© Copyright, State Pre ss, 1991 Tempe; Arizona Monday, April 15,1991 Arizona State University’s M orning Daily Vol. 74 No. 57 M e e tin g f o c u s e s o n fu n d in g , m in o r itie s B y K EN BRO W N State Press T he governing b odies of A rizona’s u niversities, com m unity colleges and public schools converged at ASU for the first tim e Friday in what one participant called a “landm ark” m eeting of the three. O fficials from the Arizona Board of R egents, State Board of D irectors for Community Colleges and the Arizona Board of Education gathered for the m eeting, which focused on educational funding and m inority recruitm ent. “It’s im portant that all three work together,” said ASU President Lattie Coor. “E ven though a m eeting of a half a day can ’t solve sp ecific problem s, it opens up connections between the boards for working together in the future.” Coor, who attended the first half of the m eeting, said the directors began talking of a Joint m eeting six m onths ago and now hope to work on 16 possible projects in Phoenix for the com ing year, including m in ority recru itm en t and im proving teaching methods. Although a false fire alarm in the MU cut discussions short, Regent Eddie Basha called the day a success. “To m e it w as im portant because it was the first tim e a ll three agencies got together,” he said. “I just think it allowed us to expand beyond our own horizons and lim itations and take a holistic approach to education.” M ore im portan tly, B asha said the m eeting allow ed the three groups to establish a foundation for future discussion. The date for a second m eeting has not been set. -y:.,-, Dudley Woodard, UofA V ice President for Student A ffairé, spoke about m inority stud en ts, sayin g the m eeting w as a “wonderful beginning” for furthèr efforts between the boards. Although a joint effort in studying m inority concerns had been attem pted before, Woodard said the m eeting provided the start for a m ore form al unity. “For the first tim e, the big three powers, if you w ill, could get together and discuss how w e can collectively use our resources to further education,” he said. “It’s important for m aking sure there’s a continuity between the system s and a continuation in the educational process.” Senator-elects charged with campaign violations B y A N D REW FAUGHT State Press The student governm ent’s electio n s com m ission disqualified two senator-elects Friday in an action inconsistent with two previous decisions for the sam e violation. Keith Pressm an, an A ssociated Students of ASU senator-elect from the College of Education, and Jam al Alien, a senator-elect from the College of Law, failed to turn in w ritten financial statem ents by the April 5 deadline and w ere consequently banished from office, ju s t wish these people w eren’t m aking arbitrary decisions. It p u ts a blemish on the com plaint process. ’ 7 — Randy Hawkins W hile th e n ew ly -ele cted se n a to r s’ a tten d a n ce at F rid a y ’s h earin g w as m andatory, neither w as present to explain why the statem ents w ere not subm itted. According to ASASU bylaw s, candidates or elected officers who do not subm it written financial statem ents are autom atically assessed 20 penalty points, a number that disqualifies their elected status. However, in an elections com m ission decision earlier this month, senator-elect G ena Brew er for the College of Fine Arts and H eather Collins for the College of Public Program s w ere allow ed to retain their seats after being penalized only 19 points for the sam e violation. Bruce Araoldussen, chairm an of the electio n s com m ission , sa id the body exercised discretion in its judgm ents. “We’re here to ensure a fair cam paign,” Araoldussen said. “Our opinion has been rendered, and it is now done.” M e a n w h ile , A s s is t a n t E le c tio n s Coordinator Randy Hawkins said he w as surprised at the com m ission’s leniency in the ca se of Brewer and Collins, adding that he believes the com m ission should be more uniform in its decision making. “I just w ish these people weren’t m aking arbitrary d ecisions,” Hawkins said. “It puts a blem ish on the com plaint process.” T he e le c tio n s dep artm ent op erates independently of the com m ission.* M eanw hile, P ressm a n , cu rren tly a senator for the College of Education, said he subm itted his statem ent late because he w as not able to g et to cam pus on tim e. He said he w as upset by the com m ission’s decision because he spent no money, cam paigning. However, Araoldussen said that since Pressm an currently holds office, he is fam iliar with elections procedures, and therefore, acted irresponsibly. Pressm an w as exem pt from subm itting the first disclosure because h e ran as a w rite-in candidate later in the cam paign process. “Keith Pressm an has already held office, Vernon Foster, a member of the Klam ath-Moboc Indian tribe in Oregon, com petes in the Men’s Northern Traditional Dance category Saturday at the Fifth Annual Powwow at ASU. 58 Native American tribes converge at annual powwow By JUOI T A N C O S State Press ASU student Laverae Dennison said she had a special reason for spending her Saturday on cam pus. “ I want to have (m y daughter) understand about her culture,” she said. Dennison and her 3-year-old daughter, T asha, w ere am ong thousands of onlookers im m ersed in the intertribal tradition of m ore than 50 N ative American tribes this weekend at an enormous cam pus powwow. ASU hosted the Fifth Annual Powwow, which drew 58 N ative Am erican tribes from throughout the United States and Canada. D ennison, a N avajo Indian who brought her daughter to last year’s Turn to P ow w o w , page 10. Torn to V iolation, p age 10. W e a th e r W o es: N a s t y N a z is : C a r d i n a l S in : A rizona's changing e n ­ vironm ent threatens wildlife. A review o f “T h e NasG irl.” a m ovie fun-loving T he ASU baseball team w o n o n e gam e o f a three-gam e series against Stanford this w eekend. P a g e 10 powwow, said the general public does not u n d e r sta n d m u ch a b o u t N a tiv e Am erican culture. “This is the only way she can get a piece of it (cu ltu re),”, said Dennison, a freshm an business m ajor, who also is a secretary at the Hispanic Research Center. Dennison added that she w as raised off the reservation, and she hoped her daughter would grow up with a greater knowledge of her Indian heritage. “You gotta understand,” she said. Vernon Foster, a m em ber of the Klamath-Moboc tribe in Oregon, said the powwow started five years ago as a social gathering. “The Indian people have som ething P a g e 15 Today’s weather: Sunny w ith a high in the 80s. Tonight: Low in the upper 50s. Classifieds .* Comics. Crossw ord.. ........ .Y»’,.,.... .17 14 .............................9 Sports....... ............................^............................15 State Pvtsi Jü tn n rU v A n r il 1 5 . 1 0 0 1 Polls report population up, legislator support down By KRIS MAYES S tate P ress Public opinion of Arizona legislators is at an all-tim e low, w hile the sta te’s population has risen by 35 percent in the last decade, m aking it one of the fastest-grow ing states in the nation, two recently released studies indicate. A Rocky Mountain Poll of 720 Arizona residents revealed that only 25 percent of those surveyed believe legislators possess “strong principles and ethics. ” In addition, 25 percent view state lawm akers as “ pretty much like the ones who w ere indicted (in the AzScam stin g ).” “These are the low est readings in many years,” said Earl de Berge, research director at the Behavioral Research Center in Phoenix. “We are still in an anti­ incumbent mode right now.” However, the sam e poll showed a positive public perception of the L egislature’s dealings with the afterm ath of the AzScam sting. The results indicated that 60 percent of Arizonans approved of the actions taken by the House and Senate to expel form er Sen. Carolyn Walker. “Clearly the handling of Carolyn Walker w as a very dominant factor,” de B erge said. “People w ere m entioning during the polling that they w ere glad to see her get kicked out.” M e a n w h ile , A r iz o n a ’s p o p u la tio n increased by 35 percent in the last decade, m aking it the third fastest-growing state in the nation, according to an ASU Center for Business R esearch report. “The situation is much as it has been,” said Tom R ex, the study’s coordinator. “For decades people have been m oving here from the North and E a st.” The influx of new residents, numbering 950,000 according to U. S. Census Bureau figures, likely w ill continue in the future. “ T he p o p u la tio n w ill co n tin u e to increase,” he said. “The only question is by how m uch.” M a r ic o p a C o u n ty a c c o u n te d fo r 65 percent of the state’s rise in population, the U niversity study revealed. Counties experiencing the m ost rapid increase in numbers w ere Mohave, Y avapai, Santa Cruz and Maricopa. But Rex said the state m ay not be prepared to handle continued population growth. “The quality of growth has not been good lately,” Rex said. “A lot of the jobs created for the new residents have been low w age.” He said low-paying jobs are forcing much of Arizona’s m igrant population to utilize the state’s w elfare system . Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at A SU that is presented a s a service to the University community. Any cam pus club or organization can subm it entries for publication to the State Press, located In the basem ent of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries m ust 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 eetin g s •Alcoholics Anonym ous will have a closed meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •Cam pus Patriots The ASU Review Committtee of the Campus Patriots will meet at 5;30 p.m . in the MU Santa Cruz Room. Everyone welcome. •Coalition for World Peace will meet at noon in the MU Mohave Room. Topic: Violation of Human Rights in Mauritania. •Golden Key Honor Society Sign up for Shadow Day today in McClintock H all, Room 106. •M UAB Cultural and Arts Committee will meet at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Programming Lounge. The fight scene between Hamlet and Laertes will be presented 8 Pop up for the upcoming theater event “ Ham let.” •M UAB Film Committee will meet to pick movies for next fall at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. •M UAB Sneak Preview Committee will have a planning meeting for Friday’s “ Oscar” sneak preview at 4:45 p.m. in the MU Kaibab Room 208E. •University Library/Media System s Staff Association Poster Contest?Exhibit celebrating National Library Week in the Hayden Library concourse area. Open regular library hours. Come see what Iibraries?media systems are all about. •W om en S tudies Women Writers Workshop from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Women’s Student Center. C larification In the April 10 issue of the S ta te P ress, a page one story about the student regent w as not m eant to im ply that ASA E xecutive D irector Larry L’Heureux used the words “Republican” or “D em ocrat” when referring to student regent politics. Check These Out!! 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It’s a taxing tim e for all Am ericans, but especially for the m illions who have waited until the last m inute to file their 1990 federal tax returns — and for Postal Service and IRS em ployees who have to deal with the annual April 15 onslaught. The Internal Revenue Service expects to receiv e 27 m illion returns at its 10 processing centers this week — nearly one of every four that w ill be filed this year. Most people m ust file by m idnight Monday, but several m illion w ill take longer. H ie IRS said many of its offices and its toll-free telephone number — 800-829-1040 — would rem ain open into the evening to answer taxpayer questions. But don’t expect instant service; repeated tries often are required in the best of tim es to get through to an IRS operator. M any p o st o ffic e s , e s p e c ia lly in m etropolitan areas, w ill station clerks outside to allow m otorists to drop off returns without leaving their cars. In som e areas, Tax Night has becom e a social event. Outside the post office in Norfolk, V a., according to the Postal Service, WAFX radio “w ill have Abe Lincoln, a ch ief justice and U ncle Sam p assing out stam ps. Grandma w ill be cutting and passing out slices of apple pie and they’ll also have live m usic and hot d ogs.” The IRS w ill send volunteers inside the lobby of the M ilwaukee P ost O ffice to fill out sim ple returns and offer advice on the m ore com plicated returns. Anyone in the Los A ngeles basin w ill be able to determ ine the closest post office open until midnight by dialing a special number. P ostal authorities in New York City are opening a ll 21 windows in the Jam es A. F arley Building for 24 hours Monday. In addition to sellin g stam ps and envelopes, the P ostal Service sa y s, “to ease d ie pain of Torn t o Taxes, page 6 . U S. troops get toremotecamp; airlift increases ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — U.S:, British and French aircraft on Sunday dropped tons of supplies to Iraqi refugees on the Turkish and Iranian borders, and the first U.S. troops reached a rem ote refugee cam p to aid in the relief effort. In northern Iraq, Kurdish rebel leaders said their fighters turned back another attem pt Sunday by Iraqi troops to push into the rebel-held mountains. They said the Iraqis w ere trying to cut off escape routes for the refugees. About 500,000 refugees, m ostly Kurds, have fled northern Iraq to the rugged, mountainous Turkish border and another 900,000 have sought refuge in Iran, officials in both countries say. The Kurds fear the wrath of Saddam Hussein following their failed rebellion that began after his arm y w as routed by the a llies in the Persian Gulf War. In the mountains, the refugees have faced hunger, disease and death. Saddam has insisted innocent civilians have nothing to fear from his troops, and urged Kurds to return to their homes. Iraqi radio reported Sunday that Saddam made the assurances a day earlier during a visit to northern Iraq. In southern Iraq, the rem aining American forces began pulling back Sunday to a newly established dem ilitarized zone along the Iraq-Kuwait border, the U.S. Central Command announced. D espite the pullback, D efense Secretary Dick Cheney said in an interview on NBC-TV that at least “the next several days” the United States would m aintain responsibility for providing food and water for the refugees. In the northern mountains along Iran’s border, Associated P ress reporter Alex Efty, who has been traveling with the T o rn to Refugee* p ag e 6, Two refugee men fight for food on the back of a truck delivering supplies to a refugee cam p on the Turkish border Sunday. The cam p w as accessible by road for the first time since the refugees have arrived. Alexander gets President’s Tanker explodes, sinks off support for school reform riviera; ecology feared ruined WASHINGTON (AP) - After barely a month on the job, Secretary of Education Lamar Alexander has gotten President Bush’s backing for a farreaching package of reform s that include national student tests and experim ents with radically new ways of running schools. Bush, who pledged during his 1988 cam p aign to be the “ ed u cation president,” w ill unveil the school reform package at the White House on Thursday a fter a luncheon w ith governors, an adm inistration official said Sunday. The fast-track initiative w ill em brace som e of the sam e education them es that Bush and form er P resident R ea g a n h a v e so u n d ed b e fo r e : expanding parental choice in education and im proving literacy and job training program s for dropouts, d isplaced workers and other adults. But it Will also put Bush’s stam p — and Alexander’s — on som e radically new ideas, including pressing ahead to develop a type of national student testing program , as a presidential advisory panel recently recom m ended. Alexander is a form er governor of Tennessee who w as president of the U niversity of Tennessee when Bush nominated him D ec. 17 to succeed Lauro F . Cavazos. He won Bush’s backing for his reform ideas within days of his March 18 sw earing-in, said ch ief E ducation T o rn t o P lan , p ag e 9. GENOA, Italy (A P) — Rocked by one last explosion, a fire-ravaged tanker holding m illions of gallons of oil sank Sunday off the Italian R iviera, and experts worked to avert a n e c o lo g ic a l c a ta s tr o p h e in th e M editerranean. The C ypriot-registered tanker Haven appeared to have rem ained intact on the sandy sea bottom 1% m iles off the shore and it w as believed m ost of the v essel’s crude rem ained inside, officials said. The tanker held nearly 42 m illion gallons of Iranian crude When it first caught fire Thursday. A Genoa port authority official, giving “an extrem ely rough” estim ate, said 15 m illion gallons of oil m ay have burned. T h e o ffic ia l sp o k e on co n d itio n o f anonym ity. A few hours after the tanker sank som e oil cam e to the surface, but officials believed it w as released a s the tanker settled on the bottom, said an Environm ental M inistry m arine ecology expert, Eugenio F resi. It w as not im m ediately determ ined how much oil leaked. P atches of oil have washed ashore on several stretches of beach along a 20-mile sw ath of the resort coast w est of Genoa, and currents m oved other slick s that one official described as “leopard spots” on the sea. H ie tar reached shore Within 40 m iles of the French border Sunday, and could reach d ie principality of Monaco by Monday, according to G reenpeace, the international environm ental organization. Monaco is about 90 m iles southwest of Genoa. Video pictures taken by underwater robots showed the tanker settled flat against the bottom. T o n i to Italy, p age 9 . Police find 20 Van Goghs after nation’s largest art robbery AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) — Two arm ed robbers stole 20 paintings by Vincent van Gogh on Sunday in the Netherlands’ priciest art theft but abandoned the works less than an hour later outside a railw ay station, police saidThe haul from the Vincent van Gogh National Museum, which included the final version of his m asterpiece “The Potato E aters,” was worth “hundreds of m illions” of dollars, police spokesm an Klaas W ilting said. “Still Life With Sunflowers” and “Still Life With Irises" w ere among the other paintings. They are both part of separate series the Dutch painter did on flow ers before his suicide in 1890, and other paintings in those series have broken art auction records. P olice said they did not know why the robbers left the works less than an hour after fleeing. P olice found the paintings in two garm ent bags in the getaw ay car, parked at the A m stel railw ay station about lVi m iles aw ay. There were no arrests. “If you look at the w ay it w as done, you would presum e it w as w ell planned, but if you look at the outcom e, it looks like pure am ateurish,” V said a police spokesm an, Foeke W agenaar. Three of the paintings w ere seriously ripped, said Ronald van Leeuwen, director of the m useum , which claim s to have the largest and m ost varied collection of the 19th century im pressionist’s work. One of the dam aged works w as the vivid, haunting “ W heatfield With Crows,” which van Gogh painted in the French town of Auvers-sur-Oise about a month before his suicide. The holdup began at 3 a.m ., when one of two night guards beard a noise and w as confronted by a pistol-w ielding man w earing a ski m ask, police said. P olice assum e the gunman hid in the museum after it d osed Saturday. The robber ordered the guard to turn off the m useum ’s infrared alarm system and then open the front entrance to «dm 't a second man, the police said. One of the guards w as locked in a room, and the other w as held at gunpoint, police told a news conference. The robbers spent two hours packing the paintings in the garm ent bags and then fled. O pinion State Press Monday, April 15,1991 Page 4 Reality Current system keeps students in school longer than 4 years Michael LaMantia I Asst. O pinion E d ito r! __ « I w as talking to m y brother, an anti-trust law yer, the other day. He asked m e why students who work, receive financial aid and go to school (like m e), usually take m ore than four years to graduate. “That’s just the way it is ,” I said. Ideally, a student who doesn’t have to work w hile going to school should graduate in four years. If students can pass 31.5 credits per year, they can usually “get out” without ever having to attend sum m er school. I explained to m y brother that 15- to 16-hour sem esters com bined with juggling a job are hard to m anage. But if a person Can’t handle that m any credits each sem ester, sum m er school is the only option. In return, sum m er session m eans yet another tuition paym ent. T he a d m in istra tio n m a in ta in s th is problem exists only because there are too m any students and not enough classes. So even if a student can m anage a 16-hour credit load during the regular school year, m any of the cla sses needed are closed. If a student doesn’t get into a cla ss they need, they w ill m ore than likely end up at ASU for another sem ester. The problem seem s only to be intensified for students receiving financial aid, These students are required to take 12 credits each sem ester — even if they only need nine to graduate. The federal governm ent seem s m ore than w illing to offer another loan at between 8 and 10 percent for full-tim e tuition costs. A fter a ll, doesn’t it stand to reason that there is m ore m oney to be m ade if a student needs another loan to cover a fifth year of college? There’s no question, it is a tough system . “It’s Qie nature of the business,” I explained to m y brother. More often than not, it seem s universities are a business processing numbers rather than students. The students who succeed are those who w ere able to cut through the red tape. U niversities traditionally operate at a different lev el than the re a l w orld. F or the m ost part, universities have been given the freedom to govern them selves without being required to serve students' best interests. That is why so m uch is heard about the Arizona Board of R egents. This group of part-tim e help is the m ain governing body for universities in Arizona. State law s govern the university in the sam e w ay federal law governs state law. The board can m ake no law that violates state law and so on. “So how the heck does that affect a student’s graduation date?” m y brother asked. The board basically deals the hand they’re dealt. The state and feds m ake laws that determ ine funding. There isn ’t enough funding fo t the classes to sustain the students’ progress toward graduation. Lending institutions supply Guaranteed Student Loans for the governm ent. State and federal governm ents don’t have a system that encourages college students to graduate in four years. The m ore m oney students borrow — the m ore money lending institutions m ake. The Board of R egents, which suggests to the Legislature how much funding ASU should get, is subject to the whims of that Legislature (governor). The board also doesn’t sp ecifically decide bow to spend the m oney ASU receives. The adm inistrations at various schools are actually responsible for deciding how to spend the m oney. Adm inistrations set up endowm ents, scholarships and various other types of m oney pools in order to keep their respective schools on a steady course. Money is spent, saved, bonded, granted, subsidized and often blown. A large school like ASU has so m any funds for “this and that,” it gets hard to keep track of it a ll. It is also hard to m ake sure people aren’t sponging off the system . The present system allow s for too much inconsistency. Each year budget numbers change. Each year different dollar amounts are allocated to different areas. Most of the tim e, the above decisions are m ade based on what looks best for the budget book — not for the average student who m ust work to cover the high cost of tuition and life. The whole system is out of hand. Gone are the days of the four-year plan. B ecause of the tug of w ar between the a g en d a s o f th e sta te and the ASU a d m in is t r a t io n b u r e a u c r a t ic inconsistencies force students to be closed out of cla sses and spend m ore tim e and m oney to graduate. Reaganites will not believe ‘lies’ in Kelley’s new book Mike Royko T ribune M edia Syndicate My conservative friend Grump w as peering in the window of the bookstore, w here the best sellers are displayed. His scow l w as even storm ier than usual. He suddenly gripped his walking stick like a baseball bat and raised it above his head. I asked him what he intended to do. “ I ’m thin king of sm ash in g th is window,” he shouted. That’s against the law , and you have alw ays been a law-and-order man. “True,” he said, lowering the stick. “ But som ething should be done. This is slanderous, scurrilous, outrageous and perfidious.” I assum e that you’re referring to the new and shocking and w ildly popular book by K itty K elley. “ D on ’t ev e n m en tion th a t v ile creature’s nam e uT m y presence. A sham eless keyhole peeper, transom snooper, rum or m onger, spreader of m a lic io u s l ie s , c o n to r tio n s and distortions. She is a disgrace* to the profession of journalism .” B u t y o u ’v e a lw a y s sa id e v e r y journalist is a disgrace. “True, but sh e’s even m ore disgraceful than the rest of you. She should be tried for treason for w riting sm utty lies about m y com m ander in chief and our first lad y.” He’s no longer your com m ander in chief. B esid es, how do you know they w ere sm utty lies? Maybe it’s the sm utty truth. Even in the b est of fam ilies, sm utty things can happen. “Doesn’t m atter. Even if it w ere the truth— which I consider unthinkable and incom prehensible — such m atters are best left in the laundry ham per where they belong. It is unconscionable to muck about the private liv es of this nation’s m ost beloved public figures.” You m ay be right. On the other hand, I reca ll your uninhibited g lee when d isclo su res w ere m ade about the enthusiastic bedroom bits of Jack Kennedy. In fact, you sm acked your lips over every nasty tidbit about the entire Kennedy clan, and you still do. “That’s not true. I never said one critical word about the eldest brother who died in the war. Of course, if he had lived, he would have surely been a rogue too. That’s the w ay those people are,” YeS, but you sneer and leer about the Jack Kennedy stories. “And why not? The man w as an utter cad. The public had a right to know that he w as no gentlem an. Im agine, carrying on that w ay in the White House itself. With the taxpayers paying for the bedsheets. Shocking.” W ell, Kitty K elley says that Frank Sinatra regularly slipped in through the back entrance of the W hite House and spent long, private afternoons with “Don’t finish that sentence, I warn you.' I ’m prepared to use force to defend the honor of the first lady.” Form er first lady. All right, I won’t go into the juicy stuff about Sinatra. About how it is supposed to have started years ago in California. “You are walking a thin, dangerous lin e.” Then let m e rem ind you of your absolute delight and h ilarity when em barrassing disclosures w ere m ade about the late Martin Luther King Jr. “That’s an entirely different m atter. Why, the man w as a hypocrite. A m inister, m ind you, a man o f the cloth, preaching about goodness and the Ten Commandments. Y et he indulged in sinful hanky-panky. And rem em ber, that w as not revealed by som e trashy journalist. It w as leaked from the private, official, secret files o f the beloved J. Edgar Hoowever him self. Of course, I w asn’t surprised about King’s behavior and hypocrisy. That’s the way those people are too.” W ell, speaking on hypocrisy , one m ight argue that when the nation’s first couple talks to the nation about fam ily values, goodness and virtue, and then it is alleged that both of them , a t one tim e or another, engaged in “Don’t say it. I warn you again, I am capable of taking action to defend their good nam es. Of course, I know what this is a ll about. It is nothing but a m edia plot.” That isn’t w hat you said when Gary Hart’s indiscretions w ere m ade public. As I recall, you said that when reporters spied on Hart, ruining h is presidential hopes, it w as the m edia’s finest hour. “And it w as. The m an w as a notorious wom anizer. Would w e want som eone with that background in the White House?” But K itty K elley says that in his Hollywood days, Ronny w as one of the m ost notorious. . . “You should both be tried for treason.” W ait, I’m not saying it’s a big deal. But if w e’re going to believe this trashy book anyway. “It doesn’t m atter, People aren’t going to believe this trashy book anyw ay.” You’re probably right. It’s only going to se ll at least 750,000 copies in hardcover and anoth er cou p le o f m illion in paperback. “I think I w ill sm ash that window, after a ll.” O pinion StltC Pits» Monday, April 15,1991 ___________________________________P g 3 £ ^ . Sudden death Disengaged teens willing to throw their lives away C ody S h e a re r N orth A m erican Syndicate NEW YORK — B esides experim enting with crack cocaine, the m ost dangerous way in which teenagers pass tim e in depressing high-rise housing tenem ents is to play a gam e called “elevator surfing.” The objective of the contest is to first outwit the security devices incorporated in public housing elevators. After dism antling these obstructions, daring souls clim b out on to the top of the elevator where they w ait to jump on to the top side of another as it passes by. Last week, Edwin Ortiz, a 13-year-old Hispanic boy becam e the latest teenage victim to die in New York City since riding on the top of elevators becam e a popular craze. Housing officials say a few hundred teens have been injured so far in this gam e. Edwin Ortiz fell five stories to his death in a housing project on Manhattan’s Lower E ast Side, where he lived with his grandmother. No one knew what ever happened to his parents. His teachers — who described him as a thoughtful but disillusioned and sullen child, who w as angry at having to live in a world filled with poverty and drugs — weren’t surprised he’d succum b to peer pressure. W hearas riding on the top of elevators may not sound like much fun to som e of us, it’s a thrill in the Lower E ast Side of New York City where kids only know drugs and crim e. What drove little Edwin Ortiz to death — an unpleasant environm ent in which to live — also im pacts poorly on other unhappy teens throughout the country. Their world is also troubled. point, citizens are going to begin to ask them selves whether their tax dollars are better spent in the P ersian Gulf or on A m erica’s young. Just how dissatisfied today’s teens are becam e apparent the other day when the Gallup Organization announced that 6 percent of all American teens had tried to com m it suicide and another 15 percent said they had com e close to trying to take their lives. Gary Hoeltke, Gallup’s senior analyst on the suicide poll, speculated that national teen suicide rates were probably higher than those reported in the poll since the survey included more white teenagers than the population at large. Is teen life in this country so unpleasant? Why are so many teens, like Edwin Ortiz, w illing to throw their lives away? The answer, of course, is that suicidal teens aren’t born crazy. It just happens that their worlds aren’t sufficiently enriching to keep them engaged. Obviously, adults have som e responsibility on this front. In this city, for exam ple, which has one of the worst records of violent crim e, m any teenagers risk their lives to play ball in the neighborhood. More teenage boys die by­ gunfire than a ll other causes com bined; and a black teenager is 11 tim es m ore likely than his w hite counterpart to be shot. As for schools, they seem to be too busy hanging on to offer much direction or com fort to our nation’s young. In New York state, for exam ple, 8,000 teachers are likely to befayed off this fall because of budget cuts. Sim ilarly, drastic cuts are occurring elsew here. Florida state officials say they are bracing for lay-offs that could total 8,000 to 12,000 next autumn, at least half of whom could be teachers. Meanwhile, the state could receive up to 100,000 new students. In California, 10,000 of the sta te’s 250,000 teachers have already received reduction-in-force notices this year. And in M innesota, 1,500 of the sta te’s 43,000 teachers have been told not to report to work in September. For a country that prides itself on its com passionate and generous investm ent in education and social program s, w e’re hardly m atching our own headlines if sizeable portions of future generations are knocking them selves off. At som e ^ F Did Pentagon spokesm en deliberately lie during the gulf war? Lieutenant-G eneral. Leionard Perroots, who was director of the D efense Intelligence Agency until 1989 but was used as a special consultant throughout the gulf war, has told British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) view ers that U. S. officials weren’t alw ays straightforward. D ays before the w ar began Pentagon officials reported that six helicopters flying across the Kuwaiti-Saudi sand carried defecting Iraqis. The truth, however, is that the helicopters were transporting Am erican special force units returning from a reconnaissance m ission behind enem y lines. Our m ilitary had painted helicopters to look like Iraqi ones, w hile our special forces w ere flying from Kuwait on secret m issions. Perroots also disclosed that Am erican precision-bombing m ade errors in targeting a baby m ilk factory outside Baghdad, as w ell as going after a reinforced bunker, that killed 300 civilian s. “It w as not the m ost current inform ation,” that w e are using, he said. U. S. casualties in the gulf war m ay add $14 billion annually to federal spending because of increased use of veterans benefits, according to the Congressional Budget Office. N early half (4 percent) of children aged 3 to 17 used a com puter at home or in school in 1989, up from 30.2 percent in 1984, reports the Census Bureau. But white students (48.2 percent) w ere more likely to use a com puter at school than black children (35.1 percent) or Hispanic children 37.5 percent). F St a t e P ress SUZANNE RO SS E d ito r ■ • T E N N Ÿ T A T U S IA N M a n a g in g E d ito r O t y F d l t n r . ______...______ __________H O B A R T R O W L A N D K E V IN S H E H A s s t . C i t y E d i t o r .. ..— ................... ________ _______ ________________ D A W N D E V R I E S ....................... C o p y O h iff A s s t . C o p y C h i e f ........■■■■■■„■■......., ________________ K R I S T I M M O N S ____________K R I S T E N J O H N S O N N e w s F A ftpr...iTi..cnt.tiM nr.— O p i n i o n E d i t o r __________ ~ ____ __________ .M I C H E L L E R O B E R T S A s s t . O p i n i o n E d i t o r . — — — — _____ M I C H A E L L A M A N T I A P h n t n F d i t o r . .. .. ............ ..................... ____________ __ ___ ■___ .T . J . S O K O L ______________________P A U L C O R O S p o r t s E d i t o r . ........................... A s s t . S p o r t s E d H ö r.................... ________________ .___ D A N Z E I G E R G r a p h i c s E d i to r .......... ............... _____ _________ . .. S T E V E N K R I C U N C O L U M N IS T : D a n N c w lc k l C A R T O O N IS T S : R o b M in to n , J u lie S ig w a rt. M A G A Z IN E S T A F F ! C a a e b e e r , M ic h e lle C r u f f , V ic k i C u lv e r , J o e l G e lp e , R a n d y H a w k in e , C h r is tin e H e if c r a n a o iy M a ty R o s e L a fre n ie re , A a ro n L e v y , L a u rie N o ta ro , C h a n d a R . S h a h a n i, C h r i s t y T o m lin s o n M a r k J a s . T y n a n , J o n W a la ; K r a m e r W e t z e l P R O D U C T I O N : C a s s a u n d r a C a v in e s s , C e lia H a n im a n - C u e to , H o lly H ia tt, B a rry K e lly J e ffre y L u c a s, M a r k N o th a ft, F r a n k N . a n i lia A P nc nn R a tIny ^OadlU lo m o nllc, p P n r 7¿ a/ltr -D lUUlUUL IIlU LUin. n u3 iVv 3a P gP c. M a g a z i n e E d i t o r ........ _________ — _______. . . .N I C O L E C A R R O L L M a g a z i n e M a n a g i n g E d i t o r . — ______________C A R I N C U M M I N S Todd A « e n r M a e a T i n e E d ito r .______ S c h n e lw a r , D a n T h o m p s o n , J o h n V a c c a ro , D a n ie lle W e b s te r. R E P O R T E R S : K e n n e th ........ S T E V E N K R I C U N B ro w n , A n ita S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : M a rtin , C h r is tin e C o lt D o d rill, L e o G o n z a le s . M U la n , L d n c e N e w m a n , N e il, C arco n e, T eena C h a d w e ll,; A n d re w F a u g h t, J e n n ife r F ra n k lin / T h e S ta te P r e s s is p u b lis h e d M o n d a y th r o u g h F r id a y d u r in g K e lly e K ra tc h , P a tric ia M a h , K r is M ay es> D a v id P u n d t, D ia n e S a n to r te o , J u d i th e a c a d e m ic y e a r, e x c e p t h o lid a y s a n d e x a m p e rio d s , a t 15, A r i z o n a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y , T e m p e , 85287. N e w s r o o m : (602) 965-2292. W e d o n o t a n s w e r M a tth e w s C e n te r, R o o m • T ancos. ' A riz o n a S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : M a r ty M u rp h y , A m y S la d e , L o re n z o q u e s tio n s o f a g e n e r a l n a tu r e . A d v e r tis in g a n d P r o d u c tio n : (602)965-7572. ... S i e r r a J r ., D a r r e n U r b a n . P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Joe B a rn a so n , Irw in T h e S ta te P re s s i s t h e o n ly n e w s p a p e r e x c lu s iv e ly p u b lis h e d D a u g h e rty J e o r g e tta D o u g la s , S c o tt T ro y a n o s , T a m a ra W o ffo rd . f o r a n d c irc u la te d o n th e A S U c a m p u s . T h e n e w s a n d v ie w s p u b lis h e d i n th is n e w p a p e r a r e n o t n e c e s s a rily th o s e o f A S U C O P Y E D I T O R S : S o n ja L e w i s , T a b i t h a P r i v e t t - D r o m i a c k . a d m in is tr a tio n , fa c u lty , s ta f f o r s tu d e n t b o d y . IE D 1 T O R I A L B O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion Of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: Suzanne Ross Editor The State Press will reward o u tsta n d in g letters to the edito r that offer insightful com m entary and /or unique points of view. The letters chosen will be ta g g e d with the award logo a n d d o not n e c e s s a r ily reflect the o p in io n s of the State Press Editorial Board. Tenny Tatusian M anaging Editor M ichelle Roberts O pinion Editor Hobart R ow land City Editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, and major (or any other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D. 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, Arizona 85287-1502. State Press M n r v lx v A n e li 1 5 . 1 9 9 1 Conference gathers students to foster unity By KELLY E KRATCH State Press About 150 Arizona students gathered at ASU this weekend to celebrate cultural self-sufficiency, attending workshops on conflict m anagem ent, dealing with racism and other topics designed to foster unity. “If w e don’t get together and do it the way all of you are here today r- in the spirit of cooperation, of learning and of unity — nobody is going to do it for us, and nobody is going to listen to u s,” ASU graduate Danny Ortega said to the crowd at the annual Chicano/Hispano Leadership Conference. Ortega, a successful attorney who graduated from the U niversity in 1976, stressed the im portance of unity and cooperation in furthering the Hispanic cause. “Leadership Taxes_____ Through Em powerm ent” w as the them e of Saturday’s conference. “You’ve got to take that sam e principle and apply it to the organization of our com m unity,” Ortega said. “We’ve got to do it for ourselves because if w e don’t, som ebody else is going to define for us what w e need and what’s good for u s.” He said students are obligated to pay back the community. “There com es a tim e in life when you set aside what’s good for you and include w hat’s good for others.” Ortega added that the key to effecting change is successful organization — because there is “power in num bers.” He challenged students to return to ¡school prepared to “organize and take som e risks” because “your life is free when you’re young.” get you more tim e to pay w hatever is owed; a check for the outstanding balance must accom pany the form. A two-month extension is availab le without asking for those whose home and m ain place of business are outside the United States and Puerto Rico. M ilitary personnel who served in the Persian Gulf area at any tim e since Aug. 2 C ontinued from page 5. filing taxes, both Excedrin and Maalox w ill be in front of the building giving out free sam ples.” F iv e m illion or m ore couples and individuals are expected to escape the filing-deadline rush by getting an autom atic four-month extension sim ply by m ailing a Form 4868 before m idnight. That form won’t have at least 180 days after Monday to file. Most have autom atic extensions of up to 285 days and no penalty or interest w ill be charged on paym ents that otherw ise would have been due Monday. Those m ilitary taxpayers who are due refunds w ill begin earning interest Monday, even if they use the extension to delay filing for several months. Refugee C ontinued from page 3. routes. Kurdish rebels, said he was told a brigade-sized governm ent force mounted an attack. Jalal Talabani, leader of the Kurdistan D em ocratic Party, said in a communique issued from his London office that Iraqi forces w ere trying to cut off the refugees’ escape The rebel fighters reported the Iraqis suffered heavy casualties in the fighting and their com m ander w as captured. B ecause foreign reporters have been unable to reach m ost scenes of fighting, the claim s could not be ■Your onty w S Ü Ë ¡tniDGEsnnc IM U D D Y FOX £$ H .. $ 1 0 ° ° O F F T U N E -U P i $ 2 0 ° ° O F F O V E R H A U L N O W $14**, Reg $24« Very complete tune-ups. FREE pick-up & delivery. verified independently. Talabani’s party said that 12 refugees w ere killed or wounded in an attack Sunday by Iraqi forces east of Suleim aniyah, about 27 m iles from the Iranian border but south of the 36th parallel. The United States has warned Iraq not to interfere with refugees north of the line. 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Peoria, Suite A-105, Phoenix, 602-942-4986 6 4 4 -1 2 3 3 N U H A S S L E S • J U S T P IC K U P T H E P H • H id 6 4 4 -1 2 3 3 Those special breaks also a re available to Red Cross workers, accredited journalists and other personnel who w ere in the Persian Gulf in what d ie law considers to be a role supporting the m ilitary. The IRS estim ates that once all the extensions have expired, a record 113 m illion couples and individuals w ill have filed returns for 1990. W OM ANCARE Obstetrics & Gynecology A distinction of excellence in healthcare for today's woman. DEBORAH NEMIRO, M .D., F.A.C.O.G. EXCELLENT B IC YC LE S M ountain B ike S p ecialist Fred Amador, a senior liberal arts m ajor at ASU, said that although he “often feels isolated,” the conference helped him realize “there are others doing the sam e things to change the system .” Charles Calleros, associate dean of ASU’s College of Law, said w hile racial tension is inevitable in any m icrocosm of society, it needs to be reported and confronted. He urged students to “disagree and speak up” when faced with negative racial stereotyping — especially in the classroom . Calleros, chairm an of ASU’s Campus Environm ent Team, presented a workshop called “ D ealing with R acism .” “You’ve got to speak up," he said. “U niversities value diversity so those different perspectives com e out. Get out your opinion if you feel som ething’s wrong.” 1530 N. C O U N TR Y C LU B N ow you ca n afford to d re a m in color. If you thought that finding a color Macintosh®system you could afford was just a dream, then the ne\y affordable Macintosh LG is a dream come true. The Macintosh LC is rich in color. Unlike many computers that can display only 16 colors at once, the Macintosh LCexpands your palette to 256colors. It also comes with a microphone and new sound-input technology that lets you personalize your work by adding voice or other sounds. Like every Macintosh computer, the LC is easy to set up and easy to master. And it runs thousands of available applications that all work in the same, consistent w ay -so once you’ve learned one program, you’re well on your way to learning them alL The Macintosh LC even lets you share infor­ mation with som eone w ho uses a different type of computer—thanks to the versatile Apple® SuperDrive; which can read from and write to Macintosh, MS-DOS, OS/2, and Apple II floppy disks. Take a look at the Macintosh LC and see what it gives you. Then pinch yourself. It’s better than a d ream -it’s a Macintosh. A pple intn (d u ces th e M acintosh_ LG. _______ __________________ s File Edit In p u t lio k u Br.-TC Qt rn3 N o te b o o k M a n ip u la te G raph F re ts HayxyÉdyX/x r 1Ô AX YDLBA A X R is L O N G F E L L O W B U R N Display Advertising 12 23 Z State Press Ì4 li DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's h o w to w ork i t B UR N r n e r j Yesterday’s Answer Gordon—- 18 Mechani­ 5 Nevada resort 6 Savings and loans 7 Cheer word 8 Shortly 9 "Star Wars" teacher 10 “The King and r setting 16 Opposite of neg. o 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e Shape ofthe World- New! FROM EARLY TIL LATE C P U S -i Z Q Z X G HR O G HJ X G ; IJ M N ; R B R D C ollege can be difficult enough by itse lf but when you com pound it w ith a job, the load doubles. T he IBM Personal System/2® can help you through these workloads. T he P S/2* cranes preloaded w ith soft­ ware that w ill let you create im pressive papers, reports, graphics and spreadsheets for your classes or for your job. An IBM m ouse, color display and tools like a notepad, calendar, cardfile and even gam es are also included. And it’s expand­ able so it can grow w ith you to keep pace w ith your needs at work and in college. As a student, you are eligible for a special price on an IBM P S/2* Affordable loan paym ents are also available w ith the IBM P S /2 Loan for Learning. And on a different note, you can get the Roland* Desktop Music System at a special price. T he P S/2 is w ell worth looking into. W hether it’s for work or for college, you’ll find it can be a major help. See the IBM Personal System /2's at Compass, Moeur 108. Register there to w in a portable compact disk player. N o purchase necessary. Drawing to be held April 18th. P S /2 Hotline 224-2763 EJ Y G O G Y -SY, G N U G I W GYFD RXSYCM Y e s te r d a y 's C r y p to q u o te : VERACITY IS A LANT O F PARADISE A N D ITS SEED S HAVE IEVER FLO URISH ED BEY O N D TH E W ALLS. — IEORGE ELIOT •This offer is available to qualified college students, faculty and staff w ho purchase IB M Selected Academ ic S olu tion s through p a rticip y^ Q cam pus o utlets, IB M 1-BO O -222-7257 o r IB M A uthorized P C D e a le rs certified to rem arket IB M Selected A cadem ic Solution s. O rders are subject to availability. P rice s are subject to change, and IB M m ay w ithdraw the offer at any time w ithout notice. ® » M . P ersonal Syetem /2.and P S/2 are registered tradem arks of Internationa! B u sin e ss M achine s C orporation. R oland is a registered tradem ark o f R oland C orporation, U S. ® IB M C orporation 1991 Page 10 State m s» Monday, April 15,1991 Arizona’s changing environment threatens wildlife By AN ITA C A RC O N E State Proas Arizona’s changing environm ent is threatening more than 116 species of anim als in the state, according to recent Arizona Game and Fish Departm ent statistics. “The m ost prevalent problem is the loss and modification of the habitat,” said Tim Tibbitts, a non-game ornothologist with the Arizona Game and F ish Department. He said species classified as threatened or endangered will continue to die off at a rapid pace, adding that unless Arizona citizens prioritize the environm ent, those rem aining could be elim inated. Roy Aikens, a representative of the Arizona Game and F ish Departm ent, said that in order to revive som e of the sp ecies, it would take intricate work in repairing the state’s stream sides and Iakesides, an understanding of the dynam ics of w ildlife on the brink of extinction and — m ost im portantly — active habitat protection. Violation _ C ontinued from page 1. a n d h e k n o w s (p r o c e d u r e s ) fro m precedence,” Arnoldussen said. “ He didn’t even m ake an effort to contact u s.” M eanwhile, Pressm an said h e w ill fight for his title if necessary. “This certainly doesn’t seem fair,” he said. “I m ay be able to speak with them and clear up the discrepancy.” Pressm an deferred further com m ent until the com m ission’s opinion is released today. The 10 m ost endangered species in Arizona include the bald eagle, the peregrine falcon, the black-footed ferret, the M exican gray wolf, the Hualapai M exican vole, the desert tortoise, the flat-tailed horned lizard, the razorback sucker, the desert pupfish and the M exican spotted owl. . Tibbitts said the bald eagle and the peregrine falcon are m aking the m ost im pressive com eback after nearly disappearing from the United States because of pesticide contam ination after World War II. The banning of DDT, an organo-chlorine pesticide, and efforts to reintroduce the bird in other states have saved quite a few sp ecies, he added. But experts claim there is no easy way to continue saving such anim als from possible extinction. “It’s a very difficult issu e,” said Dr. W endell M inckley, professor of zoology at ASU. “There is no real answer. Each organism is différent.” He said the steps to in itiate change and im prove the environm ent lie within each individual. M eanwhile, Allen, who subm itted his first financial statem ent on tim e, said he w as led to believe his lack of attendance at the com m ission hearing would not jeopardize his elected status. Allen said he had to attend an event at the College of Law and could not m ake the hearing. “He (Arnoldussen) led m e to believe I didn’t have to be there, and considering the facts, (he said) I would only be docked 10 to 15 points,” Allen said. Allen said he should have been better inform ed of the consequences of not subm itting a financial statem ent. “I don’t think Bruce Arnoldussen knows his priorities,” he said. “In law, w e have som ething called ‘stare d ecisis’ — w e treat like cases alik e.” However, Arnoldussen said Allen acted in “total disregard” of the elections process, adding that the senator-elect attend«! all candidate m eetings and w as distributed a ll necessary literature indicating deadline Powwow--------Conitiniied from page 1; special that w e’ve alw ays lived by, and we need to share that,” he said. The weekend event, which concluded Am erican Indian Cultural Week, w as sponsored by ASU’s N ative American Student Association. It also w as held in conjunction with the Office of the Vice President for Student A ffairs, the Cultural D iversity Committee, the Office of Student Life, the Am erican Indian Institute, the N ative American Alumni A ssociation and the American Indian Council. N ative dress dominated the landscape at the University band practice field Saturday. American Indians decked out in sacred E agle feathers, beads and copper bells com peted “Humans m ust decide what it is they wish to do. They m ust be w illing to give in order to gain in ecology which could alter econom ics,” said M inckley, adding that Arizonans have overextended their utilization of the environm ent. Dr. Andrew Sm ith, an associate professor of zoology at ASU, agreed that habitat loss is leading to diminishing numbers of endangered species. “The general trend right now is that a sm all population of anim als such as the endangered species are becom ing fragm ented,” he said. “They used to have a continuous habitat, but now it’s being broken up. “It’s a domino effect. The m ore patches of land that are lost, the further the potential of loss of sp ecies.” Smith said that as the “patches” of anim als facing extinction lessen s, its probability of extinction increases. He added that sm aller populations of anim als could produce inbreeding, which m ay result in genetic problems for the species. for $5,000 in prize money. Dancing, singing and drumming w ere judged by Native Am ericans, as the racially diverse crowd soaked up the costum es, the culture and the afternoon sun. “This really helps people who aren’t Indian (by telling) them what it’s a ll about,” said Mark Crull, who is on vacation from Chicago with his w ife and four children. Crull said he w as im pressed that young N ative American children are so aware of their cultures and thought the powwow would be “real educational” for his own children. “This is (the Indian) culture. It’s im portant,” he said, adding that the N ative Am erican culture is not prevalent in Chicago. FREE WINGS dates. “Although he did attem pt to contact us, he put another engagem ent ahead of the com m ission,” he said. “His actions show a lack of responsibility and are not becom ing for an ASASU senator.” Pressm an and Allen can appeal the com m ission ’s decision to the ASASU Supreme Court. If their appeals are not successful, ASASU officials w ill appoint two new candidates. Ten-year-old Kevin Crull said the powwow w as worth his tim e. “I’m learning their dances, their songs, their cultures,” he said.; Jessica H adley, an 8-year-old N avajo Indian, said she doesn’t rem em ber how or when she learned her tribe’s dances. “ I just know how,” she said. M eanwhile, Elm er R eeves, a m em ber of the Navajo tribe in New M exico, Said the powwow w as a way for different tribes to display their different dances. “The governm ent sees all Indians as the sam e, but w e’re a ll separate — w e have our own cultures,” he said. S tu d y n a t u r e . . . one hole at a time Buy 1 Order of Chicken W in gs and Get a Half-Order F R EE ! Includes Hom emade Ranch Dressing ALWAYS AVAILABLE TO GO!! JMfc— 15 wings......................$3.50 2CL— 30 wings....'......................... .......................... $5.95 9 ft— 45 wings..... ........ ..................... ........ ............ $8.25 M i — 60 wings........................................... ....... ....$10.50 Sick and tired of BIO 100? For just $12 after 4 p.m. you can study ponds, desert flora and fauna and the blue sky at the Karsten Golf Course at ASU. Try learning about nature from the source — rather than from the books —- while you’re playing one of the finest 18-hole championship courses in Arizona. (Price includes the FREE 1/2 order.) Offer good from 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Every Sunday & Monday. NFL M LB W O O DSH ED I W O O DSH ED II Food & Drink SW Com er of Baseline & Mill T E M P E 831-W OOD Casual Dining & Libations NW Comer of Dobson & University M E S A 844-SH ED ( it NBA NHL R ate o n ly a v a ila b le to ASl fu ll-tim e s K0B6 CLUB April 15th & 16th — 10AM to 4PM M.U. Ventana Rm. (new 2nd floor) T i n s ÿ a p a ñ e n " O b tin t} 1845 E A S T B R O A D W A Y « T E M P E A sk about Frequent Eaters Card. fi : M then bring your ;s. C urrent p h o to ID req u ired . EAT AND SAVE IN T H E R A W a t IPomGnKt i> a l]© 2 If you need: . 1125 E. Rio Salado Parkway Tempe, Arizona 85281 . Across from Sun Devil Stadium REMEMBER JUL 602) 921-8070 2 P C JR HOURS: Lunch 11-2:30 Dinner 5:30-10:30 Closed Monday 1 CALIFORNIAROLL N o T a k e O u ts 1 C o u p o n P e r P a rty Exp. 4-24-91 College Culture ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ J^SJJ, ‘N a s t y ’ N a z i s Nasty Girl serv es scath in g social com m entary BY J ON A . WALZ . S iH great philosopher once noted that social commentary can, at times, be most effective when it falls under the guise of humor. The Nasty Girl, ¡from Germany, is a good case-in-point in its effective mix of screw-bal I comedy and scathing commentary about those funi H u loving Nazis. Recently, good political satire has been all but non­ existent in the cinema. Even overseas, the bastion for dissent, output has dropped immensely since the heyday of poly-sat in the late ’SOs. Perhaps global politics have cóme to a point where the entertainment value of it all exists on Television alone. Unless the satire on film is truly zany (a la the Marx Brothers’ Duck Soup), it will be hard pressed to replace the comedy of real life. Nothing is funnier than the real thing, especially when politics is involved, The Nasty Girl begins, unseemly enough, as the fictitious (although the film is in pari based on fact) autobiographical tale of a young woman named Sonja (Lena Stolzc). Through flashbacks she leads us through her early childhood in Pfilizing, West Germany, and ultimately uncovers why she is now the town celebrity and considered by some as the “Nasty Girl” of the town. Sonja attends a Catholic school that both her parents Robert G iggenbach and Lena Stolze in Michael verh o ev en s T h e N asty Girl. teach at. Her mother is a religion teacher in the girls’ bound to be plenty of material in archives and plenty side and her father is the headmaster of the boys’ of people to talk to about Pfilzing’s experiences side. Sonja is well liked by the students, teachers and between 1939 and 1945. Little did she know. nuns. Her uncle is a priest, so she is respected in such She researches in the town library, archives of the a way that she is always included in the school local paper and attempts to talk with the widow of custom — reserved to children of large benefactors Mayor Zumtobcl, Pfilzing’s leader during the Third of the school — of receiving test Reich and the town’s only declared Nazi. answers from the nuns before tests. This In her search she uncovers very little, except for an is her first run-in with Pfilzing’s small­ intriguing article in the paper concerning the town corruption schemes. She will run denouncement of a Jew by several clergymen in into more later.’.. 1934, She questions the editor of the paper, Dr. Sonja is given the chance of writing an Juckenack (Hans-Richard Muller). He is no help at essay on “Freedom in Europe” that was all and actually discourages her search. Zumtobcl’s to be submitted to the president Of West widow is violently against any part of Sonja's search Starring Germany for judging. Not long after, she and wiH not supply her with any documents Lena Stolze wins the contest — to the delight of the pertaining to her husband. It gets more and more ibert Giggenbach town — as well as a trip to France. In curious. They all suggest that some things should France she finds that many of the young rittenandDirectedty stay hidden. European intellectuals who were Michael Verhoeven To put it mildly, Sonja is very unhappy with the runners-up, had very little knowledge, or ed on a five star scale roadblocks in her way. She sues the town twice for interest, in her beloved country. And F il m 2 rr . ^ m shockingly enough, they found little distinction between West and East Germany. W hen she arrives back home, she marries Marlin Wegmus (Robert Giggenbach). Martin was a substitute teacher in her School, whom she had always had a deep, lustful crush on. Although he is much older, their mutual love does not go unrequited. A new essay contest is announced by the government. Sonja opts to write another one, this time on “My Hometown During the Third Reich,” She views this as a rather simple task, for there was Recital Hall. The program is free and open to the public. 965-TUNE, W e d n e s d a y 17 •ASU Ethnomusicology Ensembles will present a concert at 7:30 p.m. in •Jazz Com bo at 7:30 p.m. in Recital Hall. The program is free a n d open to the public. •Dinner theater — Winterstock Regional Theater and the Landm ark Restaurant present Steel M a g n o lia s. Dinner 5:30 - 6: 30 p.m. Showtime 7:30 p .m. ^ H U R S D A Y 18 • Frank Sinatra, Eydie G orm e and Steve Law rence will perform a t 8 p.m. Desert Sky Pavilion. the release o f all documents pertaining to Mayor Zumtobcl. She wins both suits, but is notified that the files were (depending upon who she talked to) either lost, on loan or so brittle that they could not be taken out to be looked a t The deadline passes for the essay, but Sonja continues her frantic and sometimes homicidal search for the truth. By the end of it all the fallout includes Dr. Juckenack, the clergymen and the ending of Sonja’s once care-frep life. Although the film sounds deep and daunting, it P hoto co u rte sy of M iram ax R im a could be considered primarily a comedy existing in a body of a drama. The humor is situational and revolves around the odd predicaments that Sonja always found herself in. Lena Stolze, who plays Sonja, is incredibly expressive with her face and with her large sultry eyes. She won the Best Actress award at the 1990 Berlin Film Festival. Incidentally, The Nasty Girl itself was among this year’s nominees for the Best Foreign Film Oscar. ’The Nasty Girl contends that while rehashing the past can be just as dangerous as the true actions Of the past, it is necessary in order to find out what Sonja found out: “we all have to know where we • came from.” Although Nazism is still taboo around the world, at least someone (namely director Michael Verhoeven) has enough guts to have fun with it. You won’t find that on Television. Show ing exclusively at Harkins Fashion Square 7, inside Scottsdale Fashion Square a t Scottsdale and Camelback Roads. 423-1400. •Phoenix Sym phony — Irwin Hoffman. Music Director of the National Sym phony Orchestra of C osta Rica will be on the podium for the April 18 and 19 Phoenix Sym phony Classics co n ce rts. ^ R I D A Y 19 •Lyric O pera Theatre presents "G oodtim e Charley,* at 7:30 p.m. in the ASU Music Theatre. Page 18 State Press Monday, April 15,1991 Tonight GALAXIES AND NEW Entertainment Briefs 19th-century Paris paradise for artists NEW YORK (A P) - If ever there w as a true paradise for artists, it w as Paris in the 19th century. With its m oods, romance and harsh realities, artists found excellent teachers, an array of good m odels and housing they could afford. In May, A b b eville P ress w ill publish an im pressive and staggering look at how that era affected Am erican artists, “The Lure of P aris: Nineteenth-Century American Painters and Their French Teachers.” The beautifully appointed $95 book was written by H. Barbara W einberg, curator of Am erican Paintings and Sculpture at the M etropolitan Museum of Art. It took W einberg 10 years to produce the book, with its lovely color prints of works by such artists a s Thomas Eakins, Jam es M cNeill W histler and W illiam Henry Lippincott. W einberg’s book illustrates the enor­ mous influence of the French school on Am erican art. Hillis' retirement spurs search for new director CHICAGO (A P) — An international search for the next director of the Chicago Symphony Chorus has begun following M argaret H illis’ announcem ent that she w ill retire in fall 1992. H illis, who founded the chorus in 1957, w ill rem ain director through the opening of the 1992-93 season. Since the group’s debut in 1958, it has ap­ peared with the Chicago Symphony Or­ chestra alm ost 600 tim es, won seven Grammy awards and accom panied the or­ chestra on its 1989 European debut in Lon­ don and Salzburg. H illis, 69, plans to step up her ap­ pearances as a sym phonic conductor. She is to m ake her Prague debut in 1992. Pryor to be honored at NY Friars Club NEW YORK (AP) - The 87-year-old New York F riars Club w ill make history again when it honors superstar Richard Pryor at its next annual Celebrity Luncheon. And to ensure the rib-roasting w ill be of the highest quality, com edian Robin W illiams w ill serve as the em inent roastm aster at the Sept. 27 event. Long a popular stand-up com ic, Pryor made his m ovie debut with Sid Caesar in “The Busy Body.” He won critical acclaim in “Lady Sings the B lues” opposite Diana Ross, the F riars Club’s Entertainer of the Year in 1990. His other m ovie credits include: “Up­ town Saturday N ight,” “Which Way Is Up?” “Greased Lightning,” “California Suite,” “The W iz,” “Car W ash,” “Brew ster’s M illions,” “Superman III,” “Stir Crazy,” “See No E vil, Hear No E vil” and the soon to be released “Another You.” Y ou ’d have to be a real nerd not to read tradition. students. freshmen, clubs. sophomores. news. juniors. history. seniors. academics. graduates. trends. people. nightlife. events. faculty. graduation. friends, memories... All these and more are between the covers of THE SUN DEVIL SPARK yearbook. WORLDS! 8 :0 0 P ro g ra m s you count on — co un t on you! 9:00 KAET ArizonaState University Shape of the World- New! Follow the Story of daredevils sailing unknown seas, merchants chasing fortunes and rulers seeking new worlds to conquer as Shape of the World continues its mapping of the globe. KAPLAN PU TS YOU IN SCORING POSITION. Want a touchdown on the SAT, LSAT, GMAT, GRE or other admissions exams? Then call the team with the best scoring record in the league—Stanley H. Kaplan. f K A PLA N STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. W e ’ll a lso put you in sco rin g position for the G R E P S Y C H , IN T R O T O LA W S C H O O L , B A R R E V IE W , M C A T , DA T, T O E F L , N A T IO N A L M E D IC A L B O A R D S , M S K P , F M G M S , F L E X , N C L E X -R N , C G F N S , N A ­ T IO N A L D E N T A L B O A R D S , C P A , N T E , S P E E D R E A D IN G and more. the State Press M agazine! The Astronomers - New! Explore the galaxies in search of quazars, gravity waves and black holes through the eyes of the astronomers who are revolutionizing our knowledge of the universe. Using the latest in ' computer-generated imagery to create threedimensional animations, this six-part series uncovers the secrets of the cosmos. Take K ap lan or T ake Y our C h an ces. 967-2967 ~TheSunL& Something Special . . . Drug Enforcement Administration HAVEFUN &MAKE EXTRAMONEY. T each ing B arten d ers S ince 1 9 3 3 •F le x ib le H o u rs & P erso n a liz e d T rain in g •C O E D C o u r se s •S e r v in g a g e in AZ is 19 C ollege Student D iscount I (Bring in this coupon & college I.D.) $200 O F F TU ITIO N F in a n c in g A vailable m AMERICAN BARTENDERS SCHOOL 9 6 8 -7 6 5 7 1 5 2 3 E . A p ach e SPECIAL AGENT AN O F F E R OF A C H A L L E N G I N G C A R E E R a w enforcem ent is a rew arding and challenging career. It offers u pw ard m obility, dom estic and foreign assignm ents. T he DEA is the Federal g overnm ent's leading agency in th e fight against drug trafficking! ■ EA Special Agents c onduct crim inal investigations and prepare for the prosecution o f m ajor violators o f the d rug liw s o f the U nited States. The minimum qualifications for the Special Agent position are: • Be a U.S. citzen. • Be a t least 21 years o f age and not o ld er th an 34 at appointm ent. • Be in excellent physical condition. • H ave a valid d riv er’s license and ability to drive a vehicle at m axim um highw ay Speeds, • Be willing to relocate to a n o th er city in the U.S. • Have uncrorrected vision o f n o t less th a n 20/200 in b o th eyes, co rrected , 20/20 in one eye and 20/40 in the other. • A college degree in any field and o n e year o f experience conducting crim inal investigations o r com parable experience. • A college degree in any field and one d f the follow ing: • 2.95 overall grade po in t average (GPA). • 3 5 GPA in m ajor field o f study. • Standing in the u p p e r V> o f class o r m ajor subdivision. • M em bership in scholastic h o n o r society. • O ne year o f graduate study. D Call Our Recruiting Dept, at 662-640-5700. —Yom Can Make the Difference!— Page 13 M onda^ prfM !vJ991_ JV C J a z z F e s tiv a l to fe a tu r e n e w p la y e r s , r e ta in s v e te r a n s attention in the jazz world this p ast year. D avis w ill m ake his only scheduled New York concert ap­ pearance this season a t the festival, headlining with King on June 21 at Avery Fisher H all. Mel Torm e w ill m ake his 15th consecutive appearance June 21 a t Carnegie H all, delving into the m usic of Duke Ellington. Friends of Sarah Vaughan w ill present a tribute at Carnegie H all on June 25 to the singer, who died last year. Friends include B illy E ckstine, Roberta Flack, Dizzy G illespie, Shirley Horn, Carmen M cRae, Joe Willia m s and Jim m y Rowles. A tribute to the late D exter Gordon w ill be presented June 28 a t Avery F isher Hall. Shirley Scott w ul be m usical director. Gordon’s widow, M axene Gordon said , “It is about bebop. Slide Hampton is arriving ‘Round Midnight’ for Dizzy. D exter said he never played it right.” The festival w ill honor Marian M cPaftland in a concert June 26 at Avery Fisher Hall for her radio program “Piano Jazz.” The concert also w ill honor D ave Brubeck mi his 70th birthday. NEW YORK (AP) — Alm ost 40 years after it w as born, the JVC Jazz F estival w ill feature younger players like Wynton M arsalis this summ er, w hile retaining veteran superstars like M iles D avis, B. B. King and Mel Tonne. “The them e of this year’s festival is youth,” organizer George Wein said W ednesday.‘“I hope it works. “I think it’s im portant that the world knows that there are m any younger m usicians playing in the tradition of jazz who are interested that this great Am erican m usic stays a live,’’ he said. H ie festival, which runs June 21-29, includes concerts to be titled “Swing: Forty and Under,” w here cornetist War­ ren Vache, 40, w ill be the oldest player, and “Bebop: Forty and Under.” They are am ong five shows scheduled for the 500-seat Equitable Center. “Those two concerts w ill highlight how these artists are playing in a fresh, original way, yet m aintain the excite­ m ent of som e of the m ost im portant periods in the history of jazz,” Wein said. M arsalis w ill headline a June 22 concert at Avery Fisher Hall by eight young m usicians who have received a lot of Jazzm obile salutes record producer George Butler on June 28 in Carnegie H all, w ith proceeds to Jazzm obile. New Audiences w ill co-produce two concerts at the. Beacon Theater. Bobby Short, with guests from Ruth Brown and Sweets Edison to the Am herst Saxophone Quartet, w ill host “Bob­ by Short’s New York, New York” on June 23 at Carnegie. Town Hall w ill present “86 and Still Blow ing,” a tribute to Doc Cheatham, on June 24. Ornette Coleman w ill be at Carnegie Hall the final night, June 29. Solo piano bourn in W eill R ecital Hall continue this year. In conjunction with the festival, F ilm Forum is showing m ore than 35 jazz m ovies from June 21 to July 11. There w ill be two walking tours o f the history of jazz in New York. A new event w ill be a free six-hour jazz festival at Dam roscb Park in Lincoln Center. The June 23 program w ill feature Arthur Blythe, David Murray, Donald Harrison and others. There also w ill be a jazz and blues jam at the Ritz. # s e m a te â mmmm) **rBacteicy 19SPB1 Breast Enlargement? p r-^ -7-iU (W ashington D C .) *—*ÄrBaöieldrlUJ;CD^fi2«i993^^*ric «f*- — B I B B ------- B » If you’re a college woman who has had a -B B & B — . Have you had a 7'»kyßG imiimmm ^ .1991 f £ 7 £ 2 6 B * & B C B B £ n M < * B 5 M M 0 . - —x mm— Bi*3#«Q« B * B f* î (&m(D9m&amzmo3:To9?'>-s & W z & 0 8 ? tî/u p ) breast enlargement, the State Press needs B .tr S T — « H ie B « r * * W f c C 7 B < ¡tari*» (ttB Ô $M 83Ê B B £ UV V l9BIÎPS«l3Bfl- comments on your satisfaction or lack there­ f C M t t B — I9 9 I^ 9 « 1 3 B Î ¿ 'J - h r» - r > • » » » » • t a » . * f c u * â i - - ( 3 i i r i « i a i . '* t e t t a T E i T - . *-fXt*WλaT#ÎV/L«ITfc^L-|i>rT*TÎl.'. • m a‘j3o#8*<7>w«H*. »trsararcw M « aa u r. '■ T E L 1-8 0 0 -5 3 7 *2 1 8 6 S fc ü 0 3 -3 2 3 4 -5 0 7 1 <¥B9:oo»j».~s:30Pj«B»*B!) ... t e X * — SU .S.A . N ew Y ork O ffic e ««/aw T E L 1 -8 0 0 -3 4 4 -7 2 4 1 * f c » 2 1 2 -9 8 6 -5 5 2 0 . (JPB9:OOAM:~$:oaP.M. N.Y. Time) . ’' of, regarding your decision. Com pletely confidential. Please call Christy at 965-2292 or 965-1695. ’ 1 -H O U R OFF! S A LI FO TO . SINGLE PRINTS 12 exp lS e x p 3 6 exp I?93?94?96." COLOR ENLARGEMENTS 1 1 25%— . 2 4 exp : 1 IO L 1 Any Fu* rodetdmo ol prod— Inp. Coupon must accompany order. 1 5 X 7 * 8 X 1 0 *1 1 X 1 4 From 36mm color negative. No Cropping. Sea Store For Details- 1 E X TR A SETS 1 1 1 1 1 r. 110.126.35mmor Pile colorprim film ASU MEMORIAL UNION- LO W ER LEVEL Othsr Locations 1739 E. Broadway......967-7590 Th» Cornerstone Mall ...968-0027 ■H w e a r in g SI 18 CLASSIC AARAU GSTAAD BRISTEN CAROUGE WOMEN *S CLASSIC is B e l ie v in g SALE $82°° $67" $4995 $3495 $6395 $6195 $7395 $5995 $48" $46" $58" $44" $32" $4799 P rice s go od through April 30,1991. University sporting goods 1038 South Mill » Tem po A Z • 968-7725 3228S. M l..... .966-6636 K W. Broadway... 968-6593 930 Coupon G ood Thru 4-30-91|H| mm warn mm mm mm 5110 S. Rural.......839-6834 1640 E Warner... .820-7154 THINKING ABOUT A CAREER IN THE TRAVEL INDUSTRY? TR AVEL CAREER S Y M P O S IU M Sponsor«! by Travel and Tourism Students Association N ancy Critchfield Regional Vice President AIT/American Express Travel Leslie H onaker Manager o f A ccount Services America W est Airlines Trevor Stuart-Hill Director o f Marketing Town and Country Tours G V .H ea ly General Manager W estcourt at the Buttes Tom W illiam son Account Manager Royal Viking Cruise Lines Sandy P oulson Executive Director Tempe Convention/Visitors Bureau W ednesday April 17, 1991 M em orial U nion M ojave R oom 222 A c ro ss From G a m m age 1 2 :3 0 P M — 2 :3 0 P M Comics State Press Monday, A prili 5,1991 P age 1 4 Calvin and H obbes b y Bill W atterson By GARY LARSON T H E F A R S ID E by Garry Trudeau D oonesbury LASTNIGHT, I PIP SOMETHING I ’VEAe m . PONGBEFORE, SOME' THINGJ PIPHT EVEN KNOWI WAG CAPABLE OF... WHATSUP, BABB* YOU UJOKPRE' OCCUPIEP IT PtOMTREALLYMEANANY­ THING, BUTI KNOWHOWHURT ANP THREATENEPB.P.ISGONG TOFEEi. ITHEEVER FINPGOUT... NO! I PIP. J YOU FKEP THE PtPNTf IAWNMOWER. ■A I by Julie Sigwart Rainey Days by Ford M. Lattie’s Dog "G ot him, Byron! It’s som ething in the Vespula genus, all right — and ooooweeeee d oe s he look m ad!” PLAINVIEW, Minn. (A P) - The off-the-beatentrack town of Plainview tried advertising itself on a highway billboard, but the effort failed. Now, a group of residents is going to the racetrack in hopes of attracting visitors. Eighteen investors chipped in about $300 apiece to buy a 3-year-old thoroughbred filly they hope w ill bring notice to their town of 2,000, 18 m iles northeast of R ochester in southw est M innesota. They named the horse Plainview Express. Its first race w ill be next month a t Canterbury Downs in Shakopee near M inneapolis. “If it works, fine; if it doesn’t, it’s still fun,” said Ferm an Lanning, the m asterm ind behind the publicity stunt. , “Who knows, m aybe sh e’ll be in the Kentucky D erby,” he said. le v ll Sisearle »carb o ole -wà FOR V AN ORIGINAL 12" MEDIUM PIZZA with UNLIMITED TOPPINGS* FOR PEPPERONI PIZZA Pan Pizza available for $1.00 extra. Please mention special when ordering. Single item portions only ~ CALL DOMINO'S PIZZA E xp. 4-29-91 Our drivers carry less than $20.00. Limited delivery areas to ensure safety. Our drivers are never penalized for late deliveries, @1990 Domino's Pizza, Inc. E xp. 4-29-91 SE R V IN G A SU S IN C E 1980. University & Rural Hours 11:00am -l :30am Sun-Thu: 11:00am-2 :30am Fri.-Sat. E a c h offer not valid with any other co u p o n s or offers. Subject to all applicable state and lo cal tax. O ffers valid at this location only. Page 15 Monday, Apri) 15,1991 State Presi ASU avoids Cardinal sin s T a tte r s o n w in s a s S u n D e v ils to p S U By PAUL CORO State Press By DAN ZEIGER He m ay be the best of ASU basketball’s two Austins rolled into one, and now the Sun D evils have got him. L ester N eal of V entura (C a lif.) Community College signed a national letter of intent Friday to play with the Sun D evils. Like Isaac, he is a 250-pound, wide-body center with prowess around the basket. Like A lex, he is only 6-foot-6 with scoring ability. “We’re excited to have a player of L ester’s caliber in our program ,” ASU coach B ill Frieder said. “He w ill add a great deal of leadership and he is a great athlete. He w ill rebound everything in sigh t.” , N eal, who played high school ball at Chicago powerhouse Dunbar High, was named the W estern States Conference Most Valuable P layer after he averaged 22.1 points and 15 rebounds for Ventura last season. He tw ice led the state JCs in rebounding. “He’s a different kind of player than w e have now,” said assistant coach George McQuarn, who recruited Neal. “He’s very, very strong and enjoys playing in the paint. We needed an aggressive kid and one that is m ature. ’’ McQuarn said N eal com es from a program that em phasizes defense, which has aided the banger with his lack of height. “As with any JC kid, w e’ll bring him in w ith th e h o p e h e ’ll c o n t r i b u t e im m ediately,” McQuarn said. “With him , the m ain thing is he gives us strength and size. We would have liked for him to be bigger. If he grows 3 or 4 inches before the fall, it’ll help u s.” State Press Although no one is exactly certain what it has to do with its nicknam e, it is fitting that the Stanford logo contains a tree — because the ASU baseball team seem ed to be up one before its gam e With the Cardinal on Sunday. Playing with the bitter mem ory of losing a contest it should have won the night before, the Sun D evils fought off the doom and gloom of defeat and turned it around for a 10-4 triumph in front of just 1,739 spectators at Packard Stadium. The ASU victory w as its first over topranked Stanford in six tries this season and bought the team more tim e in its battle for an NCAA tournament bid. The Sun D evils (26-22 overall, 8-13 SixPad) m oved past UofA, who lost 8-4 at USC on Sunday, into fourth place in the league standings behind California, 11-7 winners against UCLA. ASU is only two gam es back of the Golden Bears and has legitim ate hope o f m oving into third before the end of the season. Cal hias five gam es rem aining with Stanford and three with USC, and it is doubtful the Bears w ill have a winning record against the top two team s in the conference. Also, should Cal and ASU finish in a tie for the third, the Sun D evils would com e out on top because they won the season series from the Bears. “When you think about the team s that are going for the third spot, it’s been awhile sin ce w e've been in that position,” ASU coach Jim Brock said. “I don’t think I enjoy it. But I think if w e get on a roll and make the playoffs, if w e are playing w ell, the others in our region won’t look forward to m eeting u s.” But the Sun D evils w ere adm ittedly not looking forward to the series-ender after sufferin g a depressing 6-5 defeat on Saturday The Cardinal erased a 5-1 lead Saturday by scoring five runs on only one hit in the eighth inning and held on when ASU threatened in the bottom of the ninth. “ I’ve never played as hard in m y life as I did on Saturday,” shortstop Kurt Ehmann said. “I honestly mean that — m y uniform w as so dirty and I hustled like I never did before. I could not believe it when they cam e back. That loss hurt, and we cam e Out a little bit sluggish. It was hard to get up to p la y ” The Sun D evils got out of their doldrums during the top of the first as Stanford (26-11, 10-4) loaded the bases with no one out off pitcher Scott Dodd, who started despite throwing in relief on Saturday. But the Sun D evils m ade it out of the fram e unscathed a s Dodd got Jeffrey Hammonds to ground into a force out at the plate and then struck out Ryan Turner before Steve Solomon grounded out to first Friedergets JC transfer Neal picked the Sun Devils over Washington State and Colorado, but was originally recruited heavily by the likes of UNLV, USC’and DePaul as well. Irw in Daugherty/Stafe P re ss Stanford sec o n d basem an C hris Kemper aw aits th e ball’s bou n ce with sh o rtsto p R oger B urnett looking on a s ASU c e n te r fielder Mike Kelly slid es in safely for th e stolen base. base to end the th reat “I don’t think anyone w as pumped to win before the gam e, even though we needed to w in,” ASU left fielder Scott Sam uels said. “But after the gam e started and w e got out of the first, we got recharged. When w e shut them down, that got us going and really woke us up.” Dodd tossed 3% innings and allow ed three hits and two earned runs before giving way in the fourth to Gary Tatterson, who Was the winning pitcher by working the last five fram es and giving up only five h its and two runs w hile striking out nine. Tatterson pitched the series opener on Friday and w as hit hard as the Cardinal ripped him for nine h its and seven runs in only 3% innings, but the senior w as able to recover and im prove his season record to 7-7. “My theory is that Tatterson could be even better a s an ideal relief pitcher,” Brock said. “It seem s that the m ore tired he is, his pitches sink even m ore and he has better control. If you look at his record, som e of his m ost notable perform ances have com e when he had pitched just recently.” Ehmann and Sam uels w ere two of the offensive stars for the Sun D evils on Sunday. Ehmann w as 3-for-5 and set an ASU career high of four RBI w hile Sam uels, who belted home runs in each gam e of the series, added a two-run shot to give the Sun D evils a 5-3 advantage after the sixth. ASU is still aw aiting the paperwork on 6-foot-9 Australian forw ard/center Tony Ronaldson, who orally com m itted to the Sun D e v i l s in t he fall. W ithout Ronaldson’s official letter, ASU has signed five recruits for the 1991-192 season. The other four that have signed are 6-foot-9 forward Mario Bennett (Denton, T exas), 6-foot-7 toward Jim m y Kolysko (Scottsdale), 6-toot-S swingman W un V e r sh e r ( C o m p t o n , Cal i f ., Community C ollege) and 6-foot-10 center R iki Strother (T em ple V iew , New Zealand). Outside Ronaldson, ASU w ill likely only sign one m ore, probably a junior college guard. The Sun D evils are recruiting either David Anderson of Southern Idaho and Gaylon Nickerson of Butler County (K ansas) Community College. Turn to B aseb all, p ag e 17* D a v is o n , q u a r te r b a c k s im p r e s s in s p r in g g a m e By PAUL CORO S tate P ress While Leonard R ussell’s stock continues to rise for Sunday’s NFL draft, ASU football’s new est junior college tailback transfer is already ahead of where R ussell was last spring. W ell, that w as really pretty easy to do because R ussell did not even participate in m ost of last year’s spring drills after getting hurt on the first day. But Jerone D avison proved he has gone beyond showing up for spring practice, running for 93 yards on 17 carries in Saturday's spring gam e. With R ussell’s early departure to the NFL and in ju ries to G eorge M ontgom ery and K evin Gaibreath, the 6-foot, 230-pound product from Solano Community College in V allejo, Calif ., took the bulk of the first team ’s carries in the situational scrim m age and proved he can contend for the job. “He is a great guy to run from tackle to tack le,” running backs coach Frank Falks said. “He has a great center of gravity. He can get his pads down and still have speed.” Davison had a few R ussell-like rum bles of 21, 12 and nine yards that left sophomore quarterback Bret Pow ers in adm iration. “ It’s a sham e I have to carry out a boot fake because I’d lik e to sit back and watch him run,” Powers said; Powers him self w as proving he can fill a major void, the one left at quarterback by Paul Justin. Pow ers com pleted six of nine attem pts for 69 yards and a touchdown, but also w as picked off once by inside linebacker Brett W allerstedt, who seem ingly had the best defensive perform ance. “ I feel really com fortable and confident and that’s really im portant in this offense,” Pow ers said. “It’s not too much pressure (being the No. 1 Q B ).” To further help out the quarterback spot, senior Bobby Valdez proved he is not out of the picture as he continues to battle back from elbow Surgery on his throwing arm that took place 17 m onths ago. With Kurt Lasher sidelined with a thumb injury, Valdez Completed his first five passes Saturday for 70 yards, including a 33-yard touchdown strike to redshirt freshm an Clyde McCoy. . The touchdown w as a sign of the im provem ent of Valdez, who w as lim ited to throws around 20-25 yards at the end of la st season. Valdez said he is at about 85 or 90 percent right now and can throw a s deep as 50 yards. “I’m hoping to get strong enough to throw every period in the fall and contend for the job,” said Valdez, who is being paced during the spring. “The first couple days of spring, it felt rusty, but as the spring went on, the zip cam e back. “I wish I had m y old arm back, but it’s com ing along.” Offensive Coordinator Mike Martz said he has been im pressed with Valdez’s progress and figures on him being a factor during fall cam p. “He is still rusty in how he understands things,” Martz said. Martz has been taking a closer look during spring at the offensive line, where ASU is trying to find the b est five and then worrying about positions. “I’ve been really pleased with the offensive lin e,” Martz said. “That w as the m ost pleasing thing (Saturday). The com petition has brought the whole level up. We feel good about th e progress of the running back and the offensive line. If w e continue that progress, I think w e’ll be a solid rushing team .” Kelvin F isher led the fullbacks with 19 yards on six carries, w hile McCoy and tight end Bryan Ryder both had three receptions. Place-kicker Mike Richey hit Turn to Football, p age 17. V ald e z State Pu m i Tennis teams split success on road By DARREN URBAN S tate P ress California m eet cam e after being down 4-0 in the third set and got ASU into the doubles com petition. The road is a difficult place to play in any sport and it is especially hard in Pac-10 tennis, regarded as the toughest Conference in the nation. So the ASU m en’s team did nothing out of the ordinary with its two losses to the Bay area schools this weekend, continuing its struggles in Pac-10 play. The Sun D evil women swept a pair of non-conference road m atches this weekend in San Diego. The m en’s squad (17-9 overall, 1-7 Pac-10) dropped a 5-1 decision to three-tim e NCAA champion Stanford Friday, and followed with a 5-3 loss to No. 5 California Saturday. ‘‘The biggest factor is that there’s a definite home court advantage,” ASU coach Lou Belken said. “Every place you play, it’s som ething different. Here, the ball carries and the balls com e up shorter there. We had problems adjusting.” “We went in there hungry to win it,” senior and No. 1 player Brian Gyetko said. “We just didn’t have it.” Sophomore Chris Gambino had the best weekend for the Sun D evils, taking both his singles m atches. His win in the “We alw ays have to fight to get into NCAAs,” Gyetko said. “ It m akes it that much m ore fun to m ake it.” “We’ve played pretty w ell, beating seven team s in the top 25,” Belken said. “There’s alw ays questions (about postseason) until the phone call com es,” The Sun D evil women (17-9) fulfilled the pre-trip prediction of Coach Sheila M clnerney, winning two close road m atches at San D iego State and San Diego. “Anytime you play two top-15 team s on the road, it’s going to be tough,” M clnerney said. “I don’t think w e played too w ell against San D iego State, but we were much better against San Diego. ” The No. 15 Aztecs gave ASU the m ost problem s, splitting “ Chris did a great job keeping us in the m atch,” Belken said. “We’re seeing Chris getting more comfortable and confident.” With two regular season matches remaining, the Sun Devils are still on the bubble for an NCAA berth and will probably remain there even if they can sweep next weekend. the six singles m atches and forcing the Sun D evils to win the three-m atch doubles play. Seniors Jennifer Rojohn and Karen Bergan lost their m atch, but fellow seniors Krista Amend and K risti Jonkosky and the team of sophomore Pam Cioffi and freshm an Meredith G eiger collected the victories needed for the m eet. Bergan w as m aking her first appearance since February after suffering cracked ribs. Amend, Jonkosky and junior Luann Klimchock each captured two singles w ins for ASU. “K rista, K risti and Luann played extrem ely w ell this weekend,” M clnerney said. “Our doubles w ere pretty strong.” The triumphs raised the Sun D evils’ winning streak to three and they have won eight of their la st 10. M clnerney said the momentum is a positive going into the postseason, but does not assure anything for her squad. “You never know,” M clnerney said. “If we can play like w e have been playing, like against Texas (a 5-4 Sun D evil win) w e’ll be OK. We’ve got New M exico and Arizona and then Pac-lOs, and we have finals in between. We’ve got the ab ility. We’ve just got to stay focused ” Archers dominate visitors at West Regional By LORENZO SIERRA Jr. S tate P ress Etiquette ca lls for a host to give comfort to guests. The ASU archery team , however, threw etiquette out the window as it disposed of all its guests in the 1991 W est Regional C ollegiate, held at the ASU outdoor archery range. The Sun D evils played rude hosts as both the m en’s and wom en’s team s dominated the rest of the field. The m en’s squad was paced by Chad Connor’s first-place finish with 1,465 points. Tim Huedepohl cam e in second with 1,424 points. Jam ie Loesch was the final Sun D evil to finish in the top five with a fourth-place finish. The win put Connor in great shape to defend the national title he won as a freshm an last year. “I think I’m shooting better this year than I w as at this tim e last year,” Connor said. For Huedepohl, a freshm an, the secondplace finish w as disappointing to him. “ I feel I could have shot b etter,” Huedepohl said. “It never cam e together. It just wasn’t there,” On the wom en’s sid e, things cam e together as ASU swept the top five spots and shot past second-place Phoenix College 5,699-4,892. Janet Schaffer took top honors with 1,465 points. Second place went to Kris Maskrey With 1,396. Lori Tetford edged out Heather Collins 1,368-1,367 for third place. SuSan Doran rounded out the top five with 1,333 points. In thé m ixed class, the Sun D evils blasted Phoenix College by over 800 points. Heading into the final part of the season, the Sun D evils are feeling confident about stretching their m ixed team national titles to 14 straight. The m en’s team has won ev ery national title since Jim m y Carter’s last year in office for a total of 11 ch am pion sh ips. A lthough the w om en finished second last year, they have dominated the country, winning seven national titles between 1983 and 1989. " “I feel like w e can do it,” Huedepohl said about winning the national tide. “We haven’t had much com petition out W est.” About the only com petition the Sun D evils have had is with their own team m ates. “You want to beat everyone else,” said Connor, “Everyone inside of ASU com petes against each other.” Even with the tough rivalry within the team , Connor said m em bers have a good com radery. “We hang out,” Connor said. “We alw ays bug freshm an. Last year, it w as m e and, aw man, it w as a tough year. This year, it’s T im .” And if history repeats itself, the freshm an (Huedepohl) w ill win the national title, but Connor plans to m ake it a four-year sweep. “That’s m y goal,” Connor said about winning four consecutive national titles. “ I’m on m y w ay.” T.J. Sokol/State P re ss ASU archer Lisa Tetford Area. 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P r ic e s g o o d at th is lo c a tio n o n ly . iin i Includes: *5 qts. PEN N ZO IL 10W30 M otor Oil «Chassis Lube «New PEN N ZO IL O il Filter •C heck All Fluid Levels «Most Cars & Light Trucks •» l 00 EPA Waste Free O il Expires 5-11-91 N f S ilt*. ' Devil i[Städfumj É » H ä ■:;JÍ ' OC 1st Street f H ô ■ c ASU Golf Course ' ü Western States § r \ Minder ' ‘ S 1__ 1Bindere U n iv e rs ity State Press Monday, April 15,1991 Page 17 ASU track falls short to Cats Classifieds S tate Press B y M A RTY M URPHY Classifieds S tate P ress The ASU track and field team w as able to handle its sister school to the north, but could not handle its brethren from the south this weekend at Sun Angel Stadium. The Sun D evil m en’s team fell 107-54 to UofA, but outscored NAU 83-78. The women w ere a little closer to the W ildcats, falling 69-86. They too outdueled the Lumberjacks by a count of 80-51. ASU coach Tom Jones echoed his pre-m eet com m ents when in reflecting on the m eet. “We have no one in the field events on the women’s side without Gea (Johnson),’’ Jones said. “Right off the top, we g ive up 16-24 points. ’’ The wom en’s score against UofA w as so tight that a better perform ance by one Sun D evil m ay have turned the tide. Jones said one race in particular m ay have hurt his squad the m ost. “We got disqualified in the 4x100 and that’s what cost us the m eet,” Jones said. “It’s just one of those things. It’s like m issing a free throw, you know, if it costs you the gam e.” The Sun D evils w ere disqualified because of a hand-off out of the designated zone. ASU w as able to dominate certain events and rack up points. Juniors LaShawn Simmons, Tesra Bester and Lisa H ale sw ept the 100-meter hurdles, Simmons ran a 13.96 to take first, followed by B ester’s 14.05 and Hale’s 14.29. Sim m ons also won the 100 m eters with a tim e of 12.01. Freshm an Shanequa Campbell finished second at 12.15 and H ale w as fifth in the event at 12.70. Senior Dana Jones won the 400 m eters with a 56.38. In the field events, sophomore Mary Hertz placed second in the javelin with a throw of 119-feet-ll. B ester and Simmons again lit it up when they com bined for a one-two finish in the long jump. Bester posted a mark of 20-feet-7V4 (wind-aided) and Simmons went 19-feet-llVi» (against the wind). The m en’s m eet w as highlighted by several perform ances in the Reid and on the track. In an extrem ely tight 1,500-meter race, junior Todd Lewis led All-Am erican Marc D avis of UofA for m ost'of the race, but ended up losing the race by .67 of a second. Lewis ran a 3.51.73 and D avis had a 3.51.06. “It w as windy and Todd led the whole race,” Jones said. “He broke the wind for D avis, who just sat back and drafted him the whole tim e until the final stretch.” Senior Robert Rucker won the 400-meter hurdles with a tim e of 50.97. Freshm an M ichael Sulcer captured the 100 at 10.66. In the field events Lenny M cGill, a freshm an who took part in the spring football gam e that morning, cam e back in the evening to help his track team m ates by winning the triple T .J. Sofcol/State P re ss A SU junior Tesra Bester won the long jump Saturday at Sun jum p, 49-feet-4ti. Freshm an Nick Hysong grabbed first in the pole vault. Angel Stadium in a three-way meet. Softball gets 4 wins in Oregon From staff reports The eighth-ranked ASU softball team did not show the effects of a month-long road stretch this week as it cam e aw ay from the Oregon schools with four conference wins. A fter sw eeping Oregon State Saturday, the Sun D evils (34-11 overall, 6-2 Six-Pac) went into Eugene Sunday a hot team and pounded out 21 hits for a 6-5, 4-1 doubleheader sw eep of the Ducks. In the first gam e, outfielders Rachel Brown and Jackie Am ara carried the offense, both going 2-for-4 with 2 RBI as Oregon hung with ASU throughout. A fter the Sun D evils scored two in the top of the seventh to take a 6-5 advantage, the Ducks struck back with two of their own before Karey Jam es cam e on to retire the final three batters, two on strikeouts, and record the save. Amber Tinstm an picked up the win for ASU although she allow ed three earned runs in ju st 4M> innings. In the nightcap, ASU cranked out 11 hits but got support this tim e from the pitching staff a s Jam es cam e through again, tossing five innings of shutout ball on three hits. Brown had a repeat perform ance of the first gam e with two hits and two RBI, as did first basem an Kim Anderson. Catcher Christy Serritella went 4-for-7 Sunday in the leadoff spot. In its first stop on the Oregon trail, ASU rolled up sevens in its sw eep over Oregon State on Saturday, beating the B eavers tw ice by the score o f 7-1. In the first gam e, Kim Anderson pulled a trifecta of fours a s she got four hits in four a t bats with four RBI. Ann Rowan added m ore offensive punch, going 3-for-4 and scoring tw ice. Dawn Wood, who w as the Six-Pac player of the week last w eek, got the victory a s she allow ed six hits and struck out 10. In the second gam e, Cheri K eller’s bases-loaded triple paced the Sun D evils. Jackie Amara w as a perfect 2-for-2 and drove in two runs. Baseball Ads may run for any length of time. Canceled ads win be credited to your account Sony, no refunds. ADVERTISING POLICY: Personals (15 words o r lass) are only S I .751 M utt p ises personal ad In person wflfi student ID. The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted. C A LL N O W 965-6731 A N N O U N CEM EN TS ^ S ss t Eligible Sieglet Directory" la d th M p w / ilE ^ tH rfiw w h in flw ri M .E .S J). IS NOTA DATINO SERVICE!! Fe b e i jefsoM tea pkaaecsB 602/870-0027 w ü w w w p f iiM w c iiM w w a rn a n » E M P L O Y E R S — LO O K IN G for help? Place a State P re ss H elp W anted ad. W e have three H elp W anted sections— General, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your b u sin e ss grow ing! H E A D IN G F O R Europe this sum m er? Jet there anytim e with Airhitchfr) for $269 from the W est Coast, $160 from the E ast Coast! (Reported in New Y ork Tim es and Let’s Go!) Akhitch(r), (212)864-2000 ID E A L T E N A N T se e ks landlord. Professor and obedience-trained canine com panion offer ow nership, care, your sabbatical hom e or rental^ 1 year. 5/15 or 6/1. Leave m essage, 438-1067. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS APARTM ENTS 1 A N D 2 bedroom s- Supe r Sum m er Special. 6 m onths only $1,200 total. Pool. 967-4568, Don for details. $200 total move-in. Close, east of A SU . Believe it! 2 A N D 3 bedroom apartm ents from $395, % month free. Covered parking, g a s barbeque, pool, private patios. C a sa G rande Apartm ents, 1855 East Don C arlos, Tempo. 968-6926. NEWLY REMODELED 1 bedroom 2 blocks from ASU Pod, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. A sk for specials for A SU students. 1700 S. College, Tempe 967-7212 2 B L O C K S from A SU , 1 and 2 bedroom, pool, laundry, dishw asher, free cable. C heck our sum m er specials. 1014 East Spence, Su n rise Apartm ents, 968-6947. . A S U A R E A . Studk>,1 arid 2 bedrooom for rent. $260 and up. 9 6 6 6 8 3 8 or 967-4908. State Press Sun D e fil Spark Yearbook H ayden's Ferry R eview Student Handbook M atthews Center. Basement 965*7572 GREEKS! I Monday is your day at “ In the Cornerstone” Come to Yogurt Oasis wearing your letters and receive 5 0 4 8 off any small, medium or large yogurt. 1 Mock o ff campus 1 bed:$3ss 2 bed: $ S 2 5 Also, 3 bed available $160 deposit call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. A pach e 1 block east of Rural S U P E R S U M M E R m ove-in special. Beaut­ iful new large 1 and 2 bedroom s. W alk to A S U . Pool, laundry room, 1 block south of University o n 8th Street. C ape C od Apart­ m ents, 968-5238. Y O U S A Y it, w e display it! O nly in the Stale P re ss C lassifieds! Topping extra 968-9512 1-2 B E D R O O M furnished, $ 2 5 0 4 3 6 0 phis m üdes, no pete. 1330 South Sun se t Drive. Ehmann responded by nailing a single to right-center field Apartm ent 9. 967-3658 or 966-7012. 1 to score Sm ith and Newstrom , giving the Sun D evils an 8-3 block south of A pache and 1 M ock w est of lead. After a passed ball scored Dunn from third base, left Rural. fielder Mike Scialo grounded into a force play at second base $199 M O V E -IN Special! 2 unfurnished. W asherfdryer hook-up, pool, to bring in Ehmann with the la st ASU run. “I think for a lot of reasons that you can say that covered parking, cam pus area. Clean, quiet. 966-2465. (Saturday) night,w as the m ost devastating gam e for us only if I can say that this gam e w as the m ost im portant one,” Brock said. “I have a tough tim e getting down on this team . They’re doing a ll that they can, working hard and keeping A N N O U N C E M E N T S the positive attitude.” Only a combined total of 5,765 fans watched the three gam es, perhaps the sm allest ASU-Stanford series turnout a t Packard in 10 years. Football G u ttU N ic d fro M i p a ge IS . seven of 11 field goals and punter Steve Rausch averaged 43.5 yards a boot. Coach Larry M armie w as absent from the scrim m age because he w as attending the funeral o f ASU linebacker Jason Martin’s m other, Wanda. F ifteen players also m issed the gam s because of injuries. W hite Scott Woodford’s and E ric Caruth-Berry’s careers are over because of injuries, other linebackers Gavin H ill, Israel C L M S H E D DISPLA Y RATES: 1 time: $7.86 per col. inch 2-5 times: $7.00 per col. inch 6 + times: $6.50 per coi inch APARTM ENTS C o a d a n ed Croat p age 15. The m ost thrilling part o f the weekend without question for ASU follow ers w as the re-em ergence of Mike K elly, who had a productive series after an agonizingly long slum p. K elly had been hitting only .212 (ll-for-52) in the 12 contests prior to the series, but w as 6-for-8 with four RBI in the three gam es against Stanford, including two hits on Sunday. K elly’s leadoff single w as the catalyst for a five-run seventh in which the Sun D evils took control of the gam e. With ASU up 5-3, first basem an Brian Smith doubled off the glove of Turner in left field to advance K elly to third. Doug Newstrom followed by stroking a tweener to David M cCarty at first base, but the junior could not find the handle and K elly scored from third. With one out, second basem an B ill Dunn w as intentionally walked to g et to E h m a n n U N E R AD R A TES: 15 words or In s : $3.00 per day tor 1-4 days $2.75 per day for 5-9 days $2.50 per day tor 10+ days 15« each additional word. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Stanley and Darren Woodson are also hurt w hile Shante Carver is enrolled in M esa Community C ollege to becom e academ ically eligib le again. D efensive tackle Shane Collins, tight end Bob Brasher, strong safety M ichael W illiam s, nose guard P at Mason, center Paul DeBono, guard Tim Kirby, strong safety Arnold Laws and tight end Nickie Moore a ll m issed the gam e with health problem s. 437 -1 048 Roommate matching service also available. 4 3 7 -1 0 4 8 A N N O U N C EM E N T S Monday, April 15,1991 Page 18 APARTMENTS San M iguel Apts. Large 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Next to ASU. U tilities Included. 910 E. Lemon 9 6 6 -8 7 0 4 S U M M E R D ISC O U N T S! Reserve Now For Fall! W A L K TO A SU ! O n ly Vi b lo ck from cam pus. Beautifully furnished, h u ge 1 b e d r o o m . 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ro o m . 2 ba th ap a rt­ m ents. All bills paid. Cable TV, heated pool, and s p a c io u s laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t . S t o p by today! T e rra c e R o ad A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T e rra c e 966-8540 HOMES EOR RENT A V A IL A B L E M A Y 1: Beautiful rental. 3 bedroom , 2 full baths, fam ily room, dining room, 1,550 square feet. Vaulted ceilings, ceram ic entrance, kitchen and bath. Above-ground pool, block fence. IQ m inutes from ’ A SU . $75Q/month, lawn service included 945-0399. LO U N G E P O O L S ID E between cla sse s this sum m er. AM appliances included. 2,000 square feet, 5 bedroom , 2 bath- M ay hire m over for fall relocation and partial furnished. 5 students, $220 each, 1/5 utilities. 969-4480. TOW NHOMES / C O N D O S FOR RENT 1 A N D 2 bedroom condos and townhom es, Papago Park and Q u e sts Vida. B ob Bullock, Realty Executives. 998-2992. 2 B E D R O O M condo, 15 m inutes A SU . F ir e p la c e , h e a te d p o o l, ja c u z z i, dishw asher. $435/m onth 265-2066. 2 B E D R O O M , 1 bath with refrigerator, washer/dryer, com m unity pool, d oes to A SU $400/m onth M G M , M a g g ie . 345-1919, 3 B E D R O O M , 2 bath, oe iin g fans, covered parking, washer/dryer, 2 miles/ A S U Jerry, 730-1441 F U R N IS H E D 2 bedroom , 2 bath T h e C om m ons on L e m o n ," $850/m onth. Private owner. 8386621. H A Y D E N S Q U A R E 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished. $800 plus deposit for sum m er. 9 864711: L U X U R Y C O N D O 3 bedroom , 2 bath, washer/dryer, fenced patio area, pools, tennis court. $80Q/month. N ear A SU . 967-4908. P A P A G O P A R K i. 2 bedroom . 2 bath, w asher/dryer, available 7/2/91 Plan ahead! C a f 494-9105. RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING MOBILE HOMES AUTOMOBILES F E M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to share 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhouae. Very nice. $300/month, includes utilities. 844-9130. 1962, V E R Y wei maintained, 55*x10' m obile home. W a itin g distance A SU . $ 3 .8 0 0 ,1 w ü carry 3 4 % . 894-0413. 1966 C H R Y S L E R Laser, 2.2, 4-cytinder, pow er brakes, steering, new dutch, battery. 6 0,00 0 m iles. $3,450/offer. 483-1306. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E : N ear A SU , 4 bedroom , 2 bath, pool, washer/dryer, ad furnished, Tempe. 5250/m onth plus 14 utilities. 966-2360. S T A T E P R E S S Production Department p ro v id e s type se tting, p a ste -u p and p rocess cam era services. C a i D on na at 965-7572 for rates and information. L O O K IN G F O R fem ale room m ates to live in hom e with pool, d o g s okay, m ove by M ay 15 921-3728, Kristy. M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath fully furnished apartment. Nonsm oker, no pets. $22S/month. Call 464-2373. M A L E R O O M M A T E to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath from 5/10 to 8/20 furnished. $250 plus W utilities. 967-0279. N O O N IS the deadline to get classified liner a d s in the following day. D o n ’t m iss it! Matthew s Center basem ent, 965-6731. F E M A L E N O N SM O K E R $2S0/month— % utilities C at lover, ow n bath, pool, Baseline/Hardy. 820-5990 JA M A L E N O N SM O K E R to share two bedroom apartment. Tw o m iles north of A S U $260 utilities included 9 904019. 1968 N IS S A N truck: Black with striping, chrom e w heels and bum per, bed cover. $6,900. 834-0693. FURNITURE L O T S O F nice furniture for sale. W e’re leaving so everything m ust go. F o r infor­ m ation c a i L isa or Lea at 968-5738. Q U E E N S IZ E Bookcase waterbed with heater. O nly 4 m onths old. M ust se i. Best offer. 968-4073. S O F A , L O V E S E A T , burgundy, good condition, $280. Tw in-size futon m attress, 8” thick, $75 C a i 731-9954. H O N D A C IV IC ‘84,11 6 ,0 0 0 highw ay, new brakes, perfect condition. $2,700/offer. 967-1892 or 9 68 1 06 9 , Tong. T O Y O T A C O R O LLA , 1964, diesel, air, AM /FM radio, automatic, power steering, metallic blue color $265Q/offer. 65,000 m iles. M ust seN. 9 674262. MOTORCYCLES H O N D A E L IT E 150 deluxe, 86 model, bought 1990. A sk in g $950 or best offer. C a tiEric, 7 8 4 4 6 3 6 ROOMS FOR RENT COMPUTERS 1 B E D R O O M tor sum m er rent. $185 plus deposit. 2 m iles from A SU . N ice pool and patio. W asher/dryer. 921-9542 C O M P L E T E S Y S T E M to use A S U com pu­ ters from home, keyboard— m o n ito rmodem, $175/offer. 784-J514. 1 B L O C K south of cam pus. H ave to see to ' believe. 1420 So u th College. Alan, 731-9251. R E C H A R G E Y Ó U R laser printer, toner cartridges $39.95. C a i 225-8049 2 B E D R O O M S, share bath, large home $ 2 5 0 e a c h — 14 u tilitie s, k itc h e n privileges, pool, balcony. M ales preferred. 945-8653, 994-3759. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed— $275 ind uding utilities M a n y extras, quiet. 894-9270 R O O M A T E W A N T ED , male/female, n o n s-. moker. O w n room and bathroom . Funv ished, dean, pod , $25 0 plus 16 utilities. N d far from A SU . C all Greg, 941-8487. $695 COMPLETE! 1 Brand new with yr. warr. at S0206/I2mftz com puter system with Hi-Res monitor. V ISA / M C /A M E X Call CBA 24 h rs (6 0 2 ) 9 5 1 - 9 3 9 0 R O O M IN dean, quiet house with 3 A S U students. Bike— A SU . $200, share utilities. 931-2672. COMPUTER MULTI-SYSTEMS R O O M M A T E W A N T E D — m a ste r bedroom , bath, washer/dryer, b ig yard, $225/16 utilities. 967-5738 John, Paul. Buy & sell new and used computers, printers, and software. H O N D A E L IT E 80, ‘87 model, $475. Call Sara, 921-3695 CASH FOR YOUR MOTORCYCLE OR SCOOTER •Top D ollar Paid •P ick op & Delivery Available •Com ing back next fall? Ask about our Returning Student Discounts •W e crate bikes for shipment 225 W. University HOMES EOR SALE F R E E S E M IN A R , pizza— How to buy H UD/VA governm ent, R T Ç hom es. For inform ation, call S u e K-/Hom es Phis, 966-0595/892-9107. S P A C IO U S / E L E G A N T .. L A R G E 4 bedroom hom e near cam pus. O nly $122,700. Century 21 Gold. 730-8806. K a rd . ; TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S EOR SALE O N L Y $100 dow n for ’T h e Com m ons on Lem on” 2 bedroom , 2 bath unit with all appliances and som e furniture. Sa ve over $35,000 at only $43,000! W alk to cam pus and stop renting! G re g A skins, Realty Executives, 9680016. S H A R P 2 bedroom , 2 bath poolside condo. McCKntock/University. $67,900. M ary Ram seyer, 820-5506, Century 21 A ista r Realtors. T H E B E S T of the beet. Attending A S U and you want to be w here it’s happening. H ayden Square is w here it’s at. T his unit completely upgraded, 2 bedroom , fire­ place, pool, spa, next to sh o p s and A SU ! $ 91 ,0 0 0 . K a re n , P ru d e n tial Realty, 961 4 67 8 . 2 B E D R O O M S in 3 bedroom , 3 bath condo, laundfy. m ils to A 8U . $260 and $250 864-4630 F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to sh are 2 bedroom , 1 bath townhouae. Room furn­ ished or not. M cClintock and University. $275, includes utilities. 784-4096, a sk for Kathy. 1967 C H E V Y Sprint, great condition, tow m iles, AM /FM cassette, air, new tires, tune-up. Carta, 9 674614. Next to Buffalo Exchange Bob Bullock naalty Executives A IR L IN E S H IR IN G . Se e kin g students and gra d s to fM m any positions. Airline will train. Excetient salary and travel benefits. Phone (303)441-2455. B E F O R E / A R E R S C H O O L program aktos needed. Part-time/$5.00 per hour. A pply at 4309 E a st BeNe view, Phoenix. C O M M E R C IA L B U IL D IN G for rent. Excel­ lent lower or accounting office. 8 room s (2 extra-large), com m on reception area, 2,7 00 sq uare feet, 3rd Street and M cDow ell. 5 m inutes to courthouse. 2786421. You sav it. we'll display it! Only in State Press Classifieds. HELP WANTED— GENERAL $5.25/HOUR G U A R A N T E E D plus oppor­ tunity to earn more. Flexible hours, day or evening, no experience necessary, conve­ nient W est M e sa location. 6480661, A N S W E R IN G S E R V IC E , afternoons and Saturdays, telephone and typing experi­ ence required. Scottsdale. 9987372. A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E R S needed parttim e or full-time. W ork in Phoenix, hourly pay. C ali 8 604524, leave m essage. EE) JEWELRY A L W A Y S B U Y IN G jewelry of ad kinds, ind uding gold, storting, gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill Avenue, Tem po Center, 9686074. C A S H F O R gold, diam onds. MW Avenue Jew elers, 414 South M M , Suite 101, Tem po. 9685967. Charlie •966-5765 A R E Y O U energetic, have à great attitude and want to earn $ 6 4 1 0 an h o u r? Call M iracle Shine, 277-2845: W om en encour­ aged to apply. A T T E N T IO N B U S IN E S S Majors: South­ w estern Com pany interview ing for full­ time sum m er employm ent. G ain experi­ ence in sa le s and b u sin e ss managem ent. Leave Arizona, resum e college credit, m ake $ 5 2 0 0 . 821-8213. MISCELLANEOUS EOR SALE 5 -P IE C E G L A S S and b ra ss com plete dinette set. A skin g $80. Size 10 w edding d re s s, n e ve r w orn. A sk in g $ 80 0 . 962-3774. T W IN -SIZ E FU T O N with adjustable frame, 8 layers thick, hardly used, $110. 3-speed Schw inn bike with m ountain handlebars, very reliable, $30. 19” color TV, $100. Digital m icrowave, $50. Turbo G raphics system with 6 gam es, $200. 921-1287, anytime. M O O O VIN G ? H O N D A IN T E R C E P T O R 250CC, beautiful TELEMARKETERS blue on wttife, mint condition, 2 biette helmets, moving. $2,200/bffer. 9214823. •$54ir. S U Z U K I K A T A N A 1982 low mileage. L o o k s and ru n s great. M u st se ll. $1,2S0/best offer. 8 294477. •No high-pressure sales •Work tvs.: 4pm-9pm, M-F Sal.: 8:30am-2pm BICYCLES 27” SC H W IN N Continental, 26” A A U with Shim ano com ponents . $40 each. Queensize waterbed. $100. 6 414078. C R U IS E R F O R sale Excellent condition. C ycle Pro, 1 % years old. $80/offer. M ust seN, graduating. 921-2310. TRAVEL 1 R O U N D -T R IP , Phoenix to Honolulu. M ay 13-18. M ust be male. $290 .2 6 74 0 15 . A M E R IC A W E ST / A M E R IC A W est. 2 5 % off anyw here they fly. CaN 949-1990. F LY IN G S O M E W H E R E for $500 or m ore? Ja p a n ? Am erica W est voucher for $400, save $100. 967-2296. F R ID A Y , M A Y 10. M othe r's D a y weekend, 3 U S A ir nonstop one-way tickets to Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania. $200 each/ offer. 9 681251 or 3 454999. L E T S T A T E P re ss C la ssifie d s work for you! CaM 965 4 73 1 fo r information. 996-2992 L O W E ST C O S T — Y our best b st is our ons-stop student travsl shop. Student-fare flights, travel backpacks and accessories, books and m aps. EuraM p asse s, youth hostel m em berships and international student ID ca rd s — all issu e d on the spot! Contact Am erican Youth H ostels at 894-5128 or visit our travel center at 1046 E a st Lem on Street, Tempe. RENTAL SHARING Needo roommate? Cheek the O N E -W A Y A IR L IN E ticket to Philadelphia from Phoenix. N onstop on M ay 12. M ale only. Great rate. Contact Jeff at 7844716. P H O E N IX T O C hicago, round-trip. Leave 5/19. return 5/27. $150 cash. Call 4781668. R O U N D -T R IP . M A LE . Phoenix to Newark. 5/11/91 to 6/1/91. $150. 7844717. Let us help you a d v e rtise y o u r garage or m oving sale. State Press Classifieds S E M E S T E R A T S e a Information/Video Presentation. 8pm , Sonora Center, Tues­ day 4/16. T R A V E L C H E A P in your name. I special­ ize in quick departures. M oat places U SA . $28 8 46 0 . round-trip. A laska. $550450. A lso worldwide. I a lso buy transferable coupons. 9687283. C A S T IN G C A LL: Talent for print, TV. m ovies, photos. C E E C Entertainm ent, ‘Star Sh in e ' hotline, 2 744362. C R U IS E U N E positions. Land-side and on-board entry-level positions available. Seasonal/perm anent. Travel benefits. (303)4486933. ext. 7. S u m m e r Jobs No experience necessary. FT & FT, flexible hrs. Start immediately at $12/hr. Call 9-5 966-6122 C R U IS E S H IP J O B S , s e a s o n a l/ p e r m a n e n t , t r a in e e s w e lc o m e . (904)432-5945 D E G R E E D E N G L IS H teacher needed in Spain. E S L experience required. Resum e to: 1128 E a st W atson, Tem pe 85283. E M P L O Y E R S — LO O K IN G for he lp? Place a State P re ss H elp W anted ad. W e have three Help W anted sections— General, Clerical and Food Service— to help you keep your b u sin e ss grow ing! E A R L Y R IS E R S Part-tim e help needed. B efore school Financing Available Buy of tho Wook Low down, no qual. Papago Park & Questa Vida. 1, 2,3 bd. HELP WANTED— GENERAL A T T R A C T IV E P A Y p lu s excellent hours. $5.50 guaranteed plus daily bonuses. M onday-Friday evenings plus Saturday. Great for students. C all Paul for interview, 9 684457. 9681388 2E BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Call Anytime! 829-3910 S U M M E R JO B S We are hiring 100 students arid teachers for a variety of temporary clerical positions. If you have office s k i s such as typing, reception, clerical, WPO, secretary, etc, please call for appointment: Tem pe Phoenix 966-1100 264-4537 STIVERS TEM PO RA RY PER SO N N EL " -INC;V;,.: E X P E R IE N C E D F E A T U R E S and enter­ tainment w riters heeded to cover aN types of m usic, art, dining and nightclub reviews. Please forw ard resum e and d ip s by A pril 30 to: M . CecH Blaine, W here It’s Hot, Suite 2 1 1 ,1 8 1 9 South D obson Road, M esa, Arizona 85202. G A R C IA ’S R E S T A U R A N T now hiring fo r server assistant, cocktail w aitresses and hostess. N o experience necessary. Apply in person, M onday through Saturday, 2-5pfn, 7633 E ast Indian Schoo l Road. G O O D IN T E R N S H IP experience to put on your resum e. C all Senator D e C on d n i’s Office for inform ation on sum m er and fall ¡ntem shfos. CaN C arrie at 3 7 8 6 7 5 6 or M im i at 3784996. WALK TO WORK P A R T T IM E $8oo to $10°°/hr. Full Training $5®°/hr Guaranteed • New 15,000+ sq. ft. OFFICE SPACE • • NEW COMPUTERIZED W ORK STATIONS • • NEW LOCATION • W alking distance from A SU (Univ. & Rural) • NEW O F F IC E S* • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend A s our Telemarketing Representative, you would work in a fun, professional environment contacting custom ers nationwide for major clients earning great part-time money on a schedule that you set up. For confidential interview, please call extension #33 at: DIALAMERICA 894-0264 A sk for extension #33 State Press H EL P W A N T E D — GEN ERAL H E R B E R G E R T H E A T E R Center Parttime supervisory positions available in house and box office. Resum es to: Kelly, H fC , P.O. Box 1430, Phoenix 85001. J O B S J O B S jobs. Get started now! 1(800)258-6322 for free career catalogue/ Joblink registration. M A K E $200 per W eek, part-time, selling Kool-spokes. C all 833-4131 for details. O F F IC E HELP: Part-tim e afternoons, som e weekends, light filing, good phone skills a m ust M ust be available for the sum m er. Apply in person: 2121 South Priest, no. 128. 968-5570. O P IN IO N R E S E A R C H interviewers. A bso­ lutely no sa le s. Evening/w eekends, $4.40-$5/hour (rapid raises). Tempo. 967-4441, Susan, P A P A J A Y 'S has openings for delivery d rive rs and cooks: E ve n in g hours. 966-4292 H ELP W AN TED — G EN ER A L Distribution 968-4230 P E R F E C T F O R Student! C lose to A SU , 20 hours/w eek. A ccou nting m ajor w ith 3 25-plus G P A — Call Julie, 345-7818: R U N N E R , 20 hours/week. 8am -12 noon. Driving com pany vehicle, M ust have valid Arizona d rive r's license and good driving record. M ust be dependable, trustworthy, self-starter w ith initiative. 966-2874, 'Tempe. EO E. S A L E S TR A IN IN G : Entry-level opportuni­ ties for recent graduates or M ay gradu­ ates M ust be aggressive, self-starters. Train with no. 1 office nationally Salaryplus equals $24,000-$30,000. N ever a fee! M arge, 730-6050. Northern Arizona Mandate, a literary art/photography & e n v ir o n m e n ta l m o n th ly magazine is seeking manu­ scripts, art & photographs. Call (602)776-8947 — — ■»---- 10C WINGS H DRAFTS 70C IBANDERSNATCH sthsisfo-est BREWPUB MAKE MORE MONEY Food Servers., Bussers Job Training Seminar and EMPLOYMENTASSISTANCE IF "You are thinking about entering the food services industry... •you want to increase your tips... •you want to move to a higher quality food service establishment... ...This seminar is for YOU! If you w ant to g e t your application, into the hands of the people w ho are going to hire you... C A U 9 M -7 & 1 Find out how just a few dollars can put you on top in your field. S T U D E N T S — LO O K IN G for w ork? C heck the State P re ss Help W anted sections daily! T E LE M A R K E T E R / O F F IC E A S S IS T A N T : 2 p o sitio n s open, 2 0 -4 0 hours/w eek, $5/hour. C all Barb or D avy at Arizona Tool W orks, Inc., 437-4773. THE BEST OF TASTE. INC P IZZA & P U B _ FREE PIZZA Buy 3A G e t V4 M o n d ay o n ly 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 1301 E. U niversity IfÉIl •Service Clerks FT/PT •Bakers assistant PT/AM 6107 N, Scottsdale Rd. (Hiltoti Village) T H E ST A T E P re ss advertising department is now hiring com m issioned advertising sale s representatives to begin training for Sum m er and next FaN. W e are looking for highly motivated students w ho are inter­ ested in preparing them selves for a future in satos/advertiaing/marketing. Y ou m ust have a vehicle and not be graduating before Decem ber of 1992. Interested? Call Jackie Eklridge today at 965-8555. T R A V E L A N D earn college credit in a 12 -w e e k p a id su m m e r in te rn sh ip . 894-5283 V A L E T P A R K IN G attendant. 3 nights per week, $5-7 per hour (this figure h a t your tips averaged in). M ust have d e a n driving record, at least 20 years old, be w illing to work in Paradise V a ll^ . Scottsdale or Central Phoenix. 861-938C $fefw ri. I§ A DO ZEN 8943419. s r “ ’ 1“ , ■■ ■ A S U G R E E K S — interested in playing ip the Kappa S ig 2-m an volleyball tourney April 18-21 call D on Shilliday 967-9688. G O L D E N R E T R IE V E R pup pie s, tlx w eeks, first sh o tp if^ lK ^ w e n ts, $120 or best offer. B L A C K , 3 % -m o n tB home. 921-3283. A S U A R E A typing, w ord processing, edit­ ing and transcription. C all anytim e for fast service, 966-2186. • F u ll text e d itin g • S p e ll c h e c k in g • S y n ta x c h e c k • G ram m ar co rre c tio n • G ra p h ic s c a p a b ility • E x p e rie n ce d e d ito r • F u lly co m p u te rize d • Q u ic k tu rn aro u n d • N e ar th e u n iv e rsity • B e st ra te s in to w n C le a n y o u r s le e p in g b a g ! $10 w/ coupon D ID Y O U see B e ggar’s Theater at Holly­ wood Alley last W e dne sday? W hat a show!! W h ite w a te r O a s is 1250 E. Apache C all JIM (ASU campus) ■ 921-4174 K A R L H A M M E S: H e y you! Sm ile! From ? W h y haul it h o m e ? M IC H E L E A N D Ken— Congratulations on "y o u r” show! It’s been nice getting to know you both this sem ester— a s lab aides, classm ates (Ken), etc., a s well a s friends. Congrats again! Gayle. Store It! read read\ j H A P P IL Y -M A R R IE D C O U P L E w ish to give secure and loving hom e to newborn. Legal/m edical e xpenses paid. P le ase call B ob and Kathy, collect: (602)886-8422. W A R M , LO V IN G . chMdlees couple seeking to give your white newborn e financially secure life tilled with love and affection. Ke n and Diane. 991-1191. W E C A N help each other! C aring couple m arried 11 y e a rs can give your newborn a loving fam ily and i wanm, financially secure home. Please call collect, Patricia and Jerry, (802)236*2312. S T A T E P R E S S Production Departm ent p ro vid e s type se tting, p a ste -up and p rocess cam era services. Call Donna at 965-7572 for rates and information. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , se c re ta ria l services. 23 years’ experience. Student discounts. Southw est com er, M iller and Chaparral. 994-8145. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G . $ 1 / p a g e . Resum es. G raphic design. Fast service. N e a r A SU . **R iz” : 964-3361, leave m essage! TUTORS A C C O U N T IN G , F IN A N C E , and M ath professional instruction, study aides and exam ination strategies. State-approved tutor. 921-2211, Sun-D evil Tutoring, Gil. M A T H H ELP: M at 117,118,119. Graduate Engineers tutor. Applied math. U ser friendly. 423-5525. PREG NANCY C O U N SE L IN G C risis P reg n a n cy C enter Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 Frances Drake = = Student Summer Specials! lour 1905 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ. DOMINO’S PIZZA DELIVERS FA S T,FR E E & HOT Call Now 903 South Rural •Tempe 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 This ad is good for $1.00 an any regularlypricedpizza. No expiration. C H IL D C A R E F R E E R O O M and board for part-time child care. Nonsm oker. Experience preferred. 641-1667 P R O F E S S IO N A L W O R D P R O C E SS IN G at reasonable rates. LaserJet printer, choice of typefaces and paper, guaranteed errorfree for your b e st presentation. 497-6572. YourIndividual Horoscope Your lock — your key H A Y D E N 'S FERRY REVIEW S IG M A N U Brian W ebber: Y ou’re the hottest babe I’ve ever seen! W ith love, an admirer. LE T T E R Q U A LIT Y w ord processing for your typing needs. APA/M LA, fast turnar­ ound. C lose to A SU . $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. 945-6793 Best Little Warehouse In Tempo • 967-3900 READ READ READ READ READ READ F LY IN G F IN G E R S h a s Maclntosh/laser quality and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 for details. S e rv ic e in clu d e s: Comforters included /ü e a d READ READ READ typing/word Can Jessie, Not just TYPING! B R Y N A . H A P P Y Birthday Dear! It is going to be just like Paradise, how could we a sk for m ore? H ave a super day and evening! Love ya! Ed. A D O P T IO N F R E E 1-year-old cat to good homo. All sh o ts, neutered, com pletely house-? trained, indoor or outdoor cat- Very affec­ tionate, loves people. Can Markham , 661-0957. A PA /M LA- E X P E R IE N C E D processing. Need it fa st? 945-5744. E X P E R IE N C E D S E C R E T A R Y will do typing/word processing. $1 35-plus/page. F or more inform ation call Suzanne, 831-2119. T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G $1 25 P E R page. N ear A SU . Fast, accu­ rate. R u sh jobs ok. Lisa, 921-9202. PETS F A ST /C O N V E N IEN T T Y PIN G ! 3 blocks/ A S U . W ordPerfect. Lase r. Faculty/ students. A ny size job. Diane, 966-5693. A V A IL A B L E T O type or word process m anuscripts, reports, term papers, etc., $t reasonable rates. Call Nancy, 964-7501. rose s delivered, $20. Call T R I S IG M A Bryna. H appy 21st Birthday! I hope you have the greatest day ever! I look forward to celebrating it with you) Love ya tons! Ed. - % C O FFEES PLANTATION A D V E R T IS E R S ! R E A C H 45,000 readers daily in the State P re ssi A S U W E S T is only one mile from Precision Typing and W ord Processing. Call M ary at 978-8686 for student discount. P E R S O N A L S_______ S IG M A N U 'S thanks for H appy hour at D ucks! W e had a great time! Love, The Kappa’s. ;A T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G T H E P IC N IC Com pany— now hiring day, evening and delivery help. Apply after 2pm, 1415 Ea st University— Tempe. N o phone calls please. S E M E S T E R A T S e a Information/Video Presentation, 8pm, Son ora Center, T ues­ day 4/16. HHPHIII T Y P IN G /W O R D P R O C E S S IN G S h e r i P a t r i c k - 9 6 H W II f r e s l e n e e 9< o'u. S c r v te e e b e ik ló p N b W d n é T e rm P o p e r t / H s w i l e t t e r t R e tu m ti/Q rq p N c » l a s e r P rin tin g N o ta r y_ P u b lic 1 D a y S s r v / 7 b a y i W eek D isc o u n t S tu d e n t P r i é e s S T O C K Y A R D S R E S T A U R A N T now hiring lunch w aitre sse s. A pply in person, 10:30-11:30am or after 1:30pm: 5001 East W ashington. P H I S IG Je sse — C ongrats to the new President! I know you’ll do an aw esom e job and I’m behind you 1 0 0 % . Love alw ays D G Larry. P .S. Form al w as a blast, thanks again! RNEMLY muis, Specialty restaurant/deli now accepting applica­ tions for the following positions : P R O F E S S IO N A L P R O O F R E A D IN G term papers, dissertations, theses, m anu­ scripts, whatever. Call M ike Ziffer anytime at 964-7463. C O C K T A IL W A IT R E S S — Jockey C lub Night Qub/Restaurant, 5 2 E ast Cam elback (Central and Cam elback, Phoenix). Part-time evenings, includes w eekends. Experience required, m ust be at least 19 years old. C all Bobby for appointment: 279-7777 N O O N IS the deadline to get classified liner a d s in the following day. D on’t m iss it! M atthew s Center basem ent, 965-6731. D ine in or Delivery P le ase m ention special w hen ordering “Country Glazed Ham” E L E C T R O L Y S IS — P E R M A N E N T hair removal. Rem ove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. C all for more informa­ tion: 969-6954. A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S for drivers and counter help. Earn up to $$ per hour. Sam m y B ’s Pizza, 945-8850. G E T P E R S O N A L — Se n d som eone special a State P re ss personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $1.75! Com e down to the basem ent of Matthew s Center to place your ad today! And rem em ber to bring your student ID) T E N N IS C LU B attendant. Evenings and Su n d a ys, Call 948-5990 for appointment. Excellent growth potential Competitve wages Apply in person: H EL P W A N T E D — F O O D S E R V IC E HOTEL « RESTAUHANT TRAINING FREE S E L L IN G F L O W E R S M other s Day. Need car . $5/hour . Call 894-3419 C LE R K /T Y P IST . E X P E R IE N C E preferred, afternoon* M onday-Friday. Broadway/ 32nd Street. Guaranteed 20 hours/week. 268-4800. S E R V IC E S B U S T E R ’S R E ST A U R A N T — Scottsdale is now hiring experienced food servers, cocktail servers, buse rs and hostesses. Please apply in person: 8320 North H ayden (M ercado del Lago). R E ST A U R A N T S/ BARS T.G. Cggingtoris An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is a ccep t­ ing applications for exper­ ienced w aitress positions. Must be available som e w eekdays a n d w eekends. Apply in person after 2 p.m. 1 6 6 0 S . A lm a S c h o o l R d. H ELP W AN TED— C L E R IC A L Get your work published! P A R T -T IM E TU T O R and transportation support needed Tuesday and Thursday, 2-Spm , Special Ed m ajor preferred. $10 per hour. Call 945-2003. TEM PO RARY HELP Flyer Page 19 Monday, April 15,1991 $1.50 P E R page. Term papers, letters, resum es, etc. At your service word processing. Linda, 839-6167. A A A T Y P IN G / W O R D P r o c e s s in g . $1.50/page. Fast turnaround. 20 ye a rs' experience. C all Linda, 962-8075. A C C U R A T E, R E A S O N A B L E , fa sr turnar­ ound w ord processing with laser printer/ casse tte transciption. Student/faculty. M ill/University. Autom ated Secretary, 829-8854. A C C U R A T E , F A S T w ord processing, typing, $1.50. Graphics, $2. Free pickup and delivery. Sharon, 892-0281. MgUB call 96! wmmm ___ i FOR TUESDAY. APRIL 16,1991 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Though you'll enjoy career progress today, a difficulty Could arise over money matters now. Romance, though, is likely on this day conducive for dating and recreational interests. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) This is a good day for shopping and entertaining at home. News comes about a distant matter. Evening hours aren’t the best for getting your own way. Compromise when necessary. GEM INI (May 21 to June 20) Your intuition is right about a finan­ cial concern. Don't second guess your­ se lf tonight. Y ou're charming and gracious today and will make a good impression on others. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You may find more joy from personal pursuits at home than in outside ac­ tivities. A friend or acquaintance could g et under your skin now. Money prospects look good. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Intuition is an asset to you in long range business planning today, but you may run into some red tape in connec­ tion with daily affairs now. Social life, though, is grand; VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) A behind-the-scenes connection proves vety helpful to you in business now. A new opportunity could drop into your lap. Difficulties could arise in travel plans. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) Home based activities ate favored now, though you may also receive an invitation to visit friends at a distance Guard against excessive use o f credit SCORPIO (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) New opportunities for financial gain arise through business today . Partners ate in rapport now, but guard against any show of bossiness on your part tonight SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) , Couples may be making plans now to go away to some place special together. Morning hours are best for business progress. Later, complications could crop up. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You may be socializing with some people from woric today. Pleasure pur­ suits are happily accented, but a friend's negativity could prove to be a fly in the ointment AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Peace of mind comes through spendingsome time by yourself now, yet there are also some pleasant social oppor­ tunities now which you can’t sffotd to pass up. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You could be entertaining some people from work at your home now. D on’t le t a conversation with an opinionated type drag on. A friend surprises you in some way today. YOU BORN TODAY are a natural critic ofsociety and its values. You have a philosophic aide and work beat when inspired. You can succeed in banking but are mote inclined to a professional lather than a business career. Though ambitious and impulsive, you have your diplomatic aide as well. Law, religion, and publishing are fields for which you have an aptitude. You like to shine and may be attracted to a theatrical career as well. Bilthdate of: Chsriie Chaplin, co­ median; JM . Synge, playwright; and Lily Pons, o p en singer. Check the Stata Presa Horoscopes to p iari • . your day!______ Copyright 1991 by King Features Syndicale, Ine. Monday, April 15 1991 ÏÏ2 £ so State It’s time for refinement. The style that suits the mood. Dillard’s presents a very feminine collection of Scarlett dresses that’s definitely elegant. Choose one for graduation, that job inten/iew, or a casual evening out. Enjoy the comfort of rayon chains, rayon faille, pure cotton and blends with seasonless style. In Juniors sizes 3-13. Shown from our collection: Pleated coat dress available in peach and navy. 70.00. Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 12-6 In Phoanlx at Matrocanter, Paradise Valley, Fiesta Mall, ChrieTbwn, Scottsdale and Superstition Springs. Shop Monday through Friday W 4, Saturday 10-«, Sunday 12-6 at Park Central and Westridge. D illard’s We welcome your Dillard's Credit Card, The American Express* Card, Dineis Club International, Mastercard* Visa* and The Discover Card.