K C opyright, State Press, 1990 Tem pe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 72 No. 132 Wednesday, April 25,1990 ASU seeks re v ie w o f 2 skyb o x liq u o r p lan s By NICO LE CARROLL S tate Press The ASU administration has asked the State Liquor Board to review the legality of two new plans for bringing alcohol into Sun Devil Stadium skyboxes during Phoenix Cardinals football games this fall, a top state liquor official said Tuesday. Arizona Liquor Board Superintendent Hugh Ennis Said his office is considering the option of having a skybox caterer set up a kitchen on the premises and, if needed, obtain a liquor license to serve alcohol. The alternative plan would force skybox owners to bring their own liquor to the high-rise seats. If neither plan is acceptable to officials, the University could be forced to forbid alcohol consumption in the skyboxes. “ If they don’t arrive at some other solution, they’ll arrive at (no alcohol service) by default,” Ennis said. Ennis said he forwarded the proposals to state Attorney General Bob Corbin, who is expected to draft an opinion on the options by May 1. The Arizona Biltmore, last season’s skybox caterer, and Sun Devil Liquors of Mesa, a Biltmore supplier, were both cited in December for violations involving the delivery of alcohol to the stadium. Arizona state law forbids the delivery of hard liquor for a profit. The Biltmore was charging a $15 fee to deliver alcohol during the Cardinal games. Because of the violations, stadium management is being forced to alter the way alcohol is obtained in the skyboxes. The skyboxes have been a source of controversy since June 1988, when the Arizona Board of Regents voted to only allow the consumption of alcohol in the skyboxes — and not in the stands — during .Cardinal games. ASU’s General Counsel Bruce Meyerson said there are advantages to both of the options under review. “If skybox holders serve their own alcohol, it is certainly less expensive to them,” he said. Meyerson said ASU’s responsibility for the skybox patrons is not an issue because tenants are required to take out host liability insurance, which makes each skybox tenant liable T u m to SkyboxM , page 18. Stadium Skyboxes TJ- s°*<*/su.. p™» Panel studies strategies for future growth S By KEVIN SHEH S tate Press Scott Troyanos/State Press C lean S w e e p Thdravut C heew asittirungrueng, a freshm an engineering m ajor, dusts o ff th e w ooden flo o rs on th e second flo o r Of th e Student R ecreation C enter. “ J o e ,” as his friend s ¿all him , takes care, o f th e flo o rs d aily. About 25 University leaders met on Tuesday to examine strategies that would scale down ASU’s main campus population in response to steadily growing enrollment. “Our task today is to frame the issues in a general kind of brainstorming session,” ASU President Lattie Coor said before the session held at the College of Business Center for Execu­ tive Development. “This is an explorat­ ory meeting.” A panel submitted a presentation detailing four issues that would critical­ ly impact the downsizing of ASU: students, faculty, community role and resources. Individual panel members addressed these aspects. COOr Provost Richard Peck said the term “downsizing” refers only to the main campus, adding that ASU will have a total enrollment of more than 60,000 students at all its facilities by the year 2000. “What we’re talking about is controlling the enrollment, downsizing this campus and providing opportunities Turn to Growth, page 9 .. Tempe Center shop to move, says ASU ‘doesn’t care’ By HOBART ROW LAND S ta te Press The owner of Deann’s Hallmark store in Tem pe C enter said ASU’s lack of commitment to keeping the Universityowned shopping center properly maintained and retail-oriented will cause the small gift shop to move from its location early this summer. Store owner Bob Burd said ASU intends to turn Tempe Center into into University office space and is hindering retail involvement in the property. “ (ASU) just doesn’t care,” Burd said. But University officials contend that although ASU bought'the property in 1983 B ook jdent groups are mpiling a list that they hope will curb soaring textbook prices. The service starts today. P ag e 6 with the intention of leasing spaces to retail stores until 1994 — when it will be designated for office usage — they have not discouraged any retail stores from staying in the complex. “We didn’t go out and elect to put University usage in there,” ASU Director of Purchasing Karen Kloc said, adding that the Hallmark store space will be available for another retail tenant by June 30. Kloc denies that maintenance needs are neglected at the shopping center. “It’s not the Taj Mahal,” she said. “But maintenance has not been deferred.” ASU is raising rent on the spaces in the complex, and Kloc admits some tenants have expressed concern over the increases. She said that although many stores are paying less than half the market rate for the spaces, in four years, tenants will be charged the normal market rate of $10 a square foot. “I-think we hurt some people’s feelings (with the increase),” Kloc said. Burd maintains that it would not be in his best interest to renew his lease in light of the uncertain future of the complex. “ (ASU) bought it with the intention of using it for University department space,” he said. John Wehr, owner of Books Etc. in Tempe Center, said he is happy with ASU’s management. He said Tempe Center will remain a retail complex for quite a while, and he believes rumors that the complex will be leveled in five years are unfpunded. “Unless they drive the tenants out,” he said, “it will be here until the year 2000.” Pic ’n’ Save Supermarkets will be leaving the shopping center this summer for its own reasons, according to regional manager Earl Bonnecaze. “We’ve been looking for a site where we can expand our building and improve business,” Bonnecaze said. The store will be moving to a larger property on Rural and Baseline, he said. cmu . w » . R ea lity C heck: A tten tio n ! H ere's a step-bystep guide to writing a resume — and, with a little luck, lan­ ding a great post­ graduation job. Krista Amend has turned her childhood Page 23 Today’s weather: Pertly cloudy, with a 20 percent chance off ehowere end e high in the upper 70s. Tonight’« low will be In the upper SOe. Claseifieds...... College Culture.............. ..............2 3 C o m i c # . . . . . . . . . . . ........................... 26 PoUceReport..........................................1 7 Sport W o d d /N a tk > n ...........................................3 Wednesday, April 2 5 ,19 9 0 Today State Presi ASASU Senate amends election code The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries fo r publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. M eetings •A dult Children of Alcoholics and Codependents Workshop will have Lenna Erickson discuss "Who Takes Care of the Caretaker’’ from noon to 1 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon in the basement of Newman Center. •American Humanics Student Association will have its last meeting of the year at 2:40 p.m. in the Farmer Education Building, Room 215. •A.W .A .R .E. will meet at 11:30 a.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •Campus Aglow will have its end of the year celebration at 12:30 p m. in the MU Graham Room. •Economics Association will have its final meeting at 4:30 p.m. at Ducks Bar and Grill in the Holiday inn on Rural and Apache. •Investors Club at ASU will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the MU. •P hi Alpha Delta will have a final meeting of the year party at 3 p.m. in SS 308. •SCEC presents its Childrens Book Drive this week at the Payne Student Lounge or Special Education office. •Students Against Racism will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •Students For Life presents June Baker, director of Crisis Pregnancy Center. She will discuss the actual existence of post-abortion syndrome at 2 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •Varsity Pemmacat Club will have President Sony Crews speaking at 9:30 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. Approves petition to establish committee for cultural diversity Policy of Neutrality within Associated Students as 10 penalty points. The accumulation of 20 penalty points by a candidate results in forfeiture Of the election. Senate Petition 7, introduced by College of Liberal Arts and ByOANNOWICKI Sciences, Sen. Gloria Ruiz, will create an investigative committee to explore ways to enhance die participation of S tate Press Thè Associated Students of ASÜ Senate ended its 1989-90 ASU’s major culturally diverse constituencies within legislative season by unanimously passing two bills that Associated Students. The committee will then make recommendations to a joint meeting of the University Affairs would amend the election code in the ASASU bylaws. In addition, it approved a petition that will create an and Government Operations committees, which will forward investigative committee to explore ways to enhance the final recommendations to the full Senate for approval. The Senate passed the petition unanimously by a voice participation ASU’s culturally diverse constituencies within vote. ASASU. Senate Bill 118, introduced by College of Architecture ASASU Executive Vice President Mike Pressendo said this Sen. Andrew McGuire, will amend thè election code in die year’s Senate was one of the best ever. ASASU bylaws to include Associated Students Policy 602 “I’ve never seen a Senate that has been so in tune to the requiring neutrality of Associated Students employees, students’ needs or with such a sense of responsibility to their facilities and resources during ASASU elections. constituencies,” Pressendo said. “It’s been a pleasure to Senate Bill 119, also introduced by McGuire, will amend the work with diem all and I’ve both grown from and enjoyed the code to establish the penalty for violating any part of the experience.” We’re looking for a few good men and women Apply now to work at the State Press in the felt semester 1990. Application deadline for the following newsroom positions has been extënded until noon Friday, April 27. P o s itio n Assistant City Editor News Reporter Copy Editor Photographer Freelance Writer Staff Artists Magazine Writer 5690H 5684H 5687H 5686H 5697H 5685H 5684H Applicants must pick up job referral forms from Student Employment, sec» orid floor of the Student Services Build­ ing. Completed applications will be accepted at Matthews Center, north basement, Room 15. T he Sun D e v i l S p a r k Y e a rb o o k M a tth e w s C e n te r , b a s e m e n t ‘ 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 ciYienc H 4 IR Referral Number “ Don’t make me come and get you!” W ITH C U TTER S THE BONEDADDYS WITH SPECIAL GUEST A Z Z IZ Z A P erfect Cut Every Time T D e s ig n e r P e rm S p e c ia l ' w /coupon $2395 Sham poo w /coupon w /the $6.95 C U T N o A ppo intm en t N ecessary Ever! B ring T h e W hole Fam ily! ram ar Sham poo, C u t & S tyle Included Long H air S lig h tly H ig h er i h a ir cutters tm T O M O R R O W , A P R IL 26 7 e n c ra m a r Ham cutters SPONSORED IN PA R T BY University & Rural Rd. Cornerstone Shopping Center 968-8008 Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 « Sun. 12-5 Worid/Nation State Press Wednesday, April 2 5 ,19 9 0 Page 3 D e m o n s tra to rs dem and llie s c u re s ig n a tio n BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) r- Thousands of anti­ communist demonstrators regrouped in a main Bucharest square hours after being dispersed by riot police Tuesday to demand the resignation of Interim President Ion lliescu. About 3,500 demonstrators waved their fists and cheered as one speaker equated the National Salvation Front —Iliescu’s party — with the Soviet KGB. Many shouted, “Down With Communism!” . It was the third day of nearly constant protest against lliescu and the Front, which are linked in the minds of many Romanians with past Communist excesses. lliescu was appointed interim president in the wake of the bloody December revolution that overthrew dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. He served under Ceausescu but fell out of favor and was demoted to lesser jobs in the Communist Party. His Communist past and .that of other Front officials makes them suspect in the eyes of those Romanians who claim the Front has been infiltrated by Marxists paying only lip,service to democracy. In a morning session of parliament, Nica Leon, president of the Liberal Democratic Party and a member of the governing Council of National Unity, said Hie protesters rejected what they considered the Communist elite still leading the country. “Those people want the (former) Communists toppled from the leadership,” he told the Council, The Council, in which the Front shares power with opposition groups, is acting as a makeshift parliament until elections scheduled for May 20. lliescu described the protesters as “thugs.” That drew protests from opposing legislators who noted that Ceausescu used such language to label his political opponents. The demonstrations at University Square began Sunday and lasted uninterrupted until Tuesday at dawn, when clubwielding, helmeted riot police forcibly dispersed about 200 Turn to Romania, paga 15. Associated P t m t photo A nti-com m unist dem onstrators break through p o lic e lines Tuesday, during a dem onstration a t U niversity S q uare in B ucharest, Rom ania. T he protesters are dem anding th e resignation o f Rom anian P resident Ion lliescu . Polhill helps experts locate rem aining captives WIESBADEN, West Germany (AP) Freed U. S. hostage Robert Polhill awoke Tuesday anticipating a reunion with his two sons and questions from a special U. S. government team about other Western captives in Lebanon. There were indications that a second hostage release might soon be in the offing, but U. S. officials said they had “no information” it might happen. And a London newspaper reported that several dozen Shiite Moslem prisoners held in southern Lebanon by an Israeli-backed militia would be released in the next few days as part of a deal that won Polhill’s release. “According to the latest information that we have received from Lebanon, maybe after a few days another hostage will be released,” Iran’s foreign minister, Ali Akbar Velayati, told the Cable News Network in an interview Monday. He did not specify the nationality of the hostage who might be released. Hussein Musawi, a leading pro-Iranian Shiite Moslem cleric in Lebanon, also said another of the 17 remaining Western hostages may be freed soon. Musawi is thought to have influence over the group that held Polhill. Tehran state radio said Polhill’s release might be a prelude to the release of other hostages but that Washington and other W estern governm ents “ m ust show Hubble telescope out of this world after seven year delay CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Seven years late, the Hubble Space Telescope is where it belongs: out of this world and in search of others so distant that they may have been formed at the beginning of time. Less than five hours after it rode into space aboard the shuttle Discovery on Tuesday, the $1.5 billion tele­ scope sent its first test radio signal. At the sign of life, applause and cheers erupted at Discovery the Goddard Space Flight Center in Mary­ land where astronomers monitored their spacecraft. “As near as we can tell, everything looks perfect,” said astronaut Steve Hawley from the shuttle. Hawley’s job on Wednesday will be to drop the telescope overboard for a 15-year stay in space. Discovery, trailing an arc of white smoke into a brilliant blue sky, carried the silvercolored telescope to an orbit 380 milesAbove Earth — higher by 70 miles than any previous shuttle. There, the Hubble will stay to search for yet-unseen wonders of creation with instruments that can look 14 billion years backward in time. Each trip around the Earth was taking the Discovery crew 97.3 minutes, longer than on any previous shuttle flight because of the altitude. The view was different, too. “I’ve got to tell you, I just made it up to the flight deck for a first look out the window,” said mission specialist Kathryn Sullivan, who flew the shuttle once before, in 1984. ‘‘Three-thirty is a whole lot higher than 120 was,” she said, referring to the altitude in nautical miles. “I don’t know how much longer it takes you to get here, but every second of the wait is worth every second that you get.” “Our window on the universe!” National Aeronautics and Space Administration launch commentator George Diller exulted as the Discovery rose off its seaside launch pad. “It’s a beautiful day to have Hubble Space Telescope in orbit instead of here on Earth like it’s been for so many years,” said NASA administrator Richard Truly. “Hubble’s in its element and I’m delighted.” The telescope was supposed to be launched in 1983, but technical problems and the Challenger accident delayed its deployment. It suffered a further delay two weeks ago when the countdown was stopped at Hie four-minutes-to-go point because of a faulty hydraulic unit on the shuttle. While it remained on Earth, the telescope cost $7 million a month to exercise and keep in readiness. In its first day in space, that checkout and testing continued remotely under control of the Goddard center. On hand to watch the Discovery launching Turn to Shuttle, paga 22. goodwill.” On Monday, the 55-year-old business professor spent his first full day of freedom. Doctors said Polhill appeared to be in good shape for a man who had been in captivity since Jan. 24, 1987, but he was malnourished, mildly dehydrated and quite tired. U. S. officials said members of a State Department debriefing team have already had some general conversations with Polhill after giving him a day of rest. They said it would be.up to him and the doctors when the debriefing begins but hinted it might start today. When Polhill was freed on Sunday, he said he wanted to see his sons, Stephen, 26 and Brian, 23. U. S. officials said the two were to arrive from the United States today for a reunion. Clear details of his 39 months in captivity have not yet emerged, butU. S. officials say he was likely held in the same building as two other American professors kidnapped with him*— Alann Steen, 51, of Boston and 42-year-old Jesse Turner, of Boise, Idaho. They were seized at the Beirut University Campus where all three had taught. A U. S. official said they assume the three men were kept “at least in the same building” if not in the same room in Lebanon. But the official, speaking on condition of Turn to Hostage, page 15. News Briefs Zaire lifts 20-year ban on opposition parties KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) — Bowing to weeks of pressure, President Mobutu Sese Seko said Tuesday he. had lifted a 20-year ban on opposition parties and would let a multiparty government replace his in a year. Thousands of Zaireans chanting, singing and waving branches poured into downtown Kinshasa, the capital, and blocked the streets to cheer the president’s decision. Mobutu, absolute ruler since taking power Nov. 24, 1965, announced in a nationally broadcast speech that he was setting up a transitional government to rule until free .elections could be held. No election date was set. “I am taking leave of the Popular Movement for the Revolution,” said Mobutu, 59. He said he would no longer be head of the party that supplanted the government in 1970, but would remain as president “at the request of the people of Zaire.” 't ~ Germanys set July 2 date for unification BONN, West Germ any (AP) — Chancellor Helmut Kohl and East German Prime Minister Lothar de Maiziere on Tuesday named July 2 as the day for economic and social union of the two G erm anys, a West G erm an spokesman said. Union in those areas will bring the divided nation a long way toward full unification after more than four decades of separation following the horror of the Nazi dictatorship and defeat in World War II. The issue of political union, or holding ’ an election to form a single government, remains to be worked out. Physicians question: Eschew or not eschew? WASHINGTON (AP) - So you thought you did your part on Earth Day by picking up litter? Now the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine claims that if you are going to be an e n v iro n m e n ta lis t (76 p e rc e n t of Americans say they are), you’ve got to be a vegetarian (that’s 3 percent). In other words, chew vegetables and eschew hot dogs to save the world. “If you’re a meat eater, you are contributing to the destruction of the environment, whether you know it or not,” says Neal D. Bernard, 36, a 1980 g ra d u a te of G eorge W ashington University Medical School and president-^ of the 30,000-member com m ittee. “Clearly the best thing you can do for the E a rth is to not su p p o rt anim al agriculture.” Opinion ESSli State Press Wednesday, April 2 5,1990 N o p a re n ta l c o n s e n t Teens deserve hassle-free access to birth control Currently, any teenage girl in Arizona can walk into a clinic and get birth control supplies without any type of parental consent. And this is exactly as it should be. However, many parents and conservative political action groups would like to Change this. They believe that it is the parents’ right to know when a teen becomes sexually active. If a teen has to obtain the permission of her parents to be on birth control, their logic follows, she will be less apt to become sexually active. In other words, easily a v a ila b le b irth c o n tro l p ro m o tes promiscuity. Unfortunately, in the real world, not all parents have the time or the inclination to concern themselves with 'their children’s sexual behavior. Most American homes are now two-income families so teens are often left without a truly guiding parental influence for most of the day. Sadly, many of these teens do not feel they have any adult influence that really cares whether or not they get pregnant. With or without available birth control, teens will continue to engage in sexual activity. A law mandating parental consent, or even notification, would only limit the number of teens using birth control. This means that the number of teen pregnancies would skyrocket. Mandating that teens go through the sexual experimentation stage without birth control because it “promotes” promiscuity ‘is like demanding that the United States not maintain a military because it “promotes” war. We all know our nation’s defense is necessary. If the United States were left unprepared for an attack, the damages would be considerable. The same holds true for a woman. Unwanted pregnancies, whether the child is born or aborted, are like attacks on an unprepared nation'and can wreak considerable damage on a young woman’s future. We, as a nation, would never consider sending our soldiers into combat without properly outfitting them with the necessary training and gear to ensure survival and a good chance of victory. Can we do any less for teens as they face their sexual battle? Sending teens though their most critical stage of sexual development, where the desire to experiment is the strongest, without providing the “combat gear” and “training” necessary is like sending them into a losing battle. While education is a necessary part of preparing our teens for the “sexual war,” providing them with the proper tools for protecting themselves is also vital. Mandating parental approval for birth control would only take away a teen’s ability to protect herself from a bad situation. Sure, there are teens who feel their parents are open enough to allow them to have access to birth control. But these teens ‘M ost American homes are now two income families so teens are often le ft without a truly guiding parental influence for m ost o f the day. ’ are more apt to discuss the possibility of obtaining birth control with their parents anyway. There are also many teens who use abstinence as a form of birth control. But mandating parental approval on birth control would ultimately expose teens outside these two groups to the risk of pregnancy: This is a penalty that they are financially, as well as psychologically unable to handle. What does this have to with students at ASU? Obviously most college students have come of age and no longer need to consider parental approval before opting for birth control. But we are also the voting population closest in age to the teens; we are the ones who can b est id en tify w ith th e ir circumstances. Older Americans grew up in a different era than the teens today are e x p e rie n c in g . The p r e s s u r e s , circumstances and values have changed. While I don’t mean to exclude the older student attending ASU, the majority of c o lle g e -a g e s tu d e n ts g re w up in circumstances much more similar to current teen life than did the older generation. Now we have the ability and right to vote. It is our; responsibility to consider and represent the needs of the teens who currently have no voting privileges. We need to remember them because we have the ability to affect their lives and they have virtually no voice in the political process. If we do not voice their concerns for them, teens may find themselves very limited not only in their freedoms but in their ability to be responsible. Teens wanting to obtain b ir th c o n tro l a r e d is p la y in g th e responsibility level of adults. Let’s not force them to act like children. Letters Library hours far too short E d ito f: Pat Tefft’s letter raised a complaint about the University library that should get the attention of other serious students, faculty and staff. This student was denied access to the multi-million dollar facility dedicated by the state of Arizona to the education of its students and absolutely essential for their use. That should not happen. It is not a new problem. About 30 years ago, as a member of the faculty committee charged with basic planning of Hayden Library building, I strongly urged the incorporation of features in the design which would permit reduced staff operation during low-use periods. Some years of my graduate study had been done at a state university where the library m aintained open doors until midnight every day of the year except one. There was never a question of early closing or lock-Out days to shut off study Q u o ta b le “Modem art is what happens when painters stop looking a t girls and persuade themselves they have a better idea. ” — John Cfiardi S TA TE PRESS DARRIN HOSTETLER E d itor . CAROLYN HOFIG M anaging E ditor Asst. M anaging E d ito r................. ............. SUZANNE ROSS C ity E d ito r........................... ...M ICH ELLE ALLMAN BURGESS O pinion E d itor....... ....... ............ ...... BRIAN TASSINARI Asst. O pinion E d ito r..... LYNN VAVRECK M agazine E d ito rs..................... .................. m e ü h a l v e n s u n .....................SHARON KANEY ........ CHRISTINE HERBRANSON .............................. DAN NOW ICKI ....................... M ICHELLE CRUFF ..............................STEVE KRICUN .................................. SETHSULKA Copy C h ie f............................ ...........................NICOLE PERRON Photo E d ito r...:......... ............. ..............S C O T T TROY ANOS REPORTERS: G rem lyn Bradley, M ike Burgess, N icole C arroll, Carolyn Huffm an, Sonja Lew is, Dan N ow icki, H obart Rowland, Kevin Sheh, Tenny Tatusian, V anja Thom pson. K ristie Young. SPORTS REPORTERS: V icki C ulver, M atthew K aster,Larry Newell, K ris Tim m ons, Dan Zeiger. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jam ie Lytle, S undi Kjenstad, W ill Pow­ ers, T.J. Sokol. COPY EDITORS: C harles G ranieri, K risten Johnson, JütTibke. FREELANCE W RITERS: Joseph C raw ford, H eidi Donat. opportunities. This policy was so helpful to me and my students that I wished for it at ASU, but we didn’t get it. During my tenure of more than 30 years at ASU, library lock-up appears to have been a whim-driven policy that has irritated and frustrated faculty as well as students, standing in disbelief, shaking the door of the closed educational tool during reasonable hours. Under this new administration, with more aggressive participation of students in University decisions, and in view of the pressure for academic excellence for ASU; perhaps this road block can be removed and the libraries can accommodate patrons when patrons need them. Truet B. Thompson P ro fesso r E m eritu s ^E lec trical and Computer Engineering Thanks a lot, Dean Editor: No thanks are in order to Leon Shell, dean of student life and other administration officials for quashing a good time, i.e. the successful and relatively uneventful Earth Week concerts on Qld Main lawn. I mean, we can have loud mariachis on Cady Mali and bands on PV Beach, but not at Old Main park, next to the sacred University Club and ROTC (Old Main) buildings. Heaven knows people enjoying themselves in the sun must be a bad thing; besides, Old Main lawn will probably be a parking lot soon, so we wouldn’t want students to think that campus lawns are theirs or anything like that. Katie Hunsaker Sophomore, Geology K im berly H arris, M ichelle H enry, C hristopher Horak, Kelly Jain, M ichael LaM antia, Deborah Nemko, Francine S tahl, Mish T ell, Kram er W etzel. CARTOONISTS: M ike R itter, J u lie Sigwart. COLUMNIST: Jade Danner INTERNS: Shelly LeV ick, Chad Redwing. PRODUCTION: Dane C hrist, Nancy Ness, M ark Nothaft, Robyn P inkston, Lynne Senzek, T.J. S okol, Stacy Tow ar, Eric Zotcavage. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Jay Eckhardt, Dan E llstrom , Jessica Irw in, Paul Lee, Karen Lisiew ski, Todd M artin, A llison M urphy, Pete N ichols, T erri Sm ith, Ray Zickel. The S tate Press is published M onday through Friday during the academ ic year except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona S tate U niversity, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom : (602) 965-2292. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. A dvertising and P roduction.' (602) 965-7572. The S tate Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU cam pus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU adm inistration, faculty, sta ff or student body. L E T T E R P O L IC Y The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. AU letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in lenath to be eligible for publication. a Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo IQ to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to: State Press 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287-1502. Opinion Pase 5 Wednesday, April 2 5,1990 State Press J u s tic e fo r a ll Citizens, not judges will restore U.S. Constitution J o s e p h S o b ra n U n iv e rs a l Press S yn d ica te WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court’s ruling in the vexing Kansas City public school case illustrates the profound problem raised by judicial activism. As thé présent system has evolved, the judicial branch of government can simply award itself new powers. The court ruled 5-4 that a federal judge may order a local government to raise taxes to p ay fo r w h at is d e sc rib e d as desegregation. The details of the case are complicated, but they don’t affect the constitutional issue: Our highest court has ruled that unelected courts may order elected officials to raise taxes: Taxation without representation is back — in the name of equality. In principle, this means that the Supreme Court could order Congress to raise taxes, if Hie court decided, say, that our society isn’t desegregated enough. Not that the federal judiciary is likely to go that far. The better part of valor being discretion, the federal courts have usually shied away from confronting Congress, which has power over the Supreme Court. State and local governments, however, have no protections under the system of checks and balances, so the federal courts have by and large inflicted their whimsies at the state and local levels. ‘In this case the Supreme Court did hold that the judge in question, Russell Clark, went too far by imposing his own tax plan. ’ In this case the Supreme Court did hold that the judge in question, Russell Clark, went too far by imposing his own tax plan. But the majority asserted that Clark “plainly” had the power to order local officials to impose a plan satisfactory to him. The majority opinion was delivered by Byron White — the justice who coined the apt phrase “raw judicial power” on another occasion. (Maybe he’s forgotten.) * In dissent, Anthony Kennedy pointed out the obvious, that “taxation imposed by the unelected, life-tenured federal judiciary” is repugnant to the principle of selfgovernment. But Kennedy might have gone further. When the Supreme Court confers such power on any federal judge, it implicitly confers power on itself. For the court to decide such a case at all is for it to be involved in a clear conflict of interest. The “least dangerous” branch of government, as Alexander Hamilton called the judiciary, now has a kind of leverage over the American people that the framers of the Constitution neither intended nor foresaw. Does anyone assume that the court will rule impartially in a case touching its own interest as this one does? A basic principle of the rule of law is that no man shall be judge in his own cause. But the court’s intrusion into political issues has made it a competitor with other branches and levels of government. Like most interested parties, the Supreme Court tends to view its own interest as the one that should by right prevail. It often confuses its own will with constitutional necessity, no matter how arbitrary its rulings may seem to others. William Brennan in particular has a bad habit of thinking that when he parts his lips, the Constitution is speaking. A recent development in the art world should clarify our minds. .Some of the great*«* naintings of the Renaissance, including Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling, have been restored to their original brilliance. For generations the dirt that darkened these pictures was mistaken for the pictures themselves. In music, too, the authentic-instruments movement has taught us that for some time we have not been hearing What Handel and Mozart expected their works to sound like, but unnaturally beefed-up distortions resulting from an intervening tradition of 19th-century orchestral music. Until recently, Bach was getting to sound Wagnerian. In the same way, the Constitution has accumulated so much extraneous matter that it’s easy to mistake what the court has said about the Constitution for the Constitution itself. You can hardly see the old masterpiece until you remove layers of opinion added by men who were far inferior to the document’s authors. It is tim e A m ericans learned to distinguish sharply between the authentic C onstitution and th e en cru statio n s superimposed on it by its power-seeking interpreters. If the court won’t preserve the original, it’s up to the rest of us to do it. More Letters thaa?Tribu»e Sobran’s agenda offensive Editor: Joseph Sobran has repeatedly shown his agenda: Attack every Jewish issue. I admittedly know very little about Igor Shafarevich, but the statements he made are blatantly harmful to Jews in the Soviet Union. Sobran tells us the author wrote of a “certain hostility to ethnic Russia that Shafarevich says is especially pronounced among certain Jews, especially those who helped form the communist movement. He also complains that the problems of Jews have upstaged the problems of other groups.” Sobran holds that because he did not read any calls to violence in Shafarevich’s essay, he is not anti-Semitic. Is it not ironic that the early communists blamed the Jews for the counter-revolutionary movement? Surely both Sobran and Shafarevich are aware of these accusations, as well as an open call for pogroms forwarded by Pamyat (a Russian nationalist movement). A pogrom is a national event in which civilians attack Jews. Sobran is not diverging from his usual theme defending “anti-Zionists.” Martin Luther King Jr., who understood racism better than any man, admonished a black Harvard student for his Slurs against Zionists: “When people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews. You’re talking anti-Semitism.” Mr. King’s statement also applies to Sobran. ' David Zuckman Junior, Architecture Today’s cam paigns g et p o sitively negative J e f f G r e e n fie ld U n ive rsa l Press S yn d ica te NEW YORK — If there’s one thing we all “know,” it’s that politics in America has gotten too negative, right? And if you want proof, consider what’s going on in Florida, where one candidate for governor appears to be making the emotional stability of his chief rival a campaign issue. That’s right. A few days ago, former U. S. Sen. Lawton Chiles announced he was running for governor. He also acknowledged that he had been taking the drug Prozac as part of treatment for depression. His rival, Rep. Bill Nelson, promptly released all of his modify*l records —Florida now knows that Nelson suffers the affliction of hemorrhoids — and challenged Chiles to do the same. Instead of the usual mumbo-jumbo about how “the people of Florida must decide whether they want a wacko in the governor’s mansion,” Nelson said flat-out that the mental and emotional health of a governor was a legitimate campaign issue. Pretty outrageous, right? What’s that? You’re not outraged? Well, neither am I. In fact, I think the really outrageous aspect of the debate over “negative” politics is the automatic response of “outrage” to perfectly legitimate questions about our would-be leaders. Take the issue of Lawton Chiles’ emotional health. It is absolutely true that millions, perhaps tens of millions of us have at one time or another gone through emotional crises in our lives and sought professional help. If that’s the situation former Sen. Chiles found himself in, it is perfectly explainable to the people of Florida — or at least it should be. But if the Florida electorate is unwilling to accept that explanation, does that justify ignoring the issue? Not in my view. Chiles is asking the people of Florida to give him substantial power over their lives; they have a right to know about his present physical, mental or emotional health. But suppose Chiles’ opponents try to slander him, to mislead the public, to somehow paint him as a basket case likely to flip out in moments of crisis? That would be a perfect example of the difference between legitimate and illegitimate “negative” campaigns. It’s the difference between pointing to an opponent’s record and lying about it. And there’s reasonable evidence that voters understand the difference. In the recently concluded Texas gubernatorial primary, Ann Richards refused to answer questions about whether she had abused drugs during her years as an alcoholic. Her opponent in the runoff, Attorney General Jim Mattox, tried to exploit that issue by running ads that asked ominously whether Richards had used marijuana or cocaine in her years as a local official. The problem was that Mattox had no proof. The public apparently recoiled from the charge, and he lost the runoff in a landslide. This has implications for Florida. If the Nelson campaign raises the issue honestly and dispassionately, then it trill be up to Lawton Chiles to put that question to rest — for instance, by releasing his doctors from the physician-patient bond of confidentiality and allowing them to answer the press’ questions. But if the campaign of Bill Nelson insists on going for the jugular, if it tries to raise false innuendos about Lawton Chiles, the voters may well cry “foul” and punish the Nelson campaign for its excesses. Does all this sound like a repugnant, “negative” campaign? To me, it sounds like a perfectly legitimate debate over the fitness of a candidate to hold high office. P ag eó State Press Wednesday, April 2 5 ,19 9 0 Students form own book selling business By KRISTIE YOUNG S tate Press Student groups and businesses affiliated with ASU are “sick and tired of the rising costs of textbooks” and have developed a program to combat the problem. “The students need an opportunity to unite and fight the rising costs of books,” said John Ceraulo, a senior psychology major. Ceraulo and graduate student Tom Morrow have spent one year formulating, discussing and revising their version of “the solution to paying outrageous textbook prices.” “I spent $180 last semester on books,” Ceraulo said. “ASU has no system where you can get back a fair amount of money (for selling back textbooks).” The two students’ plan, named the Student Book List, will be launched today. Ten newsstands, filled with 5,000 blue information sheets for the Student Book List, will be placed around the ASU campus. “Students can pick up a form, fill out how many books they want to sell, and we Will compile and produce a listing of all of them,” Ceraulo said. The Student Book List will name textbooks for sale and the owner’s phone number. Ceraulo said this way, owners “can sell the books back for whatever price they want.” A $1 fee per book listed is the only service charge for using the Student Book List. “We will produce three lists,” Ceraulo said. “One for each summer session and one for the fall semester.”1 Ceraulo said another reason they implemented the Student Book List is so students can share information about certain classes, books, professors and course requirements. . t “We really believe the student has more knowledge about the books than the bookstore,” he said. Ceraulo said he “received the approval of ASU administrators. We wanted to make sure we weren’t breaking the rules.” Leon Shell, acting associate vice president for Student Affairs, said Ceraulo’s plan of action “is not in conflict with any University policy.” Shell checked with the ASU Bookstore and the legal counsel office at ASU. He said there was nothing to keep Ceraulo from implementing his plan. The only stipulations were that Ceraulo’s list was not to be affiliated with ASU and the ASU logo could not be used. Ceraulo is quite confident his plan will succeed. “We hope to have a newspaper-size listing of books to sell,” he said. “We hope students can get more money back by using (the list).” Everything we sell looks like it cost lots more, but you pay less! The neatest selection of earrings, rings and belts in the Valley at the lowest prices. For men and women. J y lie S ig w a rt/S ta te Press At the end of this month, Associated Students of ASU’s Campus Affairs division will begin compiling its own data to form a different book exchange program. “A lot of structural changes need to take place,” said Cherie Verhines, newly elected Campus Affairs vice president, of the old program upon which the new plan is based. “We won’t begin work on a new one until the end of April.” Verhines said the new Campus Affairs book' exchange program will be ready for the fall semester. Of Ceraulo, she said several groups have tried to implement similar programs, but these plans haven’t worked due to lack of organization. “Maybe we could get together to make a consolidated effort,” she said. D O LLA R S F A S H IO N A C C E S S O R IE S 414 S. M ill. #201 Tem pe (A bove S paghetti C o.) 829-1127 ■Wmm.' D ollars. It's not ju s t our name, its our prices. $2oo Off G rease ’n G o ’s Valvoline Lube, Oil & Filter Service Reg. Price $1995 Keep truckin’ with STATE PRESS Classifieds! 1355 S. McClintock Tenipe, 894-2798 G R A D U ATIN G ? C o n s id e r A C a r e e r In R EAL ESTATE A re Y ou C u rio u s o r C a r e e r C o m m itte d ? C a ll C a rl T o d a y a t 8 9 9 -9 0 0 0 invites the m en o f ASU to test drive the tradition. PEOPLE WHO KNOW USE VAL VOLINE! 2 LARG E CHEESE P IZ Z A S 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 P A P A *» Limited Offer JAYS PIZZA G ET INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS EXPERIENCE TH IS SUM M ER! Unique travel/study opportunity in Japan Interact with top executives of well-known organization Travel to Tokyo and earn academ ic credit!) ^W ork during the summer &join the seminar during the last FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL T .J . AT 7 8 4 -9 5 4 5 Celebrating four decades o f Greek excellence at ASU WITH PROFESSIONALLY INSTALLED OIL CHANGE USING QUALITY VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL T o p p in g s $1.50, c o v e r s B o th Pizzas Japan Seminar August 17,1990 to August PRE-RUSH PINNER THURSDAY APRII» 2 6 th AT THE PHI SIC HOUSE. SsOÓ PM (M A IL IN R E F U N D ) alvoline • B e Y o u r O w n B o ss • E x c e lle n t E n tr y L e v e l In c o m e • N o C o ld C a llin g o r D o o r K n o c k in g • 8 D a y T ra in in g P ro g ra m H a s Y o u E a r n in g Q u ic k ly P H I S IG M A KAPPA turtle wax' V V FINAL INFORM ATIONAL MEETING W EDNESDAY, APRIL 2 5 ,1 9 9 0 3:00 PM TO 4:00 PM IN BAC 629 If you cannot attend, contact: International Business Seminars 830-0902 O R : Dr. Daniel C . Brenenstuhl BA 367B , 965-5031 or Dr. Dick Montanan BA 3231,9 6 5 -7 2 0 3 or 438-2278 Discover the exciting world o f International Business! EARN *15-$20 per hour (Full or Part Time) Disc*»wiTI (Bring in this Coupon & College ID 1 $100 OFF TUITION I Teaching Bartenders since 1933 •Flexible hours & personalized training. •COED courses P a s ti Wednesday, Aprii g 5 , 1990 D IV E l O State Press Wednesday. Anri! 8 5 .1990 Business consultants to offer seminar to ‘empower women’ By GREMLYN BRADLEY S tate Press Three Valley business consultants will present a one-day seminar Friday that will focus on “ Em pow ering Women in Business.” Sponsored by The Winning Edge selfmanagement seminars, the event will be held from 9 a m. to 4 p.m. at the Clarion Inn on Scottsdale Road and McCormick Parkway in Scottsdale. “You’ll leave with some tools and techniques that will enhance .. . business abilities” said Debie Friedman, a certified self-talk trainer. Tuition for the day is $195 and includes lunch and materials. But Friedman said s tu d e n ts m ay a tte n d tw o-for-one. Enrollment is limited to 50 attendants. Empowerment, she explained, is “a strength that’s shared from one person to another.” • She added that not only is this an asset to the individual, but to the workplace as well. And in a society that is becoming more internationally and globally oriented, she said skills in dealing with others are a priority. “More and more teamwork is needed,” Friedman said. The other two presenters will be Caroline King of Caroline King Consulting Services and Becky Robbins of Lloyd Fickett and Associates. P ositive th a t classified Press results M atthew s C enter Basem ent 965-6731 Designer of ‘Oiympiapark’ in Munich to speak at ASU By GREMLYN BRADLEY S tate Press Renowned West German architect Gunter Behnisch will speak at ASU on May 3 to discuss his “Recent Works.” “It’ll be kind of a surprise to see what he’ll talk about,” said David Scheatzle, an associate professor in the College of Architecture. As part of a meeting of the American Institute of Architecture, the lecture will be held at 8:15 p.m. in the Architecture-Environmental Design Building, Room 60. The Architecture Guild will sponsor the event. Behnisch designed the “Oiympiapark” in Munich, the site of the 1972 Olympic Games. “It’s a huge, tensile structure that looks like it’s made of fabric, but it’s really made of glass and steel,” Scheatzle said. “It looks like a freè-form circus tent.” The park, according to Scheatzle, is a popular recreational area. Behnisch is also a professor at the Darmstadt Technical University in Darmstadt, West Germany. The Parliament Buildings in Bonn are also Behnisch’s design. Prior to the lecture, the Guild will hold its annual recognition dinner for graduate classes. The dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. fil? SUN DEVIL SPARK YEARBOOK M atthews Center, basem ent • 965-6881 M IN I-S T O R A G E 9 6 7 -3 9 0 0 D o n ’t H a u l It H o m e ... STO RE IT !! Send your baby a personal. (They’re only $1.40) STATE PRESS Classifieds Matthews Center Basement S pecial S tu d en t R ate 4 m os.— price of 3 •N ot to be used w ith any other specials W e sh ip y o u r s tu ff hom e! s ' 10 to 1,000 pounds, including furniture s ' Insured, custom packing s ' Boxes for sale s ' UPS, Consolidated Freight, others •Your lock, your key •Full security •Visa/Mastercard •Open 7 days ET Special "foam in place" packaging for com puters and electronic equipm ent 1905 E. Apache Blvd. 1418 N. S cottsdale R d., Scottsdale 990-2552 SW Corner of Scottsdale & McDowell in Papago Plaza University DO C ; O 0 1O --□i . sr Apiache AMEX, Visa, Mastercard, checks accepted Not a UPS agent SPECIAL STUDENT FARES R O U N D T R IP F R O M P H O E N IX C HICAG O .............. ..$194 Passport Photos 2 for $ 6 .5 7 Film Processing 2 for 1 ST. L O U IS ............ ..„176 PO RTLA ND........... ...1 9 7 W A S H IN G TO N ..... ...2 8 0 D E N V E R ............... ...2 2 8 CO. SPR IN G S..... ...228 D E TR O IT............... ...2 1 4 NEW O RLEANS... ...178 or SAN J O S E ........... ...156 FREE FILM ATLANTA............... .1 7 8 HO USTO N......... ...1 97 Monday & Wednesday on Develop & Print Orders SALT LAKE CITY. .1 8 7 SAN FRANCISCO ..-1 0 8 MILW AUKEE......... -.2 5 0 KANSAS C IT Y ...... ...166 ...1 06 DALLAS......... NEW YORK CITY. ...270 M IN N E A P O L IS ... ...318 Pricessubject tochange ILFO R D Photo Paper 2 5 — 8 x 1 0 $ 1 1 .0 8 100 — 8 x 1 0 $ 3 8 ,4 8 SUNSET CAMERA Tempe Center — Mill & Univ. 829-0424 OTHER CITIES AVAILABLE MILL AVE. TRAVEI 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 11 1 1 Reserved seatins for sroups and vB parties; Perfect for Birthdays & Bachelorette Patties! State Press P ag e? Wednesday, April 8 5 ,19 9 0 Growth-—--------campus will also directly affect the character of the elsewhere,” Peck said. “We still have the option for growth campus. According to Billie Bogart of the Office of Institutional — but just a controlled growth in certain areas.” Peck said during the ’60s aitid .’70s, the most dramatic Analysis, the total enrollment for part-time students in ASU’s period of growth at ASU, the state’s funding formula for Graduate College was nearly double the number of full-time enrollment ‘‘failed to provide the infrastructure —resources, students. Wilkinson said any policies directing part-time or non­ staff, facilities — to support the services “required by the degree students to centers or branch campuses will reduce number of students we served.” “In the past, ASU has granted access in response to main campus enrollment without impacting full-time demand without considering what the University was enrollment. Peck said changing the mix of students attending the main becoming,” Peck said. “Students and members of the community began to view ASU as being too large and campus would influence the faculty recruitment at the various teaching locations. uncaring.” , “The nature of the student population in each location is But Peck said the University had to identify and consider all .issues before instituting any changes reducing main one of the primary factors in influencing the character of the faculty,’*Peck said. He added that the Downtown Center —a campus size. and the main campus all require different One method of enrollment reduction is tightening entrance third campus requirements, an option Christine Wilkinson, acting vice “types and sorts” of faculty. “Downsizing the main campus would improve the faculty president of Student Affairs, warned might have severe repercussions, specifically concerning minority enrollment. ratios of traditional students — making this campus more “Downsizing the main campus by increasing entrance traditional in character for faculty also,” he said; Peck said class size in the lower division courses has standards may negatively impact our diversity —a diversity increased dramatically recently, and added that the increase we hold to be very precious.” But she said if entrance standards are raised gradually, could justify hiring more faculty to be responsible only for teaching but who would not research or publish. adverse impacts would be avoided. But “the difficulties involved in (hiring additional faculty Efforts fopused on reducing individual colleges on campus might not be effective, Wilkinson said, because other colleges just for instruction would) concern the impact to two faculties: the teaching faculty and the research faculty,” potentially will be affected. “We don’t lose the students — they just start moving in a Peck said. “Such an option is not without serious problems and it is something that must be considered.” different direction,” she said. Peck said a greater percentage of full-time students would Wilkinson said the impact on part-time students also would increase continuity and enhance the learning experience. have to be Considered. “By managing enrollment properly,” Peck said, “we can “Because of our urban situation, we have many more students who are enrolling here part time, both at the ensure proper student-faculty balance at the main campus, undergraduate and the graduate levels,” Wilkinson Said. the branch campuses and the educational centers. ” Susan Clouse, director of Undergraduate Admissions, said “ Reducing the number of part-time students on the main Continued from page 1. A a h o u s e h o m e is u n R n o t t i l i t ’s C paid p o litic a l advertisem ent F a c u lt y , s ta ff a n d s tu d e n ts c a n c a s t a n a b s e n te e b a llo t f o r t h e T e m p e C i t y E le c t io n a t C i t y H a ll, 3 r d f lo o r . C N e il G iu lia r t o C H IT S ' C O U N C A T t h r o u g h E la s s if ie d P R E S S A d v e r t i s i n g ! S e ll y o u r te x tb o o k s a n d s t u d y g u id e s , a n d p r o v id e c o u r s e in fo r m a tio n , d ir e c t ly t o a s tu d e n t T T E IS /lP E T i t SELL YO UR TEXTBOOKS FOR UP TO 10 0 % OF W H A T YOU PAID!! LEAVING TOWN PRIOR TO MAY 8TH? L E e n t S o c c u p ie d ! E trimming the size of the m a in campus also would be perceived positively by the community. She said it would keep non-traditional students at brançh campuses and educational centers, thereby providing better service to traditional Students. “Better service to our students — both at the main campus and the branch campuses — will then communicate to the community a very positive change,” she said. Clouse said retention is another problem downsizing would address, adding that 30 percent of full-time freshmen transfer after the first year. “ We think that by improving the undergraduate experience and by improving service, we can positively affect that persistence rate of our traditional students on the main campus — and encourage more enrollment on the branch campus,” she said. Funding for a branch campus has been hard to come by in Arizona. But Mathew Betz, vice provost for Academic Affairs, said while funding is relevant, it should be considered only after the University has assessed its needs. “Although resources are important, they should not be the driving force in determining what this institution should do.” He added that while the University should be aware of the financial implications, they shouldn’t be put “out in front.” Following the hour-long presentation by the panel, which also included John Porter, the director of InstitutiQnal Analysis, the discussion group broke into two groups and spent an hour discussing these issues. Coor said he was pleased with the results of the meeting, adding it was a “very good session.” He said he wants the issues central to growth explored further over the summer so that “when we gather in full session again in the fall, we will have a more informed basis in which to really explore these issues.” who I L Pick up a stands on campus, or call the booklist info line at 3 9 2 -T E X T THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT AND YOUR VOTE!! p a id fo r by th e com m ittee to elect N eil G iuliano, Len Lassen-Treasurer If you earn less than S21.(i00* per year, you may qualify to get a monthly rental discount! Call Now! L i m i t e d T im e O f f e r ONE BEDROOM AS LOW.AS $399 Thincen delicious ingredients including three meats and three cheeses served hot on our baked fresh daily bread have made the Original a favorite for over 17 years. It s a steal - 50« o f fo f Schlotzskys small Original sand wich and 75* on a medium o t regular O nginal sandwich, QUADRANGLES _ V IL LA G E 1255 University Drive I Tempe, Arizona 85281 9 6 8 -8 1 1 8 N O W TAKING RESERVATIONS FOR AUGUST BERNARDFINNEY MANAGEMENTSERVICES INC HURRY! DON’T MISS OUT! I r ¡50 I \ M edium ^ S m a ll O r ig in a l N ot valid w ith any other otter. Expires 5-2-90 Sandwiches ♦ Soup» Tem pe V illa g e Square Comer of Priest and Southern 7672 Tem pe C enter (Back o f Tem pe C an tei) 18 E. 10th Street Tempe 968-0056 75 N ot va lid w ith any other oder. Expires 5-2-90 \ Pase 10 Wednesday, Aprir 25; 1990 By SETH SULKA S tate Press The cliche “it’s not what you know, but who you know that's important” certainly applies to finding a job in the extremely competitive sports industry. But for students interested in getting a head start in landing a career in sports, the seventh annual Sports Careers National Job Fair, to be held May 17-19 at the Hyatt Regency in downtown Phoenix, will provide an opportunity to gain practical hands-on experience while making those vital contacts within the industry. The founder and president of Sports Careers, Mark Tudi, started the organization seven years ago when he realized that the only way into the sports industry was through personal contacts. “The jobs in the sports world never hit the streets,” Tudi said. “A resume does not work in sports — doors open through personal contact. And because of the specialists that are here, we help open the personal contacts necessary to find a job.” i.,.'. Those specialists include an impressive list of big names in sports. Jerry Colangelo, president of the Phoenix Sims; David Stem, commissioner of the National Basketball Association; and Art Shell, head coach of the Los Angeles Raiders are just a sample of the top executives that will be present. The three-day job fair will consist of career, development seminars, job opportunity sessions, recruitment sessions by major employers as well as one-on-one coaching sessions with industry leaders. For more information on the job fair or to make reservations to attend, contact Dave Birecki at 954-8106. H A Y D E N S FERRY R E V I E W ASU'S N ational L iterary M agazine W H Y W A IT T O B E SAFE? University W om en’s Clinic, Inc. University Women's Clmk has same day or next day ’ confidential appointments available for women's health care. m S E XU ALLY T R A N S M IT T E D D ISEASES & «3 q q S P EC IA L T E S T IN G P A C K A G E : (Includes exam and tests for chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomonas, gardnerella, and yeast.) way. And you’ll also earn good part-time money for serving in a nearby Army Reserve unit. Following Basie Training and an Army skill training school, you’ll usually Serve one Weekend a month plus two weeks of Annual Training. And you’ll eam over $85 per weekend to start. T hink ab o u t it. T h en th in k ab o u t us. Then call us today: a t 9 6 7 -1 6 1 1 1 3 5 0 E . B ro a d w a y T em p e, AZ Get3MonthsOfNothing Fòrtiif.PriceOf2. If you’re heading hom e for the sum m er with more stuff than space, save yourself the mental gyrations of moving back and forth. Store it. N othing makes more sense. Matthews Center Basement SCOTTSDALE, 8615 E. McDOWELL ROAD, 949-7075 TEMPE, 409 SOUTH HAYDEN ROAD, 966-5722 Offer expires Septem ber30, 1990. Q -I UJ lil EC £ Q EL LU N C $20,000. State Press. Classifieds work. Hard. CO CO The Army Reserve can help you pay for college... the smart way. First, you may be eligible for the Montgomery GI Bill. This could provide you with up to $5,040 for current college expenses. Second, if you have or obtain a qualified student loan, you could get it paid off at the rate of 159f per year or $500, whichever is g re a te rup to a maximum of $10,000. Selecting certain specialty training can increase the maximum to ARMY RESERVE C all 965-6731 daily, 8 a.m .-5 p.m. CM O CO Pay for c o lle o e m ill V nC s m a r t „ 0) SZ to ** o m « o q Expires 5-15-90 at the north end M emorial Union Inform ation Desk You can charge your classified ad on your Visa or MasterCard! > / 21 W est Baseline Road, Tempe S/W Corner' o f Baseline and Mill Phone 831-5532 BE ALL YOU CAM BE? (Visa or MasterCard) . N < < O N S A LE N O W F O R O N L Y $5 TAKE CHARGE O 0) ra RUNDLE’S LIQUORS & MKT. 1324 W. University (just east o f Priest) MONTEREY VINEYARD W h. Zinfandel 750 m l....... $3.99 MEISTER BRAU 12 Pack ......................... .. . $3.99 VOLSKA VODKA 750 m i . . .. $5.49 Used Playboy M agazines..........94C No business? Slow business? W e can help. State Press Classifieds 965-6731 erQ *30 HOW ARD JO HNSO N FREE FREE Per Room Per Night I—2 double beds -Free dinner Plaza Hotel -Free bottle of cham­ pagne with dinner •Cafe de'Tryst Restaurant •W.E. Tryst Loungewithentertainment -Free breakfast Pregnancy Testing •Outdoor heated swimming pool •Whirpool. saunaandexercisefacilities •Complimentary 24hour airport 3333 E. University transportation •Complimentary Showtime movies •Car rental service on property Pregnancy & Birth Control Counseling Adult Magazines. Groceries. Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers For reservations call 1-800-654-2000 967-9079 D o y o u f e e l “ R IP P E D w h e n y o u r S e ll w y o u F F ” s e ll b o o k s ? t h e m h a t O b a c k y o u f o r B ring th is s e m e s te r ’s b o o k s in and exchange th e m fo r fail o r sum m er s ch o o l b o o ks. p a id ! TEXTB O O K EXCHANGE 1 0 2 3 S. R u ral Rd. B e tw e e n L e m o n & T e rra c e on R ural FROM THE DIRECTOR OF “THE EXORCIST Tonight, while the world is asleep, an ancient evil is about to awaken ON SHORTS & SHIRTS PRESENTS A »R0DÜCERS BERKLEYBOOK OPENS FRIDAY APRIL 27, AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE S tttP rm Wednesday, April 2 5 ,1 9 9 0 DOMINO'S PIZZA Page 21 A SU REC SPORTS C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S ASU for your involvelment in the ASU Recreational Sports & Student Activities Department: ■ IN T R A M U R A L C H A M P IO N S ■ SRC S T A F F ■ O FFIC IA LS In appreciation of your involvement ASU REC SPORTS would like to recognize all at the 1st A nnual STUDENT RECREATION COMPLEX RECOGNI TION NIGHT THURSDAY, APRIL 26t h , 7:00 pm SRC GREEN GYM | FREE D om ino's P izza & beverages will be available for all guests. ■ G uest sp eak ers .will highlight this year's Intramural Program and the Official's Association. | S p ecial recogn ition to all the SRC staff & employees that have contributed greatly to the success of this year's entire program. SPECIAL FEATURE...Videos o f B loopers and SRC programs!!! P lease R.S.V.P. to the SRC before April 26th CaU 965-8900 Page 22 Sût» P ic » Wednesday, April 2 5 ,1990 Shuttle_— C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 3. was a contingent of scientists who have hailed the Hubble as the greatest advance in astronomy since Galileo raised a small telescope to his eyes nearly 400 years ago. T ruly re fe rr e d to thé ea rly -d ay astronomer when he Was asked about the long delays in getting the telescope to its working station. “Somebody the other day said, ‘Who remembers the day that Galileo picked up his telescope to look at the stars?’ ” said Truly, a former shuttle astronaut. “ It doesn’t matter what day we launch Hubble, it matters that we do it right.’’ The telescope is 43 feet long and 14 feet in diameter, about the size of a railroad tank car. When it flies free, it will receive electrical power for its six scientific instruments from two wing-like solar arrays that extend outward on each side. It is named after the late astronomer Edwin P. Hubble, who theorized that the universe was expanding and that the farther away a galaxy is, the faster it is traveling. That gave support to the theory that a MESA massive explosion — the Big Bang — created the universe 10 to 20 billion years ago. The Hubble is expected to help provide the answer to two major questions: How old is the universe? How big is it? The telescope has two mirrors, one 94.5 ' inches in diameter, the other 12 inches. Two of the instruments are cameras, two are spectrometers and one is a photometer. In addition, the fine pointing system acts as a sixth instrument by providing precise measurement of distances. On Wednesday, Hawley is to grapple the 1216-ton telescope with the shuttle’s mechanical arm, lift it out of the cargo bay, point it and — after a long checkout — drop it overboard to orbit on its own. Discovery’s launch was not without its problems. With 31 seconds left in the countdown, the computer that runs the final moments before liftoff refused to close a fuel valve and stopped the launch process. The problem was overcome and the shuttle lifted off at 8:34 a.m. EDT. HOT & COLD SUBS E n tertain m en t C en ters $12.00 Value $ 2 .0 0 O F F 'Miniature Golf or * Golfland WaterSlides All Day Admission (open spring break) or 'S u n S p la s h W a te rP a rk (open May 26, 1990) Valid up to 6 Adult Admissions * SPARKY > - roast beef, turkey 6 ham ROAST BEEF — prime, lean roast beef PORKY —r ham, spited ham , salami HAM — succulent Danish ham TURKEY — white, turkey bretist ' : CH IC K EN SALAD — white chunk chicken TUNA SALAD — white chunk tuna POORBOY — top .grade bologna VEGETARIAN —; provolone, muenster, and swiss cheeses, fresh cucumbers, mushrooms, sprouts, bell peppers, lettuce, Coupon cannot be used fo r purchase o f child, spectator o r P M. Splash tickets, pre-sold in conjunction w ith any other discount, prom otion, group rale, o r pre sold tickets/Fun M oney. Expires A p ril 1991 • PLU 115 Take E xit 8 o ff S uperstition Freeway, north on Country Club Drive« then east on W est Ham pton Avenue in Mesa. Open daily. For m ore inform ation call 834-8318. À k $2.95 $ 3 /99 $2.85 $3.90 $2.95 $3.90 $2.$0 $3.55 $2.85 $3.86 $2.95 $3.86 $2.95 $3r86 $2.25 $3.25 $2.50 $3.50 tax. included LARGE SODA ! K E s E s & c h ip s PURCHASE OF ANY 6" SUB tomatoes, onions and Italian dressing. 6 " subs include a spear of-kosher pickle I 0 v subs include a spear of kosher pickle and * bag of Laura Scudder's n a tu ra l potato chips. (Served on wheat or white sub roll.) Also: Salads (Chef, C ard en , Chicken & Tuna) Hello Ciani«« it o c 0 C O U PO N G O O D TH R O U G H 5-1-90 N O T G O O D WITH ANY OTHER OFFER CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 967-1114 OFF F L A V O R S D A IL Y A N Y lO ’ VSUB Including Strawberry • Pineapple Cherry • Lemon C O U PO N G O O D TH R O U G H 5-1-90 N O T G O O D WITH ANY OTHER OFFER 967 -1 114 CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 967-1114 GOOD FO O D C O O L COM PANY G O O D fV E A t t Western Stalls OLD CH-IC/IGO TIRES AND AUTO SERVICE 530 W. B ro a d w ay, SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR STUDENTS, STAFF&FACULTY tC O U PO N -C O U P O N * Computerized Vehicle Alignment •C heck o n ly __________ •F ro n t w heel alignm ent refe ren cing th ru st lin e __ •F o u r w heel a lig n , w ith m echanical rear w heel adj_ •R oad test *14« *2 9 « Oil-Lube-Fitter INCLUDES: •U p to 5 qts. o il •C hassis lube •O il filte r •3 0 w eight o il •Labor $ 1 2 " ADD $2 FOR 15/40 OIL *39°® MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS Call for appt. Expires 5-31-90 Call for appt. Expires 5-31-90 CO UPO N’» Computerized Spin Balance & Rotation •C om puterized spin balance a ll fo u r wheels •R o ta te fo u r tire s •C h e ck a ir pressure fo r p roper in fla tio n •F re e safety check $22°° MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS Call for appi. Expires 5-31-90 cöupotr 5-Point Complete Brake Inspection Our W ild MachenIce <11 •Pull all 4 wheels and Inspect H im * caR entire brake system For An •Chock master cylinder and brake lines Appointment •Chech front wheel beerlngs and tools •Check broke drums •Add brake fluid and adjust brakes If necessary •If brake repairs are needed, ihe $5 charge will be applied lo repair charges •Most domestic and foreign cars A light trucks $K 00 ^ J I J o r a g g ^ E x p ir e s ^ ^ - M 101 S. Hayden at 1st 829-7400 2077 S. Hardy 42 E. Southern at Mill 894-0799 1507 S. Country Club South o f Broadway Mesa, North o f Superstition Freeway 967-8758 834-9338 Tem ps 9 2 1 - 9 4 3 ,T W ednesday College ID Night! 2 for 1 Entree N ow th ro u g h S um m er O th e r Special Nights from 5-10 p.m. Monday: 2 for 1 Pasta Bar Including garlic bread and salad (sorry, no to go boxes) $5.95 Tuesday: Lasagna N ight Your choice of seafood, vege­ tarian, chicken or Italiah sausage $6.25 Sunday Family N ight Tw o pasta bars, medium pizza and a pitcher of soft drinks $15.95 O n W ednesday S h o w y o u r s e r v e r y o u r c o lle g e o r f a c u lty /s ta f f ID a n d re c e iv e 2 for 1 dinner entrees* MAKE OLD CHICAGO YOUR WEDNESDAY TRADITION! Offer ts good from 5 to 10 p.m. in the dining room only and not valid with any other offer. *Of equal or lesser value, pizza not included. College Culture Page 23 Wednesday, April 25,1990 State Press The Usual Suspects ‘Yakety Y ak’ reformed into recycling song Stars including Paula Abdul, Randy Newman, B. B. King and Alice Cooper will appear in a video promoting recycling bas­ ed on the Coasters’ 1958 hit “Yakety Yak.” Sponsored by the Take It Back Founda­ tion, “Yakety Yak, Take It Back!” also will feature Quincy Jones and Bugs Bunny, according to the foundation’s publicist, Lee Solters. The video will sport a song based on “Yakety Yak” to encourage recycling by urging listeners to “Separate your papers from the trash,” It is to be filmed in June at A & M Studios and will be co-produced by the foundation and Warner Communications. Thirty- and 60-second public service an­ nouncements will also be distributed to radio and television stations, Solters said Monday. Abdul K in g Perlman advises on restoration of theater Violinist Itzhak Perlman is giving advice on restoration of a 64-year-old theater and concert hall in New London, Conn. Perlman, who was stricken with polio at age 4 and wears leg braces, is suggesting ways to make the theater accessible to disabled people. Problems at the Garde Arts Center were apparent to Perlman when he performed a benefit concert there with the Eastern Con­ necticut Symphony in October. “It’s no secret that the Garde, built in 1926, has some problems relating to ac­ cess,” restoration committee Chairman Carl Stoner said Monday. Committee members-met recently at Perlman’s New York City apartment to go over their master plan. Committee member Steve Sigel said Perlman told group he is always upset to see how theaters build a special “Perlman ram p” to accommodate him and then remove it the next day. Trum p wants Japanese to buy yacht for millions Real estate tycoon Donald Trump is fish­ ing for a Japanese buyer for his Trump Princess, one of the world’s most luxurious yachts. Trump is asking $115 million for the yacht he bought three years ago for a reported $29 million and then spent $9 million more refur­ T ru m p bishing. “ I think the prospects of finding a Japanese buyer are good, especially if you consider recent Japanese purchases of works of art,” J. Jeffrey Walker, a Trump Organization senior vice president, said Tuesday. “We just need to find someone with the right mentality.” Trump is building a new 420-foot yacht to replace the Princess, and Walker said the expected cost is more than $200 million. Buying the Trump Princess would make good business sense, Walker said. “The price is too high, but there are many Japanese out there with money to burn; so you never know,” said Akio Kato, manager of the Marine Sales and Project Development Department of Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries. How to: W rite the right resume By ROBYN PINKSTON S tate Press round this time of the semester, reality begins to creep up on everyone out there in academia-land. For some, it is a time of cramming in those 12 chapters of reading that have been put off for the last five weeks. For others, however, there’s more to be done than just prepare for finals. It’s time to prepare for reality beyond the University. The end of the year means gradua­ tion for many, which, in turn, means time to sit back and gather up every ounce of worthwhile experience in every corner of your life and try to organize it into that priceless piece of literature they call a resume. Two to three, sheets of paper with carefully selected words must describe you, your education and your experience that will set you apart from the plethora of qualified ap­ plicants for that crucial first job. Those sheets hold a lot of clout. If they aren’t arranged effectively and attrac­ tively and in a way that will set them apart from others, your resume can easily end up in the pile headed for the Rejection Letter Department. Don’t think of writing your resume as a dreadfully dull task. See it as an opportunity to take a serious look at your life and your career objectives. Sometimes just writing it all down makes everything clearer. Compiling your resume is much like writing a major essay minus the sting — you don’t have to go to the library once. All the pertinent information comes from yourself. You merely take that information and mold it into a comprehensive, creative and tactful “essay outline” that will hopefully earn you a good grade on someone’s payroll. Here are a few tips to get you on the right track: ►Don’t just sit down at your PC and think, “OK,.time to write my resume.” Put some careful thought in­ to it. Take notes. Make a chronological list of jobs, big or small, clubs and organizations you’ve been involved with — include any officialpositions you’ve held — also any awards or honors you may have received. Call Mom and Dad at home and have them dig out all those cer­ tificates, awards and scholarships you got when you graduated from high 1 9 9 0 College Not e book school. At this point, no accomplish­ ment is too small; you’ll weed out the beneficial ones later. ►Take the volumes of information you’ve uncovered and analyze it. Whether it’s part time jobs, volunteer work, church related activities, clubs and organizations, or any other activi­ ty, think about the contributions you made and skills and insight you gain­ ed from the experience. Put those skills into words. Use an impressive vocabulary and active verbs . . . a thesaurus is a beautiful thing when it comes to tasks such as this one. Don’t be afraid to give yourself a nice pat on the back. However, make sure you deserve it — you’re hot applying at Burger King. Big time employers have a tendency to check up on some of those past jobs. Make a detailed list, sort of a worksheet, of all your qualifications and experience including the group, employer or organization it involved, where and relatively close to when it happened, and a brief synopsis of what they got out of you and what you got out of them. ►Now it’s time to take this whole col­ lege degree/career thing and put it in­ to perspective. Try to consolidate what you want out of life and fit it into two or three sentences. If you can do it and it is possible — it can make you look really good. This is an important part of your resume. An ability to express your career goals in a thoughtful, directed way will show your future employer that you aren’t just wandering around aimlessly looking for any kind of work. It shows you have thought about the directions you want to take, which in turn translates into a potentially responsible and dedicated employee. ► OK. Time for another list. Who thinks you’re pretty swell? It doesn’t even have to be someone with an im- portant title or some pull in the com­ munity (although it looks pretty good if it is). Any adult or colleague who knows you personally and has good things to say will work just fine as a personal reference to list on your resume. Old bosses, club advisors, professors and even personal friends can serve as beneficial references. Remember, however, to let the per­ son know that you’ll be listing them as a reference on your resume so they are prepared to rattle off all the wonderful things you have to offer. ►Now you get to take this abundance of personal lowdown and organize it into a resume. Here’s the general format: 1. lis t that important stuff we haven’t mentionèd yet — like a name, address and telephone humber(s) where you can be reached. 2. Plug in that career objective you slaved over. 3. List by date and employer or spon­ sor, if applicable, your experience and qualifications that are directly jobrelated along with those skills, in­ sights and responsibilities you worked on earlier. If you’ve had many work experiences, a separate heading might distinguish tiiat from your other ex­ perience. As a student coming right out of college, it’s understandable that much of your experience was not necessarily in an employee capacity, so lumping it all together may look the best. 4. Now you mention that degree you’ve been laboring over for eons. List the institution, the city and state in whichit’s located, and the kind of diploma you received along with your major area of study. Don’t neglect to mention other major areas of em­ phasis aside from your declared major. 5. Next list any professional ex­ perience you encountered in your in­ itial search*. This would be awards and honors such as scholarships or grade recognition like the Dean's List, fraternity or sorority involvement, honor societies or any other activities that help make you look well-rounded. This area may need to be labelled “awards” or some other appropriate title, depending on its content. 6. Now you’ll get personal with things like your birthdate, health, marital status and a short list of hobbies and interests. Turn to R w m , page 25. Page 24 State Press Wednesday, April 2 5,1990 Iguana’ hits timely issues By SHARON KANEY S tate Press In light of the current focus on en­ vironmental issues and the political climate in Europe, it seems very timely that ASU’s final theater production, “Billy’s Iguana,’’ makes statements about these issues. But director Eva Kovacs calls it a coin­ cidence. Not ohly is the production’s timeliness coincidental, but so is the fact that playwright Chris Danowski’s script ended up making these statements at all. “He just started by writing a play about a family that was really screwed up. ft didn’t really occur to him that he was writing a play that made all of these huge statements,’’ Kovacs said. “Billy’s Iguana,” which opens tonight at the Lyceum Theater, indeed tells the story about a screwed up family. Kovacs said the family is both a metaphor of society in general and symbolic of the average fami­ ly next door. Billy’s pet iguana, who grows so large that he swallows the family and their house, represents the world. Despite its heavy themes, Kovacs says the script is riddled With Danowski’s own bizarre sense of humor. Danowski, who is a graduate playwrighting student at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, began the script as an undergraduate student at ASU in Jim Leonard’s playwrighting workshop. “I ap­ proached Chris when he handed me the first page of ‘Billy’s Iguana’ over a year ago. I told him I wanted to direct it,” Kovacs said. Kovacs said she and Danowski discovered the underlying themes once they began discussing the production. “Wien we discussed the production, we Turn t o ‘Iguana’, page 25. Photo by Lyle Beitman A m ost unusual nuclear fam ily (Sharon Lam berth, Jared Khan, Tracy M errM ield, and Dale W atkins) frie s to Hve in the d eterio ratin g environm ent in “ B illy’s Ig u an a.” “C o/fee/atts into the stomach, a n d títere is a general com m otion. Ideas begin to move üke the battalion o f the G rand A rm y. , . Things rem em bered arrive a t fu ll gallop . . . The artillery o f logic hurries up with trains a n d am m unition, the sha fts o f w it sh irt up like sharpshooters. y¡onore de Balzac (1799-1850) Author o f more than 100 novels, attributing his success to coffee. rs ru D E N ìl AND Bvcuury Arm your m ind for the battles ahead at Roundtrip fromPhoenix Hawaii Amsterdam Frankfurt Berlin Paris Madrid Athens $336 $638 $638 $650 $670 $710 $838 Restrictions apply. A sk about o u r USSR . Tours starting from $4191 Am erica* oldest and largest student travel organization. ODundllkaud 14515 Ventura Blvd «250 Sherman Oaks CA, 91403 800-888-8786 C h a n g in g H an d s B O O KSTO RE Browse through our 3floors of: “ I Do Not Want” ... CD $999 T h e C o ffe e P la n t a t io n PUBLIC ENEMY The Definition of Good Taste ‘ ‘Fear of a Black Planet” w New Hmes-Best of Phoenix, 1989 • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • Books on Cassette • Coffee Roasters Tropical Coffeehouse S e ll o r T ra d e your books ai ChangingHands. O pen from 7 a.m. Lunch Daily For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash o r 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. . . . ■ Happy Hour 4-7 p.m. M-F Half Price Drinks Live Entertainment (Sorry, n o tra d e -in s on Sat. o r Sun.) M -F 10-9 S at. 10-6 S u n . 12-5 414 M ill A venue • T em pe • 966-0203 SINEAD O’CONNOR * CO FFEE * 1 PLANTATION ROBERT PLANT ‘ ‘Manic Nirvana” BONNIE RAITT ‘ ‘Nick of Time” DEPECHE MODE “ Violater” V CD $999 CD $999 CD $999 S ale th ru 4-29-90 Comer 6th & Mill TEMPE 8 9 4 -1 0 6 7 9 3 0 E. B R O A D W A Y HOURS: M0N-THURS 9-9 rRI 9 AM-11 PM, SAT 9 AM-11 PM SUN 10 AM-7 PM S ta te P ress Wednesday, April 2 5,1990 ‘Iguana! Resume Continued from page 24. Continued from page 23. both grew to understand this play is about entropy,” she said. Kovacs had environmental and policital concerns long before people started getting hyped for Earth Day 1990, and she has wanted to direct a play that addresses those issues without becoming didactic. “ I wanted to direct this play in a way that brought these statements out without preaching at the audience,” she said. Preaching aside, Kovacs plans to get the message across. “This play is screaming to be statement theater,” she said. 7. Last, list your references (or note that they are available upon request). ►Now arrange all your information in a way that’s both pleasing to the eye and ap­ propriate to the sort of job you’re applying for. It pays off to have your resume typeset or printed letter-quality from a computer and then printed on high-grade paper. It will be worth the extra expense. ►The resume can be mass-produced, but unfortunately the cover letter to accom­ pany it cannot. When writing your cover letter, use the same self-enthusiastic tac­ Largest Valley Selection A 20% 10% Off All Discontinued Items A M a l l perks that help your resume stand out in a positive way are undoubtedly advantageous. You’re graduating, and for the most part you can do anything you want. Your col­ lege degree opens one door; your resume, the next. Besides helping you get a job, your resume can help you get in touch with your past experience to use in an inter­ view, shape your experience, goals and ob­ jectives and help you plan a career that will fit your own personal future needs and desires. S e r v i c e $ M g o Of? ups Stripping charges Synthetic Hairpieces & Falls, Braids, Extensions, Banana Clips, Ladies Accessories Expert Restyles 1337 E. McDowell Rd Phoenix. AZ 85006 A tics as before, only be brief. Give your main selling point for the job for which you are applying, and/or a way in which you can make a contribution to the organiza­ tion as a whole. Think of it as an introduc­ tion; make the future employer eager to see your whole resume. Most importantly don’t be afraid to let a little of your personality slip into your con­ tent and format. Creativity is great, as long as it remains professional. Let your potential employer get a taste of the per­ son behind the resume. After all, any SUM M ER SESSIO N IN BAJA! Attend ASU Summer Sessions in Ensenada, Baja California Mexico with the Anthropology Dept.’s Ethnographic Field Study and Spanish courses. Cost of approximately $1000 per session include tuition, housing, meat and local travel. Sessions from June 18-July 13 and July 16-August 10th. •Free pick-up and delivery •w e also have w estern Union service Off For more info, contact Dr. Winkelman at 965-6213. 8 2 4 $ . M ill All Wigs and Accessories (University & Mill SW Corner) W INDO W TIN TING 9 6 6 -0 0 7 6 ViEnuys FREE % - \ FM Portable Radio w ith s te re o h e a d p h o n e s w it h a c o m p le t e w i n d o w t in t . While they last! • L if e t im e G u a r a n t e e • S c r a t c h R e s is ta n t T i n t • L a r g e s t S e le c tio n o f T in t Gift Certificates Available NOW* T e m p e O p en S u n d ay 10 a .m .-4 p.m. M o n d ay-T h u rs d ay till 8:30 p m. WINDOWTINTSPECIALISTS TEMPE M ESA/CHANDLER CENT. PHX N . PHX 3414'S. Mill Ave. . 966-0731 3050 S. Country Club 497-0101 4545 N. 7ttl St. 274-2665 15846 N. Cave Creek Rd. 493r5000 $ 100 O F F SUPERBAR! (Saturday and S unday Only) Expires 6/1/90 R u r a l a n d A p a c h e ( 1 3 1 4 S . R u r a l) Graduate Student Association Lunch Box Series ‘‘Collaboration & th e Arts'* Wednesday April 25 MU 218 Pima Room 12 noon to 1 pm Valerie W ard, MFA can d id ate an d d ire c to r/c h o re o g ra p h e r o f “C ultural Collisions,“ w ill discuss collab o ratio n o f th e arts a n d its application in graduate w ork. Ms. W ard w as recen tly aw arded O utstanding G raduate in th e Fine Arts and D ance D e p t Don’t Miss Dr. Ken Blanchard ‘T h e O n e - M i n u t e M a n a g e r “Teaching Positions & " the Com m unity College'* Monday April 30 MU 222 Mohave Room 12 noon to 1pm Lupe G u tierrez a n d E llen La C orte fro m th e E m p lo y m e n t O ffice o f M aricopa C ou n ty C o m m u n ity C olleges w ill inform s tu d e n ts o n h o w to p re p a re a n d a p p ly for te a c h in g positions. Let him motivate you and help you manage your life • Thursday, April 26th 7:00 PM Neeb Hall For more Information: 965-1263. Comics State Press Wednesday, April 25,1990 by Bill Watterson The Tar Side Calvin and Hobbes r Bl e e d in g , NOSE? J GUESS TUM MÖ.NS tue ru . 9 m \m . t o g o TO SCHOOL TOMORROW DISASTER. I GET INJURED JUST TRMIN& TO l£KRN THE SKU AS IT TAKES TO PLM A GAME I DONT EVEN WANT TO PLAT «SNRKK* PROBABLE a ll CLOGGED UP NOW. UUH? TEAR, WUT? IF TOU SNORE, I'M TILTING TUE BED SO TOU ROLL OUT TUE WINDOW. M V i ' -; ITS ALWMS NICE TO NAME A 5UAPMUETÌC FRIEND TO TALK TO. « 0 » ■ ¿ im . ^ n c t now a tragic slbry; Oux 'Ca.vsem w as -There -when a swatter ' ¿ame down on a»\ «nyenhp«( victim on -the Kitchen window. We'd l;Ke < to w arn our more sensitive Viewers) +hht -the^y may pre fer n o t 1b wxTcK' T h e ifo tlp w irvq S e g m e n ts / m h -2 * Rainey Days by Julie Sigwart SO... WHAT D/O YOUSAY THE U N I IT WAS ON A ROSE? THANKS -BUT if / VONT VATE f E short, d u m py WEASELS: \ ■ C “ “ * ' X . 01990 Universal Press Syndicate Ivory Towers I 'm by Gary Larson 3Â y o u * W T t ¡ CREPIT ae / i (W tZ /C A R D ? BOSTON (AP) —Government food scientists looking for a healthier way to satisfy forbidden cravings said Monday they have created the ultimate in guilt-free desserts — oat bran ice cream. Actually, calling it ice cream is stretching it a bit, for it has none of the fat-filled cream that is an essential ingredient of the real thing. Instead, it gets its creamy consistency from a tasteless, fat-like gel that’s made entirely from oats. Its principal creator, George E. Inglett, calls this secret ingredient Oatrim. He said it could take the place of fat in many cold foods, including mayonnaise, cheese spreads, salad dressings and margarine. “It has a double whammy," Inglett said. “It will replace animal fat, such as cream, in desserts. And it acts in the body to lower blood cholesterol.” Inglett, a food scientist at the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s research labs in Peoria, 111., said he hopes Oatrim will be on the market within two or three years. To be successful, Oatrim will have to compete against other fat substitutes that have been under development longer, and it will have to overcome doubts that have arisen about the seemingly fantastic powers of oat bran to lower cholesterol. The first of the substitutes, called Simplesse, was approved by the U. S. Food and Drug Administration last month. It is made from egg whites and milk protein, Others, made by Kraft and Procter & Gamble, are also under consideration by the FDA. SUN DEVIL SPARK YEARBOOK Mildews Cerner, lasoMii • 965-6551 Limited time offer Expires 5-1-90 1465 N. Hayden Rd. Scottsdale Mbwraiidedwriththisani;newmeiiitofsonly. Scottsdalelocationonly. Model: LeslieLeonard, MissArizona, (S t comer of Hayden & McDowell) Sports State Press Wednesday, April 2 5 ,1990 Page 2 7 A m end’s te n n is ta le n t d em an d s a tte n tio n By VIC K I CULVER S tate Press When Krista Amend was just a little girl, she knew exactly how to receive attention from her parents —by picking up a tennis racquet and showcasing some of her best court skills. She knew this would get the attention of her parents because it had worked with her older brother of four years, Eric, who is now playing tennis professionally. “I (played tennis) because my brother did it and got a little attention for it,” said Amend, a sophomore on the ASU womens tennis team. “I guess I wanted to follow in my brother’s footsteps.” Krista and Eric both began playing tennis at very young ages. Eric, who was an All-American tennis player at USC and competed in the 1984 Olympic games, began when he was 18 months old because their father, Bill, was doing a project for his doctoral dissertation on whether or not children could learn coordination at infant ages. Krista has played in the No. 1 position on the Sun Devil squad since her freshman year. In her first season, she went 16-11 in singles. This season, she has improved her individual ranking, which has been as high as 20th in the nation. “I am happy with my results,” she said. “I have had to play a lot of really good players over and over again.” W ill P ow érà/S brte Press K rista Am end is A SU’s top w om ens ten n is player as w ell as ranking am ong the n atio n ’s best. At Miraleste High School in Palos Verdes, Calif., Amend was a prep All-American in 1988. She said she chose ASU above all other schools because she liked the coaching staff and the team. “ (Head Coach) Sheila (Mclnemey) is one of the best coaches of college tennis in the country, ’’ Amend said. ‘‘And I really liked the team a lot because they liked to support each other. I thought it would be a good opportunity for me if I came here^” When Mclnerneny was recruiting Amend, she said she did not scout her as the team’s No. 1 player. But with Amend’s impressive .freshman year record, Mclnerney said she is glad she made the decision. “She has done a good job for us at No. 1 for the last couple of years,” Mclnerneny said. “She really handles the pressure and is a good competitor. I feel comfortable with her up there.” Mclnemey said Amend’s best asset as a player is her motivation fpr the team. “ She is very team-oriented,” Mclnemey said, “She is more worried about the team winning than she is about her own accomplishments.” Amend said her concern for how the team does stems from her desire to be a part of a good, high-ranked team. She added that it is one of the reasons she chose ASU. “Everyone works so hard and everyone puts in the time,” she said. “That way, you can only get better. I always wanted to be on a team that improves and wants to improve. ’’ The Sun Devils are currently ranked seventh in the nation. Amend said with the desire the team has to improve coupled with the young starting lineup, she feels ASU is destined for much higher results. She said she hopes to make an impact on the advancement of the program when she embellishes her singles game, She hopes to do that with some of the techniques she has learned from playing doubles with teammate Laura Glitz; “By playing with someone so aggressive, you improve a lot,” she said. “I have learned a lot from (Glitz) and I hope to incorporate.it into my singles.” While Amend said her doubles have by far been her largest area of improvement since she has been at ASU, she said her weakest area is her mental attitude. She said many times she lets pressure get her down, which in turn causes her to become nervous and less-aggressive. “I want to stay in control,” she said. “And I really would like to be more aggressive and stay really focused.” Mclnerney said she feels Amend’s improved doubles game is enhancing her confidence as well. “From a team standpoint, her unproved doubles play has been as instrumental to .us as anything, ” Mclnerney said. “I think it has had a positive effect on Krista and has given her confidence.” Amend is the only member on the ASU squad who has not1 competed on some sort of pro tour. She said after seeing how strenuous it is on her brother, she tends to shy away from the thought. However, she said after she finishes her top goal — graduating — she would like to give the pro tour a try. “I don’t want to take on too much and get burned out,” she said, “But I would like to try it sometime in the summer.” ASU faces UofA for key tw in-bill are schooled as a team on the way they play since we’ve worked against their style in practice the last-two days.” The Sun Devils will be without pitcher Terri Carnicelli (16-16, 1.46 ERA), who is out of the lineup with bicepital tendinitis. The sophomore from Phoenix leads the conference in appearances with 38. By DAN ZEIGER “ I think (Camicelli’s) chances to play are practically S tate Press Not unlike its baseball counterparts, the ASU softball team zero,” Wells said. “I don’t think she’ll be healthy: She was is in contention for a berth in the College World Series this still feeling numbness in her arm when she throws.” summer. Without Caniicelli, Wells will count on sophomore Melinda However, the road to the NCAA playoffs that Sun Devil' Cook (10-3, 0.72 ERA) and freshman Dawn Wood (10-6, 1.29 Head Coach Linda Wells’ team must travel appears bumpier . ERA). Cook was the winning pitcher iff ASU’s 5-3 victory The Sun Devils (37-27 overall, 5-7 Pac-10), fourth in the over the Wildcats on March 28. conference standings and battling for a spot in postseason A big plus for ASU is that the team should have catcher play, travel to Tucson for important doubleheader against Christy Seritella, batting 258 with 9 RBI, fully recovered UofA at 1 p.m. today. “We have to play good defense against their run-and-slap from a minor leg injury which she suffered in.Oklahoma two style offense,” Wells said, “and produce some offense of our weeks ago. The sophomore from San Diego has started 61 of the Sun Devils’ 64 games. . own against their pitching.” In the infield, shortstop Ann Rowan (.361, 22 RBI) enters The third-ranked Wildcats (41-10,11-3 Pac-10) boast one of the game only seven hits shy of Kathy Escarega’s school the conference’s best pitching staffs, comprised of Julie career record of 187. The junior from Tempe, who has a Jones (17-3, 0.49 ERA), Doreen Juarez (13-4,0.81 ERA) and conference-leading 73 hits this season, delivered the gameGinnie Scheller (11-3, 0-66 ERA). UofA, whose team ERA of winner in ASU’s 1-0 victory in the second game of a twin-bill 0.64 ranks third in the Pac-10, has shut out 12 of its last 14 last Friday against California. opponents. Rowan will be joined by Kim Anderson (.171, 15 RBI) at “When we’ve played them before, we were confident that first, Liz Phillips (.268,28 RBI) at second and Stephanie May we can hit their pitching,” Wells said. “True, they’ve shut out (.284,5 RBI) at third. Also, senior first baseman Brandi Hust 12 of their last 14, but they haven’t played against us.” (.195, 8 RBI), who saw her first action last week against The Wildcats hold a 2-1 advantage over the Sun Devils in California after missing 31 games with a tonsillectomy, could the games the teams have played this year. UofA claimed a also receive playing time. 7-1 victory over ASU at the Roadrunner Invitational in Las ASU’s outfield should be comprised of freshman Cheri Cruces, N. M., on March 3 and the two teams split a Keller ( .173,4 RBI) in left, junior Jackie Amara (.203,5 RBI) doubleheader in Tempe on March 28. in center and junior Becky Davis (.277,13 RBI) in right. “We’ll be prepared for them,” Wells said. “I’ve always “We’re hoping that we can play the same exact game we played when we beat them earlier,” Wells said. “I think we thought Arizona was one of the best teams in the country, T hird-ranked W ildcats’ pitching to pose threat ASU catcher C hristy S erftella, a sophom ore, is now com pletely recovered fro m her leg Inju ry o f tw o w eeks ago. T he San Diego native is b atting .258 w ith 9 RBI a fte r m issing th ree starts. even before they got the third ranking. I also think that ASU has been one of the more underrated teams.” Pas« 88 State Prese Wednesday, April 2 5 ,19 9 0 Colleges cross borders in search of athletes By KRIS TIM M O NS S tats Press University-level athletics is becoming an international network. While collegiate coaches still look within their own states for new talent, international recruiting is becoming more common. With 22 international athletes on campus — including three golfers from the same town in Sweden — ASU is no exception. Thirteen countries, ranging from Canada to Yugoslavia, are represented in eight collegiate sports at ASU. ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris said that generally, international recruiting occurs through a “pipeline.” "If someone had an experience here a decade ago,” Harris said, “they tend to refer people to the same institution.” Through the pipeline is how British swimmer Paul Howe came to ASU. Howe, at age 16, had represented Great Britain on the 1984 Olympic bronze medal-winning relay team with three Sun Devils. After the Olympics, ASU Head Coach Ron Johnson and Howe expressed a mutual interest in what each had to offer. Howe said ASU’s swimming program and climate made ASU an ideal school. “In England, we didn’t have one outdoor facility because the weather isn’t as nice,” Howe said. “When you enjoy your training environment (outdoors), it is easier to excel.” Academic excellence also is an important criterion when ASU recruits an international athlete, according to Harris. “What you are looking for at any institution, and certainly at Arizona State,” Harris said, “is for someone who can perform academically to the standards we expect here and . . . has the ability to perform athletically to the standards of this University.” Mens Head Coach Steve Loy agreed. “They (international recruits) have to be good students,” Loy said. “The number one priority is academics.” HoWe, a 22-year-old exercise physiology major, admitted that the school’s academics did not matter. “In England, just as long as you have a degree, that’s what m atters,” Howe said. “They don’t know standings of schools. They only know Stanford and Harvard, so academics was not forefront in my mind.” Athletics and academics is what Swedish athletes look for in a college. Swedish golfers Per Johansson, Lars Herne and Ulrika von Heijne, all from Kalmar, said they came to ASU because it is the best way to combine the two. In Sweden, school comes first. If athletes wish to continue a sport, they must finish college first. “I chose ASU because it has one of the best golf programs in the country and the weather is great,” Herne said. “In Sweden, the weather isn’t good — can’t play year round and can’t combine athletics and academics.” Herne said he chose ASU because Johansson, his neighbor in Sweden, was here. Johansson, A 23-year-old transfer from Alexander City (Ala.) Junior College, said that he chose the U S. for college because “it’s a great system where you can combine sport and school.” Johansson said the new Karsten Golf Course and Loy’s coaching attracted him to Tempe. Johansson’s eligibility runs out at the end of this season. He plans to return to Sweden to play golf for the summer, then join the pro circuit. Von Heijne is a freshman on the womens squad and Swedish national team member. “It’s the best program in the country,” she said. “But I didn’t know much about the school academically. The classes are OK. It’s easier, but playing and studying at the same time is always hard And you can’t do that in Sweden.” Loy said that when he is recruiting new talent, he first looks at the best high school golfers in the country. After looking at the best junior college players, he “fills the gaps with foreign players.” Loy said Johansson was the best junior college player in the country. Loy also said the goals of foreign athletes are different from those of local athletes. “They are trying to find a way to stay in the United States whether it’s through marriage or education,” he said. “Sometimes it can be detrimental.” Just 30 miles across the border into Canada is Welland, Ontario, the home of Brian and Len Gyetko, tennis players at ASU. Brian, former Canadian Davis Cup squad member, said he chose ASU for college because of tiie caliber of the school as a whole. “Basically the Pac-10 is a good conference for tennis,” Brian said. “ASU is a good tennis school where I’d be practicing against good players. Brian, currently the top seed on the tennis team, added that being able to play tennis year-round would be important. “The engineering college here is very good,” he said, “but I would not have come here if it weren’t for tennis.” Len, a walk-on, said part of his decision to attend ASU was because his brother was here. “I thought it would be easier if both of us were here,” Len said. “We could help each other on and off the court. Both Gyetkos consider Canada their home, but they agreed that they would live in the United States if that is where the jobs were. Brian, however, wishes to join the pro circuit after he has received his degree. “Having a degree takes a lot of pressure off of you when you are on the circuit,” he said. Mens Head Coach Lou Belken said international recruiting is an “up-and-coming thing in mens tennis.” “There are only so many quality American kids,” Belken said. “But unfortunately With foreign athletes, you won’t know what you are getting until they get here.” While all students must make the transition from high school to college, the transition can be even greater for foreign athletes. “I think there is always an inherent adjustment problem,” Harris said. Despite studying English in Sweden, Johansson, Herne and von Heijne all had a language barrier to overcome. “When I first started school, I couldn’t decide if I should take notes in Swedish or in English,” Johansson said. “But I decided that if I was going to learn, I would have to take notes in English.” Now that the adjustment period is over, they all said Tempe is not a bad place to live. “It’s obviously a great environment,” Harris said. “It is an institution that is rapidly developing. From an athletic standpoint, we certainly compete in one of the strongest conferences in the country.” C la s s ifie d s ANNOUNCEMENTS AM ERICAN MARKETING A ssociation, don’t forg et the TG10 P arty on A p ril 27. Tickets- $23 couple, $15 single. Contact C arlyn, 820-5684. DON’T FORGET to read the personals in the M ay 1 S tate Press., there m ay be one fo r you!! HANG G LIDE! G ently sloping man-made hHI. Safe and exciting. G roup rates and g ift c e rtific a te s a v a ila b le . W in d s p o rts , 897-7121. S titt Press Classified Advertising Matthews Canter South Basement 965-6731 LINER AD RATES: 15 w ords o r less: $3.00 per day fo r .1-4 days $2.75 pe r day fo r 5-9 days $2.50 pe r day fo r iO e- days 15* each a d ditional w ord The firs t 2 w ords are capitalized. -N o bold face o r centering. ' P e rso n a ls a re o n ly $1.401 Student L o an s... IV Z io n s F irs t N a tio n a l B a n k o f A riz o n a Your Quick Response Student Loan Bank Lender Number: 817 455 0» 1-800-768-2425 Mem ber FDIC State N h W e d n e s d a y , A p r il Page 29 25,1990 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS AUTOMOBILES REAL ESTATE APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING HEADING FOR Europe th is sum m er? Did you know you can je t there anytim e fo r no m ore than $160 plus gas? Jet from LAX or SFO fo r no m ore than $269, from Denver fo r $229 or from east coast for no m ore than $160 w ith A irh itch (reported in Consum er R eports, N ew York Tim es and L e t’s G p)! (212)864-2000, or w rite : A irh itch , 2790 Broadway, Suite 100-M, New Y ork, New York 10025. TIRED OF racism ? The U n ification P rinci­ ple is a proven path to overcom e such barriers. For sem inars, c a ll 894-0667. MUST SELL, great deal! 1986 C hevrolet S p ectrum . 5-speed, 4-door, AM /FM cassette, air-conditioning. $2,999. Kevin, 921-3458 EXQUISITE CONDO, 3 bedroom , 2 bath, vaulted ceilin gs, appliances, e fficie n t AC, m any am enities. $61,000, 839-0228. 1 BEDROOM plus den. 1 m ile/ASU. Fenced yard. Pet okay. $325 per m onth. 265-2066. LAKES TOWNHOME—- V illage Landing Luxury 3 bedroom , 2Vb bath, double garage. B eautiful, secure, enclave near ASU. Club am enities plus! $139,000. 820-1979. 2 BEDROOM, resort-style liv in g in luxury s p lit-le v e l cond o. S p aciou s m aster bedroom , $225; cozy lo ft, $175; plus u tilitie s on each. T e rrific recreational fa c ilitie s . An extro dina ry value. C all 461-1023 or 829-6892 and fin d out w hat a great livin g experience is! W : S ta te Press P re s s State IT’S THE end o f the sem ester. You’re leaving fo r the sum m er or m aybe your best friend is leaving. How are you going to te ll th is w onderful person ju st how m uch you’ll m iss th e ir sm iling face and m idnight phone ca lls from H ell? AH you have to do is place a personal ad in the State Press. If you run it in the M ay 1 issue, you can buy one and get the second one fo r h alf price. Now, isn ’t th is a great way to te ll someone special ju st how special they reaHy are? Place your ad today in the basem ent of M atthew s C enter or at the north inform a­ tio n desk in the MU (photo ID is required to place personal ads). D eadline fo r person­ a ls in the May 1 issue is noon, M onday, A p ril 30 M in i-S to ra g e ... FREE TRUCK RENTAL W h en Y ou R ent a Unit From Us F o r Reservation and Info. Call Susie W HO’S GOT the best breast in town? B.G. E instein’s, o f course. The very best grilled chicken breast sandw ich! T ry it w ith a dab o f honey m usta rd..yo u'll love it! B.G. E instein’s Bar and G rill opens fo r lunch at 11. U pstairs, com er o f 6th and College. AUTOMOBILES 14X7 "STRAIG HT” ra lly wheels, caps and rim s. $140 840-8862 1983 OLDS Cutless Ciera. G reat condi­ tio n , clean and com fortable, a ir condition­ ing, power steering, brakes, windows, locks and seats. $3,500/offer. 894-9536. 1984 CAM ARO Z-28, t-tops, autom atic, a ir conditioning, every option available, excel­ lent condition. $5,500. 860-0381. 1985 JEEP CJ7. Looks, runs great. Many hew parts. F irst $5,200 takes it. Jeff, 839-6821. 1985 MAZDA GLC, sunroof, hatchback, 5-speed, great on gas. $2,300. Tom, 784-0520. 1987 JEEP W rangler, 34,000 m iles, 5-speed. CaH M ark, 921-3450 or 831-6366. ' 1986 YAMAHA F Z 6 0 0 .12,000 m iles. New tire s , S upertrapp, B iette fib e r glass helm et. $2,100. E ric, 829-6919. 1987 HONDA E lite 150, great condition, m ust seH! $1,000. 784-8010. 1988 KAW ASAKI N inja 600R. Beautiful, re d , g re a t c o n d itio n . 7,6 0 0 m ile s, extended w arranty. $3,400/offer. M ust sell, graduating. Leave m essage: B ill, .280-2474. HONDA AERO 125. Runs great, good condition, Needs no w ork. $425. Erin, 966-5941. HO NDA SP R E E, g re a t fo r around cam pus. $250 o r best o ffe r. 967-7876, leave message. A ll makes & conditions. 2235 W. 1st Street A rizona Shorts 5 th & M ill 1985 YAMAHA R iva scooter. 125cc, new seat, helm et, cover, low m He* $699: 964-4775. IN S TA N T C A SH fo r yo u r veh icles! $$$$ U » a , 4 8 4 -7 0 5 5 SHORT AFFAIR? 1983 SUZUKI G S550, new tire s, brakes, tune-up, headers. Runs m int. $1,200. 784-9572, anytim e. HONDA ELITE 80, 1987, great condition. $800. 784-0439, leave a m essage. I 'll co m e to y o u r lo c a tio n ! TEXTBOOKS— SELL fo r up to 100% of what you paid. The Student B ooklist, 392-TEXT 1983 HONDA V-45 Sabre, Porsche Alpine W hite, excellent condition. Helm et, extras. $1,100. 840-6846, 954-2507 after 5. $$$$ 967-0210 SPEN D A w eek in b e a u tifu l San Francisco/N orthem C alifornia attening in CARP sem inar. Topics include life and te a c h in g o f R e vere nd M oon. C a ll 966-3877 MOTORCYCLES 1987 SAMURAI— w hite convertible, bikini and soft top, a ir conditioning, Sony pullout CD player, Sparky plates. Fun car! G reat c o n d itio n ! O n ly $5,4 0 0 — m ust s e ll. 966-8780. BMW 2002— 1972. M echanically Sound. AM/FM cassette. 25m pg. Asking $1,490 firm . 833-5082. ^ ./ M UST SELL! 1986 Isuzu 1-Mark. R ebuilt engine, great condition. $4,300/offer. 784-8275, ask for M ike VW BUS, 1972. Runs great, looks good. Sunroof. $1,450 or best offe r. E ric, 991-7181- I $$ QUICK CASH $$ I I 'll b u y y o u r c a r o r tru c k , ru n n in g o r n o t! F ree to w in g . C a ll n o w ... 256-7408 a.m . 381-0142 p .m . ANNOUNCEMENTS NEED CLOTHES? CA$H? Buy s e ll The H ottest W ear fo r Guys & Gals •Levi -Guess •J im m y Z «Esprit c. c.'s closet Classics BICYCLES CYCLE PRO cruiser. B lue, in great condi­ tio n . $75, includes U -lock. C ontact Keith, 784-9721. FURNITURE B E A U T IF U L K IN G -S IZ E w a te rb e d , includes everthing; also, stereo: AM/FM cassette, 8-track, turn table 844-8122. COFFEE TABLE, $30; entertainm ent center, $40; 4-piece dinette, $75; recliner chair, $50; dresser, $55; loveseàt, $45; desk/chair, $50; night stand, $35; Compu­ te r table, $25/offer. C all 784-1582. COUCH, SECTIONAL, 5 pieces, 6 m onths o ld. G reat cond ition. $450. M oving! 437-0985. DESK AND dresser, $100 or best offer. 967-3416, leave m essage. MUST SELL im m ediately! Dresser, desk, ch a ir and futon bed. Less than 1 year old. P rice negotiable. C all R andi, 967-3786. TICKETS ERIC CLAPTON ticke ts. G reat seats. Section K, row 17 C a ll Je ff at 784-9626. PHOENIX SUNS playoff tickets, vs. Utah Jazz. $50 and $60. Good seats. Call 833-5082. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 5-COMPONENT KENWOOD stereo w ith cabinet; oak w aterbed; m iscellaneous item s. C a ll 243-7226. Pam, I.OOO’s needed! Saturday, 4 -2 8 ,1 0 a.m. Show up! Sun Devi! Stadium BRING A PICN IC FUN PRIZES For further info, call 953-5251 AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES COMPUTERS 3 BLOCKS to ASU. 2 bedroom , w alk-in clo set, range, oven, dishw asher, refrigera­ to r, ce ilin g fan, m ini-blinds, $425. RSVP R ealty, 838-3898. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartm ent, covered parkin g, m odern appliances, laundry h o o k -u p s . 0 4 9 S o u th M c C lin to c k , (between Apache / U niversity). Jess Sotom ayer, 897-0516. fft€€ ftCNTftl SCfWICC Apartment Anders Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 N.W. Phoenix 841-5055 APARTMENT FOR rent during sum m er. 1 bedroom , 1 bath. M irage on East G ilb ert D rive. Price negotiable. C all 966-3191. A S U A R E A , 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th , $ 3 4 0 /m o n th p lu s e le c tr ic ity . A irconditioning, jacuzZi, no pets, deposit. 967-4789 Fully Modern Move-In Special Facu Ity /S ta ff/G rad uate Students. Deluxe studio, 1 and 2 bedroom apart­ m ents. Spa, 2 pools, courtyard. Close to ASU H a y d e n P la c e 6 2 5 W . 1st S t., T e m p e (1st & R oo sevelt) 9 6 8 -5 4 4 4 ASU’AREA. S tudios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartm ents fo r re n t. $260 and up. 966-8838. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedroom s W alk to ASU, pool, laundry room . 1 block south o f U niversity on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartm ents. 968^5238 fo r special. •Newlyredecorated •Vertical blinds •Designer carpet • 4 sparkling pools •Laundry facilities •Great for rental sharing •W alk to ASU •1st Months Rent $ 9 9 (plus deposits) AMAZING VALUE, Z enith 181 laptop, new, $849. 998-2765. O p en Daily 9 to 6 Utilities Included REAL ESTATE $100 DOWN fo r S pringtree 2 bedroom condo w ith vaulted c e ilin g . O nly $42,000 — save $20,0001 W hy rent next sem ester? G reg, R ealty Executives, 941-7705. ADORABLE 2 bedroom red b rick cottage, located 1 m ile east o f ASU. $58,000. Frank, 268-9132. ASU— 1 block, why rent? $3,500 buys quiet, clean m obile hom e. S e ll wheq done. 997-6421. SAVE $25,000 3 bedroom ASU tow nhom e O nly $100 dow n fo r sharp University Ranch 3 bedroom, 2 bath tow nhom e w ith fire ­ place, vaulted ceiling and red tile roofs. W hy rent next semester? Only $46,0001 941-7705 G reg R ealty E xecutives ^ Advertising... W e help you find it! APARTMENTS The Fomifains THREE FORMAL dresses: 2 pink, 1 peach. Size 3-5. C all Stacy, M ondayFriday, 9-5, 829-3733. E X TR A S N E E D E D NATIONAL COMMERCIAL LUXURY 2 bedroom , 1 bath condo. G arage, appliances. Assum able 9% FHA. $68,500; $8,650 down: 345-6583. r “ *" | I 1028 E. Orange 967-0489 SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now For Fall! W A L K TO ASU ! O n ly Vi block fro m c a m ­ pus. B eau tifu lly fu rn ish ed , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 bath; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 bath a p a rt­ m ents. All bills p a id . C able T V , h e a te d p o o l, an d sp acio us laundry fa cilities. Friendly, courteous management. S t o p by to day! T e rra c e R o a d A p a r tm e n ts 9 5 0 S. T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 GRADUATE STUDENT, sta ff and-faculty. F ully renovated, quiet living . Close to ASU. Exercise room ,' expansive pool. 894-6468. . STUDIOS $295. S m all, quiet com plex w ith pool. Close to ASU, utm ies included. Please c a ll 966-8597. RANCHO LAS PALMAS B est dea l around — W alk to ASUI M ove In fo r firs t m onth's rent. N o dep o sits/n o fees! O ne m onth fre e w ith 13 m onth lease. O ne B edroom /$355 m onth Tw o B edroom /2 Bath $515 m C a ll now ! 1249 E. Spence 829-9607 TAKE OVER lease. Furnished 1 bedroom (designed fo r 2). $372, includes u tilitie s . Low deposit, 5/1 o r 5/15. ASU close. 968-1283, leave m essage. TIRED OF the noise? T ired o f the dOrms? Free a ir conditioning. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, $475/m onth. 910 East Lem on, 966-8704. FREE Apartm ent Locating Service AVAILABLE IM M EDIATELY. Need room ­ m ate, m ale/fem ale. 4 bedroom , 2 bath house. Pool, w asher/dryer, cable, m icro­ wave, big-screen TV. 5 m inutes from c a m p u s . C a ll 9 6 7 -2 0 0 3 , J u s tin e . $200/m onth plus Mi u tilitie s . CHRISTIAN FEMALE room m ate.. Own bedroom , bath. Apartm ent w ith pool, etc. $195 plus Vb u tilitie s . 894-0834. FALL SEMESTER. 2 bedroom . 2 bath apartm ent, a ll am enities. R ural/Apache. $250 plus Vi. 437-1057. K elly . FEMALE FOR a 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo. F u lly fu rn ish e d , w a sher/dryer, poo l, tennis. 953-1159, 992-0088. FEMALE WANTED— Share large 1 bedroom . Free u tilitie s , furnished. Im m edi­ a te ly ! $ 2 0 2 /m d n th . C a ll 967-4962, m essage. GREAT FOR tw o friends: Lós Prados 2 bedroom , 1 bath, upstairs, w ith sundèck. $260/$270. Pool, w asher/dryer. C all: Ron, 829-0626. LARGE 2 bedroom . Own bath. A ll am eni­ ties. 1 m ite to cam pus. $250 plus Vb SRP. M ichael, 967-3741. M A L E /F E M A L E , N O N -S M O K E R ; 2 bedroom , 2 bath, $265 plus Vb u tilitie s . W asher/dryer. 481-9709. MALE/FEMALE ROOMMATE, 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo, furnished^ pool, voHeybaH. $260 plus Vb u tilitie s . 829-9281. M ALE ROOMMATE wanted— share 2 bedroom , 2 bath, heated pool, jacuzzi. $230/m onth, Southern/R ural. C all Sean, 784-9001. MASTER BEDROOM in clean house w ith private bath. F ull house privileges. $295, includes u tilitie s . W alk to cam pus. Call John G ., 921-2080. 437-1048 NON-SM OKING FEMALE student to share S cottsdale hom e. M ay-August. References plus deposit required. Call 784-8118 or (612)763-5532. R o o m m a te m ate hi n g se rv ic e a lso a va ila b le . PAPAGO II, fem ale room m ates, 5/1-8/10. Own bedroom /bath, $20 0/utilities. 2 g irls to share, $13 5 /u tilitie s. Furnished, no deposit. 784-052?. 437-1048 TOWNHOMES / CONDOS RENT PAID through ftfay. Fem ale to share nice 2 bedroom , 2 bath, near ASU. $255 plus Vb u tilitie s - 894-6354. ROOM AVAILABLE in nice four bedroom hom e, close to ASU. $150/share u tilitie s . K eith, 946-0602. 2 BEDROOM, m aster suites, Q uesta Vida. F ull-size w asher/dryer, refrig era tor, m icrowave. O verlooks pool. V ertical, blinds, dishw asher, ce ilin g fans, 2 patios, 2 recreational areas. 894-6229 or 985-1111. ROOM IN 2 bedroom apartm ent, furn­ ished, share bath. 10-m inute w alk to ASU. P refer 1 person, 2 okay. A vailable 6/1 for sum m er and/or fan. Raphael, 965-2735, anytim e. $197.50/m onth. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex, large fenced yard. Pets okay. Near ASU. P riest and 5th S treet. $400/m onth, 921-0931, leave m essage. ROOMMATE(S) W ANTED: Share beauti­ fu l condo, Scottsdale, 3 m iles from ASU. Furnished, W asher/dryer. C all B rian, 481.-0096. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo, shaded, 2-car parking. Living room , kitchen, nook, fire ­ place, porch, balcony. 200 yards to ASU$530/m onth. (619)260-8412, R O O M M A T E , 4 b e d ro o m h o u s e . $25 0/utilities included. No pets. W asher/ dryer. 829-1390, after 6. Southem /Priest. 2 BEDROOM condo, furnished, washer/ dryer, air-conditioned. Available Juné 1. Papago lj. (714)786-9575, (714)693-9376. ROOMMATES NEEDED fo r sum m er, 3 bedroom , 1% bath house. $200 a m onth plus phone b ill. C all K arl, 784-9712 for m ore inform ation. 3 BEDROOM condo, near ASU. A irconditioned, fireplace, pool, w asher/dryer. Reasonable. Phyliss, C21/RAN Realty, 844-0600. SHARE LARGE house, pool, washer/ dryer, dishw asher, etc. R ural and Apache. $170 plus u tilitie s . 437-1048, Dana. 1 AWESOME 3 bedroom , 2 bath bi-level townhom e w ith w asher/dryer, sundeck, ce ilin g fans, pool, tennis courts. Vb m ile to ASU. CaH im m ediately. Dana, 967-3786. SUMMER RENTAL, to ta lly furnished house, M cCorm ick Ranch in Scottsdale. 2,000 square feet, 3 bedroom , 2 bath, ja cuzzi. B eautiful area. M ale, fo r $275. A vailable May 1. Call 483-2022. HAYDEN SQUARE condo, downtown Tem po. 3 bedroom /2 bath. D eluxe living situatio n, a ll am enities included. $1,090 per m onth. 940-0518. A vailable June 1. SUMMER ROOMMATE needed (fem ale). 2 bedroom apartm ent. Own room , recrea­ tiona l fa c ilitie s . Coral P oint Apartm ents. $220— Vb u tilitie s . 464-2103. ONE AND tw o bedroom , 1 bath condos, w alk to ASU, w asher/dryer/refrigerator. 345-1919. SUMMER SUBLET. 4 bedroom , 2 bath. Own room . Fully furnished, pool, washer/ dryer, new ly-installed central air. $175, Vb u tilitie s , $100 deposit. 945-9092. PAPAGO PARK II. 2 bedroom , 2 bath. W asher/dryer, a ll appliances. 1 m ile to ASU. 952-8980. HOMES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, spacious,, big yard, Mi m ile from ASU. M ust see. 966-7912. 3 BEDROOM/2 bath house w ith pool. 3 m iles from ASU. A ir cond itioning and evap. Pets okay. $675/m onth. 941-5549. 3 BEDROOM, carport. 10 m inutes w alk/ ASU. Sum m er Sublet M ay-August. $400 m onthly. 731-9790. RENTAL SHARING 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted to share 3 bedroom condo, ow n room w ith bed. 1 m ile w est, ASU. $267/m onth Los Prados townhom es, available im m ediately. Call Jay, evenings, 921-7059- BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES INTERESTED IN extra money? Be your own boss anywhere. P erfect if going home fo r sum m er. C all o r leave m essage, 423-0292. MODELS ACTORS/ACTRESSES. For a free interview w ith a full-service talen t netw o rk, c a ll 967-0019. The Im age Source. TRAVEL JAPAN arid m ake top executive business contacts w hile earning ASU business cre d it! O he week program 8/17/90 to 6/24/90. M eeting 4/25/90, 3pm, BAC629 fo r inform ation, o r c a ll IBS, 830*0902. W ANTED: ARCHITECTURAL student, need help w ith designing lu xury custom hom e. You set the fee. Tom , 962-8232. Pase 30 . .. *1 Wednesday, April 2 5 ,19 9 0 a ..." 1 State Press HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED PERSONALS 100 MODELS fo r C arsten/Planet Earth hair show (cuts, colors, perm s). M odel c a ll, May 1 ,5pm . Carsten In stitu te , 3345 South R ural Road. No phone calls. APPLY NOW fo r 40 hour sum mer posi­ tions in d istribu tion center. Part-tim e help also needed im m ediately. Apply at 3154 N orth 34th D rive, Phoenix. 272-7973. DISABLED FEMALE lo oking fo r part-tim e sum m er help. For d e ta ils , c a ll 967-8829. Please leave m essage. L IF E G U A ftD /S W IM IN S TR U C TO R — C ertified. Full-tim e. $5 per hour. Mid-M ay through August. Call S tanley Day School, 9669643. SUMMER OFFICE help. Light typing, filin g and heavy phone. C all 9669405. AAAAAAA: DO you need extra cash for tuition ? You can w in a $500 scholarship ju st by purchasing a ra ffle ticke t. W here? Just stop by the Kappa A lpha Booth next to the fountain anytim e durin g the week. $12/HO UR STATISTICIAN , tem porary position available. 8-10 hours per week between 7:15am and 3:30pm . Perform ing sta tistica l analysis o f consum er panel data using SAS program : North Scottsdale location. Call 998-6322. APPOINTM ENT SETTERS. P art-tim e, leads provided. $6 an hour plus com m is­ sion. Pagenet—-C all C hris, 433-4954. TELEM ARKETERS ESL Teachers in Asia fo r ELS In te rn a tio n a l 1 y e a r • F u ll-tim e ESL experience a n d /o r M A E S L /L in g . 1 y e a r contract, $22,000 co m ­ pensation p a c k a g e in­ c lu d e s a ir fa re and h ousing. Position availab le im m ed iately. S end resum e to: ELSI 2 3 1 5 S, Elm M ësa, A Z 852 0 2 $5-$8/hr. to stajl + comm. No selling, just setting appoint­ ments! No experience neces­ sary. Job hours: MrF, 4-6 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. ASSEMBLY PROGRAMMERS, part-tim e. R apidly growing com pany is lo oking for students w ith strong m ath aptitudes to w rite softw are fo r Real Tim e/M ulti-user operating system applications fo r VAX and the 68020, To apply, c a ll Ticketm aster at 279-2822. ATTENTION: EXCELLENT incom e for home assem bly work. F of inform ation, call (504)646-1700, departm ent P7085. DO YOU w ant to m ake difference? Take fu ll proje ct responsibility right out of school? W ork w ith the w o rld's leading com puter com panies? If so, Rogers C orporation, Power D istribution D ivision, has challenging and rew arding opportuni­ ty fo r you. Rogers C orporation, a w orl­ dw ide supp lie r of pow er d istribu tion products, is looking fo r degreed m echani­ ca l engineers to design and m anufacture pow er d istribu tion com ponents fo r the w o rld’s leading com puter com panies, such as IBM , D igital and H ew lett Packard. Rogers o fffe rs a fast-paced environm ent, em ploying the la test techniques in world class m anufacturing. W e have im m ediate opportunities fo r the rig h t people. Please contact R ick Palm er at (602)786-8420 to arrange fo r an interview . Rogers Corpora­ tio n , an A m erican S tock Exchange co m p a n y, is a E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity Em ployer. SUM M ER WORK $200-$ 400 W eekly Interviewing April 18-20 and A pril 2 3 -2 7 , 9 a m .-3 p.m. A p p ly in person: Howard Johnson Hotel (on Apache, across from ASU) PART-TIME OFFICE help, m orning hours, some Saturdays, Lotus, word processor, $4/hour. K elly, 423-5077. 1 ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS fo r parttim e sum m er jobs. $5.50/hour, 20plus hours/week. D on't delay, c a ll today! 968-4457. ADVERTISING ASSISTANT intern in m ajor accounts departm ent for V alley’s largest publisher o f suburban weekly n e w sp a p e rs. P re fe r a d v e rtis in g or com m unications/m arketing m ajor. 12-16 hours/week, paid position. C all Rebecca, 483-0077. ★ FREE HAIRCUTS ★ M odels needed for c re a tiv e “ h a n d s -o n ” training at A dam Pink S a l o n ’s a d v a n c e workshop. T uesd ay night a t 6 p.m. M ust call for an appointm ent. 4 91-2660 SU M M E R JO B S We are hiring 100 students & teachers fo r a variety of temporary clerical positions. If you have office skills such as typing, reception, clerical, WPO, secretary, etc., please call fo r appointment: T em p * 966-1100 Phoenix 264-4537 STIVERS i l-.M P O R A R Y PERSONNEL IfSlC; • AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS w ith great personalities and who want to earn $10 to $20 an hour, c a ll A erobics-to-Y ou, 496-6666. AIRLINES HIRING now ! Im m ediate entry level positions available. E xcellent sala­ ries and benefits, in cluding tra v e l passes. No previous a irlin e experience required. Some college preferred. 303-441-2449, S i d i r P r e s s C I d s s if ir d s is lo t d i e d in t h e b d s e m c n l of M d tlh r w s ( r u l e r A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs a fron t and back o ffice r person, perm anent, fulM im e, w ith excellent secretarial skills. Type 60 words per m inute. W ill tra in . C all 941-3812. ANSW ERING SERVICE, part-tim e, tele­ phone, ty p in g e xp e rie n ce re quired . M onday, Thursday, Friday: 1-7; Tuesday, W ednesday: 1-6. Scottsdale. 947-7351. G E T T H E LEA D O U T ! of your pencil and write down this phone number: ATTENTION! Arizona’s parks and w ild life need you! H elp us collect 100,000 signa­ tures by July 5 . For m ore inform ation, c a ll The Arizona H eritage A lliance, 256-6712. BARM AID W ANTED. n ece ssary. P a rt-tim e 966-2111. No experience and evenings. CONVENTION SET-UP postions avail­ able. AM and PM shifts, fb lt- and part-tim e. M ust be available weekends. Apply in person: SunBurst Hotel and Conference C enter, 4925 N orth Scottsdale Road, 945-7666, ask fo r Brian Berg. DO YO U WATCH T H E C O M M E R C IA L S M ORE TH AN T H E PR O G RA M S? Maybe you should consider a career in advertising. The State Press is hiring ten advertising sales representatives to create, design and sell advertising to local retail businesses. No experience necessaryjust the desire to learn and grow profes­ sionally. A car is necessary. Please, no seniors. Apply in writing, stating why you'd be an asset to the advertising team by noon, May 5, to Jackie Eldridge, room 47 in Matthews Center Basement. 9 6 7 -0 0 6 6 TM I Corp. is now hiring for summer. O u r tele­ p h o n e rep re s e n ta tiv e positions are filling fast. Earn $5.50/hour guar­ anteed. $1500-52500 this summer. Set your own schedule. C onvenient location at Broadway and M ill. C all established customers of Fortune 500 clients. Fun environment, friendly fa c e s . Summer's almost here, call today and ask for Sharon Preston to get an interview . 967-0066, 9 ji .m - 9 p m., M -F . Ask about our $100 bonus. TMI Corp. (EOE) EARN $506700/W EEK. M ust be person­ able and stylish . 7365314. C all Nick. Tem pe/M esa/C handler area. EARN BIG bucks. Cam pus Connection needs am bitious students. G ain great business experience, earn up to $4,000 and powerhouse your resum e sellin g ad space for your school’s edition. You’ll receive extensive trainin g, m aterials and support w orking fo r the nation’s top college m agazine. S ales positions and one ed ito ria l position available. C all Robin o r Jay, (800)342-5118. EASY W ORK. Upscale, festive w orking a tm o sp h e re . Food s e rv ic e w o rkers needed fo r various assignm ents. S taff B uilders, 894-1296. LOOKING FOR som e exciting people to help me give away MCI long-distance service. Cash paid. F or m ore inform ation, c a ll Tate at 821-1858, M onday-Friday. TELEPHONE INTERVIEW ERS needed fo r m arketing research. Evening and weekend shifts. No sales. W alk from cam pus. $4.50 an hour to sta rt. C all 12 to 4pm to set up interview . 8263282, Higgin­ botham Associates. MINDER BINDERS: H iring fu ll- and parttim e cooks. Flexible hours, benefits. Apply between 2-5pm , 715 South Hayden, Tem pe. THE SOUTHW ESTERN Company is inter­ view ing students fo r sum m er work. Chal­ lenging and resum e building. Also make $5,450 C all 222-8106. NIG HT ATTENDANT w anted, Friday and Saturday n ight, 11 pm -7am . Janito rial duties, answ er phones and assist doctor at veterinary c lin ic , Send resum e to P.O. Box 1392, M esa 85201. NO RTHEAST DAYCARE lo o kin g fo r teachers. M ust have high school diplom a, 18 or older. Part-tim e, fu ll-tim e openings. G rea t sum m er o p p o rtu n itie s . Am igo Preschool, 267-1539, P A R T -T IM E B IN D E R Y /D E L IV E R Y person- M ust have valid Arizona license. A lpha G raphics: 1495 N orth Hayden, 994-1190. GROUNDSKEEPER/ WAREHOUSE POSITION PART-TIME Permanent part-time posi­ tion 10-15 hours per week a n y tim e M o n d a y-F rid a y between the hours of 8 a.m>5 p.m. Candidate must be able to take direction and w ork independently. This position i nvolves light maintenance in warehouse and grounds maintenance. Please apply: A COM PANY: 4561 E. M cD ow ell Rd. Phoenix, AZ 85008 START YOUR SUMMER JOB NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE EOE M /F/H /V PHOENIX SYMPHONY pdrt-tim e/evening. W e need your voice fo r m ajor subscription cam paign. Good pay, d a ily cash bonuses fo r enthusiastic, a rticu la te people. Call David Dean, 277-7291, ext. 355. •2 4 hours per week •Evenings hours •W eekly pay •W alk to work •Cash bonuses paid nightly. PRESCHOOL DIRECTOR. Mesa, Kids A re People Too. Experience preferred. Jean, 9263464. $5.50 G uaranteed 968-4457 FUN, RESPONSIBLE person fo r general o ffice work: Year-round, fle xib le hours, 2-3 days a week, com puter know ledge. Apply im m ediately! C all for interview , 991-6892, please leave a m essage. GAME ROOM attendant, part-tim e. M ust be honest and dependable. Approxim ately 15 hours/w eèk. A va ila ble I1am -6pm , M ondays and W ednesdays. $3.80/hour. A pply in person. Players C hoice Lim ited, C ornerstone M all, R uràl/U niversity. HOSTESS POSITIONS available, parttim e, evenings. Apply a fte r 4pm a t Salt C ellar R estaurant, 550 N orth Hayden Road. 947-1963. HOUSE CLEANING, part-tim e, $5/hour. M esa area. 8am -2:30pm . C all 491-2301, leave m essage. RESPONSIBLE PERSON needed to stay w ith tw o toddlers, 6pm to 8am , three nights/w eek. 7360862. SALES MANAGER needed. New m arket­ ing com pany, for tra ve l and financial services. Expanding to Arizona. C all Tim , 784-4000. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch w aitresses. A p p ly in person between 1 6 1 1 :30am , o r a fte r 1:30pm. 5Q01 East W ashington. SUB SHOP 99 now h irin g fo r sum mer, days and nights. 829-0868. SUMMER JO BS! Full-tim e, $300 per week; part-tim e, $150 per week. Many openings in custom er service and retail. 30 scholarships available. Located in Tem pe. C all 9am to 4pm , 8362633. SU M M ER JO B $200-$400 w e ekly. E nthusiastic individuals needed part-tim e and fu ll-tim e . M anagem ent positions avail­ able. Q uick advancem ent. C all fo r best job in the V alley, 921-8282. Part-time $8 to $ 1 0 /h o u r W e fu lly tra in $ 5 .5 0 g u a ra n te e d /h o u r. COUNSELORS- Prestigious co-ed Berkshires, MA sum m er cam p seeks skilled college ju niors, seniors and grads. W SI, tennis, sa illin g , w aterski, canoe, athletics, archery, gym nastics, aerobics, golf, arts and cra fts, photography, silve r, jew elry, m usical directors, piano accom panists, science« rocketry, cam ping, video, news­ paper. Have a rew arding and enjoyable sum m er! Salary plus room and board. C all Camp Taconic, 800-762-2820. CRUISESHIP JOBS, $300-$900 weekly. (214)572-6165, ext. C-4. DAY CARE attendants, part-tim e o r fu ll­ tim e. M ust be staying th is sum m er. $4 per hour. 9669643, Stanley Day School. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed. M ust have own car. Earn $6-8 per hour. Papa Jay's Pizza. 9664292 DO YOU care enough about your environ­ m ent to do som ething about it? Find out how you can m ake a difference, and earn m oney! 894-0360. T h e n a tio n ’s fin e s t an d la rg e s t te le m a rk e tin g firm is n o w a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r sh ifts in the: •Early A.M. •Afternoons AFTERSHOCK— I love you so much. A-PHI BROOKE, C ori T rish, 21 never looked so good and hung so hard! Thanks! I love you guys!!! Suzanne. California Firm Recruiting for INSIDE SALES A dynamic $50 million leader in the high tech printed circuit board industry hasimmediate openings for customer service/iriside sales representatives. Qualified candidates must be self motivated and available to train in California. A college degree and excellent com­ munication skills are required. Background in sales or cus^ tomer service preferred. In addition to an attractive starting salary we offer an exceptional benefits package which includes a caahbonua program . Please phone for an appointment. We will be on campus 4/27^-4/29. Sigma Circuit, Inc. Santa Clara, CA 1 (800) 727-6635 THE STATE Press is h irin g ten advertising salespeople to tra in now fo r selling advertising th is sum m er and the 199691 academ ic year. No experience necessary, ju st a reliable car o r tru ck and the desire to learn and grow professionally. Apply in w riting, stating why you’d be an asset to the advertising team by noon, May 5, to Jackie E ldridge, room 47 in M atthews C enter basem ent. TRAVEL, BE in the sun, see the w orld, have fun, and get paid! How? College students cruise ship jobs; stewards, stew­ ard e sse s, m aintena nce. $900/s alary weekly. G uaranteed openings. C all us n o w f o r s u m m e r e m p lo y m e n t. 1-806926-8447, ext.C -1279. VALET PARKING attendants. M ust be 21 years old, clean cut, Good d riving record. W ork 5pm -11pm , o r 11am-3pm . Apply 34 W est D unlap, Phoenix. N orth C entral/ Dunlap area. Serious inquiries only. . INSTRUCTION LEARN JAPANESE, Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian« German, Russian, A rabic, E nglish conversation, Toefl preparation. Arizona Language Insti­ tute, 962-8677. JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. M ill, S uite 101, Tempe. 9665967. CASH PAID, jew elry o f a ll kinds, including gold, sterling , gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 9 2 1 S. M ill Ave, Tem pe Center. 9666074. EREE LOST/FOUND FOUND: 16C AR AT tri-co lo r ring w ith stone. C all 967-6830 to identify. HAVE YOU lost som ething? Check the MU Lost and Found. LOST: BLACK backpack w ith turquoise and pink pocket. Need notebook fo r finals. Please c a ll 491-3499. AFTER CLASS HOURS A A A D elta Tau D elta in vites you to attend our inform al pre-rush dinner Thursday, A p ril 26, 5:60, at the D elt House. Any que stions, co n ta ct M itch M cKinnon, 784-0656. LOST: BUSINESS card file , in College of Business, on 4/19. M aroon in color, 5x7 size. C all Howard a t 949-0494. LOST: MAROON ASU backpack, lo st Friday durin g accident at intersection of M ill and U niversity. C ontents im portant. Reward. C all C heryl, 784-8298 PERSONALS BUDDY— YOU’VE got me! H olly. C O N G R ATU LATIO N S DAW N, J u lie , M egan and Jennifer o n your lavalierings, pinning and engagem ent! W e love you, your DeeGee sisters. CRAIG: THANKS fo r the flow ers and everything! M ost o f a ll thanks fo r believing in me. Love, M onika. DE LTA G AM M A S h ip w re ck!!! Gamma Shipw reck!!! D e lta DE LTA G AM M A S h ip w re c k !!! Gamma Shipw reck!!! D e lta DE LTA G AM M A S h ip w re c k !!! Gamma S hipw reck!!! D e lta DE LTA G AM M A S h ip w re ck!!! Gamma S hipw reck!!! D e lta DELTA KAPPA E psilon Kevin C onnell, alias “ Annoying M an’’—A lpha Phi Form al S a tu rd a y n ig h t! Be T h e re !^ -"L o v e Alw ays,” Me. DG SENIORS— You absence w ill leave a hole in our house and hearts. W e w ish you a ll the success in the w o rld! Love, your DeeGee sisters. DQN’T FORGET to read the personals in the May 1 State P ress...there may be one fo r you!! DON’T MISS South w inds on Friday! Southw inds is your ASU news and in for­ m ation station. It’s our la st show o f the year, and it w ill be o ur best. W e’re on Tem pe Cable C hannel 34 in Tem pe at 4:30, and ron the Phoenix Cable Learn C hannel 34 Valleyw ide, M ondays at 4:30 and W ednesdays a t 5pm . W atch It. DTD SCOTT, Jason and Dan. Thanks for being great dates at SK’s form al! Jodi, H eidi and M erryLynn. Enjoy the C otton!! GAMMA PHI is proud o f her new extended executive officers. W e’re lo oking forw ard to a great year! GAMMA PHI Beta congratulates its new o fficers fo r 199691: H eidi, Susan, M ikki, H eather, JodiQ ., JodiH ., E lle, B irdie, Lara, M ichelle, Brenda, C hrissy, Lisa, K ris. W ay to go, girts! GAMMA PHI w ishes to thank pur dates fo r la st w eekend’s Luau! W e had a blast! Thanks, guys! GREEKS— GREEK W eek is over but Rum or Has It th a t som ething is m issing? The 1990 G reek W eek B ooklet is on the way, and it is awesom e! IT’S THE end o f the sem ester. You’re leaving fo r the sum m er or m aybe your best friend is leaving. How are you going to te ll th is w onderful person ju s t how m uch you’ll m iss th e ir sm iling face “ and m idnight phone ca lls from H ell? A ll you have to do is place a personal ad in the S tate Press. If you run it in the May 1 issue, you can buy one and get the second one fo r h a lf price. Now, isn ’t th is a great w ay to te ll som eone special ju st how special they really are? Place your ad today in the basem ent of M atthew s Center or at the north inform a­ tio n desk in the MU (photo ID is required to place personal ads). D eadline for person­ als in the May 1 issue is noon, M onday. A p ril 30. KRISTEN MADDUS (sten): W e’ve had a blast fo r three years and w ill continue now, especially now th a t we can hang at the bars together. Have a blast tonig ht. I know you w ill because I w ill be holding the shot glass. Happy 21st. —M arce. MICKEY P.H. Thanks you fo r a ll o f the late-night quizzing and a ll o f your support. I couldn’t have done it w ithout you. Thanks— we’re graduating! Love, M .J.P. NANCY STRACKE— Happy B irthday! C ouldn’t have asked 4A bette r room m ate. No m ore rides to the airp o rt. Like It! G et ready fo r events w /us T.W .’s. Love you, Julie. •Evenings W e h ave te le m a rk e tin g p o s itio n s a v a ila b le in1 several d e p a rtm e n ts in clud ing : •P u b lis h e r S ervices • B o o k C lu b P ro gram ^ • N o n -p r o fit p ro g ra m s G am m a O m oaa O u r ea s y s c h e d u le s a n d a p ro fessio n al staff all a d d u p to a n e n jo y a b le a n d lu c ra tiv e jo b . O u r T e m p e o ffic e is 5 m in u te s fro m cam p u s. D la la m e r lc a 894-0264 Tempe North Little League wishes to thank the follow ing fraternities fo r sponsoring little league teams: (Farm League - Pirates) M g m a CM (Major League - Giants) B Thanks fo r your support! State P rê t Wednesday, April 8 5 ,19 9 0 PERSONALS SERVICES TUTORS PIKES— GOOD lu ck w ith Spuds and Suds. S orry we can’t be there. Love, the Kappa's. E L E C T R O LY S IS -P E R M A N E N T h a ir rem oval. Remove unw anted h a ir forever. Student discount. C a ll for m ore inform a­ tion, 969-6954. W ANTED: TUTOR, ECN 313.1-997-5715. RED JELLYBEAN, your present is in the M U . I suggest you get it today. The key is in your m ailbox. You best be on your way. W HY HAUL it hom e? Store it! See our ad today. Best L ittle W arehouse in Tempe. 967-3900. SAMM Y’S: GOOD luck on your fin a ls!! SIGM A ALPHA Mu w ould like to congratu­ la te the ASU baseball team on a great season! ' s ...' YOUR FUTURE revealed by the Tarot cards. $5 reading w ith th is ad. Call 8 9 4 -14 91 fo r a p p o in tm e n t. Lea ve m essage. SIGMA NU Spring *90— Thanks for sm other great Bash, Bedrock style! Love, D elta Gamma. TRAVEL SK ACTIVES, com e see the H.O .C. flip som e burgers and roast som e dogs for you! AM ERICA W EST tic k e t, Phoenix to Newark, New Jersey, May \2 . $100. Call Kelly, 350-0302. SK AC TIVES, to n ig h t, 6pm , com e get som e real food. Love, the H.O .C. FLY ANYTIME! C ontinental USA, $375 rqundtrip. Leave today! Northwest USA, $275! A laska-three weeks notice, $525: O ther destinations available. W e also buy transferable Coupons! 968-7283. SK H.O .C . W e’re doing great! I love you a ll! G ood luck w ith the last couple of weeks. H .0 . 0 Love, M X . TRANSPORTATION $1.50 AAA W ord Processing/Laser printer. 34 years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. M arion 839-4269. $1.5Q/PAGE, QUICK turnaround, W ord­ P erfect 5.0, tetter qua lity. 25 years experi­ ence. 994-4291. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, le tters, resum es, etc. A t Y our Service W ord Processing, Linda, 839-6167. ONE-W AY TICKET to Portland. M aine, May 15. C all Lisa at 483-8554. M ust sell! TH IN K LIFETIM E! ONE-WAY TICKET to Chicago, leaving May 14. $115. C all Bob, 829-7113. PUPPY, CHOW, to responsible owner only: Lovable 2-m onth-old purebred needs hom e' Kay, 867-7720. AIRLINE TICKETS» I G u ara n te ed lo w est fares RESTAURANTS/ BARS HAPPY HOUR—75® D rafts, 75C C alifornia House W ines, $2 75 p itch e rs. Free m unchies M onday-Friday, 5-8. Pizza Doug O ut, 411 S. M ill, downtown Tempe, 921 -4277. S top by ton ite ! to an yw h ere . D o n 't buy b e fo re you call us! : % 1250 E. Baseline. Suite 102 8 2 0 -5 6 5 2 TUTORS ACCOUNTING 211 AND 212 FINAL EXAM SERVICES •Annotated solutions to final exam packets pn Aided by the accounting department. Fee: $6 per complete set •Exam Gram”1 Intensive exam preparation services during the w eek prior toThe final exam in groups o f from 6 to 3Q students fix up to 10"hóurs. Fee: $25 per student. •Private tutoring in groups o f from 1to5students. Rates vary depending on total hours and group size selected. Call GU M yers a t497-2097 SERVICES CARSTEN INSTITUTE of Hair and Beau­ ty, 3345 South R ural Road, Tempe, 491-0449. H air-cut, $6. D iscounted 25% w ith student ID STUDENTS We ship your stuff home! 10 to 1,000 pounds—including furniture, computers and electronics. Packaging Store 990-2552 BRIGHTSIDE W in d o w T in tin g $80 C ars $6 0 T ru c k s M o b ile S ervice Leave a message on m achine MISCELLANEOUS ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, editing, a ll included. Q uick turn­ around. Call 894-6074. ACCU RATE R E SU M E S/ M a cin to sh / Laser. Letters, research papers, trans­ parencies. 839-3305, 8-5pm . A KINKO’S paper m akes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resum es, flie rs , e tc... Self-serve M acintosh com puters and Laserprinter too. 933 E. U niversity,- c a ll 966 -20 35. 960 W . U n iv e rs ity , c a ll 921-0168. Open early, open late, open seven days! APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. N eed it fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. A RESUME SPECIAL, $24.95, term paper discounts, fax service! C all Dr. Copy, 968-7771, 8am -8pm , fo r details. Parents coming to town fo r graduation? Use this handy directory to get their lodging and transportation reservations made early! AR IZO N A BILTM O R E—The 'G rande Dam e' of resorts and A m erica’s longestrunning recipient of the M obil 5-Star Aw ard. (602)955-6600, ext. 2400. COMFORT INN-TEMPE. Special ASU graduation rate. From $29.95.5 m iles from cam pus. (602)820-7500. EXPERIENCE SHERATON San M arcos, A rizona’s O rigina l G olf Resort, only 25 m inutes from cam pus... $79 single or double—May 4-14, 1990. (602)963-6655. LETTER-QUALITY TYPING and graphs produced w ith excellent turn-around tim e. S atisfaction guaranteed. $1 50/page for typing, $2/page fo r graphs. 966-7809- „ EN D R ES U LT C o m ple te w ord pro ces­ s in g — WP51, HP laser, equations. VERY AFFORDABLE 443-8856 WANTED KAW ASAKI JET ski; 650SX, 1987 or new er. Call A lexis, 273-7256. ADOPTION ADOPTION NETW ORK, Inc. Please le t us help you m ake that d iffic u lt decision. Adoption consultants. For inform ation, ca ll 1-800-88ADOPT. NEW COUNTRY hom e. Loving couple m arried 13 years, anxious to share th e ir love w ith an in fa n t. W e w ould be happy to liste n and help in any way possible. C all co lle ct, Nathan o r Nancy, (702)851-7848. Attorney: (213)854-4444. CONSIDERING ADOPTION? W e are a happliy-m arried Caucasian Southern C ali­ fo rn ia couple w ho w ould love to adopt a new born. W e can o ffe r a life fu ll o f Jove and security. Expenses paid, attorney involved. Please c a ll co lle ct after 6pm weekdays or anytim e weekends. Sandy and W ayne (818)348-3895. JASON SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks. M odels’, actors’, and a rtists’, portfolios. Reasonable. 990-1818, 946-2475. HOTELS/MOTELS HOTELS/MOTELS FIESTA INN $55 G raduation Package! Have your friends and relatives stay w ith the best! C all 967-1441. RAMADA INN-CHANDLER, 1-10 and C handler Boulevard. 12 m iles from ASU. S p e c ia l g ra d u a tio n r a te : $39 1 (602)961-4444: HILTO N PAVlLLION special room rates: $69, through M ay 13; $49, May 14-Septem ber 13. (602)833-5555. HOTELS/MOTELS ADOPTION LOVING, CARING couple looking to adopt new born in fa n t. Legal and confidential. C a ll A rlyn and R on, c o lle c t, (215) 789-3325. GRADUATE SPECIAL: $39. sin gle or double. Holiday Inn A irp o rt East. Close to cam pus. (602)273-7778. H IG H -G R AD E LO O K? C a ll N orm a, anytim e, to type your “ due now” project; also prepare resum es. G reat rates! C all or leave m essage, 897-8246. HOSPITALITY SUITE R esort. Close to cam pus. May rates: $37 and $47/night. in c lu d e s b r e a k fa s t, c o c k ta ils .. (602)949-5115. HOWARD JOHNSON G raduation Special: $39 Single/D ouble. D ire ctly across from A S U . M a k e r e s e r v a tio n s n o w ! (602)967-9431. INNSUITES TEMPE welcom es incom ing frie n d s , fa m ily o f g ra d u a tin g ASU students. Call 1-800-842-4242. Ask about our special graduation rates! M A R R IO T T /C O U R T Y A R D . P h o e n ix A irp ort and Mesa hotels, ju s t m inutes from A S U ... $ 4 4 ( F r id a y - S u n d a y ) * 1-800-321-2211 RAMADA HOTEL A irp o rt East, 1600 South 52nd S treet, (602)967-6600, 3 m iles from ASU. $39-plus tax. PHOTOGRAPHY SPECIAL RATE: Best W estern M ezona, 250 W est M ain—Mesa. 5 m iles/ASU. $40 a ll ro o m s . C a ll (6 0 2 )8 3 4 -9 2 3 3 , (800)528-8299. TRANSPORTATION ACE LIMOUSINE— G rand occassions deserve G rand celebrations. Let us make y o u r e v e n in g e x q u is ite ! ' 894-6533, 397-2253. GREAT WHEELS, good deal! Near ASU. A irp ort transport. Cash o r credit. Ace Auto R ental, (602)894-6533. GUARANTEED RESERVATIONS, unlim ­ ite d m ileage. A irp ort location. S tarting*at $ 1 9 .9 5 /d a y . C o u rte s y R e n t-A -C a r, (602)273-7503. HOTELS/MOTELS A fter G raduation , C atch O ur N ewest L ounge A ct MISCELLANEOUS LOOKING FOR a place to live? Buy my m obile home and save! % block to cam pus, low u tilitie s . G reat location. $2.500 o r b e st o ffe r. M ust s e llg ra d u a tin g ! L e a ve m essage: B ill, 280-2474. STUDENTS- ENTREPRENEURS: instant cash: grants, and loans. Governm ent g u a ra n te e d ! 1 -8 0 0 -9 2 6 -8 4 4 7 , e x t. GL-127-13. f=MINI=ñi •STORAGE w ith S tu d en t ID (V¡ blk. south of A p ach e) W ORD PROCESSING fo r your typing needs. Fast turnaround. Close to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne. 966-2825. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. C all anytim e. Prices com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186- 1 0 % O FF 1450 S. M cC lintock Tem pe, AZ 85281 TE M P E T Y P IN G S e rv ic e e x tra s — S pecializing in short notice. Very close to ASU. G oing rates. 24-hour message phone. Q uickly return a ll caHs. Elaine, 967-7167. EMBASSY SUITES—TEMPE/ASU offers 2-room suite, free FULL breakfast and cocktails. 2 m iles from ASU. 4400 South Rural. Road. $49 Up to 4 people. Call (692)897-7444, ask for graduation rate. CWV/inteeie 968-2212 W ORD PROCESSING — $1.50 per page. Resumes & editing available. R eliable. C a ll 921-3770 evenings & weekends. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING AA K U R IT T Y P IN G -S H O R T papers, prom pt service, transcribe tapes. C all after 1pm. Linda, 831-0329. PETS ALL PAPERS, resum es, le tte rs, transcrib­ in g , editing, m ailings. G ram m ar/spelling checks. C ollege graduate using IBM com puter. 964-0994. SHEILA’S TYPING and W ord Processing. C o rrespon dence, m a n u s c rip ts , . term papers, resum es. G lendale - - 842-4637, anytim e. THE DEKE Lawn and T ennis qlub is seeking new m em bers For inform ation, c a ll Thurston at 966-2787. % PRICE International Youth Hostel m em bership w ith purchase o f E urail pass. Both issued on the spot! ISIC carde, student-fare flig hts, MEI trave l packs, other tra ve l item s also available. Contact Am erican Youth H ostels, 1046 East Lem on, Tempe, Arizona 85281-3901 o r ca ll 894-5128 TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your papers that "profession al” look. M acin­ tosh and Laser prin t. Susan, 945-1551. $1.65 AND up. P rofessional word proces­ sor and form ar English teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. TIM — THANKS fo r a fun weekend. PCH w ill never be the sam e. Lisa. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to m ost m ajor citie s. Gas allow ances available. 21 or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. INTERESTED IN trave lin g to Japan and m aking excellent business contacts for future jo b opportunities? M eeting 4/25/90, BÁC629, 3pm or c a ll IBS, 830-0902 SK W ÖLFE: Hope you’re feeling better soon! W ill it help if I sing? Love, M erfyLynn. Page 31 FREE USE OF M O V IN G VAN!! 840-8862 Playing daily poolside at The Fointe on South Mountain. Our exclusive ASU-Sunbelievable vacation, sets die stage for your best summer celebra­ tion ever. Spacious two-room suites, management-hosted cocktails each evening, over $500 in “Fointe Ferks”and an endless arrayof recreational amenities including golf, tennis, fitness and horseback riding. All for an unbelievable $54.* SERVICES SERVICES Makeyour graduation summer truly Sunbdievable. M onday thru Thursday 90% OFF All Hair & Nail Services •Cuts, Perms, Color •Manicure, Pedicure, Full Sets, etc. 31 E. 9th S t TEMPE CENTER M 7-3788 Call 438-9000 and ask for 9-GRAD. Air Conditioning Service Freon Extra A tla s Products. Includes 22-point inspection. For most cere. Expires 4-31-90. Atlas Products. We'd install brake linings or disc pads, resurface disc rotors or drums, bleed and adjust brake system end inspect, dean and repack front-wheel bearings. Expires 4-31-90. ((fl)Th8 Pointe. on South Mountain PHOENIX, ARIZONA The First and Only All-Suite Resorts in the Vforld ‘ Sunbdievable vacations are 154 per suite, per night, single or double occupancy, based on a prepaid three-night minimum. Each additional person S10. On a request and space-available basis, May 18 - Sept 30,1990, exclusive o f hut and gratuity Additional nights available at die same rate. Not applicable to groups. Other restrictions may apply Subject to change. Page 32 OPEN 2 4 HOURS A DAY S in k e t 908 W. University (at Hardy) P ric e s G o o d 4 -2 6 -9 0 to 5 -2 -9 0 1734 E. Apache (at McClintock) 2309 E. University (at Price) 406 N. Country Club (at University) FINALS FEVER T a k e a b reak at a m /p m m ini m arket While supplies last, tax not included Gatorade Qts.-AII flavors fe to r a ffi Oscar M ayer Frlto-Lay HOT DOGS ¿ ^ B u d w e is e r ® ^ Miller®, Coors® 12 p k M 12 oz. cans ^ ^ ^ ^ X $ 2 litre bottles each w hen you b u y 2 o r m o re . S in g le 12 pks. 5 . 9 9 each ¡ ¡ P IZ Z A 32 oz. F o u n t a in D r in k % , 2 slices fo r 9 9 ^ _ {59«each) Snickers . Candy Bars Soft Serve Cone am/pm Sports Bottle O n * offer par coupon. Valid thru 5-16-90. Tax not Included. Valid only at: 908 W. University, 1734 E. Apache, 2306 E. University, 406 N, Country Club. W ITH THIS COUPON W HILE SUPPLIES LAST Umit2conas par coupon. Toppihgsnot included. Valid thru 5-16-90. Tax not included. Valid only at: 906 W. University, 1734 E. Apache, 2309 E. University, 406 N. Country Club. W i t h t h i s c o u p o n w h i l e s u p p l ie s l a s t ,