z Izz band. S S 226: 11:40 a.m,, Robert Lovell, air quality specialist from Utah. T U E S D A Y — Memorial Union Pirtal Room : 10 a.m. to 2 p.m , A S U Career S ervices presents Environmental Career Forum. . Student Recreation Center: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., REl orienteering clinic. Old Main Park: 11 a.m., Spiney Norman band. 2 p.m., Strangelove band. 3:30 p.m., Housequake band. Architecture Building North Lecture Hall: 1:30 p.m., Paul Denton, visiting scholar. W E D N E S D A Y - Student Recreation Center: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., REl climbing clinic. Old Main Park: 10:30 a m., R en z Jennings, chairman of Arizona Corporation Commission. 11 a m., Dashboard Mary band. 2 p.m , the Mortals band. 3:30 p.m., Shadow Talk band. 5 p.m., Dead Hot Workshop band. Agriculture Building R oom 250: 4 p.m., John Brocfj, environmental resources professor. Dixie G am m age Courtyard: 7:30 p.m., environmentalist/actor G eoffrey Platts. T H U R S D A Y — Student Recreation Center: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., REl kayak clinic. Old Main park: 11 a.m., Short Term M em ory Loss band. 2 p.m., Earl band. 3:30 p.m., One Heart band- ' 1 ' V Architecture Building North Auditorium: 4 p.m., Ian McHarg, an organizer o f th e original Earth Day 1970. F R ID A Y— Old Main Park: 12:30 p.m,, D enise and Billy band. 2 p.m., Zion Knights band. 3:30 p.m., August R ed band. 5 p.m., Gin Blossom s band. Coalition member Matt Chapa added that if ASU faculty members want to have “ Earth Day brought to their classes,” arrangements can be made with the speakers. An Earth Week information booth will be on Cady M all from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m, daily. Awards will be presented to outstanding environmentalists on Friday afternoon, Earth Day began in 1970 when Wisconsin Sen. Gaylord Nelson designated April 22 as a day fo r a “ nationwide teach-in to dramatize Am erica’s environmental plight before a nation barely aw are of its present and potential challenges.” Earth Day 1990 w ill be observed on April 22 at Phoenix’s Wesley Bolin Plaza. Orman said the festivities w ill run from noon to 7 p.m. and w ill include booths, displays and musical groups. Tempe to stage Earth Day early B y H O B A R T R O W LA N D State Press Tempe will kick off its Earth Day 1990 celebration at- Kiwanis Community Park ballfield a day early to avoid conflicts with events in Phoenix and the rest of the Valley scheduled for April 22. “ We should get a bigger crowd on April 21 because we won’t be competing with the April 22 events,” said John Osgood, a Tem pe Public Works official. The Tem pe event, “ A Day in the Park,” runs from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m: It is being produced by the city, the Tempe City Council and the Tem pe P T A Council. Osgood said the 40 health and environmental agencies participating in the Tem pe event -will emphasize e n v ir o n m e n ta l con sciou sn ess in families, and children in particular. “ (The children) are our future,” Osgood said. “ I f they start changing their behavior now, w e’ll all be better off.” ASU’s W ildlife Foundation and Earth Day Committee w ill be among the participants setting up booths. They w ill give information on University environmental programs. Osgood said he hopes, the Earth Day fair w ill generate enough enthusiasm among Tem pe residents that the message won’t be lost at the end of the day. Today M e e ting s ecum enical service a t noon in D anforth Chapel. •Alcoholics Anonymous w ill have an open m eeting at •Department of Military Science presents “ Am erican noon in th e basem ent o f Newman C enter. • American Home Economice Asociation o ffe rs a special presentation, “ N etw orking W ith AHEA” a t 5 p.m . in Cowden 132. A ll m ajors are w elcom e. •Campus Interfaith Council w ill have a Good Friday N ational S ecurity in S elective P erspective” at 1 p.m . in the N ursing B uilding, Room 101. •Kayak Club w ill m eet to discuss th e Sunday rive r trip at 6 p.m . in the M ona Plum m er A quatic C enter. . S a tu rd a y •Esperanto ASU continues its classes in the international second language at noon in the MU, Room 214. •Manzanlta Residents w ill have th e ir fourth annual SYR; A Hawaiian Luau, at 5:30 p.m . at th e M ona Plum m er A quatic Center. G ra d u a te s f a c in g fe w e r jo b s - The University 6 f M ichigan Hiring Survey found new jo b hiring for college graduatesdown 13% in 1990, Beat the odds, Access the hidden jo b market with your leirer to potential employers- According to the US government. 95% o f all jo b openings are NOT listed. Be one of the lucky 25% who are hired by coldwontacting companies with a letter campaign. GuidetomajorUS. employers. 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Entertainment Food products Food service Fortune 500 industrial Fortune 500 service Forest products AD AC AR BA BR CE CM CS CH CO CP CC DE EG EN ET FP FS Fr FO FR Government Hospitals Hotels Industrial products insurance Lew Firms Manufacturers Nursing homes Pharmaceuticals / health Printers Public Relatione Publishing RadioStatione Real estate (commercial) Real estate (residential) Retailing School diets, (secondary) Telecommunications Transportation TV stations Utilities CITY DISKS Atlanta Boston Chicago Cleveland Dallas/Ft. Worth Denver Detroit Houston Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis/St. Paul AA BN Cl CD DS DR DT HN KC LA Ml MS New York Phoenix Philadelphia Pittsburgh Portland Sett Lake City Sen Diego San Francisco Seattle St. Louis Tampa m Washington, D.C. GV HO IP IN LG MA NU PH PI SC TL TN TV UT NY PX PA PG PD SL sb SF SE ST TM DC Located in th e C o rn e rsto ne at R ural & U n ive rsity Tem pe 8 2 9 -1 7 4 3 I 10 to 9 12 to 6 *7 World/Nation Friday, April 13,1990 ■ , _ P a g g j^ Experts: Iraq-bound steel tube was gun part LONDON ( A P ) — Customs officers seized a huge forged steel tube ordered by Iraq after m ilitary experts determined Thursday that it could be used to build a gun capable of hurling nuclear or chemical warheads hundreds of miles. Iraq denied the accusation, and the British manufacturer said the tube would blow up if anyone tried to use it as a gun barrel. Arm s experts say a gun with a barrel thé size of the tube seized by Customs — 131 feet long with a 39-inch bore — could fire artillery shells as far as Tehran or Tel Aviv, each within 350 miles o f Iraq’s borders. Such a weapon would be the longest gun ever made. *‘There is no question it could be used as a barrel of a large artillery gun to fire a projectile of some considerable size. It is defin itely subject to export licensing controls,” said Douglas Tweddle, head of the GUstoms and Excise Office. On March 28, customs officials seized U. S.-made parts fo r atomic bomb triggers that w ere bound fo r Iraq. Iraq has confirmed it has chemical weapons but denied seeking a nuclear capability. Last week, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein threatened to use missiles armed with chemical warheads against Israel if Israel attacked his country. The seizure of the triggers and Ira q ’s .execution March 15 of a British-based reporter convicted of spying -have soured British-Iraqi relations. “ Even if w e bought a box of chocolates from Britain, they would say Iraq w ill use it to produce an atom bomb,” Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariiq A ziz told reporters in Mosul, Iraq. “ Everything that is said about these pipes is baseless,” said Naiel Hassan, press attache at the Iraqi Embassy in London. “ The British and the Israelis are trying to make a fuss about this matter. Even the company itself said that these pipes are used for only petrochemical industries.” The Iraqi government and the reported manufacturer, Sheffield Forgemasters, had insisted the equipment impounded was a pipe designed fo r a petrochemical plantThe com pany said the govern m en t’s Department o f Trade and Industry had reviewed and approved the project. P h illip W righ t, Chief e x é c u tiv e o f Sheffield Forgemasters, said the company had been approached by Iraqis about building gun barrels, but the company refu sed a fte r consulting the B ritish government. Customs officials are convinced that die impounded tube is covered by government rules banning the e x p o rt o f certain munitions, Tweddle said. Britain banned all arms sales to Iraq and its enemy Iran following die outbreak o f the eight-year Persian Gulf War. There has been a cease-fire since 1988, but Iran and Iraq are still not officially at peace and the British embargo remains. “ The goods a re now seized. Investigations will continue to prove intent and to establish whether offenses have been committed,” Tweddle said. T h e equipm ent, impounded at the northeastern English port o f Middlesbrough Tuesday night, was packed in eight crates and was being loaded aboard a ship c h a r t e r e d b y th e I r a q i M a r it im e Organization, Customs officials said. Wright said the tube seized by Customs could not be used as a gun. ~ “ I f they did manage to get all the other necessary components I wouldn’t stand within a m ile of the thing if they tried to Are it. It would blow itself to pieces,” the Sheffield Star newspaper quoted Wright as saying. W r ig h t s a id I r a q i o f f i c i a l s h ad approached his company about making gun barrels, but it declined. G D R co alitio n b a c k s p lan to reu n ite ra p Lithuanian rally AMOCtatedPratt photo A young man In a Soviet army uniform squints Into the Sun during Thursday’s pro-Independence rally In front Of the Lithuanian Parliament. Mors than 15,000 students gathered to demand Independence from the Soviet Union. T u na firms move to protect dolphins W ASHINGTON (A P ) Three U S . tuna canners, including the world’s largest, said Thursday they will no longer buy or sell tuna captured along with dolphins. Environmentalists, who have long sought to protect dolphins from fishing nets, strongly praised the decisions. The actions were announced by companies selling the StarKist, Bumble Bee and Chicken o f the Sea brands. Environmentalists and lawmakers said they hoped the m ove would save some of the estimated 100,000 dolphins that die annually in huge nets used to catch schools o f tuna. “ StarKist w ill not purchase any tuna caught in association with dolphins,” said Anthony J. F . O’Reilly, president of the H. J. Heinz Co., which owns the StarKist Seafood Co. “ StarKist w ill sell only dolphin-free tuna,” he said at a news conference. The change could cost Consumers “ a couple or m ore cents” per can, O’R eilly said, adding that he hoped sales would increase with the announcement and that some increased costs “ w ill'be compensated by increased volume.” StarKist has a 35 percent share of the U. S. tuna market and is the world’s largest tuna canner. San Diego-based Bumble Bee Seafoods Inc. followed suit a few hours later, saying it “ would now implement its plan to end the purchase of tuna caught in association with dolphins.” “ Our tuna cans will begin to reflect the dolphin-safe label in U. S. stores within the next three months,” the statement said. Van Kam p Seafood of St. Louis, seller of Chicken of the Sea brand, said it would “ discontinue buying tuna caught in association with dolphins,” according to a statement from Jose E. Munoz Jr., company president. “ T o do this, we are asking our few existing contract vessels to relocate their operations to the western Pacific, where the dolphin mortality problem does not exist,” Munoz said. Leslie Scheele of Greenpeace, which backs a worldwide boycott o f tuna caught with nets, called the announcements “ without a doubt one of the biggest steps that could be taken in order to preserve dolphins in the Eastern Tropical P acific in probably the last 20-30 years.” Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., who is sponsoring legislation to require canners to label tuna that is caught by nets that ensnare dolphins, said the announcement made StarKist “ not only the largest but the most ¡enlightened tuna canner in the world.” “ Now Charlie the Tuna has a reason to sm ile,” said Rep. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., author of the Dolphin Protection Consumer Information Act o f 1990 in a statement read by Biden. Charlie the Tuna is an animated character used in StarKist tuna advertisements. But the Am erican Tunaboat Association said the new policy was m erely a political response that threatened to destroy the U. S. tuna fleet, reduce tuna stock and do little to help save dolphin lives. “ Foreign boats, which operate free of stringent U. S. quota, w ill simply sell their catch to a growing European market and elsewhere,” said August Felando, association president. “ U. S. boats, which have pioneered and continue to lead in developing technology and techniques for porpoise rescue, w ill be forced to other fisheries, or even go out o f business,” he added. Although the new policy was aim ed at purse seine net fishing in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, StarKist said the company also would continue to refuse to buy fish caught anywhere with gill or drift nets. The Eastern P acific is the only fishery where dolphins swim with tuna. There, purse seine nets are intentionally dropped below schools of dolphins to capture the tuna underneath when a drawstring is pulled to close the net. G ill or driftnets are set on the water overnight and trap anything — fish, birds and other marine life that enters the area covered by the net. EAST B E R L IN (A P ) — East Germany’s Parliam ent chose Lothar de Maiziere as prim e minister on Thursday and embraced his sweeping agenda for quickly uniting the foundering nation with West Germany. The nation’s first freely elected legislature also apologized to Jews for Nazi atrocities and promised to make reparations to Israel and seek diplomatic ties. B y putting de M aiziere’s broad coalition government in power, the Parliam ent set up a transitional government whose prim e goal w ill be to negotiate the terms of creating a single Germany. Before Parliam ent met, members o f the coalition agreed that a united Germany should remain part of NATO and that East Germany should m erge its currency with West Germany’s by July 1, The coalition also backeda rapid process for unification However, it demanded that East Germans retain some social benefits, including housing and job guarantees, as the nation sheds four decades of socialism for the competitive free market. The historic decisions w ill be followed by unification talks with West Germany and the four W orld W ar I I Allies that divided the countries: the Soviet Union, United States, Britain and France. The 400-member Parliam ent put de M aiziere and his 24-fnember Cabinet in power by a vote of 265-108, with nine abstentions. Eighteen lawmakers w ere absent. News Briefs ‘Fighting trim ’ GOP chairman released from hospital W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Republican P a rty Chairman L ee Atwater, described as “ in fighting trim ,” was released Thursday from a N ew York hospital where he was treated for a brain tumor. “ He’s in excellent spirits,” said Dr. Paul Kornblith, the neurologist who treated Atwater at Montefiore Medical Center, Kornblith led a team that implanted radioactive isotopes in the tumor on the right side o f Atw ater’s brain. Physicians hope the isotopes w ill halt the growth of the tumor and kill the cancerous cells. Bushes report larger Income; Quayles’ dips, but taxes high W ASHINGTON (A P ) — A better-paying job and a healthy return on investments helped President Bush and his wife, Barbara, pull in income of $456,780 last year, on which they paid $101,382 in taxes. A copy of the first couple’s joint 1989 return, released Thursday by the White House, showed that the Bushes paid taxes equivalent to 22.2 percent o f their total income. Their income was up 59 percent from 1988’s adjusted gross income o f $287,171. Taxes rose 63 percent from $62,106. By contrast, Vice President Dan Quayle and his wife, Marilyn, made less in 1989 than in 1988, but paid more in taxes. State Pm«« Friday. April 13,1990 Page 4 Popular guy America lost electronic neighbor when Musburger fired asks are: “ Am I OK? Is m y neighborhood O K?” Then she w ill perm it herself to think about bigger things. J e ff G re e n fie ld U niversal Press S yndicate A T L A N T A — The conversation was about the sacking of CBS sportscaster Brent Musburger — not just about why it happened, but why it had received the coverage it did. No, CBS Chairman Larry Tisch told an audience of broadcasters, it was no grand policy statement about highpriced talent. It was just an individual contract negotiation that didn’t work out. I f that’s true, and there’s no reason to think it isn’t, that makes the saturation news coverage even harder to explain. It isn’t as if Musburger left in the midst of some controversial remarks, as with Jim m y the Greek or Andy Rooney. And it isn’t as if the star of a m ajor T V show suddenly walked o ff the job, as Jack P a a r did nearly 30 years ago. Musburger, after all, covers events that other people actually perform. He tells us what Michael Jordan did; he * does not leap from the free-throw line, pass the ball behind his back and slam-dunk it through the hoop. So, why the huge headlines in the tabloids? Why the stakeout of reporters and camera crews outside Musburger’s hotel? It goes back to something fundamental about what is and is not news. An old adage about news consumers goes like this: When someone wakes up in the morning, the first questions she That’s why most Americans listen to the radio in the morning instead of watching network television shows. TV m ay tell them what the secretary of state thinks of the crisis in Lithuania. But the radio tells them whether they should take an umbrella to work, and whether the interstate is backed up four miles, and whethèr asbestos has been found in the ceiling of their kids’ school. One of the things television does — like radio before it, only m ore powerfully — is to make some personalities intensely ‘The seasons change, the players retire, the champions are replaced by new champions, but Musburger is there — as a presence in our lives as familiar as a neighbor or a colleague. ’ f a m ilia r , in te n s e ly “ local.” Take the tens of millions of football fans who gather around the T V set every Sunday. T o them, Brent Musburger is not simply a network performer. He’s the guy who’s in their homes, in their rec rooms, in their taverns several hours a day, telling them the facts they really car.e about: whether the Chargers beat the Dolphins, whether the Giants covered the spread. And while it’s true that he is not the prim ary performer, he is there all the time. The seasons change, the players retire, the champions are replaced by new champions, but Musburger is there — as a presence in our lives as fam iliar as a neighbor or a colleague. H e’s hardly the first èxample of a personality who has become famous because of his presence (he is, too be sure, a perfectly competent sportscaster, but that doesn’t make for front-page headlines). Vanna White turns letters on a game show. The show is very popular and can be seen, literally, day and night. From this platform, White has become a best­ selling author, a sought-after speaker and one of the best known women in America. E d McMahon is an announcer on a popular late-night talk show. His principal job is to laugh heartily when the host says something funny. From this platform, McMahon has become a ubiquitous com m ercial spokesman, star of his own talent show and one of the best-known men in America. Why would w e care if either White or McMahon w ere to be fired? For the same reason w e care about Musburger: They are not simply people who entertain or inform or divert us. They are electronic neighbors to whom we are bound by ties that come from regular acquaintance and from a shared interest. Is this a measure of “ alienation,” of the extent to which we substitute im agery for reality? Maybe. But remember: Brent is the guy who’s seen us through Super Bowls and N CAA championships, the joys of victory and agonies of defeat, for 15 years. I f that’s not a close relationship, I don’t know what is. Letters Thanks for elections help Editor: 1 ; The ASASU Elections Department would like to take this opportunity to thank and ¡applaud the many individuals on campus who put forth a terrific effort in assembling the most successful student elections in ASU’s history. To the m embers of Delta Sigma P i, the Professional Business Fraternity and A ir Force ROTC for collectively providing nearly 700 poll working hours with over 50 volunteers. To the Associated Students of ASU staff, who helped to verify petition signatures, process requisitions for securing items and being on the ball with messages. To the Registrars Office, who helped to sort and verify ballots. To Physical Plant and University Media Services for their timely delivery of equipment. To Safety Escort Service for their walkie-talkies and US West for the use o f two cellular phones. T o the State P ress fo r providing substantial coverage of the entire elections. To all 49 candidates who ran in the highest number fielded in ASU history. Win or lose, your concern for campus issues is commendable. And finally, to all 5,151 concerned students who took the time to vote in the largest turnout ever in a general election. You read and you listened and by voting, you personally initiated an important step towards wiping out apathy on this campus. Voter turnout as a percentage of the student body is on the rise. Keep that momentum strong! Brian Boley ASASU Elections Coordinator Bobby Hingorani ASASU Assistant Elections Coordinator STATE PRESS DARRIN HOSTETLER Editor C AR O LYN HOFIG Managing Editor Asst. Managing Editor SUZANNE R O S S ............ ....... ..BRIAN TASSINARI LY N N VAVRECK M agazine Editors.... ...... ............. ........ ..M E G HALVERSON .......... ........SHARON KANEY Assoc. Ent. Editor. ................ ... CHRISTINE H ERBRANSON Music Editor _______ D AN NOWICKI Listings Editor.....MICHELLE CRUFF News Editor........................ ...................... ..STEVE KRICUN Sports Editor....................PAUL CORO Asst. Sports Editor.. ...... ............. ..SETH SULKA Copy Chief ...................................... .NICOLE PERRO N Photo Editor SC O TT TR O YA N O S REPORTERS: Gramlyn Bradley, Mike Burgees. Nicole Carroll. Carolyn Huffman. Sonja Lewis, Dan Nowicki, Hobart Rowland. Kevin Sheh, Tenny Tatusian, Vanja Thompson, Kristie Young. SPO R TS R E PO R TE R S : Vicki Culver, Matthew Kaster,Larry Newell, Kris Timmotis, Dan Zeiger. PH O TO G RAPH ERS: Jeorgstta Douglas, Jamie Lytle, Sundi Kjenstad, T.J. Sokol. C O P Y EDITORS: Charles Granieri, Kristen Johnson, JiU Tibke. FREELANCE W RITERS: Joseph Crawford, Heidi Donat, Quotable, “ Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you ju s t sit there. ’’ Kimberly Harris, Michelle Henry, Christopher Horak, Kelly Jain, Michael LaMantia, Deborah Nemko. Francine Stahl, Mish Tell, Kramer W etzel. — W ill R ogers CARTO O NISTS: Mike Ritter, Julie Sigwart. COLUMNIST: Jade Danner INTERNS: Shelly LeVick, Chad Redwing. PRO DUCTION: Dane Christ, Nancy Ness. Mark Nothaft, Robyn Pinkston, Lynne Senzek, T J . Sokol, Stacy Towar, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Jay Eckhardt, Dan Ellstrom, Jessica Irwin, Paul Lee, Karen Lisiewski, Todd Martin, Allison Murphy, P ete Nichols, Terri Smith, Ray Zickel. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona'State University, Tem pe, Arizona 85287 Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. W e d o not answer questionsi o f a general nature. Advertising and Production: (6 0 2 )9 ^ 7 5 7 2 . The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the A s U campus. T h e news and views published in this newspaper are hot necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. , EDITORIAL BOARD Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: D arrin H ostetler EDITOR Suzanne Ross ASST. M ANAGING EDITOR C arolyn H öfig MANAGING EDITOR B rian Tassinari OPINION EDITOR Opinion State P ru t P agcS Friday, April 13,1990 Competition Dem ocracy frees evil spirit of capitalism in Europe C o d y S h e a re r N orth A m erican S yndicate E A S T B E R L IN — In all fairness, it can be said that East Germany’s politicans and people have a right to be confused. E ver since the fall of the Honecker regimei, and the borders opening to the West, East Germans have been taking their stage directions from Bonn. Political leaders here have been virtually handpicked by powerful West German interests, without having had a chance to present their own credentials and values to the electorate. The people, in particular, have not been afforded an opportunity to think about what kind of government and society they would like to em erge from the collapse of communist rule. Such is the story throughout Eastern Europe. Artists, priests, farmers and lawyers have been thrown into politics overnight, with little experience of how parliamentary d e m o c r a c y w o rk s and w h a t p la c e individuals have in it. F o r many political newcomers, venturing into an electorate a fter 40 years of one-party communist rule and a succession of sour-faced leaders, has meant encountering demanding voters. Ferenc Moravi, a flamboyant Hungarian businessman, who is running as an independent candidate for parliament in his country, is a case in point. He has learned that voters want answers and honesty, and they can turn really nasty when not satisfied. As M oravi arrived in the town of Kiskoros for a campaign stop the other day, he was confronted by a group of irate voters who threw themselves in front of his car. He was pulled out, tied up and beaten while his vehicle was ransacked and then set afire. What few are admitting in . Eastern Europe is that there is a general lack of tolerance and inexperience in individual democratic conduct. The sheer speed of change in this region has created anxieties and uncertainties that reveal themselves toward anything that is different, which often means minorities, or rich people in M oravi’s case. One burning question is whether the disintegration of communism is going to p r e c ip ita te a s e r ie s o f n a tio n a lis t governments that w ill be forced by voters to engage in frontier revisionism and even up old ethnic rivalries. Conditions in Central and Eastern Europe resemble those o f 80 years ago. As in 1910, a confident Germany looks eastward into a zone of instability and ethnic conflict, which is larger today than it was then. The p o t e n t i a l f o r w i d e s p r e a d e t h n ic disagreements is genuine. M irce Dinesgu, a Romanian poet who participated in the overthrow of the late ty r a n t C eau sescu , a ck n o w le d g e d in Budapest recently that “ Freedom can also set evil free.” Referring to violent attacks against members of Rom ania’s large Hungarian minority. Dinesgu prophesized that “ Nationalism is an old disease that is not going to be cured overnight.” F or 40 years officials in Eastern Europe have been giving dull speeches but they a lw a y s b a r e ly c o n c e a le d lin g e r in g nationalism and anti-semitism, which is on the rise in the region. Not surprisingly, the euphoria that followed the revolution in Eastern Europe is being replaced by immense economic problems. Already East Germans are seeing the value of their subsidized, low-cost lifestyle eroded by the Deutschmark. Unemployment is starting to rise, and there are predictions that a quarter of the workforce could eventually be out of work as the economy is ruthlessly shaken out. This might explain why toward the end of a demonstration in Leipzig the other night, protestors began shouting chants of “ Foreigners out.” No one likes to admit it but immigration L ÿ tH S K l C P B W I& OWH THÈ Moscow _ .„STOCK ■c I pCHANGE •— r • 1 v t ■■ T T r u I X L M W t s_ r j u x iW COLLEGE PRESSSERVICE and racism are becoming pivotal issues in Western Europe too. In West Germany, where hostility is never far below the surface, even migrants from East Germany are arousing resentment. In France, there are calls for tougher immigration laws. So, too in Italy. Across the world, television has and will continue m ore aggressively than ever before, especially in Eastern Europe, to spread tjie awareness of Western living standards into the poorest,- most rural areas. Faced with ethnic unrest and deepening recessions, it’s no surprise many in Eastern Europe may end up voting with their feet. But the West m ay be able to forestall anarchy if it invests here. An elderly Jewish w om an , w ho has fa c e d w id esp rea d discrimination, summed up the problem ch Cartoons A C T U A L Iß t T i e °H66l <3ép% ê -This I'Ll in k tm m n m k - w I OUST t ë à t o O U A h iP W cKRAfl?i6NPWVOICE, well to m y reporter Jason Adkins. She said, “ I f people have enough sausage, they w ill shut up about the Jews.” The likelihood that conditions w ill get worse in Eastern Europe soon is reinforced by the onset o f recessions in Poland, Hungary, East Germany, Bulgaria and Romania. The switch from a planned economy to the free m arket has meant slashing subsidies and forcing companies to operate at a profit or fail. These haven’t always been welcomed options. A fter spending two weeks in this region of the world, one can see that the markets and frontiers of Western Europe w ill have to be opened to fellow Europeans trying to install political and economic systems that have m ade the W est so prosperous. The alternative is mutual alienation or worse, which w ill surely be destructive to all the world. HlV.' M A R 9A R er C o g M A R ô flfé f UIAfCHÉfc/ Page 6 State Press Friday, April 13,1990 A ID S claim s s tu d e n t’s life; m em orial to b e held By SONJA LEWIS State Press A candlelight memorial service w ill be held by members of the ASU theater department, fellow cast members and friends o f ASU student Frank Wachovec at 8 p.m. this Sunday at Mitchell Elementary School in Phoenix . Wachovec, 32, an ASU theater m ajor and an actor in several campus theatrical productions, died o f an AIDS-related infection April 7, in an Ohio hospital. Wachovec was diagnosed with AIDS five years ago. ASU counselor Sandra Goldstein, whom Wachovec dubbed his ‘‘earthly guardian angel” in previous interviews, said he was benefit production “ Experencia,” a play in which Wachovec performed, said some of his students approached him about holding the memorial ceremony. “ A ll of the students wanted to have some sort of moment to remember him,” Britten said. “ He was very loved in the theater department.’:’ In “ E x p e r e n c ia ,” a p la y w ritte n specifically for the ASU theatre department by P u litzer Prize-w inning p layw righ t. Landford Wilson, Wachovec delivered a 20-minute monologue that dealt With AIDS. The proceeds from the play w ere given to the Arizona AIDS Project in Phoenix. “ Most of the students wanted to do ‘theater with a purpose’ and Show some the type o f person who savored life. “ Everyone loved Frank and everyone respected him,” Goldstein said. “ You just had to be in a room with Frank — he had a sparkle to him.” Goldstein, an adviser to students with AIDS, knew Wachovec for three years. She said it was important to Wachovec to stay in school and to stay active in College plays, despite being so sick that on some days, he could not attend his classes. “ Frank had very specific goals *about getting his degree, and he wanted to keep acting,” Goldstein said. “ Sometimes it was very physically difficult for him but he felt very good to be involved.” Dennis Britten, director o f the ASU social concern,” Britten said. “ It was Frank’s idea to do the play and to donate the money to the Arizona AIDS Project, since they helped him so much.” Britten said Wachovec was naturally the first choice to read the monologue, simply because he was ope of the best actors. “ He had a hard time for a while because he was pretty sick, but he always gave 200 percent and was such an example to students,” Britten said. “ Even before people knew he had AIDS their mouths were opened at the energy he had.” Britten added that Wachovec “ wanted to tell people that AIDS was not just a gay disease and that it is more possible to get than you think, FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR 4pm ~ 8 p m Complimentary Food B uffet 2 fo r 1 at the Bar & $2.50 Pitchers o f B eer 6pm ~ 9pm Listen to the Island Sound o f the Calypso Steel Drum Band 8p m ~ We ship your stuff home ! 10pm $1.50 32oz. Beers $1 Drinks & Shots o f Maui Schnapps NO COVER 'TIL 9PM $goo s ' 10 to 1,000 pounds, including furniture Shampoo/Cut introductory R © 9 > *1 3 ® ® introduc o ffe r • i l l l l i l l l i i Ù É i i ® s ' Insured, custom packing s ' Boxes for sale . . s ' UPS, Consolidated Freight, others ASU Students Always *10 w /I.D . SATURDAY Big P ete Pearson & th e Blue S evilles A if Jrw Closed Sundays Monday ’ . . S ' Special "foam in place" packaging for computers and electronic equipment J p W iZ Z A ftD S ■k m -i e 1418 N. S c o tts d a le R d., S co ttsd a le 990-2552 . Lem on SW Corner of Scottsdale & McDowell in Papagb Plaza 6 pm ~10pm $7.95 Prime Rib D inner 4~9pm CLASSIC N IG H T M usic from the 6 0 s, 70s & 8 0 s’ 8pm ~ 10pm $1.50 32oz. Beers $1 Drinks & Shots o f Maui Schnapps AMEX, Visa, Mastercard, checks accepted Hot a UPS agent Joseph Berning 1 Jewelers a i'¡3SS NO COVER 'TIL 9PM SUNDAY M iller Genuine Draft presents SPRING FUNG featuring- Chuck Hall & the Brick Wall starting at 3 pm 11a m - 3 pm 2.95 1/2 lb Cheeseburger & Fries 3.50 60oz Pitchers o f M iller Genuine D raft ALL DAY We have created a place fo r you in ASASU. “ The Volunteer Network” is an e ffo rt to involve more students in affairs of Associated Students o f Arizona State University, and w ill give you the chance to take part in all ASASU activities. So get involved now! Contact V olunteer Network at 965-3161. 4 3 0 N. S c o tts d a le Rd. • 8 9 4 0 5 3 3 After more than 24 years in the same location, J o s e p h B e rn in g J e w e le rs is moving VO LU N TEER N ETW O RK: We W ant You in A sso cia te d S tudents! For as little as tw o hours a week you w ill learn what it is like to be a member o f an organization Which does everything from putting on concerts, publishing the Course Source, to w orking w ith the state legislature in order to better ASU. Rio Salado Restaurant & Nightclub We’re Moving! TOG ETHER WE CAN. SaveJS5% o ff our, entire collection o f fine jew elry and on a special group Reach into our special bow l to select either an unset diam ond fify o u 're lucky) or a cubic zirconia stone! So hurrv in! D rawing ends A pril 30. ! 1 1 fN Joseph Boning jewel sn f 1 CZI ! Untori* 'r rs • C o o r s L lgh l * L o w e n b ra ti l.k|h( • M lc h c lo b . • M lc h e lo b D ark • M lc h c lo b D ry • M iller G e n u in e D ra ft • M iller L ite - A n c h o r S te a m W h e a t * B a ss * B la ck ftf Tan • W a t n e y s C re a m S to u t • D o rtm u n d e r L igh t • D o u b le D ia m o n d • G u in n e s s .'Stout ’ H a r p • iic ln c k c n • l-ab att-s.• M olsori G o ld e n • M o o s c h e a d * W a rs tc in c r • W a tn e y 's R e d Barrel** B lack M ou n tain G o ld • A n c h o r L ib erty • A n c h o r P o rte r * A s a h i S p e c ia l D ry - A u gu st S c h e ll • R e d H o o k E.S.B. • B allard B ltlc r • B e c k s B ie r • B e rlin e r W e ls s c • B ig R o c k X O • B itb u rg er • B o u ld e r P o rte r - B o u ld e r S to u t • B o u ld e r E xtra P a le A le • A m s te l L T • C a r ls b e r g E le p h a n t M alt • C e le b r a to r • C h tm a y R e d • Crista! • C o ld S p rin g s E xp ort • C o r o n a - D o rtm u tu lc r Un. D ark • D o s E q u is • D ru m m o n d D ry • D u v e l • E ln b e c k e r U r-B ock • ERU 2 8 • EKU Plls • E s c u d o - E x p o rt-3 3 • F is c h e r L a B e lle • P o s te rs • Fu llers L o n d o n P o r t e r • F u llers E.S.B. • G a to r A S U P o lit ic a l F o ru m prou d ly presents Former Governor E v a n M e c h a m M eetin g Format: 15 m inute speech/40 m inute Q & A G ö s s e r L ig h t • G r e e n R o o s te r • lle n n ln g c r Light • H en ry W c ln h a r d 's • H o e g a r d c n H o p fe n p e r tc • A n d e s - Kirin • K irin D ry • K u lm b a c k e r M o n c s h o f • U n d e m a n 's K rie k • L ittle K in g s • M a c k e s s o n Stout * M cE w a n s A le • M o ls o n E x p o rt A le • M orettl • fle g r a M o d e lo • N e w c a s tle B ro w n A le • O l d S ty le • P a c lflc o P ils n e r UrqucM - R a ttlesn a k e • R e d S trip e • Q ro ls c h • R itterb rau D ark • R itterbrau L ig h t ,• R o llin g R o c k • R oyal O a k P a le A le • S a m S m ith Hut B ro w n • S a m S m ith O a lm c a t S to u t • S a m Sm ith _ P a le A l e - S a m S m ith Im p e ria l S to u t • S a in ic h la u s • S a n M ig u e l D ark - S a p p o r o D ry • S ie rra N e v a d a P a le • S ie rra M e v a d a P o rte r • S ie rra M e v a d a S to u t * S in gh a • S ou th P a c ific • S p a te n C lu b • S p a te n D o p p e ls ta te n • S p a te n l i e f e - S p a te n M u n ich • S p a te n F ra n zisk u s • S p a te n P ils n e r • St. Pau li G irl D ark • S te ln la g c r • C a lg a ry A m b e r Ligh t • T e c a t e - T h o m a s H ard y • T o o th S h e a f • T s ln g -T a o • W h itb re a d • X lngu C om e in today an d pick up your tour card. T r y a different beer every time an d yo u could easily q u alify fo r o u r BLUE CARD (dis­ counts an d more). C om plete the tour and b e inducted into the H A LL O F FOAM . So w h at are yo u w a itin g for? FEATURING THE ONLY FRESH PASTA AND SAUCE BAR / jiÄ Ü iw ' IN THE VALLEY OLD CH-ICAGQ Bring Y o u r Q u estions and Com m ents Sponsored by ASASU Page 8 Stete Frets FMawAgrJM^IWO Police Report ASU p olice rep orted the follow in g incidents Thursday : •A refrigerator, valued at $200, was stolen from the boiler room of the Community Services Building. •A plastic menu sign, valued at $125, was stolen from the M arriott concession cart at T yler and Cady Malls. •An A T & T credit card from a faculty member was stolen, and the thief charged almost $400 on the card in long-distance telephone calls. •The gasoline tank cover on a student’s car was scratched w hile the vehicle was parked behind Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house, 414 Adelphi Drive. •A male student was arrested after he failed to pay a fine for driving with a suspended driver’s license. •A student’s purse was stolen from her room on the ninth floor of Manzanita Residence Hall. It contained $10 in currency and various credit cards. charged with manslaughter after he lost control of the car he was driving. A passenger in the car was killed instantly. The car was northbound on Priest Road and fell into the Salt R iver bottom. He also was charged with driving while under the influence. •A 21-year-old woman reported being sexually abused when an unidentified man entered her apartment in the 2000 block of East Broadway Road and fondled her. The man entered the apartment through an unlocked door, bound the woman’s hands and threa tened her with a knife. He stoic her purse as he was leaving. S ta te P re s s re p o rte r Tenny Tatusian contributed to this re p o rt •A vandal threw a smoke bomb in a room on the fourth floor of Palo Verde West Residence Hall. No injuries w ere reported. Tempe police reported incidents Thursday: the following •A 38-year-old man was arrested when he allegedly was driving a stolen car from Chicago. The man said he paid $100 for the 1976 Lincoln and did not know it was stolen. •A 22-year-old man was arrested and SELL IT. F IN D IT. C L A S S I F I E D COLLEGE LIFE CALLS FOR DOMINO’S PIZZA. m tt ir tt & ] m OPEN FOR LUNCH f t IT 968-5555 9 0 3 S. R ural 20° lO H V }~ $ 6 *P COKES! I ONLY $6.99 for an Original | Medium one item pizza and two | Cokes. ■ One coupon per pizza. I Expires: 4/30/90 20* Cokes w ith any one or m ore item pizza purchase. Lim it six per order. O f­ fe r valid thru M ay 31,1990. No coupon necessary. O ffer valid at this location only. • B Read about it in the State Press © (A Ö z 4 IN O Ü Q& HOURS: 11:00 a.m . -1 :3 0 a.m . Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 a.m . -2 :3 0 a.m . Friv-Sat. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. Limited delivery area to ensure safety. ©1990 Domino's Pizza, In c.■ r$ i.25 O FF" $1.25 OFF an Original ExtraLarge two or more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 4/30/90 • täte- in 0 Z W B DOMI PIZZi D B (A Ö z 4 mm SEN OÜ O CL 123 Subject to alt applicable state & local tax. 7903 ” Not valid with any other specials or coupons. L ■ Subject to all applicable state & local tax. Includes all applicable state & local tax. nos ^ j o t valid with any other specials or coupons. PIZZA PEOPLE OF ASU Page 9 R1dBy.April13.1990 Mata H aas Elections. Continued from p o g o 1. deal with V em ard Bonner, president of Students Against Racism and form er candidate for Activities vice president, in which McCune promised that minority students would be given two paid directorships in the Activities office in exchange for Bonner’s endorsement. “ M y pride m ay have been injured a little bit, but I still have my integrity,’’ Moran said. McCune has denied making any deals with Bonner. In the only campaign not soiled by mud-slinging between the candidates, Verhines won the office of Campus Affairs vice president over Reed, 57.6 percent to 42.4 percent. “ I ’m very pleased with the voter turnout, I ’m ecstatic that I won and I commend all the candidates — they’ve done an . excellent job,” Verhines said. “ I look forward to working with the new executive board next year. W e’ll have a great year. Reed said the election results did not surprise him. “ I ’m just glad w e both ran a clean campaign,” Reed said. This year’s ASASU elections fielded 47 candidates — the most ever. Last week’s general election also had the highest voter turnout ever, with 5,151 students checking in at the polls. ' Boley said that he hopes the momentum of student participation in the ASASU elections will continue to build. “ I hope that next year it goes even a step further than it Went this year, as fa r as candidate turnout and vpter turnout (are concerned),” Boley said. “ What really surprises m e is the number of people who showed up for the runoff. That’s a lot of people who came back and voted and that’s an encouraging sign as w ell.” i|jiäääÄS|^^^SiSäSj|i Y o u ca n ch a rg e y o u r c la s s ifie d ad o v e r th e p h o n e ! STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 Mini-Storage • Vehicle Stonge VISA <8> STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS F in a listfo r S tu den t A ffairs post to talk By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press Thomas Aceto, one o f three finalists for vice president for-Student Affairs, w ill be on campus Monday and Tuesday to meet with students and University officials. Aceto, vice president of Administration at the University of Maine, will give a presentation at 10 a.m. Monday to the search committee in the main lecture hall of the Architecture Building. He w ill discuss his philosophies of the role o f Student Affairs. The presentation is open to students, faculty and staff. He w ill m eet with student leaders at 2 p.m. Monday in another open forum in the Architecture Building. Students w ill be allowed to ask Aceto questions during the afternoon meeting. Aceto w ill be in meetings for the rest o f the day and on Friday w ill meet with various ASU officials including University President Lattie Coor, Provost Richard Peck and several deans. Christine Wilkinson, currently the interim Student A ffairs vice president and another finalist for the position, w ill be interviewed April 30 and M ay 1. I don’t know why they call Scott Gray, the King of the Nerda. H e’s got such a cool jacket. L u th e ra n C a m p u s M in is try E L C A Come andjoin us fo r worship at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church 1430 S. McAllister Avenue ( across the street from Sahuaro H all) A rizon a Storage Inns IfilliW SPECIAL STUD ENT RATES 5x5 5x10 10x10 10x20 $ 9»* $14»* $26« $44»* G o o d Friday Service 7:30 p.m. No Deposit Will Prorate Y w SY ■SKil • Y |ix Easter Sunrise Service 6 a.m. 9 6 7 -0 2 1 0 Easter Festival Service 10:15 a.m. 2235 W . 1st St. • T e m p e ; ta i This Week’s Special Guest: BOB KUBOTA Sponsored by HOUR Today and Every Friday 12:30-1:30 p.m. Union Cinem a Alw ays F R E E ! H W Î iT o Com edy Committee ALL MODELS ON SALE $ from ■ 599! , 1600 s — „ i t Í S ^ rt¿Truc*s*4.tfhe81 ^ * First Time Buyer Plan for College Students ‘ F re ig h t & h a n d lin g a d d itio n a l * A d «ilk th * * «r,tn • M ,&IV»n lia rte * W IN A URA NI) NFW 9 3 .3 K P K B HONDA SCOOTER RAMADA* HOTEL w W 1 1 *1 I i C f v RACE HEADQUARTERS PHOENIX AIRPORT EAST TICKETS AVAILABLE AT To Be Given Away On Campus At The “Splash Bash” in the Ree Center April 21 v Dillard’s' CHARGE BYPHONE 829-5555 • 800-366-3269 AND PARTICIPATING YAMAHA DEALERS NO REFUNDS • NO EXCHANGES Entry Forms & Display at the Student Ree Center PRODUCED BY . • v " M IC K E Y TH O M P S O N E N TE R TA IN M E N T G R O U P FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL (902) 965-5062 w estern Honda o f Scottsdale Come ride with usi 6717 E. MCDOWell Rd. 994*8400 l iT * S A V E McDowell v> w estern. Honda £ ■ “ ASU $ 3 .0 0 <0 W IT H T H IS C O U P O N ! 3 Off V.I.P. Adult ($18 & $16) Tickets with this coupon. Redeemable O N LY at DILLARD'S OUTLETS. Not valid at Sun Devil Stadium box office. Limit two (2) V.t.P. adult discounts per oc coupon. This coupon may not b e used with any other offer or discount No reproduction or facsimiles. Does not apply to child's admission tickets. Page 10 State Press _______________________ ____________ ___________ Friday, April 13,1990 FRIDAY NKHT S en d c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r p a y a b le t o J O B - j W A R E ™ O F F E R a lo n g w ith in fo rm a tio n b e lo w to : JO B -W A R E ™ O F F E R , P.O. B o x 4 0 8 3 0 9 , C h ic a g o , IL 60640-9998. (P le a s e a llo w 4-6 w e e k s fo r d e liv e ry .) IL re s id e n ts ad d 8 % s a le s tax. Easy rolling and slow burning JOB Cigarette Papers For the b est in tobacco sm oking pleasure. ROLL WITH THE B E S T " ____ _ @ 8.00 JOB S w eatsh irt_____ @ 14.00 JOB S w ea tp a n ts.___ @ 15.00 JOB-W ARE Value Trio (S et o f 3 a b o v e ). . __ @ 32,95 Nam e \ ea. ea. ea. COUNTDOWN ea. 8 P M -1 0 P M 25C DRINKS A d d ress C ity QUARTER .S ta te . C401A And Jerry Jam m in Moran will take you into M IX 90 ’til 3:00AM. SATURDAY NIGHT m CM M YD H K MX900HPOVER92 8:00PM Any Coin Any Drink for 90 minutes of m adness ’til 9:30PM . Live Pirate Broadcast of M IX 90 on Power 92 ’til 3:00AM. 919 E. APACHEBLVD. *TEMPE 715 SOUTH HAYDEJî ROAD, TEMPE, A Z 85281-966-1911 921-9775 Sp ecial P u ll-o u t Section Friday, A p r i l 13,1990 Involved In an earlier confrontation. ^ ome saw it on ly as a cluster o f fights intensified by booze and 100-degree heat. Others viewed it as a nightm arish scene rem iniscent o f the p re-civil rights era. N o m atter how people term the events that took place on A lpha D riv e one year ago this weekend, one thing is agreed: I t had an im pact on A S U and the people who were involved. In this special report, the • • • • State Press examines what has happened since. • • • • • • • # / A n a to m y o f a riot 'S cap ego at' sp eak s ou t P o lic e force ch an ges P a g e 12 P a g e 14 P a g e 14 Page 12 Stale Prc»»-Sp*cial Pull-out Section Friday, April 13,1990 ’We still have a lon g w ay to go' T h e racial climate at ASU is virtually unchanged in the year since the Alpha Drive incident, even though there has been a slight increase in multicultural awareness on campus, minorities and others in the University community say. "B asically there hasn't been anything concrete that has changed," said Tanya H olm es, president o f the N A A C P 's A S U chapter. "Nothing has been done that gives the entire student body some D R I V E surety that the U niversity is m ovin g ' foward and dealing with racism on campus. “ Overall, we still have a long way to go.” ; Holmes and Vernard Bonner, president of Students Against Racism at ASU, criticized what they said was a lack of progress in implementing the University’s 13-point anti­ racism plan, which they helped form last year. The pair said they w ere dissappointed that an investigation into the actions of two ASU police officers was inconclusive and that the other points have been touched on but not completed. “ Everything is still up in the air,” Bonner said. “ We’ve given the administration time to act, but they haven’t acted accordingly.” However, others interviewed by the State Press said they believe that because o f the dramatic nature of what took place on fraternity row, the problems that existed on campus fo r years finally were brought to light. They feel the incident has been a catalyst for change. “ The incident heightened the awareness o f the kinds of racist actions and behavior that are here,” said V. P. Franklin, an ASU history professor and civil rights expert. ■ i i _ „ llC X I m L a S •*■■•**• Dean Jesse M cLure o f the School o f Social Work said: “ I think it was a catalytic event. I think it got people thinking of the issue and talking about doing something.” M cLure said he believes the University w ill continue to try to deal with the issues. “ These issues are still burning inside them especially the minority students,” he said. Others said they believe that change in longstanding attitudes can not occur overnight. “ I don’t think there should be expectations of immediate change,” ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris said. “ It’s not over. I believe w e have long w ay to go, (but) the ground work for dealing in tolerance was laid in the spring of ’89.” ‘‘ I think some things have changed,” said Matt Ortega, Associated Students of ASU President-elect. “ There’s some way to go from it.” Ortega is the first minority to be elected student body president at ASU. Many people interviewed expressed optimism in new ASU President Lattie Coor’s emphasis of the importance of cultural diversity at the University. “ I ’ve placed it as high in the agenda as it can be placed,” said Coor, who added that he is interested in continued input from minorities. community alone. “ I think it had an effect on all groups and Native Americans,’ ’ said Karen SWisher, director of ASU’s Center for Indian Education. “ There a re subtle things (prejudices) that go on here, and it brought those subtleties to a head.” There also appears to be an impact on the ASU greek system. “ I think there is a growing awareness among the greek system about cultural diversity,” .Interfraternity Council President Jon Kierman said. “ It (Alpha D rive) was an impetus for the greek system and the University as a whole for diversity issues. “ It ’s just become the hot topic,” Kierm an said. Leon Shell, acting associate vice president for student affairs and dean of student life, agreed that the incident built a foundation for greater sensitivity. “ That had a large impact for the campus and I think some positive changes are going to come,” Shell said. Tim othy Tong, president of the Asian Am erican Faculty/Staff Association, said he also believes change will take time. “ I have not seen concrete differences so far,” Tong said. “ What is taking place now w ill take time for the effects to be felt. . Stories by Mike Burgess Photos by Jamie Scott Lytle W arren Brawn, a leader in the black student community, said he believes the incident has allowed blacks to have a more “ proactive role” on campus and that they are starting to become m ore involved in politics at the University. “ W e have a long way to go,” Coor acknowledged. “ The proof is in the pudding. Words alone are not going to make the headway.” The effects of Alpha D rive do not touch the black “ As far as the campus being different, I don’t think it is any different than last year,” he added. “ Things are exactly the same. “ It’s hard to be black, period — let alone at ASU.” 2 students take first-hand lesson in criminal justice A t is ironic when you consider what Robert Rucker and James Liddell went through. Rucker wants to be a police officer, and Liddell would like to be an F B I agent. Unfortunately, the two 22-year-old ASU criminal justice students were in the worst of circumstances when they got to see first­ hand how these professions work. The two were handcuffed by ASU police and put in “ protective custody” after being attacked by white fraternity members who hurled racial slurs at them. In the week after the incident, the F B I launched a probe to determine whether the students’ civil rights had been violated. Irony, however, is only a small part of what Rucker and Liddell have learned from the incident. F or Rucker, he discovered that his parents m ay have been right in what they told him while he was growing up. “ They said, ‘Be aware that there are people out there who don’t like you because of your color,” ’ the lanky student who sports a flat-top haircut said in a recent interview. “ I really didn’t believe them because I thought it was in the past. “ Now when I meet white people, I ’m a little skeptical,” he added. “ A few beers and out comes the truth.” Liddell said he too, has been affected by what happened. “ I t ’ s s o m eth in g you c a n ’ t fo r g e t happened,” he said. “ It was bad. I wasn’t an experience I ’d like anyone to go through — black or white.” Rucker said he thinks about what happened all o f the time. Driving to practice with the ASU track team serves as a constant reminder — he passes Alpha Drive on the way. “ I rem em ber the (fra tern ity) guys looking inside the (police) car like they were going to get m e,” the soft-spoken Rucker said. Because of what happened to the students, civil rights issues have surfaced on campus. But Rucker said he doesn’t seem himself as a symbol for civil rights. “ As far as civil rights, I ’m not too active,” he said. “ I f it was a white guy beaten up by black guys, I ’m for the white guy. “ I ’m for whoever got wronged,” he said. Both still are convinced that the only reason they w ere attacked was because of the color of their skin. T o anyone who would argue otherwise, Rucker replied: “ A ll those people weren’ t there,” he said. L id d e ll R u cker interview. “ There are still racists on campus.” “ It’s an incident that happened, but next year, it w ill be forgotten.” The form er roommates both said they w e r e d is a p p o in t e d t h a t th e F B I in vestiga tio n turned up no crim in al wrongdoing and that the ASU probe was inclusive. But they said they n ever expected any action against the police because they felt they w ere just two black students against the University. Unlike Rucker, Liddell doesn’t think the incidents had an impact on the University. “ The University has not changed that much, not even with the programs put forw ard,” Liddell said in a separate “ I think the m ajority class sometimes needs to go where they are the minority to see how the minority feels. When you’re the majority, you don’t get that feeling of hatred.” r • m ■ ■ ■ M p i Äiiatonr m m li| | row A H M to HM l j I id I H p s o p e o p le a r e ¡W it n e s s e s r e p o r t th a M a itis m th e ■ É t n g e d b y b o th th e m m æ m mm ¿k H h ree ‘f r a t ê r n i t y m d I M T P ö f 7o|¡ [rotte o f th e h o u $ e J | À S ind t a l J ie ls o n jjifl I c y l s jls h e d one of dow n fr i ' Of h e r b y fa 11:10 p .m . * ■ ♦ A n o th e r f i g f v S n p r o g r e s s i s 'r e p o r t e d A lp h a ? ’D r i v e n B e f o r e to t p e o fg p e r s m w h d f i t ou t o f U te * f t f t f p e f t t h e a r e a w i t h f i v e b la c k m a l e s a n d o n e ra p e s■* tK o hMe r r i g h t l e g w h it e m a l e in s id e . a at • i n f r eo ï ï f ï ï l 1 sW m len ts lr a ffic “ h ot B i l l n f f iT B 1 * A tE U < * V s a n d t h e y a r e d is p a t c h e d t o “ a ■ *' D r iv e .. 1o f th e I [v u lg a r 1 i s S te v e I R a u s c h a n d I v o r y I r v i n , b o th ASU T orrey W r ig h t» a M esa s tu d e n te ; C o m m u n it y C o l l e g e s t u d e n t ; a n d h is b r o t h e r • O ffic e r s at ||||| s c o n e and ta k e n o t e , i n 't ifg ft r r e p o r t| ffll^ K >ejpt>rt th a t: I T o b y W r ig h t , a D o b s o n H ig h S c h o o l s t u d e n t ) g e t “ H e d g e c o c k w a s v e r y b e l l i g e r e n t , in t o x ic a t e d a n d d i s o r d e r l y . Hedgecock kept o u t o f d ie v e h ic le , a n d th e w h ite m a le p u n c h e s t h a t h e w a s g o i n g ^ta g e f a t i K & e p g g e r l * a H e d g e c o c k o n t h e s id e o f t h e h e a d > of f f i i n in s id e t h e f r a t e r n i t y t o a l e r t s e c u r i t y gu a rd s who w ere a t ii & i . :^ ie -fo r • f V p a r t y , H e d g e c o c k s u f f e r s a l e g i n j u r y a n d s c r a p e s |ohiis . \ Worn P orsch e f l e e . l f w itn e s s e s v- « s t a i n in g f i v e b la c k s a n d o n e w h it e is ‘ fr o m in t o t h e t a t e r e e c t t o n o f C o lle g e A v e n u e a n d U n iv e r s it y D r iv e b y a n o th e r *—a d1 c- h l-----t r u c k AUt h a it h a s eJ d th e g r o u p f r o m A lp h a |e t o w a r d l ?p ( f o u r o f w h o m l a t e r w e r e a r r iv e , a d i s p a t c h e r b r o a d c a s t s f f i a f a l i g h t b lu e t r u l we _ d a t a a ls o t i i r e a t e n e M ^ M M i f W e d g e c o c k k e p t m a k i n g r a c i a l s lu r s a n d t . ;' ‘T • ' * i n c i d e n t '" i H S m i i r a m m e d tru c k a t R u llìi 'W fh e m e n t e l l c i t y p o l i c e t h a t i D r iv e . , lo o k in g f o r a p a r t y c a llin g th e m “ n ig g e r s .” W h a n A T a r g e n m t ifflr e n p e o p l e s t a r t e d t o c o m e o u t o t o n e o t th e f r a t e r n i t y I h o u s e s w it h s t ic k s ¡| Í| b a t s , t h e y f l e d f r a t e r n i t y ^ ] D r iv e . ■ S titt Press-Special Pull-out Section Friday, April 13,1990 The 13-Point Plan The 13-Point Plan signed b y fo rm e r President Russel N elson. P rovost R ich a rd P eck a n d fo rm e r A rizona B oard o f Regents chairperson H erm an Chanen was designed to address Issues o f concern arising from an April. 1989 In cid e n t on A lp h a Drive. The objectives o f the Plan w ere to e n h a n c e university e fforts to w a rd c u ltu ra l d iv e rs ity a n d to p ro v id e p ro g ra m s a n d a c tivitie s w h ich w o u ld m inim ize th e p o te n tia l fo r a similar In cid e n t in th e future. 1. Investigation of DPS Actions During the Events. A fiv e m e m b e r c o m m itte e c o m p o s e d o f com m unity representatives was appo in te d to co n d u ct the investigation. A fter various delays, th e com m ittee co m p le te d its investigation, w hich was Inconclusive, and subm itted a report to th e President in January. The report contained recom m endations regarding training, staffing, a disciplinary review board, substance abuse, and the university's m ulticultural environm ent. The V ice Presidents fo r Student A ffairs and Business Affairs have b e e n assigned re sp o n sib ility fo r im p le m e n tin g th e com m ittee's recom m endations. 2. Creation of a DPS Disciplinary Review Board. A p ro p o s a l fo r a c o m m itte e w ith b ro a d university/com m unity representation to advise DPS will be subm itted to th e President by th e end o f April 1990. The com m ittee will have responsibility for review o f DPS officer behavior w hen concerns are identified as w ell as for identifying issues for DPS attention. 3. Campus Environment Team A c o m m itte e o f fa c u lty , s ta ff, stu d e n ts a n d administrators has been working since early fall on th e d e v e lo p m e n t o f th e C a m p u s E n viro n m e n t Team concept. A draft re p o rt w ill b e circu la te d to numerous cam pus groups in A pril 1990. A fter com m ents on th e d ra ft are review ed, a final report w ill be subm itted to the President in M ay 1990. 4. ASASU ASASU has p u b lic ly d e c la re d its o p p o s itio n to racism and established a com m ission to m onitor the C ode o f C onduct investigation o f th é events o f April 14-15, 1989. In addition, an annual report on the status a n d tre a tm e n t o f m in o rity stu d e n ts a t ASU w ill b e prepared by the V ice President for Student Affairs. 5. Code of Conduct Revisions Revisions concerning investigation o f com plaints o f harassm ent a n d /o r discrim ination w ere approved by th e B o a rd o f R e g e n ts in S e p te m b e r. 1989. A dditional revisions to th e C ode o f C onduct prohibiting ra cia l and sexual harassm ent and discrim ination are still under discussion a n d will soon b e subm itted to the Arizona Board of Regents fo r approval . 6. Code of Conduct Violations The University, through th e O ffice o f Student life , took a p p ro p ria te a c tio n a g a in s t th e SAE fra te rn ity , suspended three Individuals and p la c e d one student on disciplinary p ro b a tio n . Penalties Im posed o f SAE Included: suspension o f all m em bers and readm ittance only upon satisfaction o f stricter standards; m andatory cultural awareness e d u ca tio n ; disciplinary pro b a tio n for tw o years; and a ban on alcohol.in th e house and lim itations o f social a n d IFC events. Valley madia surround formar ASU President J.Russell Nelson incidents. 7. Racial Sensitivity Training - Students For s tu d e n ts In o n -c a m p u s liv in g e n v lro n e n v iro n m e n ts , c u ltu ra l d iv e rs ity p ro g ra m s w e re p re se n te d d u rin g tw o 'ta r g e t' p e rio d s -- C u ltu ra l D iversity W eek. D e ce m b e r 4-8; a n d B lack H istory M onth. January-February. Diversity was selected as a th e m e fo r th is ye a r's re síd e n cé h a ll p ro g ra m m in g . Cultural diversity has been m ake p a rt o f sta ff manuals a n d tra in in g p ro g ra m s . IFC a n d P a n h e lle n lc orientation seminars in cluded cultural diversity, as d id th e G réek le a d e rsh ip class. Two. c u ltu ra l d ive rsity sessions were schedutéd for "Student Leaders Involved in C ontinuing Education * and diversity was discussed on L e a d e rsh ip D a y (J a n . 14) fo r re s id e n c e h a ll association m em bers, G reek leaders and residence assistants. were staged on campus over the Alpha Drive cultural diversity training program s, one e a ch semester. A dm inistrators a tte n d e d th e fa ll p ro g ra m a n d a re signed up for th e spring program . 10. Ethnic Studies A c o m m itte e Is c u rre n tly re v ie w in g G e n e ra l Studies curriculum to determ ine th e a p p ro p ria te w ay to in c lu d e a c u ltu ra l d iv e rs ity re q u ire m e n t. The D e p a rtm e nt o f English has a lre a d y im p le m e n te d a requirem ent fo r either a course on wom en's or ethnic lite ra tu re fo r th e m a jo r, c u ltu ra l d iv e rs ity as a com ponent o f th e UA100 course has been evaluated this year. The com m ittee report Is under review a t this tim é. 11. Action Now Program The A ction Now program was continued In 198990. Q u a rte rly pro g re ss re p o rts a re d is trib u te d to adm inistrators and cam pus fa cu lty. Staff a n d student groups. G oals fo r 1990-9.1 w ill b e su b m itte d to th e President by end o f April. 8. Police Officer Training C u ltural sensitivity tra in in g is re q u ire d in th e 11 w eek course officers a tte n d to receive c e rtifica tio n . The D epartm ent o f Public Safety has also in itia te d a sp e cia l tra in in g session d u ring th e Spring sem ester. P o lice o ffic e rs a re re c e iv in g tra in in g in stress m anagem ent and interpersonal p e rce p tio n , c o n flic t diffusem ent. p o licin g a n d In te ra ctin g In m ulticultural co m m unities, a n d la w e n fo rc e m e n t fu n c tio n in g In traum atic and critica l incidents. Police sergeants and DPS administrators have also a tte n d e d cultural diversity workshops open to a ll administrators this spring. 12. Funding of Minority Student Activity Programs A d d itio n a l fu n d in g has b e e n p ro v id e d to e n h a n ce m in o rity s tu d e n t a c tiv ity pro g ra m s. The Assistant D ean o f S tudent U fe/C ultural Diversity was also a p p o in te d during th e fa ll semester to w ork w ith m inority student groups. 9. Racial Sensitivity Training - Faculty, Administrators Both fa c u lty a n d g ra d u a te assistant o rie n ta tio n program s c o n ta in e d sessions o n cu ltu ra l aw areness and sensitivity. Two cu ltural diversity workshops w ere c o n d u c te d fo r a d m in is tra to rs In M a rc h . A n o th e r workshop fo r adm inistrators is scheduled fo r April 20. S ta ff Training a n d D e ve lo p m e n t also SDonsors tw o 13. DPS Hiring Practices The D epartm ent o f Public Safety has am ended its hiring p o licy to in clu d e p a rtic ip a tio n o f w om en a n d m inorities on search com m ittees w hen possible. The departm ent is also developing an assessment center m e th o d o lo g y fo r e v a lu a tin g a p p lic a n ts fo r promotions. bääbk ü t ä M h e i r ' l H H H H H then drove w eM o i Bush t e n Uaery Highways. For m o rt] '~" ; Information, phone m ‘I ’m O u tta H e r e ’ Student Special Also available: Stereo. Speakers. TV. and other individual specialty boxes & supplies. only Student Special includes: 5-Small Boxes 7 -Med. Boxes 1-Large Box 3-Hat Wardrobe 1-Tape Roll 1 Ì| fp »0 2 ) 984-3305 OTwrit* lor $39 95 H our free brochure and river map. 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(.Friday’s •Beverly G rill »Garcia’s »A Black Tie A ffair Limousine Service I ‘% . * * 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 * 4 4 4 4 * 4 4 4 Comics Page 18 State Press Friday, April 13,1990 by B ill W atterson Calvin and Hobbes DAD, WU. VOW EXPLAIN THE TME0R1 OF R E L A T E TOME? I DONT UNDERSTAND NUT y TIME GOES — — -- ------ ' SLOWER AT GREAT SPEED. IT S BECAUSE 10U KEEP SO IF TOO GO A T THE SPEED GEE. TWATS 'HELL, VIE MEN CHANGING T IM E IO N E S . S S . . TF K3Ü R 1 1 Ö CALI-' OF LIGHT, '(EX) G A IN M U G F TIM E . BECAUSE IT W E N T HOT m i MOM SAID ARE BETTER AT FORNÌ A , t W GAVN THREE HOURS ON A TAKE A S IO N S TO GET THERE. O F (B U R S E. T H E THEOW OF AT A U ..' SHE MUST B E R E A S O N IN G . GO TE IL . H E R FW E -H C D R FUGHT, RIGHT? KELATWTTf O K U WORKS IF W R E . GOING W E T . TOTAÜ-T o f f ■ HER R X K E R The Far Side by Gary Larson ABSTRACT TH A T, y J L J V I •iS f by Garry Trudeau Doonesbury mtTFVßseno sosFoœmN6 TAKBXXJR.MUG TD6PTALEX.1Ö TOMXK,m<£. m oeum oN Pt5POSmt(CF- tm.'/a/vB6or F£6CUPSAPE TENMINUJES. ANOHO!/ Ivory Towers by M ike R itter ...I OUST WONT STOPV/ QIC, MIKE, I'VE &OT THIS 6BAPUATIM6 THINS LICKEPÍ "THEY CAN'T GRADUATE ME Ip I FAIL MV FINALS!! DAMN, THAT'S RIGHT/ EVEN I, S E T A * ... TÄVLOtt, THEVIL NEVER I U . WALK INTO MV FINALS TOTALLY BUND, AND I'LL FAIL SOME INCREOIELV WARP TEST, ANP THEN I'LL... 8UV IT... YOU'RE A L E IS U R E S T O P fE S V \ MAJOR... by Julie Sigwart Rainey Days . ACPOSS CAMPUS PEOPLE BEGAN TO NOTICE t h e r e m a in s o f t h e crashed r - 3 8 ... lo o k ! T H E Y F IN A L L Y F IN IS H E D n e l s o n F IN E A p r s / "K COOL W) -¿ M ti! FREE FOOD. GREAT FUN. #3 N o w F rid ay s a re e v e n b etter w ith our rotating H a p p y H o u r buffet. W e 'r e BUS’SNEWYORKPIZZA ■m i MB â| ! p F L A G S T A F F (A P ) — Classic-minded astronomers used to name asteroids after Greek and Roman goddesses. Tim es change. Two Lowell Observatory astronomers have named four asteroids Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr. , Brian Skiff and Dr. Edward Bowell said they have been fans of Beatles for years. So the names seemed natural for the sun-orbiting rocks, discovered in 1983 and 1984 during a photographic survey of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter . “ We thought it would be kind of nice to honor people who don’t, usually get recognized in space,” said Bowell, who cam e here from England in 1973. He said most asteroids now are named after a stron om ers o r em in en t scien tists, although a s t r o n o m e r s a t H a r v a r d O b s e r v a t o r y in Massachusetts named one after rock guitarist Eric Clapton, Bowell said asteroid finders have the right to name their discoveries, abiding by a code, which permits almost any name but those of politicians or religious figures. Skiff and Bowell have named about 250 asteroids, including Shakespeare, Michelangelo, Sagan (fo r Carl Sagan), Hopi and TAR D IS (the time machine of the British science-fiction hero Dr. Who). The newly named asteroids range from five to 10 miles in diameter, which is typical, Bowell said. He said Lennon, McCartney and Starr are in the inner part of the main belt and have orbits slightly inclined to that of Earth. Asteroid Harrison orbits the sun in the middle of the belt and has a more inclined orbit. They are among 4,461 asteroids whose positions in the sky are accurately known. IT A L IA N >v ¡e h G R E E K R E S T A U R A N T 6t P IZ Z E R IA 9 3 3 E. U n iv e rs ity , T e m p e i SS, i Bfj “Good pizza shouldn’t be a lot of dough...” ivi; J fv li» servin g a different d ish e v ery hour like shrim p, ribs & la s a g n e , a lo n g w ith a 2 0 item continous s a la d b a r. So com e b y S h ep h e rd s for our — Gus F rid a y h a p p y hour b e tw e e n 4 -7 p.m ., h a v e som e g re a t food, a n d stay for a g re a t time. Free Delivery ^ 11 a.m .-2 a.m . R u ra l & A p a che 968*0243 829-3995 1 FREE Calzone Buy two « Calzones and get | one Free! $5.75 I ■ /"Additional topping slightly more. 2 0 ” PARTY PIZZA $7.99 "Additional topping slightly more. ■ Sports State Press P a g e in Friday, April 13,1990 Rees, power lead ASU to 6-0 Trojan trounce By SETH SULKA State Press Sean Rees pitched a four-hit shutout and three Sun Devils homered as ASU won its 18th consecutive gam e with a 6-0 victory over USC in front of 5,022 fans at Packard Stadium. The win moved the Sun Devils (34-9 overall, 12-5 Pac-10 Southern Division) into second place, one game.behind Stanford. With the loss, the Trojans fall a half gam e behind ASU and trail Stanford by one and a half games. The gam e started out ex a c tly as anticipated as Rees and USC’s Randy Powers did not allow a run until ASU scored in the fifth inning. However, right fielder Tom m y Adams, who was playing in his first gam e since quitting the team a week ago, belted a twoout solo home run off Powers in the fifth. “ I was looking fast balls,” Adams said of his sixth long ball. “ I was out in front of it a little, but I got enough of it to get it out.” That made the score 1-0 and that was all that Rees needed. Rees, whose status was unknown until just before game time, improved his record to 10-0 while lowering his E R A to 2.15. Rees also had 12 strikeouts and brought his league-leading total to 136 for the season. “ I had to battle a little bit,” said Rees, who gave up three hits to the first five batters he faced before retiring 15 in a row. “ But I felt good and had good rhythm, especially in the middle innings when I was able to place m y fastball wherever I wanted.” The pitchers continued to battle until the Trojans threatened to tie the score in the seventh inning. With runners on first and third and no outs, USC right fielder Mark Smith flied to center fielder Mike Kelly. K elly then gunned down Murph Proctor’s attempt to tag Up and score. Rees then caught Bret Boone trying to steal and the Sun Devils kept their 1-0 lead. ASU then scored five times in the eighth inning, which was highlighted by Mike K elly ’s three-run blast and Jim Austin’s solo homer off Powers, who fell to 8-1. The home runs w ere K elly ’s 14th and Austin’s 10th of the year. “ We knew that w e needed to get some runs in that last inning,” K elly said. “ One run in the P ac is just not enough security — it doesn’t matter who you’re playing.” . K elly said that it Was very important to beat Powers, who has routinely given the Sun Devils trouble in the past. “ We beat their ace so we feel pretty confident that we can beat their second and third starters.” The series continues tonight at 7 wtih Todd Douma (10-1, 2.97 E R A ) taking the mound for ASU against J eff Cirillo (5-2, 3.62). - . T.J. Sokol/State P rats ASU second baseman Anthony Manahari, who was hitless on the night, throws to first base for the out as the Sun Devils beat USC, 6-0, at Packard Stadium Thursday. Sun Devil softball returns to form, m eets Cow girls By DAN ZEIGER State Press ASU third baseman Stephanie May said She feels that the Sun Devil softball team is starting to play as w ell as it did when it captured first place at the Bud Light invitational in San Jose, Calif,, last month, If that is the case, then the team has picked a good time to turn it up a notch. The Sun Devils (32-24 overall, 4-6 Pac-10) travel to Stillwater. Okla., this weekend for the Oklahoma State Cowgirl Hall of Fam e Classic. It is the fifth tournament that ASU has participated in this season. The Sun Devils will participate in Pool B of the tournament along with Texas A & M, Texas-Arlington and Northeast Louisiana. Oklahoma State, Florida State, Sam Houston State and Stephen F. Austin Comprise P ool A. “ The field is probably better overall then the one in San Jose,” Wells said. “ You’ve got OSU, a nationally-ranked team, and Florida State is always tough.” The hectic schedule and unpredictability of a tournament situation forces Wells to prepare her team for this weekend in By DAN ZEIGER State Press With their team embedded in NCAA probation the last two seasons, fans of ASU track had little reason to look forward to most of its upcoming meets, However, with the Sim Devils starting a new decade, that is starting to change. Following an impressive and encouraging performance at the Sun Angel Track Classic last Saturday, ASU takes its newfound boost of confidence south for a m eet against U of A and NAU at Roy P. Drachman Stadium in Tucson Saturday at 5 p.m. “ The meet ended on an emotional high for us,” ASU Head Coach Tom Jones said. “ Hopefully, some of it w ill carry over into this week.” a different manner. “ You try to gauge your pitching differently to get through two days of three gam es each day,” Wells said. Each team will play a gam e against the other three teams in its pool today. ASU’s tripleheader consists of facing Northeast Louisiana at 8 a.m., Texas-Arlington at noon and Texas A & M at 2 p.m. Wells said she hopes to stick with the three-man rotation of Melinda Cook (8-3, 0.87 E R A ), Terri Carnicelli (13-14,1.49 E R A ) and Dawn Wood (8-5,1.35 E R A ). Following today’s games, each team w ill be seeded first to fourth within its pool and placed in a single-elimination tournament bracket. First-round play starts tomorrow with first and fourth seeds and Second and third seeds from opposite pools facing each other. The first-year coach Said she does not plan on making any m ajor lineup changes, but junior K im Anderson, batting .178 with l l RBI, will remain at first base in place of the injured Brandi Hust. “ Anderson has done a good job at first,” Wells said, “ but with her over there, it takes away the versatility of having her in another position. ’ ’ and move Jones to the spot vacated by Tolbert. “ Lynda is the kind of athlete who can just go through the motions and score points for us,’’ Jones said. “ But w e’re going to leave it up to her.” Tolbert has automatically qualified for the NCAA championships in the 100-meter hurdles and the 4x100m relay team has met provisional requirements. The rest of thè Sun Devils’ infield should consist of Liz Phillips (.271, team-leading 20 R B I) at second, Ann Rowan (team-leading .335, 18 R B I) at shortstop and M ay (.299, 4 R B I) at third. While thé three are among ASU’s leaders in hits, the task of getting the offensive production with runners in scoring position w ill be crucial for W ells’ team. “ We need to be consistent on offense,” Wells said. “ W e’re tending not to slump on hits, but w e’re slumping on RBI. Lately, w e’ve been leaving a lot of runners on base. I t ’s going to be a matter of us getting them up and getting them in.” In the outfield, ASU w ill count on Cheri K eller (.167,4 R B I) in left, Jackie Am ara (.181,3 R B I) in center and Becky Davis ( .220,5 R B I) in right. Christy Seritelia (.261, 7 R B I), who has started all of the Sun Devils’ 52 games this year, w ill be behind the plate. However, with a possible six games in two days, ASU will need a solid effort from everyone. Sophomore Jo Garcia and freshmen Am ber Tintsman and Shannon Finch have come o ff the bench in recent games to contribute. “ I just hope that w e’ll be able to play consistently this weekend,” Wells said. “ Who knows?” Jones said. “ Maybe w e’ll go down there and Lynda w ill warm up, feel great and run, but I ’m not going to force her to. Health wise, w e’ll do what is best for her.” ;" I f Tolbert cannot run in the 100-meter hurdles, Jones w ill count on heptathlete Johnson to run the event for ASU. However, Johnson, who owns the Pac-lO’s third-best time (13.70) this season, has been ill and Sophomore Shane Collins w ill attempt to top the personal best 64 feet, 1% inches he achieved last week. Collins, whose effort is also the conference’s best this year, should be challenged by the Wildcats’ Jack Trahan. Both Collins and Trahan have automatically qualified for the NCAAs. Unfortunately, the SunDevil women were dealt a mighty blow when star sprinter Lynda Tolbert suffered a slight hamstring pull this week in practice. However, there is a possibility that Tolbert, ranked fifth in the world in the 100-meter hurdles, could compete tomorrow. “ The womens meet should be com petitive' and close,” Jones said. “ If Tolbert is out, w e’ll lose half a second in the 4x100.” ASU’s 4xl00-meter relay team o f Tolbert, Dana Jones, Toinette Holmes and Maicel Malone owns the second-best time in the Pac-10 this season, a 45.33-second effort on March 24. If Tolbert is unable to compete, the second-year coach said he would-most likely lead o ff the race with Gea Johnson I missed Wednesday’s practice. Unless something unexpected occurs, Jones said he feels the womens 4x400-meter relay team of Holmes, Charmaine Williams, Jones and Malone should have no problems finishing first. The four have automatically qualified for the NCAAs and own the Pac-lO’ s best time in the event, a 3:34.96 effort last Saturday. The Sun D evil men, according to Jones, w ill travel to Tucson this weekend only in search of individual honors. “ As fa r as the men go, it’ll be a dual meet between UofA and NAU,” Jones said. “ We shouldn’t be a factor.” ASU heptathlete Gee Johnson may have to compete in the 100-meter hurdles and the 4 x 1O0-meter relay because of an injury to Lynda Tolbert Todd Lewis, who set a personal best and school record 8:49.56 in the steeplechase last week, w ill lim it his competition to the 1,500 meters, where his best effort this season was a 3:52.34 run on March 31. Along with the emotion following a successful meet a week ago, Jones said he hopes the prospect o f state superiority w ill be an incentive for the Sun Devils Saturday. “ Anytime you run against (teams from ) Arizona, you always run a little harder,” Jones said. “ It should be a great meet. Our kids are fired up and w ill compete hard.” Page go State Press Friday, A pril 13 ,1 990 ASU baseball lands 7 recruits By SETH SULKA Stats Brass The ASU baseball team, which could lose at least three starters to this year’s pro draft, has signed seven student-athletes to national letters-of-intent. The Sun Devils targeted their needs by signing three infielders, two catchers and two right-handed pitchers. “ We had very specific needs to fill this year, knowing that Fernando (Vina), Anthony (Manahan) and Eric (Helfand) w ill probably sign pro contracts after the season,” ASU Head Coach Jim Brock said. ‘ ‘That was our number one priority. ” ASU’s big land was 6-foot-5 Kurt M iller from Bakersfield, Calif. M iller, the nation’s No. 3-rated prep prospect, is 5-0 this season with a 1.60 E R A and 54 strikeouts. Other high school standouts include middle infielder Jason Hardtke and catcher Mike Lieberthal. Hardtke and Lieberthal are both hitting over .500 for their high school teams this season. Also signing out of high school are pitcher Doug Newstrom from Fairfax Station, Va., and infielder Brian Smith from Agoùra Hills, Calif. Newstrom has pitched one- and two-hitters in his first two starts of the season. Smith is hitting .353 in six games. Junior college transfers Clarke Rea and Ricky Ward round out the signees. Rea, a catcher at Scottsdale Community College, is second in the nation with 42 R B I while hitting .404. Ward, a middle infielder from Chemeketa Community College in Portland, Ore., hit .418 last season. Brock said that he is happy with the recruits coming in, although M iller and Lieberthal a re expected to be drafted high in thè first round. “ There’s always a chance w e might lose one or two to the pros, but at this point, each of them seem comnoitted to obtaining a college education,” Brock said. “ In each case, w e were able to sign our first choice.” Call fo r daily specials fN K C ftJ A W S 60ÜÆNC01N Chinese Buffet 1125 E. Apache Btvd. Tempe • 968-3322 941 W . Elliot Chandler • 821-5428 MENU INCLUDES: S w eet.& Sour Pork «Lem on Chicken «Egg Roll «S esam e Chicken •S h rim p with Alm ond D ing «T eriyaki Beef «BBQ S pare Ribs •S p ic y Chicken «Sm oked Fish «B eef w ith G reen Bean •V e g etarian «Almond Turkey «M oo G o o G ai Pan . •B B Q Pork «Ham Fried R ice « C h o w Mein, etc. u /c A L S O - Winter: Egg Flower Soup ccoi/c o c c o WE SERVE BEER f± T % “ I Do Not Want’’... w l # $999 U $999 PUBLIC ENEMY “ Fear of a Black Planet” v ROBERT PLANT “ Manic Nirvana” PAULA ABDUL “ Forever Your Girl” ERIC CLAPTON “Journeyman” W O LFF SYSTEM BUSINESS H O U R S •LUNCH« $3.94 BUY ONE SESSIO N GET ONE FREE! CD $999 CD $999 CD $999 andSummer. FZ t Cocktail ALL Y O U CAN E A T CHINESE BUFFET U-TAN SINEAD O’CONNOR 1042 N. Higley Mesa • 985-8823 with this coupon 11-9 Suíú-Thurs. 11-9:30 Fri.-Sat. •DINNER« $4.79 FRIDAY NATIONAL ACTS FROM L. 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Or for $4.99 our famous All-You-Can-Eat O ffer good with coupon or ASU ID froiu 4pm to fresh fruit & m u ffin s & taco & pasta & desert i dose. ..J Expires April __ 22, „1990., O ffer also good at the & sfllfld & fixins Salad Bar. Come and bring a I andM cOmtock sh zier. friend. O r ten. Take advantage o f a deal so ( good it just had to beat the devil out o f any- | u lZ Z lv i. thing else arOUOd. I Steak‘ Seafood»Salad p it c h e r s •FAMOUS SHOOTER CHAIR SHOTS «1 «° r 1330 N. McClintock Rd. Tempe, A Z *966-9810 Two doors south off S Ig Surf State Praia Page 21 Friday, April 13,1990 Classifieds ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS W ANTED: OVERW EIGHT person serious ENJOY YOUR Lunch and the view on the LOVE TO dance? H ate the bar scene? patio today at B.G. Einstein’s Bar and Y ou ’ll love the Ml Singles Dances, every about losing 10-29 pounds in the next 30 Grill. Upstairs, com er o f 6th and College. Friday and Sunday at better Valley hotels. days. FDA approved. 981-8921. 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Cali Frank, 964-1633 or after 5pm/ Alex, 831-7004. TREK, 12-SPEED road bike, 64cm frame, 1986 HONDA Elite 80, 400 miles, winds­ Suntour, red with silver trim. Excellent hield, helmet, red. $1,500. Call after 6pm. condition. $175. Joel, 496-6867. YAKIM A RACK, for smaller cars, with $$$$ I’m your CASH buyer for vehicles! $$$$ A ll m akes & c o n d itio n s. I'll come to your location! Lisa, 484-7055 V A L U A B L E C O U P O N E X P I R E S 5-15-90 $450. 962-9027/ evenings. __________ ___ GOVERNM ENT SEIZED, surplus vehicles b a s e m e n t o f M a l th e w s ( e n te r Coupon Good fo r 1986 HONDA Elite 150 Deluxe, red. Runs gutters, two-bike mounts, tower locks. good. $95. Tom, 921-9413. H e lm e t. $ 6 5 0 / o ffer. D a vid , 784-9644. 1988 HONDA Elite 80, only 2,300 miles, red, looks brand new, never scratched. FURNITURE $1,t00/offer. 345-2084, Krisy. 1988 YAM AH A RIVA 50cc, runs great, COUCH AND loveseat— good condition, great Condition. $235 best offer. Rob, quite 839-5299. 921-4281. new. $200 10 FREE GAMES* or While they last! O ff Road • Stun Runner I I Earth Shelter • Hard Drivin’ | 1110 8. Teenage M utant Ninja Ninfa Turtles >£*,, Alma School r ' Phis (war lOO More dames V N O V f t T e m p e O p en S u n d a y 10 a .m .-4 p .m . " * * k M p n d a y -T h u rs d a y till 8:30 p.m , TEMPE MESA/CHANDLER CENT. PHX N. PHX 3414 S. Mill Ave. 966-0731 3050 S. Country Club 497-0101 4545 N. 7th St. 274-2665 15846 N. Cave Creek Rd. 493-5000 Behind Big 0 Tires A* Open a t 1 0 a.m. 7 days a week 481-8580 1 0 Nickels with $ 1 .5 0 Paid Admission N o t valid with any oth er offer. Palace B E JV T H IN G S 25-40% OFF D EX ISM Sunglasses by Bausch & Lomb ¡p r W e also carry these fin e sunglasses: Gargoyle Serengeti Sun Cloud Vuarnet Scott Bolle R evo SUNGLASSES 680 S. Mill, T em p o • Centerpoint • N ext to C o ffe e Plantation 968-9912 & MORE! -w im TIME AGAIN! D EX CELEBRATES SPRING W ITH ANOTHER PICNIC PLU S SOCCER G A M E ! (V O L L E Y B A L L W IT H N IS A ) Bring your favorite ethnic food and friends to frolic at Kiwanis Park, Noon to 4 p.m., Saturday, April 14. Dynamic Exchange Club and NISA welcome all members and interested people to mingle and meet new friends. For more info call Karen 224-9288 EASTER Special OZZIE’S WAREHOUSE Honey G lazed Ham S M fin d ttC by S iS A S U . w STATE CRIME ZERO > M ashed Potatoes M ixed Vegetables Dinner Roll Call +JS, G ift C ertificates Available WINDOW TINT SPECIALISTS offer. COME V IS IT THE HOTTEST FUN SPOT . OPEN FRIDAY fi SATURDAY TILT AM B in g : | •L ife tim e G uarantee •S c ra tc h R esistant T in t •L a rg e s t S e le ctio n o f T in t best NO CASH VALUE FM Portable Radio w ith stereo headphones w ith a com plete w indow tin t. ____________ YAM AH A QT50S scooter, 1,658 miles, and soft top, air conditioning, Sony pullout con d ition ! 2235 W. 1st Street KAWASAKI EX500, 1989, 2,000 miles, 1965 M AZDA GLC, sunroof, hatchback, A SUNDAY 12-8 p.m. 130 E. University Drive • Comer of University & Forest Page 22 FURNITURE APARTMENTS M U S T SELL. Loveseat, $100. Chair and ottoman, $75. Single waterbed and head- R A N C H O LA S PALM AS board, $50. Denise Lerch, 820-1165. M U ST SELL! Couch, tables, king-size QUEEN-SIZE FUTON and frame, like ASU COMPUTERS P A N A S O N IC (IBM AREA, $340/m on th c io n «) PC, 128k 2 b ed ro o m , p lu s 2 bath, e le c t r ic it y . A ir- conditioning, Jacuzzi, no pets, deposit. 967-4789. expandable, dual disk drive, printer and modem. $500. 967-6308 ASU AREA. Studios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom W ILL BUY your Macintosh Plus or better, apartments 966-8838. for rent. $260 and up. and Imagewriter II. 940-0518. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. WORDPERFECT ‘ 54), only $135. Student/ Walk to ASU, pool, laUndry room. 1 block faculty south of University on 8th street. only. Pro im age computers. 921-1129 AIRLINES HIRING now! Immediate entry % mile from ASU. Must see. 966-7912. level positions available. Excellent sala­ Cape C od Apartments. 968-5238 for special. REAL ESTATE R eceive ment opportunities. Secure that summer job. S ave time and effort. Complete directory. (206)771-3811. 2 BEDROOM condo with loft, furnished. full-time Loft, $225 plus utilities. Bedroom, $275 Must have excellent clerical skills, type 50 plus words per minute minimum. Excellent utilities. Washer/dryer. 829-6892. discounts in newly- renovated apartment complex. 894-6468. FRCCRCNim. SERVICE qualify, $437 payment. Kevin, 893-2036 2 HOMES, 1 mile east o f ASU. 3 bedroom, FALL SEMESTER, 2 bedroom, 2 bath A N IM AL needs clean-up/vet assistant. Afternoons, $250 plus % . 437-1057, Kelly. evenings, weekends. Call 963-2340. down. Second: $69,900; 967-3658, Tom. A SU — 1 block, why rent? $3,500 buys 997*6421. phone and typing experience required. pool, 1-7pm Monday-Friday, and 8-3 Saturday. co v e re d parking, non-smoker. $188/month. 894-2636. Scottsdale. 947*7351. FEMALE TO share large furnished one bedroom apartment. $202/month, utilities HOUSE, 2 bedroom/2 bath, garage, washer/dryer. Fully furnished. $250 plus and more. Call many amenities. $61,000, 839-0228. LAKES TOW NHOM E— Village Landing. Luxury 3 bedroom, 2W bath, double S. Sunset Drive, Apt. n o .9 .1 block west of Rural, 1 block south o f Apache. 967-3658. rent during summer. 2 blocks from ASU. Furnished, utilities, just $285. Discount available. C air967-5681. pool. Close to ASU. Utilities included. P lease call 966-8597. plus! $139,000.. deposit, includes Vt M ILE south of ASU, 4 bedroom, 2 bath fireplace. $7,900 down, $800 payments, no qualify. Kevin, 893-2036. • TIRED O F the noise? Tired of the dorms? Free air conditioning. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $475/month. 910 East Lemon, 966-8704. Vi MILE to ASU. 3 bedroom, 2 bath luxury townhouse in Los Prados. $6,900 down, no q u alify. 893-2036 $709 paym ent. Studios & 1 bedrooms a v a ila b le in a s m a ll, peaceful community in North Tem po. FREE u tilitie s , FREE basic cable! Call for specials. NICER 3 bedroom, 2 bath patio home. Upgrades throughout. University Ranch. $7,900 down, no. qualify, $791 payment. Kevin, 893-2036. REPOSSESSED VA & HUD HOMES available from govern­ ment from $1 without credit. You repair. Also tax delinquent f o te c l o s u r e s . C a l f 1-805^82-7555 ext. H-2003 for repo list in your area. Call 7 days a Week. 9 4 6 -5 5 2 3 APARTMENTS Salado condo. Washer/dryer. $570/month. Contact Kelly Leid, (303)431-4772: 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartment, covered parking, modern h ookru ps. 949 appliances, S o u th laundry M cC lin tock , (between Apache / University). Jess Sotomayer, 897-0516. SUMMER DISCOUNTS! R eserve Now For F all! W ALK TO ASU! m ents. All bills paid. C able TV, h e a te d p o o l, an d sp acio u s lau nd ry fa cilities. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by to day! T errace Road A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T errace 966-8540 FURNITURE refrigerator. Stove, washer/dryer, dishwasher, fans, fireplace, swimming pool, covered park­ ing. Available how. $600. 963-4039. LU X U R Y recreational facilities. $595. 461-1023 project. Send resumes to: Homes by Dave Brown, 2164 East Broadway, Suite 300, Tem pe, Arizona 85282, attention: Gary Morgan, Vice President. also advise JO U R N A LIS M award-winning appointment with possibility o f renewal. Send letter o f interest and resume to: East Wyoming, Kalispell; MT. 59901. SUMMER JOBS! Full-time, $300 per week; part-time, $150 per week. Many openings in customer service and retail. 30 scholarships available. Located in Tem pe. Call 9am to 4pm, 838-2633. TELEPHONE SURVEY, no sales. Parttime, weekdays 3-9pm, weekends 10-6pm. Start $4.25/hour. Behavior Research Center, 1117 North 3rd Street, Phoenix. Rapidly growing company is looking for open until position is filled. Candidates Cole, School o f Communication, Northern and 835-5673 National parks, forests, fire crews Send stamp for free details. 113 Communication, Box 6001, NAU, Flag­ ASSEM BLY PROGRAM M ERS, part-time Call openings! Lumberjack Search Committee, School o f staff, Arizona 86011. Applications will be reviewed beginning April 13 and remain planning. SUMMER JOBS outdoors. O ver 5,000 other perks. Non-smoker, male/ female. Must have references. 839-7627 after 6pm. Walker DataSource Call Patty or Kevin at 258-4554, after 5pm. CRUISESHIPS NOW HIR­ ING for spring, Christmas and next summer breaks. Many p o s i t i o n s . Call 1-805-682-7555 ext. S-1114. Call 7 days a week. TEM PE C ENTER for th e 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. Call 894-2704; is currently hiring reliable individuals for national telephone EOE. TH E ROSE company is now hiring for rose sales in restaurants and nightclubs. Call for interview, 921-8855. TRAVEL, BE in the sun, see the world, have fun, and get paid! How? College Starting wage: $4.25 per hour. Apply in students person, Monday through Friday, 10am to stewardesses, maintenance. $900/salary 4pm: 4515 South McClintock, Suite 101, Tem pe , Corporate Building. 831-2971. weekly. Guaranteed openings. Call us * n o w fo r s u m m e r e m p lo y m e n t. CONDO, terrific amenities, W ANTED. Tem pe apart­ Utilities paid. $300/month. Bill, 827-3532. ROOM M ATE(S) W ANTED: Share beauti­ washer/dryer. Call Brian, ROOM M ATES NEEDED 4 bedroom, pool, LARGE house, pool, washer/ dryer, dishwasher, etc. Rural and Apache. SHARE TEM PE condo for summer. Own ties. $250/month 894-0735. plus 16 utilities. SUMMER ROOMMATE, share nice apart­ ment. Own bedroom, bath. T E LE M A R K E T E R S $5-$8/hr. to start + comm. No selling, just setting appoint­ ments. No experience neces­ sary. Job hours: M-F, 4-9 p.m. and Sat., 9-2 p.m. Work Close to campus in Rio Salado Bldg., 2121 S. Mill Ave., Ste 220, Tempe, AZ 85282, at Mill & Broadway. Apply after 2 p.m. Call anytime. 470-1071. Mile from campus. $250/month, plus 16 utilities. ship jobs: EOE, male/female. 1-800^926-8447, ext.C-1279. WAITER/WAITRESS PLU S stewards, prep cook help m e give away MCI long-distance needed for immediate part-time. Apply in service. Cash paid. For more information, person, Chopandaz, com er of Scottsdale call Tate at 821-1858, Monday-Friday. Road and McKellips, Tuesday/Saturday. M AKE W ORK M ONEY: E x p a n d in g h om e BACK East in summer sales improvement company Immediately needs program. Make $5,000 and gain college . student to work 4 hours per day. W e credit. Call 222-8106. train— no selling. Paid weekly. Call Ken, A V A IL A B L E IM M E D IA T E L Y ! M arket 951-4567/ research phone interviews. Starting $4.40 per hour. Evenings/weekends. location. Susan, 967-4441. Tem pe references required. BARTENDER, FUN Tem pe neighborhood, North-east Scotts­ RESTAURANT CAREER OPPORTUNITY is hiring for the following positions: •Sales Coordinator • Dining Room Servers (AM & PM) •Cocks •Front Desk Clerks THE BEST GETTING BETTER! Superior benefits in a unique concept. E xce lle n t downtown Scottsdale loca­ tion. Close to ASU and MCC. Apply in person: The NEED MOTHER’S helper for spring and summer. Own transportation necessary. ienced onjy. Near Paradise Valley Mall. 992-2846. per hour. Apply* 2pm-4pm. BASEBALL FA N ! Have a favorite pro team’s like to reminisce? Write me your favorite stories/trivia. Make $6/hour or $1/story. Call Rodney, 968*8065. BUFFALO EXCHANGE Seeks part-time, Clothing store. $4.25/h0ur to start, plus benefits and bonus plan. A fun place to ( § U lites Ï dale, Shea and Pima. 860-6939. W oodshed I, 19 W est Baseline. Exper­ $12 rriott MOTHER’ S H ELPER n eeded after school and som e weekends. Own transportation, energetic, people-oriented, fashion enthu­ siast to train a s a buyer in our recycled BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES cruise LOOKING FO R som e exciting people to sports bar. 25-32 hours per week. $8 to work with growth potential. Apply: 227 W. FINANCIAL FREEDOM Seminars. April 20 end 838-4199, Century. b u sin ess binder. R egistration : MODELS ACTORS/ACTRESSES. For a free interview with a full-service talent network, Call 967-0019. U n iversity, M on day-S atu rday, 10-5; 7325 E. 3rd Ave. Scottsdale M/W/F 9 a.m.-4 p.m. T/TH 2 p.m.-6 p.m. EOE M/F/V/H Sunday, 12-4. BUSINESS M AJORS, national marketing firm looking for 3 key people for m anage­ ment positions. Call 968-6636. CLUB RIO is how accepting applications 1 966-0962. A ♦ ♦ ♦ 10-11:30am, or after 1:30pm. 5001 East Washington. to 1:30pm Or Sunday, 4:30pm to 9:30pm. three bedroom condo available after June ♦ Twin - $89, Full or Queen - $99 ♦ Convertible, hardwood frames available. 2 Call toll-free: 1-800-443-3991 CU i UPS Delivery - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED water features, signs; graphics, logo’s and other residential amenities for a PAD bedroom/2 bath, 10 minutes from campus. tion, covered parking, pool. $475. Also B U Y DIRECT FROM M AN U FACTU R ER lunch waitresses. Apply in person between $225. Available 5/1. 644-9498. to own lucrative business. Refundable fee: $25 single, $35 couple, including lunch NEW FUTON LITE Designed Especially for Students STO C KYARD S RESTAU RANT now hiring facilities, entry monuments, landscaping, interviewing. Work two weekend days: either Friday, 5pm to 9pm; Saturday, 8am evening). 7 qualified instructors teach how Lightweight, durable construction. 7” of cot­ ton, foam & bonded polyester. Won’t flatten out lik e co n ve n tio n a l fu to n s. P orta b le and ♦ comfortable. | Apache, 1 block west o f Rural. 820-8220. develop design concepts for recreational m anagem ent/financial The Im age Source. r 1 block south of tainment business. 20-30 hours a week. help weekend personnel. N eed enthusiastic, ASU , west o f Mill. Quiet, excellent condi­ FURNITURE to graduates. Our new, exciting, totally unri­ valed con cep t' is the ultimate in time and 21 (Friday evening, Saturday, 9-5 and TW O BEDROOMS, two bath condo, near individual NON-SMOKER MALE/FEMALE to Share 3 two master bedrooms, two baths, loft. Terrific technically-qualified LOOKING FO R weekend employment? 784-0973. townhouse, Immediate opening for a creative and sion plus bonus. Looking for just 10 o f the most dynamic and energetic students/ pool, recreational courts, washer/dryer. RESORT-STYLE Draftsman into practice. Financial services. Commis­ LUXURY CONDO, 2 bedroom. 2 bath, May 15. $450/month. 994-5488. PLANriER/DESIGN 483-2022. bedroom, bath, washer/dryer, full ameni­ ceiling Sunset Drive, rio.9. SECRETARY, PART-TIME in the enter­ LAND zi in bach. Many parks, golf. Cal! Jeff, $170 plus utilities. 437-1048, Dana. baths, 784-4000. A TTE N TIO N : M ARKETING/BUSINESS majors. Dream job! Put your knowledge $385. 2 bedroom condo, pool, tennis, microwave, services. Expanding to Arizona. Call Tim, housekeeping and childcare for two boys, ages 6 and 14. Room, board and salary, SHARE pus. B eau tifully fu rn ish ed , hu g e 1 b e d ro o m . 1 bath; 2 b e d ro o m . 2 bath a p a rt­ Experienced preferred. Apply at 1024 East preferred. Production training available for benefits. M ove in May 1. 894-2355. EOE. dryer, air-conditioned- Available June 1. Papago 11. (714)786-9575, (714)673-9376. O n ly Vi block fro m c a m ­ full- and part-time waitresses and cooks. qualified applicants. Apply at 933 East Ranch. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Rentng room spa. $300 or $325 (master), plus utilities. CONDO, UNIVERSITY and South River Road. 1100 square fe e t. 2 bedrooms, 2 area. Great SALES M ANAGER needed. New market­ LIVE-IN— W ORKING mom needs* light 834-5839, Doreen. Emerald— Mpsa. 966-6308. night. ing company, for travel and financial to $5.30 per hour plus room and board and 2 BEDROOM condo, furnished, washer/ walking distance to Fiesta Mall. 1432 West campus and time day shift. Cash register experience time hours free plus 3-day weekend. $4.72 Furnished, leave knows day er service, self-motivated people for full­ summer. bedroom house. $225,16 utilities. Close to WHO hours, KINKO’ S C O PY Center is seeking custom­ 2,000 square-foot house in McCormick 481-0096. 921-0931, Guatemala this summer. Call 966-3877. Arizona 86011. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex, large fenced $425/month. in residential setting. T em pe locations, day­ ful condo, Scottsdale, 3 miles from ASU. m essage. experience care and assist disabled individuals in yard. Pets okay. Near ASU, Priest and 5th Street. volunteer Arizona University, Box 5619, Flagstaff, ROOMMATE Rio ON ATTEND ANT CARE Technician— Teach ASU. 967-8204. Flexible PR A N K STE R S G AR and Brill now hiring HANDS ment and published clip o f ad to: Sheri loft, $175, plus utiliteS. 461-1023. bath, furnished, locations. 279-2822 ment complex. Large room, private bath. BEDROOM, 2 Peoria sional newspaper experience. One-year tyle. Available immediately. $350/month extras, spacious master bedroom, $225; 2 and washer/dryer, etc., etc. Luxury/resort lifes­ furnished. Beautiful neighborhood. Jacuz­ Call Towers. 921-3611. Phoenix encouraged to apply. P lease send state­ for etc. w est interests in minority cultures are especially roommates Towers, working atmosphere. P izza Stop, in The the 68020. T o apply, call Ticketmaster at RESORT TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS PE R SO N Very minority culture students and/or research TW O University part-time. Must be enthusiastic. North­ operating system applications for VAX and NEED in Excellent salary. 941-3812. GYMNASTICS/DANCE TEACHER bath, Baseline/Priest. All am enities included. Vaulted ceilings, skylights, NON-SMOKING FEMALE needed for 2 LAMPLIGHTER 921-0051. with interest or experience in working with - PEO PLE T O sell T-shirts. Pays $2/shirt. and type 60 words per minute minimum. write software for Real Time/Multi-user ^ N ew Yorker, 107 East Broadway. Apply in Sell students with strong math aptitudes to Mitch, 820-0363. PART-TIME DISHWASHER, night Tony’S back. Must have excellent clerical skills University. Master’s d eg ree and profes­ for $225/month and $275/month. Fully APARTMENT HOMES: K evin, - all aspects o f medical office front and secure, easy FINANCIALLY per day. O ffice setting. Call 966-7904. person after 2pm. going, male/female, 21-30. 2 bedroom, 2 including utilities. References required. home, 264-3426 bathroom. $220/month plus 16 utilities. MATURE, PART-TIME HELP, afternoons, 2-3 hours G RAD U ATING SENIO R needed to learn student newspaper at Northern Arizona APAR TM E N T M ANAGER, part-time work, 894-5432. Available May 1. with references to: 532 East Maryland, no.F, Phoenix 85012. lecturer to last home. Pool, fireplace,.washer/dryer. Own manage in Tem pe. Excellent benefit package. Send resume LE C TU R E R /A D V IS E R : Prefer married couple. Apply: 1339 South STUDIOS $295. Small, quiet Complex With amenities $250 month’s rent. 945-9092. ASU. Club Mr. White room, pool, washer/dryer, atruim. $175,16 garage. Beautiful, secure, enclave near 820-1979. Don ’t delay, call today! share furnished 2 M ASTER BEDROOM in 3 bedroom town- STUDIO FO R 24 hours per week eve­ nings and Saturdays. Cornerstone Mail. MALE/FEMALE, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, own utilities. . v Campus Location $550 Guaranteed utilities. 829-9281. STUDIO AND 1 bedroom. $225-240 1339 vaulted ceilings, appliances, efficient AC, apart­ to University, Tem pe. bedroom, 2 bath condo. $260 plus 16 evenings, EXQUISITE CONDO, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fuHy-furnished MALE/FEMALE T O 841-5055 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, 3 patios, pool, bath, CO U PLE Broadway, Tem pe. 2 bath condo. Washer/dryer, microwave, tion. 838-9661. N. W. Phoenix CONDO, CLOSE to campus, like new. 2 area, ANSW ERING SERVICE, part-time, tele­ ment. Next to B.C. and public transporta­ 894-1391 quiet, clean mobile home. Sell when done. Chandler FEMALE ROOMMATE, share 3 bedroom, bedroom/1 Tempe/Mesa H O SPITA L, EXPERIENCED 36-unit apartment complex Sunrise Preschools, 860-1611. apartment, a ir amenities. Rural/Apache. IN feOSTON for the summer? Share 2 flportment finders 1 A t both. O ne is V A loan, $62,900, 10% secretary/assistant. salary. Will train. 941-3812. 16 utilities. 437-3837. 2 B E D R O O M , 1 bath tow n h ou se. University/McClintock. $4,900 down, no permanent Work, 947-7261, ext. 583. Male/female. STAFF, graduate students: special Som e c ollege preferred. 303-441-2449. ALASK A C A N N E R Y and fishing employ­ included. Call 967-4962, Susan. FACULTY, N o previous airline experience required. deposit for move-in. 941-9219, RENTAL SHARING HELP WANTED HELP WANTED A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs 1249 E. Spence 829-9607 and mattress Call 423-9534, ask for Mark or Marcy. $50. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, spacious, big yard, ASU. $375 per month. First, last and C all now! W ATERBED, UNFINISHED with heater HELP WANTED SM ALL 2 bedroom house. Very close to Walk to ASU! M ove in fo r first month's rent. N o deposits/no fees! O n e month fre e with 13 month lease. O n e Bedroom/$355 month T w o Bedroom/2 Bath $515 month new. $150 or best offer. Call 966-4750. HOMES FOR RENT ries and benefits, including travel passes. Beat deal around— bed, TV, stereo, desk, dresser, Venetian chair, etc... 829-1519. racketball 988-7036. State Pres« Friday, April 13,1990 for doormen, bartenders and barbacks. N o experience necessary. Must b e 21 or older. Apply in person at 430 North Scottsale Road. CORK ‘N Cleaver excepting applications HELP WANTED for evening cocktails, lunch waitress and lunch hostess. Will train, short shifts. Conveniont GOLD ARROW CAMP On Huntington Lake in California’s High Sierra Hiring counselors & instruc­ tors. Pick up application at the Student Employment of­ fice. Schedule interview for April 17 or call camp office: 213-545-3233 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). 952-0585. DOBSON RANCH now hiring summer recreation staff. Nights/weekends. $4 per hour. For more information, call 831-7464. EARN LOTS, $200 to $600 part-time Working for local marketing firm. Looks hot on resumes in any field. Call Jim between 2pm and 4pm, 921-7755. • 5-Day Work W ok • Handa-On Training • Excellent Benefit* > Competitiva Salari«« Now's your chance to work for the best Sa­ loon/Restaurant com­ pany in the US. 34 loca­ tions in 4 states. Now taking applications for e n try-le ve l manage­ m ent positions. Said resume arid salary his­ tory to : c /o Minders Binders, 715 South Hayden Road,Tempe, AZ85281 JEWELRY ENGAGEMENT RING SPECIALIST 10th S t. & C am elback 279-4034 The Southwests largest diamond Importer. Page 23 Friday, April 13,1990 State P re - SERVICES TRAVEL GASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Avenue KRISTINE "BOO" Bott Happy 21st Birth- W H Y HAUL it home? Store it! Your lock FLY ANYTIME! Continental USA, $375 Jewelers, 414 S. MHI, Suite 101, Tempe. day! Finally legal! H ope it’s a happy one! and your key. Student summer specials. roundtrip. Leave today! Northwest USA, 968-5967 Love, your bestest friend, Mariam. Best Little Warehouse in Tem pe, 1905 $275! Alaska-three w eeks notice, $525. Other destinations available. W e also buy CASH PAID, jewelry o f all kinds, including LOVER gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc weekend together? Should w e try again? YO U R FUTURE revealed by the Tarot Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave, Tem pe Center. 968-6074. O.K., let’s do it» Love, Johnny. cards. DOVER, want to spend East Apache. 967-3900. the reading 894-1491 L.T.— G O O D luck on your test! Are you Buy it, sell it, find it, te ll it, in State Press Classifieds fo r with this ad. a p p o in tm e n t. HAWAII, Call or Cedar Rapids, May 11. Female only. Call Melissa, 894-0399. B U L IM IA M A N ZY ■ 5:30-10. 1986. Found at Cornerstone, 4/10. Call ... 5 0F E V ^ — ,’ MU Löst and Found- PERSONALS “ 500 FEVER.” AH G reeks get ready for the Phi Psi 500 on April 21. Catch Cathy " Canter. Wait till you s ee your present. Tom. Banner! W ay to go! T h e Tri-Dolts. SIGMA K A PPA ’S, A T O ’s, Delt’s— Let’s rage tonight! Club Delt is here! The TE R E SA go! The Tri-Delts. B ARRIOS, didn’t g et YOU make me Delts. accurate. W ONG of Photography. art, Portraits, personalized calendars. Better than reasonable. 234-3892, leave C^all anytime. message. $1.50 A A A Word Processing/Laser printer. N EED 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, resumes, etc ? Professional word process­ A P A specialization. Marion 839-42Ò9. ing with competitive prices. Call 431-9279. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, A L L PAPERS, resumes, letters, transcrib­ etc. At. Your Satisfaction guaranteed. $1.50/page for Parents com ing to tow n fo r graduation? typing, $2/page for graphs. 966-7809. SO M E T H IN G typed, papers, Usé this handy directory to get their lodging and transportation reservations made early! ing, editing, mailings. Grammar/spelling Service Word checks. C ollege graduate using IBM sor and former English teacher. Laser PAPERS/RESUMES, W O RD PRO CESS­ printer. Claudia, 9646012. ING, IBM PC , letter quality printing. Fast, A R IZ O N A low cost. Call Jackie, 831-8635. Dam e’ o f resorts and America’s longest- service, trariscribe tapes. Call after 1pm, REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your running recipient of the Mobil Award. (602)9556600, ext. 2400. Linda, 8316349. papers that, "professional” look. Macin­ read, editing, all included. Quick turn­ typed ($25); guaranteed. imager. Free typeset—quality delivery. Also, Call Carol, 924-8064. East Mesa. ‘ Grande A -P H I SUZANNE “ W inter, Spring* Summer or Fall, all you have td do is call campus, (602)820-7500. theses, EM BASSY SUITES— TEMPE/ASU Offers •2-room suite, free FU LL breakfast and RESUME SALE! Student rates! N o hidden extras! Near ASU. Call cocktails. 2 miles from ASU, 4400 South Professional Rural Road. $49 up to 4 people. Call (692)897-7444, ask for graduation rate. Im aged 921-1129 placing 1st in intramurals and 3rd in A AA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most W O RD PROCESSING — $1.50 per page. philanthropy. W ay to go! Keep the great major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 Resumes & editing available. Reliable. work up;. o r older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. Call 9216770 evenings & weekends. A SU ’s w eek in review news program, Happy 21st B-day (Monday)— Get ready Southwinds, now watch it! in Tempe, for som e serious partying. You are the Fridays at 4:30 and again Mondays at 2:30 greatest! Love, Brooke. (Channel 34). Elsewhere in the Valley on A R E YO U charming, witty, outgoing?,:. Phoenix Want a free date including dinner? Play Mondays at 4:30 and W ednesdays at 5pm. C able Learn, Channel RESTAURANTS/ BARS . . _________ We didn’t invent pizza... we simply perfected it PETS ■ RESTAURANTS/ BARS 34, the MUAB Dating Gam e April 18 at 11:30 on the W est Lawn. Applications available at the MU Activities Center, lower level o f the MU. ASU SW IMMERS present Freakers Bash ‘90!! "C o m e as UR not costume party.” All FOUND LARGE black male dog, Labrador sororities invited. For more information, P lease call 274-9062. mix, ASU campus, 4/10. Old, no collar^ s ee flyers on your floors. Stop our truck for fresh sandwiches, pizzas & salads! FREE W RO U G H T iron ca g e and food A TO ’ S DELT’ S Sigma Kappa’s— Tri-Delts com es with Nikki: Baby Goffin cockatoo, are ready to rage at Club Dell tonight!) hand fed, hand tamed, loves atten tion - Let’s make a splash!!! ready to talk. Moving, sadly must sell— 411 S. Mill • 921-4277 $420/offer 921-8732 A f O ’S — THE AD Pi’s are looking forward HAPPY HOUR 5-8 PM DAILY RESTAURANTS/ BARS_____________ Ronald McDonald House! Couldn’t b e for a better cause or with a better fraternity!.! ; ATTENTION: IF you are the hottest, best WE looking guy on campus, your name must perfected it! Gourmet pizza for the discri­ b e Bryan Leavitt! Happy quarter of à century, hunk! All my love and ail my body EXPERIENCE SHERATON San Marcos, term Arizona's Original G olf Resort, only 25 papers, resumes. Glendale — 842-46j37, minutes from campus... $79 single or anytime. double— May 4-14, 1990. (602)9636655. TEM PE T Y P IN G service, specializing in FIESTA INN $69 Graduation Package! short-notice papers, pick-up and delivery offered, comparable rates, discounts for Have your friends and relatives stay with the best! Call 967-1441. referrals, polish up your sentence struc­ ture, condensing/expanding, spell-check. GRADUATE 24-hour double^ Holiday Inn Airport East. C lose to m essage phone, 967-7167, Elaine. forms SPECIAL: $39, single or campus. (602)273-7778. W O R D PROCESSING, and resumes. reports, letters, Mac with HILTON PAVILLION special room rates: Laser $69, through May 13; $49, May 14-Sep- printer. 969-1708, leave message. tember 13. (602)833-5555. W O RD PROCESSING for your typing needs. Fast turnaround. Close to ASU. campus. May rates: $37 and $47/night. 1n- $1.25/up. transcription available. Roxan­ c iu d e s ne, 966-2825. (602)949-5115. H OSPITALITY SUITE Resort. C lose to b r e a k fa s t, c o c k ta ils . HOWARD JOHNSON Graduation Special: ADOPTION $39 Single/Double. Directly across from ASU. M ake r e s e r v a t io n s lip-scale ‘B i& aniCenter M ONDAY “ MÄR00NIAS PLAYS GUITAR j| W EDNESDAY 3-7 pm . r1/2 Hour with this ad ready to rage at Club Delt tonight! The Tri-Delts. • BANDERSNATCH MAMTOCK s I” 1* 1 BREWPUB N :1 SCOTTSO*LETO. ! GAM M A PH< W e loved the serenade on Monday and w e hope to party with you SERVICES . $44 MM BOO A 5,IL. _______ ( F r id a y - S u n d a y ) : ---- —---- . ..•»! - — r— weekdays or anytime weekends. Sandy and W ayn e (818)348-3895. from ASU. RAM AD A MISCELLANEOUS grants, and loans. Government 1 -8 0 0 -9 2 6 -8 4 4 7 , . INN-CHAN DLER, 1-10 «’ E L E C T R O L Y S IS - P E R M A N E N T e x t. g r a d u a tio n ra te : if bunnys can build sandcastles? Love Student discount you, Kirk. tion, 969-6954. SERVICES Call for more informa­ SPECIAL RATE: Best W estern Mezofta, 250 W est Main— Mesa. 5 miles/ASU. $40 room s. C a ll ( 6 0 2 )8 3 4 - 9 ^ 3 3 . MUSIC C A S IO RZ-1 digital sampling drum TRANSPORTATION machine, excellent, 4-channel power ampmixer, 60 watts. $275. Randy, 968-7076. POOL 329-7344 ACE LIMOUSINE— Grand occassions deserve Grand celebrations. Let us make TUTORS you r e v e n in g e x q u is ite ! 894*6533, 397-2253. G R E AT WHEELS, good deal! N ear ASU. TUTORING INFORMATION Call Gil Myers anytime. Accounting & Finance courses. Special rates for ACC 211 &212 students. 4 9 7 -2 0 9 7 . HOTELS/MOTELS HOTELS/MOTELS -H A P P Y EASTER to the women in COB Airport transport. Cash or credit. A c e Auto Rental, (602)894-6533. GUARANTEED RESERVATIONS, unlim­ ited mileage. Airport location. Starting at $ l9 .9 5 / d a y . C o u r te s y R e n t-A -C a r, (602)273-7503. Michelle! In. Him, "T h é W eek en d Waiter.” Service Front Brake Service 33rd ^ S£3 HEY 66... Cpngrats dn 20 for 20... You’re awesom e! . JIM HORNE: Happy Birthday to a man that has neyer been less than 100% wonderful. W e love you very much! Love, Annie, Christine. Mike, Patty and Streaker. HOTELS/MOTELS Ö F T E R E X P I R E S ,/ » 0 / 2 P — ÊÊM That’s Arteene, Sharin and, most Freon Extra A tla s P r o d u c ts . In c lu d e s 22-point inspection. For most cars. Expires 4-31-90. Atlas Products. W e ’ll install brake linings or disc pads, resurface disc rotors or drums, 'bleed and adjust brake system and inspect, d e a n and repack frontrwheel bearings. Expires 4-31-90. 4611 N. Scottsdale Road Scottsdale, A Z 85251 Rate (602) 945-0721 •N ot applicable to group bookings Basetf o n A m iability I P itts * p m t n t this coupon t t ch*ck-4i>) KE BRYAN, when you walked into my life, I knew my prayers had been answered. If you had arrived in a M ercedes, K would have been a major religious experience. Just Jcidding, sweetie?!! Happy Anniver­ sary!!! I love you, Kristen. Southern e«a-07S7 $itfp! ■' \ (602)961-4444 a il hair removal. R em ove unwanted hair forever. and Chandler Boulevard. 1 2 miles from ASU. STUDENTS- ENTREPRENEURS: instant cash: $39-plUS tax. GRETCH — H A P P Y Easter, bunny! I love the perfect girlfriend that you are. I wonder — '4 (800)528-8299. HOURS. Mon-Thur.. . 14 a.m.-3 a.m. B i-Sat. . . . . . 11 a.m.-5 a.m. Sun ... .. Noon-2 a.m. 1301 E. university P h o e n ix RAMADA HOTEL Airport East, 1600 South 52nd Street, (602)9676600, 3 miles GL-127-13. Ladies Night. 50%OFF table time 3-9 p m NO COVER ...¿,1 and security. Expenses paid, attorney involved. P lease call collect after 6pm gu a ra n te e d ! Play for LESS - $1.80 per hour! DELT’S, A TO ’S. Sigm a Kappa’s — W e ’ re you very, very much. Thanks for being A SU our special graduation rates! S p e c ia l Grill, Snacks & ice Cold Beer, Wine & soda Row, Aisle. soon. The Delts. gradu atin g 1-800-321-2211. you sometime. Reply requested. Third day night. Questions? 967-9688. of ASU . competition, good luck. Would like to m eet. D ON’T M ISS the Kappa Sig volleyball tournament April 12-14 with blowout Satur-. V fam ily newborn, W e can offer a life full o f love RH A Exec! Looking to working with you 7 : Heard about your upcoming a n y tim e . fornia couple who would love to adopt a XpCSij's C o m e r . DAVID KATZ: Missed you on Mill Ave., c o lle c t, Mill Avenue, downtown Tem pe, 921-4277. simply C O N G R A TS SAKENA Brian and Sam for guys! Metz N ic k , minating taste. P izza Doug Out, 4 l 1 S : we FRir NITE the MU Activities Center, lower level of the students. Call 1-800-842-4242. Ask about or Airport and M esa hotels, just minutes from pizza, BACHELOR NO.2, if I w ere a popsicle, April 18, 1i 30. Applications available in B e th M A R R IO T T / C O U R T Y A R D . invent what would you do to me?... Could you .a contestant on the MUAB Dating G ame; INNSUITES TEM PE welcom es incoming friends, happliy-married Caucasian Southern Cali­ DIDN’T Tockg-t answer a question like this? If so, com e be longing to share our lives and love with your newborn. Let’s help each other. Call CONSIDERING AD O PTIO N? W e are a fem ale o f love. importantly, now ! (602)967-9431. (914)621-1361. all for you forever, — Your »passionate MU: m anuscripts, ADOPTION: W E a re a warm, loving couple to the Easter e g g hunt today for the Pi Luv, A D Pi SHEILA’S T Y P IN G and W ord Processing. . C o rresp o n d en ce, Y O U ’VE HEARD all about N C TV and and TH 6 e there... You’ve got a friend.” . 268 5-Star COM FORT INN-TEMPE. Special ASU graduation rate. From $29,95.5 miles from laser reports. Call Joe, EPS, 839-2770. ACCURATE RESUM ES composed and TRANSPORTATION RESUMES— $10 B ILT M O R E — T h e YEAH A LPH A Gams! Congratulations on ALL G REEKS Bash. Phi Psi 500, April 21, April Fast, produced with excellent turn-around time. around. Call 894-6074. on Friday. P.S. Get ready to get wet. Delts. Saturday night is the grand finale. The SAM works AREA. Typing, word processing, tosh and Laser print. Susan, 945-1551. TRI DELTS The Delts are ready to rage beginning of an awesom e weekend. P;S. Reasonable 990-1818, 946-2475. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. AC C EN TS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ THINK SPIRIT! AG D H A P P Y hour on Thursday is the Photoworks discounts, fax service! Call Dr. Copy, ' AAKURÌT TYPIN G — Short papers, prompt 423-5504 sometime. Tom Hahn, 921-9413. so happy. .. I love you! SILVER/KID-MAN computer. 9646994. Cactus Nail Company Scottsdale your number Saturday, let’s meet for lunch JASO N $1.65 AN D up. Professional word proces­ Stron g bonding made with fiberglass resins. Doesn’t yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. Full set $22 • Fills $18 good one. Love, your little sis. PHOTOGRAPHY M odels’ , actors’ , and artists’ , portfolios. editing. Processing, Linda, 839-6167. Thin and Natural Sculptured Nail week. But the weekends here now. Have a Call Jessie, TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING resumes, list and I must agree that it’s been a bad typing/word N eed it fast? LETTER-QUALITY TYPIN G and graphs Friday, Delta Tau Delta. SIGMA KA PPA Niff, alright I’v e heard your EXPERIENCED A RESUME SPECIAL, $24.95, term paper ASU American Youth Hostels. 1026 North 9th 990-2552 SIGMA K APPAS. Let’ s get wet together on 784-8004. 968-7771, 8am 6pm , for details. MEI travel packs, other travel items also available. Contact 468-3850 STUDENTS SIG-EPS— C O N G RATS on winning the twice a week. P lease contact Tiffany, Hostel Both issued on the spot! ISIC cards, W e ship your stuff home! 10 to 1,000 pounds— including furniture, com puters and electronics. Packaging Store Tri-Delts. A-CHI-O’S — CONGRATULATIONS on winning the Greek W eek Banner! Way to AFTERSH O CK... Youth : calendars, T-shirts, boxers and caps on Cady Mail, starting Monday, April 16. HAVE YOU lost something? Check the Birthday, International Street. Phoenix, Arizona or call 254-9803 PHI PSI 500— Purchase you All campus TU TO R NEEDED for Math 117. Once or etc... Self-Serve Macintosh computers and Laserprinter too. 933 E. University, call processing. event of the yer— S Y R ! Aquatic Center, Greg, 968-1941. 25th PRICE student-fare flights, grab your friends and b e a part of Manzy’s FOUND: THOM AS Jefferson class ring, Fourteen lessons and one tost. 827-9591. grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, APA/MLA membership with purchase o f Eurail pass. . G innie M onroe, ACSW 897-0444 RESIDENTS: Tomorrow night, NEEDED: A tutor for Finite Math 119. makes the 945-5744. % Private, confidential counseling. Insurance accepted. There is a solution! M ANZY 13: Get psyched for tomorrow paper seven days! ONE-W AV AIRLINE ticket to Minneapolis Peace, love and Batman— Twick. KINKO’S 966-2035. 960 .W . U n iversity, call 9216166. Open early, open late, open 5/22, longer to deliver than last time! I love you!!) help. Love— Sherri and Regina. HAPPY leaving Greasy Tony’s takes a couple minutes night! Thanks for all o f your wonderful AAA A A ROUND-TRIP, returning 8/16. $340. 897-7088, anytime. Leave m essage. ready for the w eekend? I am! I hope EREE LOST/fOUIMD A transferable coupons! 968^7283. $5 TUTORS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING PERSONALS JEWELRY O U R G IF T TO Y O U s u te Press Friday, April 13,1990 DIVE INTO... N jO ^ ? o O o ^ ~ ^ o ' e X S v ^ ' v s C l^ ' '0 < V ^ e S ~ , c = vi©^saKe^!i _. \0 ^ # P AQeOx' S ^ ^ n ò ^ rv >v*S c«*-® 'iB r a : ■'•íMsa^É. ERS