© C opyright, State Press, 1991 Tem pe, Arizona A rizona S tate University’s M orning D aily V o i. 7 4 N o . 5 9 W e d n e s d a y , A p ril 1 7 ,1 9 9 1 H ou se ex p ected to p ass b u d get p ro p o sa l By KEN BROWN State Press The Arizona House of Representatives is expected to pass Gov. Fife Symington’s budget proposal: by Thursday with few cha'nges, but lawmakers anticipate a greater struggle from Senate Democrats. Sen. Doug Todd, R-Tempe, said he expects a “tough fight” for university money, while Rep. Bev Hermon, R-Tempe, said Symington’s recommendations are “heartbreaking.” “ I ’m not h a p p y ,’’ said Hermon, chairwoman of the House Education Committee. “ (But) if we try to change it in any way, it will all collapse.” Both Todd and Hermon are predicting a b leak funding fu tu re fo r A rizona Universities. The Legislature will consider two budget recommendations as it works out its final funding package —* a Joint Legislative B u d g e t C o m m itte e p ro p o s a l a n d Symington’s draft. The JLBC budget, previously under attack by University officials for robbing students of tuition money, would give ASU’s main campus $179.9 million — $7.6 million le s s th a n l a s t y e a r ’s le g is la tiv e appropriations and $52 million less than the Arizona Board of Regents requested in November. Symington’s proposal would give the universities greater spending flexibility byt would cut more than 4 percent overall from the JLBC recommendations for ASU Main. Todd said he does not expect the Legislature to fund beyond JLBC levels, despite the “dog and pony show” of state agencies asking for more money. “The quick answer is no,” he said. “ (ASU President) Lattie Coor did a very credible job of explaining the impact of the budget recommendations, but this is a tough year for everybody.” Although lawmakers have traditionally given more money to universities than the governor or the JLBC has recommended, officials said they are uncertain how lawmakers will react this year, in light of Arizona’s current fiscal woes. Coor said either budget would. be “devastating” to ASU. Meanwhile, state officials argued that some of the cuts outlined in the report are Tura ib B udget, page 10. M aster Plan w ill shape ASUgrowth for years to com e By JENNIFER FRANKLIN State Press Tam ara W offord/Stata Pre s * CNN Osborne, director of Residence U fe at ASU, and Susan Harter, volunteer community activist for Urban Planning Issues, Neighborhood Conservation and Historic Preservation, look at a blueprint of ASU’s Master Plan. A new and improved Tempe Center; street crossings that tunnel underground; a bicycle-free inner campus. ASU’s Master Plan Committee reviewed these and other ideas for future campus development in front of about 60 people Tuesday in the MU Pima Room — the final public meeting before the project is completed in August. Officials said the Master Plan will shape the development of ASU for the next 20 years. Suggestions may be made to the committee for the next two weeks, said Mathew Betz, co-chairman of the committee and vice provost for planning. Maps of the plan will be available for viewing in the entry of the Administration Building. The 20-member committee and representatives from the San Diego-based consulting firm Wallace, Roberts and Todd', said the University will not expand outside of its current boundaries. However, both dramatic and subtle changes to the campus can.be expected. Overall, the Master Plan divides the campus into east and west development cores, separated by Palm Walk. Tempe Cent«*, a commercial center on the corner of University Drive and Mill Avenue, likely will become a gateway to the campus from downtown Tempe. “It will continue the look of the downtown area and will Turn to Plan, p age , 11. Committee’s proposals targeted at altering elections code By ANDREW FAUGHT State Press A student government committee on Tuesday forwarded four proposals to the Senate that could significantly alter the Associated Students of ASU Elections Code. Sen. David Jordan, College of Law, said he will author a bill that would establish election spending ceilings, eliminate the elections commission, grant the elections coordinator the right to file complaints and broaden the definition of destruction to campaign materials. The Government Operations Committee forwarded Jo rd an’s proposal, and a comprehensive bill will go before thé Senate for its first reading Tuesday. “It has become very expensive to run for office at ASASU,” Jordan said. “It’s to the point that thousands of dollars have been C a m e lo t R e v is ite d : Former Secretary o f D efen se Robert McNamara w ill be giving a sp eech Friday in P hoenix. Page 6 spent at winning and losing campaigns.” Jordan suggested a $500 spending limit for executive officer'candidates and a $100 limit for senatorial hopefuls as a means of encouraging greater numbers of qualified people to run for office. Excessive spending might discourage some candidates, he said. S en . A ndy M c G u ire , C o lle g e of Architecture, also a proponent of cost ceilings, added that a fair market value on campaign materials would need to be established to make the provision work. He added that the market value would be assessed by the ASASU Supreme Court to ensure fairness. Jordan also recommended elimination of the elec tio n s com m ission, a body independent of the elections department that acts upon elections grievances. “We have a hard time getting people to sit V* wV hr Lk' i > \ .n ______ ^ D o n ’t W o r r y : E verybody has to d o d eal w ith it and for som e it’s n ot pretty. P a g e 13 on the commission,” Jordan said. “They don’t have particular concerns for the integrity of the system.” Gary Starikoff, a College of Liberal Arts It has become very expensive to run for office at ASASU. ' — David Jordan senator who chairs the committee, said the existence of the elections commission is questionable since the Supreme Court can act in a similar capacity . In other developments, the committee agreed to include in the bill a provision that A B ad Seed: A p rofile o n p ossib le O lym p ic-b ou n d ASU badm inton player T o m Reidy. P age 17 would give the elections coordinator power to in itia te com plaints, an elem ent prohibited by ASASU bylaws. Executive Vice President Jeanette Wiedemeier said she does not wholly agree with the proposition because the election coordinator position is designed to “be kept out of the bashing” of candidates and officers. Jordan argued that since the elections coordinator is closest to the entire elections process, filing complaints is a necessary factor in maintaining the integrity of elections procedures. In addition, the committee considered elaborating on a bylaw definition that does not fully specify what “destruction” of an opponent’s campaign materials means. “They (violators) can take a sign out and Turn to ASASU, page 11. T o d a y ’s w eather: Sunny w ith a high in th e 80s. T onight: Low in th e u p p e r 50s. C lassifieds........... .................................... ................. . 2 0 Comics.................... . . , v . . . ; . . . 16 S ports....... ... .............. .......... .. ... 17 State Prest Wednesday. Aoril 17.1991 ASU e x c e ls in c o lle g e m ed ia com p etition By JUDI TANCOS State Press ASU’s W alter C ronkite School of Journalism and Telecommunication was one of Only two colleges nationwide to place in the top-10 in all three categories of a college media competition. The school took first in the Hearst Foundation’s intercollegiate broadcast news championship, fourth in the writing competition and eighth in photojournalism. “NCAA football and basketball teams strive for top-10 finishes each year. Our school aspires to top-10 Hearst competition finishes,’’ said Doug Anderson, director of the Cronkite School, in a press release last week. Nebraska was thé only other university in the nation to earn top-10 finishes in all three competitions. The competition, which is in its 31st year, is open to the 91 accredited schools of the Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication. Winning stories and photographs had been published in the State Press, while b ro a d c a s t e n tr ie s w e re a ire d on “Southwinds,” a 30-minute weekly news show produced by a Cronkite school class and shown on Dimension Cable, B ruce Mule, d ire c to r of Student Publications, described the Hearst as “ extremely prestigious,” saying that the awards given to State Press writers reflected the excellence of the newspaper. “Thè fact that we finished in the top 10 in the past two years shows that the State Press continues to attract top quality journalists,” Itule said. Professor Donald Godfrey, faculty adviser to “Southwinds,” agreed that the awards given to two of his students reflect the quality of their production. “We are proud to have them recognized by what is considered the Pulitzer Prize of sh«<*»n* com petitions. Their success headlines the quality and service offered by all our students involved in ‘Southwinds,’ ’’ Godfrey said in a press release. Nicole Carroll, State Press Magazine editor, said she was happy to be the recipient of three Hearst Awards — 11th place in in-depth writing, 18th place in feature writing and 19th place in editorial writing. “When I first started in journalism here, my first professor said, ‘Don’t get a big head because only your mother reads your byline.’ So, it’s nice to know that other people out there are reading your stuff and appreciating it,” Carroll said. The awards program, which is funded by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation, consists of monthly contests in general news, feature writing, editorial writing, indepth writing, personality profiles and sp o rts w riting. The b ro adcast and photojournalism competitions are held in a single month. Each school can enter only two students in each competition. Meanwhile, Dan Zeiger, assistant sports editor at the State Press and second place winner in personality profiles, said he initially was disappointed that he did not take first place. “When you enter a contest like that it’s hard not to think about finishing first“ said Zeiger, who competed against 96 other people. “ I was disappointed because I was shooting for first but when I found out the number of people who entered, I felt better.” Zeiger cred ited his subject, ASU heptathlete Gea Johnson, for his success, saying that “a story is only as good as the person being profiled.” “ J u s t me te llin g a b o u t her accomplishments and all she has done is probably the reason behind my doing so well,” he said. Today Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous w ill have a closed meeting at noon and an open meeting at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center On College Avenue and University Drive. •MUAB Host and Hostess Committee w ill have a meeting at 1:40 p.m. in the MU Conference Room. •MUAB Culture and Arts Committee w ill have a meeting at 2:30 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room and w ill present •W orld Affairs Council w ill present a lecture on “ Global Climate Change” at noon in the Armstrong Great Hall. •International Circle K w ill have a meeting at 4 p.m. at the Stabler’s parking lot. •Sm ith Brothers Offroad Racing Club w ill have a meeting at 9 p.m. at Mama’s Pizza. •Hispanic Business Students Association w ill have a drawing at 3:30 p.m. in BA 365. the ASU Pan Devils at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Programming Lounge •Arizona Outing Club w ill have a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •Chess Forum at ASU w ill have a meeting at 5:30 p.m. in McClintock 139. •START w ill have a meeting at 4 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. •Travel and Tourism Students Association w ill sponser a travel career symposium at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •Lesbian arid Gay Academic Union w ill have a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. •Students For Life w ill show a film at 2 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room•ASU Italian Club w ill have a meeting at 3 p.m. at the Coffee Plantation. •Alpha Kappa Delta w ill have a meeting at 3:40 p.m. in SS 318. •N .A .A .C .P. w ill have an awards ceremony at 7 p.m. in Neeb Hall. •MUAB Film Committee w ill have free passes available to Oscar from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the MUAB office. •Biblical Christian Leadership w ill have a meeting at 12:40 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. •Arizona Center For Medieval and Renaissance Studies w ill present a lecture on Lorenzaccio’s “ Apology” at 3 p.m. in LL C319. •M .E.Ch.A. w ill have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. CLOTHING RETAILERS FACTORY OUTLET SALE 2 WEEKS ONLY! Thursday, April 18 thru Tuesday, April 30 tM e n t HAIR CUTTERS Get a Haircut. Everyone has someone they w ant to look g reat for. Everyday Low Price SHAMPOO & CUT O N '-Ÿ * 7 K ids s6 95 ( 1 2 & U n d e r) ciYienc ' H6IR CUTTERS S elect from nam e brand shorts, jeans, pants, top s, dresses, purses, sh oes, hats and m ore. ALL AT 50-90% OFF RETAIL PRICES. OVER 5 0 ,0 0 0 ITEMS MUST BE LIQUIDATED: Lim ited, T w e ed s, P olo. Sm ythe & C o ., Express, Bill Blass. M em bers O n ly, Line Up, B.U.M. Equipm ent & m any oth er brand nam es, based o n available in ven tory. Coupon E v e ry d a y Low P ric e CUT COMBO DESIGNER PERM SPECIAL ® 1 ° ° OFF Shampoo, Conditioning Rinse, Cut and Style. Reg. $1195/W om en Reg. ®1095/M e n Reg. ®895/K id s y 0 0 c m e n c FdmiLY H4IR (UTTERS Apparel Designer Zone, Inc. Valley Fair Shopping Center • 41 E. Southern Aye. • Tempe (SE C orner o f Southern & Mill) 966-0938 M o n -S a t t o a .m .-8 p .m . Sun. 12 p .m .-5 p .m . Coupons not valid with any other specials. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-7 Sun. 12-5 $2 9 Shampoo, Cut & Style Included Long Hair, Piggy Back or Spiral Wrap Extra |Q Q om Bdeiwent Family Hdin cutters U niversity & R ural Rd. C o rn e rs to n e Shopping C e n te r 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 J W o rld / N a tio n Stete Press Page 3 Wednesday, April 17,1991 Incom e plays factor in cancer rates WASHINGTON (AP) — Poorer incomes and living conditions are more to blame for the higher cancer rates among blacks than genetic factors, according to a National Cancer Institute report on Tuesday. In a study published in the NCI Journal, experts adjusted statistical data to compare cancer rates by race with education, income and population density. What they found, said statistician John W. Horm, is that race played less of a role in overall cancer risk than did the other factors. Earlier studies, comparing the races only, showed that blacks had a 6 to 10 percent greater overall cancer risk than whites, and up to a 22 percent greater risk for specific Economic status, not race, blamed for higher risk rates among blacks types of malignant disease, such as lung cancer. The new study used data from three cities, San Francisco, Detroit and Atlanta, and correlated cancer incidence with data from the 1980 census. It measured for overall cancer risk and for seven specific types of cancer. After adjusting the cancer incidence data for socio-economic status, the study found that the rates for whites went up, both for overall cancer risk and for three of the specific types of the disease — rectum, lung and female breast. Meanwhile, the rates went down for blacks, except for cervical, stomach and prostate cancers. When correlating the findings for education levels, the study found that the highest overall cancer rates were among whites with less than a high school education living in an area of medium population density. There, the rate for whites was 402.9 per 100,000, compared to a black rate of 401.1. Using income for the correlation, the study found that the highest overall cancer rates were among whites earning less than $15,000 a year and living in high density population areas, which Horm said would typically mean inner-city poverty sites. For this income and population density group, the whites had a cancer rate of 434.8 per 100,000 and the black rate was 385.5, The most dram atic change in the comparative cancer burdens came in lung cancer. M cDonald’s to cu t its garbage by 80 p e rc e n t A ssociated P rs s s ph o to Bad habits Four women dressed in nun’s habits and holding what police said w ere 22 pounds of cocaine are lined up fo r photographers outside police headquarters in Quito, Ecuador, Tuesday. The four women, all Colombian, said they left their religious order a year ago and were recently offered $6,600 per kilo to smuggle the cocaine to Spain. They were arrested at the airport in Quito Sunday . WASHINGTON (AP) — McDonald’s Corp. announced on Tuesday a plan aimed at eliminating 80 percent or more of the garbage created by its 8,500 fast-food restaurants across the nation. The initiatives include the use of brown bags made of recycled paper, smaller paper napkins, recycling of behindthe-counter cardboard boxes, and the elimination of plastic cutlery wrappers where allowed by local health codes. And the company is trying out reusable coffee mugs, reusable coffee filters, and pump-style bulk condiment dispensers. McDonald’s, the world’s largest food service organization, said also it is looking into replacing the plastic forks, spoons and knives With starch-based cutlery that could be composted. It also plans large-scale, soil-enriching composting of food and paper wastes on an experimental basis. Parts of the plan already have been put implemented, such as the switch last fall from polystyrene sandwich boxes to a thin-layered wrap. Before the changes were begun, McDonald’s outlets sent 2 million pounds of garbage per day to incinerators and landfills in the United States. The initiative was developed in collaboration with the Environmental Defense Fund, an environmental advocacy group, which set up a joint task force with McDonald’s to scrutinize the company’s trash. Keith Magnuson, McDonald’s director of operations development, said he was “somewhere between surprised and shocked,” when he realized how much of the garbage produced at McDonald’s restaurants Could be reduced, reused, recycled or composted. Turn to Trash, page t 2 . Police wonder why detectives couldn’t interview Kennedys PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Police said Tuesday they want to know why detectives were unable to talk to the Kennedy family soon after an alleged sexual assault at their beachfront estate. Also Tuesday, NBC-TV identified the alleged victim by name and showed her photograph on the “NBC Nightly News.” Detectives made “a number of visits” to the estate, including one soon after they first received the rape report about 2 p.m. on March 30, police spokesman Craig Gunkel said. Each time, they were told members of the Kennedy family weren’t there. “Hie detective bureau did go up to the Kennedy mansion a short time after we got the report of the alleged sexual battery,” Gunkel said. “The police department is looking into why residents of the Kennedy home did not make themselves available to police detectives at that time.” A 29-year-old Jupiter woman claimed she was raped by William Kennedy Smith, the nephew of Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., on the grounds of the estate. Smith, 30, a Georgetown University medical student denied he assaulted the woman. No one has been charged. A spokesman for Sen. Kennedy said Tuesday he didn’t know police were trying to talk to him that weekend. “Sen. Kennedy was never told that weekend that the Palm Beach police wanted to speak with him about the alleged assault,” said Paul Donovan, Kennedy’s preSs aide. “As soon as he was aware that they wanted to speak with him he contacted them and made himself available at their convenience.” -William Barry, a retired FBI agent and former body guard for the late Robert F. Kennedy, said Tuesday he met police at the door of the mansion twice on March 31, the day after the alleged assault, but he never intended to mislead them on the whereabouts of the Kennedys. Barry said he didn’t know the whereabouts of Smith or the senator when police asked if (hey could speak to them. “Two police officers came by on Easter Sunday and told me in the presence of some of the staff that they wanted to talk to them about a vase that had been stolen from the house,” said Barry, who was visiting that weekend. “They had a photograph of it and asked if I recognized it. I did not.” “They asked if the senator or Will Smith were there and I wasn’t sure. People were coming and going,” Barry said. Barry said in a statement released through Smith’s Miami attorney, Mark Schnapp, that when police visited again that afternoon “Will had caught his flight home and I didn’t know where the senator was at that time.” “I am not aware of any other attempts by the police to Turn to Kennedy, page 7. H idden Iraqi assets to be found in U S., investigator says WASHINGTON (AP) — Investigators on the trail of Saddam Hussein’s hidden billions expect to find additional Iraqi assets in this country, says the chief outside investigator in the US.-Kuwaiti probe. “ We feel we’Uultimately find more here,” said Jules Kroll, who was hired by the Kuwaiti government to uncover the Iraqi president’s secret financial and arms procurement network around the world. The Treasury Department, in cooperation with the State Department, the FBI, the CIA and the Kuwaitis, has been investigating the network since Iraqi troops invaded Kuwait last Aug. 2. Kroll found that Saddam’s family had skimmed $10 billion from Iraqi oil revenues since 1981 and had used the money to set up a web of front companies stretching across the Middle East and Europe and into the United States. “This is the largest skimming operation we’ve ever seen where the assets of a country have been systematically siphoned off for the benefit of a few,” said Kroll, president and founder of the New Yorkb a s e d Krol l A s s o c ia te s f i n a n c i a l investigations firm. “The challenge is to break through those front names. ... So far it’s been proceeding very well,” Kroll said in a recent interview in Washington. On April 1, the Treasury Department publicly identified 52 front companies and 37 middlemen worldwide that it said were used to buy weapons, tools, spare parts and raw materials for Saddam’s war machine. More than 30 of the companies named are based in Britain. Only two of them operated in the United States: Bay Industries Inc., an engineering firm in Los Angeles; and Matrix Churchill Corp. of Cleveland, the U.S. machine tools subsidiary of a British corporation. Their assets — including numerous bank accounts and a $3.4 million mansion in Beverly Hills, Calif., owned by the Iraqi head of Bay Industries — have been seized by the U.S. government. But Kroll said his investigation indicates there are millions more dollars of Iraqi assets still hidden in the United States. He declined to give details, because the investigators are still gathering evidence. T reasury spokesmen didn’t return Turn to M illions, page 7,. O p M M O M _________________ Page 4 _________________________________________________ ____________ Wednesday, A p rili 7,1991 S W » P it a D esegregation Equality based on belonging Ellen Goodman W ashington Post W riter’s G roup U n o ffic ia l t r a n s c r i p t , K u rd a id g o o d id e a Mike Royko Tribune Media Syndicate This is an unofficial transcript of a meeting that may or may not have occurred, as obtained from a highly unreliable source. But who knows? “Is everyone here?” “Yes, Mr. President,” “Then let’s get started. Has that poll on the Kurds thing been completed? ” “ Yes. And the re su lts a re quite encouraging. When asked if they knew the difference between a Kurd and a turnip, 28 percent responded that a Kurd is a form of cottage cheese, 12 percent said that it is a leafy vegetable that tastes bitter, and 9 percent said it was human waste and they slapped die face of the pollsters.” “Good. What about the next question?” “When asked the question, would they be willing to see American boys fight and die in defense of a form of cottage cheese, a leafy vegetable or human waste, 98 percent responded: ‘Absolutely not.’ Two percent said we should fight only if this nation is invaded by a leafy vegetable.” “Very good. What else?” “Next they were asked this question: ‘Now that this nation has achieved a swift and stunning and glorious victory over the butcher of Baghdad, ridding us from the Vietnam Syndrome and making us walk tall, should we bring our boys home in time for them to enjoy the new baseball season and see their wives, children and other loved ones, or should we blindly and recklessly let these fine young Americans become bogged down in a deadly and dangerous quagmire that is not in our national interest ami really none of our business and will hit every taxpayer in the pocketbook and just provide Peter Arnett another opportunity to consort with the enemy and showboat on CNN.” “Swell question. What were the results?” “ Ninety-eight percent of those polled said absolutely not. The other 2 percent said they’d have to check their horoscopes.” “Well, then we still appear to be in good shape on the public opinion thing.” “Not entirely, sir. Another poll has shown that 51 percent have seen footage of dead, injured or freezing Kurdish children on television.” “That darned CNN thing.” “And of those who have seen this footage, 3 percent thought it was a horror flick, but 48 percent are shocked, appalled and sympathetic.” “That darned sympathy thing.” “And most of the 48 percent believe we should do something to help.” “That darned help thing. Well, does anyone have any good ideas?” “Well, sir, I think we must be firm and stay the course.” “Yes, the stay-the-course thing. Darn good idea. Any course in mind?” “We still have a full schedule of 1,268 airport troop welcomings.” “Is that all?” “I suppose we could cut each returning group in half, and that would double it to 2,536 airport troop welcomings.” “The double-the-welcomings thing. I’ll sign on to that. Anything else?” “We have more baseball openers. As an old light-hitting but slick fielding first baseman at Yale, you know that half the major league teams open on the road. So half the teams still haven’t had their home openers yet. That gives us about a dozen more festive salute-the-troops and have-areservist-in-uniform-throw-out-the-firSt-ball opportunities. In major TV markets, I might add.” “The major markets thing. Gosh-darn good idea.” “And here is a list of the cities, towns, villages and rural hamlets in which parades are being planned between now and July 4. As you can see, the communities range from border to border, coast to coast. I have them listed from A to Z.” “The A-to-Z thing. Good. I see under Z that they’re even having a parade for a hometown boy in little Zaboola, Miss. Was he decorated?” “Actually, he wasn’t over there. But he’s being released from a stockade, where he served 60 days for pinching an officer’s wife.” “Fine. Even those who pinch and wait also serve. Well, if that’s the end of the agenda thing, I have a photo opportunity scheduled.” “Uh, Mr. President, we still haven’t decided what we’re going to do to help the Kurds.” “Ah, yes, the help-the-Kurds thing. Any good ideas on that?” “Yes sir. As you know, they are very hungry and cold, so I think we should drop blankets and other supplies for them. We »can call it Operation Provide Comfort.” “Operation Provide Comfort. Darn good. OK, I’ll sign on to that." “Then we'll get right on it.” “Oh, one more thing.” “Yes sir?” “When we make the drops, warn the Kurds to get out of the way. I don’t want any big bundles of blankets landing on their heads. No more of that collateral damage thing." BOSTON — I am not usually nostalgic for the bad old days. I leave that peculiar form of melancholy and memory to others. I have friends who look back with fondness at the grammar school teachers they feared and the high school coaches they despised. I know elders who transform the mud and pain of World War II into a landscape of foxhole friendships. I read memoirs by people who water down the cold, anxious hunger of the Depression with the phrase, “Well, we were poor but we didn’t know it.” I rarely share such revisionist emotions. The contemporary lens seems more reliable to m e t h a n a n y r o s e - c o l o r e d retrospectacles. But in the past week, I have had two encounters with nostalgia about the worst of times and the best of times. Once, when I left the movie theater after “The Long Walk Home.” Again, when I turned off the television after “Separate But Equal.” There were two finely drawn stories from the central drama of my childhood — the desegregation of America. One told the legal take of Brown v. the Board of Education; the other was about the bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala. Each ended in a moral victory. And yet each left me oddly sad. I was not wistful for the Old South, nor for the terrible struggle over Jim Crow’s body. The nostalgia I felt was rather for a time of moral certainty and great hope. A time when Thurgood Marshall stood before the Supreme Court arguing that segregated schools were ’simply evil. A time when a black maid, Odessa Carter, could do the right thing by walking to work instead of riding on the back of the bus. A time when the lines were clear and so were the enemies. I wonder what Justice Marshall went through as he watched lawyer Marshall? Did he, too, feel a twinge of nostalgia? In the decades that have elapsed, legal segregation died but racial isolation remained. Legal equality, the precursor to economic equality, promised more than it has delivered. Today on university greens, some of the children of integration sit-in for separate dorms. In the inner cities, some black educators call for all-black, all-male, Afro­ centric schools. Imagine this. In the ’50s, civil rights lawyers argued that the psyches of black children were destroyed by segregation. Now — in either a mirror image or an insult to the moral reasoning of the Brown case — a new generation argues that segregation is the route to black self-esteem. At the same time, the civil rights cases that come before the Supreme Court today a r e l i k e l y t o be a b o u t r e v e r s e discrimination. The face of the old enemy may still be visible in political ads about “quotas.” But the faces of old allies are full of ambivalence about affirmative action. In the ’90s, they ask, when the middleclass son of a black professional is wooed by colleges, is there a need for racial preference? But when a trade or corporate board still admits blacks in only token number, can we afford to give up racial goals? In the debate over fairness, the wonderful word “evil” is rarely heard. Crack does more damage now, young black men run for their lives from each other and it is far more complicated to talk about racism. The civil rights leadership, with its eyes on the prize, is often accused of overlooking an underclass. The younger generation of blacks is split by success as well as failure. They are criticized for not joining a movement they have trouble finding. Today’s problems almost always seem harder than yesterday’s. In the good-bad old days, the issue was access. In the good-bad old days, the work was opening doors. Now the issues are poverty as well as prejudice. The work is not just getting admission, but truly belonging. Maybe we are not truly bereft of great civil dramas, just temporarily blind to them. But in this heroless momentum this cause-less time, an era defined by ambivalence not action, I miss something: the sense of possibilities. I am nostalgic for the future I once saw, way in the past. O p in io n Page 5 Wednesday, April 17,1991 State Press L E T T E R S N e w Testament passes test ' wnwnd i m g ; 'i**6* l ép M Benefits o f free trade are limitless Editor :-; ;?.■ As rewarding as it is to maintain current knowledge, or at least continued knowledge, regarding President Bush’s “Enterprise for the America’s initiative,” it is equally important to become more familiar with the details of this initiative and the many aspects of the proposal. Recounting that on June 27, 1990, Bush announced a new three-pronged U. S, approach to help resolve the economic problems of Latin America. The plan calls for the United States to do the following: F irst, negotiate arrangem ents with selected Latin American and Caribbean countries to reduce their official debt to the United States, which totals about $12 billion and make funds available through this restructuring for environmental programs ; (2) stimulate private investment; and (3) take steps to promote extensive trade liberalization with the goal of establishing free trad e throughout the W estern Hemisphere. Bush’s plan is laudable and merits closer examination. As announced, the plan calls for immediate action on the debt reduction and investment promotion measures. Under the official debt reduction proposal, the administration would seek authority to reduce the principle on and to restructure concessional loans made by the Agency for International Development (AID) and the P. L. 480 Food for Peace program to Latin America and the Caribbean. (These loans total about $7 billion.) It would condition reductions on a recipient’s adoption of strong economic programs. The United States would accept interest payments on restructured loans in local currency, which would be placed in trusts to support environmental projects. The administration would also seek authority to sell a portion of outstanding bilatéral commercial credits under ExportIm port Bank and Commodity Credit Corporation programs to finance debt-fornature swaps. Under the investment proposals, the U nited States would encourage the establishment of two new programs to be h a n d l e d by t h e I n t e r - A m e r i c a n Development Bank to reinforce private sector investment and lending, including the creation of an Enterprise for the Americas Investment Bank Fund with an initial U. S. contribution of $500 million to be paid at the rate of $100 million per year over five years. The longer-term trade measures are potentially the initiative’s most important aspect; if implemented, they could result in a restructuring of important economic sectors throughout the hemisphere. The administration’s ultimate zone is the establishment of a free trade throughout the hemisphere, but many analysts view that as years away, if not Utopian. In the shorter run, the administration’s plan will also encourage trade liberalization through other means. At the time President Bush announced the Enterprise for the Americas initiative, several executive branch agencies had been involved in an extensive effort to strengthen U. S. economic relations with Latin America. President Bush reportedly had ordered the formulation of a new plan for Latin America after returning from a F eb ru ary sum m it m eeting with the presidents of Peru, Columbia and Bolivia. Nevertheless, the official debt reduction proposal was a closely guarded innovation of the Treasury and the White House. The idan constitutes a momentous departure from previous U. S. debt reduction strategies. The only recent precedent is the 1988 U. S. departure from previous U. S. debt reduction of poor African nations’ official debt, but Latin America and Africa are not considered parallel cases. For many, the new proposal marked an a c k n o w le d g m e n t by th e Bush administration that the Brady plan was not sufficient to ameliorate the devastating impact that the foreign debt burden has on Latin American economies and societies. The trade and investment aspects of the plan were less surprising. For some time, many Latin American analysts have perceived the timing to be propitious for the United States to take steps to encourage greater trade and economic liberalization in Latin America, and had been urging such a plan. After decades of embracing the concept that the state should play a major role in a country’s economic development, most Latin American governments now appear committed to the economic reforms necessary to . create market-orientated systems. In words of one U. S. official, the United States saw that “for the first time in history, the two continents of our hemisphere are developing a shared economic vision.” The United States also recognized that it has suffered from L atin A m erica’s continuing economic difficulties during the 1980s, and that is has its own economic interests in improving Latin American econom ies. U.S. S pecial T rade Representative Carla A. Hills noted in July 1990 that the U; S. exporters have lost as much as $130 billion in exports to Latin America from 1982-1988. Improving and stabilizing those economies, and lifting trade barriers, would not only help U. S. exporters, but also increase the prospects for U. S. investm ent in the region. According to Hills, total U. S. merchandise trade with Latin America is now over $100 billion, which is almost 60 percent of all U. S. direct investment in developing countries. Given the Bush administration’s general com m itm ent to tra d e liberalization measures, its statement in June 1990 that it could seek a free trade agreement with Mexico, and its commitment a t the February 1990 Andean summit to encourage trade, the initiative’s trade components appeared in line with the previous trend in administration policy. Nevertheless, some analysts also perceived other motives in the administration’s announcement, viewing it as a means to pressure for greater changes in the Uraguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and as a response to the formation of a strong regional trading system in Europe in 1992. The benefits of free trade are limitless. Especially here in Arizona, where Mexico is our number one trading partner and with a free trade, agreement between the U n ite d States, Canada and Mexico, not only would Arizona benefit in an incredibly positive way, but we would have the largest trading block in the world —capable of changing the make-up of all three initially proposed countries and greatly benefitting all in a mutual way of cooperation between nations and its people. This is an opportunity that cannot be passed up. The stakes are too high for all of these nations and if there is anything the United States, Canada and Mexico all have in common . . . that is, all three can begin to benefit in unforseen ways positive to all. P au l M . Sowards ASU Alumnus Editor: In response to Pamela Delcore’s letter dated April 16, we would like to answer her claims that the Bible is “ 100 percent disprovable” and that there is “no historical ev id en c e” fo r the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ. , If Ms. Delcore’s claims were true, we would be’willing to denounce our belief in Jesus Christ, but on the basis of historical evidence we find, quite easily, that Ms. Delcore’s arguments are false. In proving the validity of documents of antiquity there are many tests that scholars use. One of the most important is the bibliographical test. This test looks at the number of existing manuscript copies and the time interval between the original and the existing copies. In applying this test to the New Testament, we find that there are over 5,300 known Greek manuscripts and that there is only a period of 25 years between the original and some of the existing Copies. In comparison, there are only 643 manuscripts of Homer’s Iliad and there is a period of 500 years between the original and the earliest copy. In term s of the bibliographical test, Homer’s Iliad is the New Testament’s closest competitor when validating documents of antiquity. The writings of such great men as Caesar, Plato, Aristotle and Sophocles don’t even come close in the number of manuscripts and the time interval between the original and the existing copies. It is interesting to note that few doubt the validity of these men’s writings. In response to Ms. Delcore’s claims that there is no historical evidence for the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we assert that many historians of Jesus’ time gave evidence of these events. One such historian, Cornelius Tacitus, governor of Asia, wrote in T12 A. D. about the death of Christ and the existence of Christians in Rome. Also, Flavius Josephus (bòra 37 A. D.), a Jewish historian gives an explicit account of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Many other writers of this era give historical evidence of Christ’s existence. Some of these are Lucian of Samosata, Suetonis, Plinius Secundus, Tertullian, Thallus, Philegon, Mar BarSerapion, Justin Matyr and others. We urge Ms. Delcore and others to research the evidence and make a rational decision for themselves. Jason Mitchener Junior, Communications Monty Montoya Senior, Zoology The State Press w ill rew ard o u ts ta n d in g le tte r s to th e e d ito r th a t o ffe r in s ig h tfu l c o m m e n ta ry a n d /o r u n iq u e points o f view . The letters ch o sen w ill b e ta g g e d w ith th e a w a rd lo g o a n d d o n o t n e c e s s a r ily re fle c t th e o p in io n s o f th e State Press Editorial Board. S T A F F S tate P ress SUZANNE ROSS Editor TENNYTATUSIAN M anaging Editor HOBART ROWLAND KEVIN SHEH DAWN DEVRIES ___ .__ __ .___ JCRIS TIMMONS ______.........KRISTEN JOHNSON — _ ....MICHELLE ROBERTS A sst O pinion Editor.—.—.—.- , ___ ___ MICHAEL LAMANTTA ___¿i__- X L SOKOL ..—STEVEN KRICUN Graphics Editor..........—..—... ...... — . Magazine E d fo v ,, T.-.—■- - —....... ........ ...........NIC O U CARROLL Magazine M anaging Editor.......................... CAR1N CUMMINS ASSOC.MipzlnoRH!Ünr — .......... ...STEVENKRICUN REPO R TER S; K en n eth B ro w n / A n ita C a rc o n e , Teena Chadwell, A ndrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Kellye Kratch, Patricia M ah, Kris Mayes; David Pundt, D iane Santorico, Judi Tancos. SPORTS REPORTERS: M arty M urphy, A m y Slade; Lorenzo Sierra Jrv Darren Urban. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Jo e B a rn a so n , Irw in D a u g h e rty Jeorgetta Douglas, Scott Troyanov Tamara WoRord. COPY EDITORS: Sonja Lewi* Tabitha Privett-Dromiack. COLUMNIST DanNowicki CARTOONISTS* Rob M inton, Julie Sigwart. MAGAZINE STAFF: C asebeec Michelle Cruff, VkW C ulver Joel Gelpe, Randy Hawkins, Christine Herbranaon, M ary Rose Lafreniere, A aron L ev y Laurie N otaio, C handa R. Shahani, Christy Tomlinson M ark Jas. Tynan, Jon W aU K ram er WetzeL PRODUCTION: C aasaundra Cavineas, Celia Hamman-Cueto, Holly Hiatt, Barry Kelly, Jeffrey Lucas, M ark Nothaft, Frank N . Ranilla, Renato Salomons, Eric Zotcavage. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: C olt D odrill, Leo G onzales. T o d d M a rtin , C h ris tin e M illan , L an ce N e w m a n , N e il Schnehvar, Dan Thompson, John Vaocaro, Danielle Webster. The State Press is published Monday through F riday during th e acad em ic y ear; ex cep t h o lid ay s an d ex am p erio d s, a t M atthew s C en ter R o o m 15, A rizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. V k d o n o t answer questions o f a general natu re. A dvertising and Production: (602)965-7572. The State Preaa la th e only newspaper exclusively published fo r an d circulated on th e ASU campus. The new s and views published in this new paper are not necessarily those o f ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. State Press Wednesday, April 17,1991 Page 6 Ex-secretary o f defense to advise businesses By RICHARD RUELAS State Press Robert McNamara, the former secretary of d e f e n s e u n d e r former P resident John Kennedy, will share s e vera 1 recommendations for the nation’s future with Valley business leaders in Phoenix M cN am ara Friday. McNamara will present his speech, “A Vision for Our Nation in the 21st Century,” to the ASU College of Business Economic Club of Phoenix after a noon luncheon in-the Arizona Biltmore. He will give “lots of recommendations for the (federal) government,” said Chad Madden, program .coordinator for the College of Business. McNamara served as secretary of defense from 1961 to 1968 under former presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. He advised the administration during the Cuban missile crisis, the Bay of Pigs and the start of the Vietnam conflict. Teen club landlord to shut doors due to local complaints, clientele By DAVID A. PUNDT State Press Tempe City Council granted Club Metropolis two months to clean up its act, but the landlord of the shopping center where the teen club operates reportedly is not as flexible. Club owner Kevin Anderson said he will be out of business at the end of the month, “I was told, indirectly, that (landlord Sydney Dye) will not renew my lease as long as the club attracts this kind of clientele,” he said. After Dye, landlord of the Designer Circle Shopping Center at Southern Avenue and Price Road, failed to return his phone calls, Anderson said his mother posed as a client looking for rental f property. Anderson claimed Dye told his mother the club’s space was available, The club owner said his 15-month lease runs out at the end of April but includes an option to renew. At an April 8 meeting, Tempe City Council denied Anderson’s request for an extension of his operating hours until 3:30 a.m., after numerous complaints from arèa residents and businesses. . “My attorney is looking into it, but- meanwhile, we’re looking for another,, place,” said Anderson. A number of residents appeared at the April council meeting, complaining of auto thefts,late-night car stereo noise, gun shots, vandalism and empty beer bottles left on their property. ' Among the complainte, the manager of a nearby AM/PM market said the theft of beer, food and candy ■had increased dramatically in the first part of the year, When Club Metropolis changed its music format to appeal to a broader audience. Jan Sejlundt, manager of the Copenhagen Imports furniture store next door to the club said he found bullet holes in his front Window. “We’ve had B. B. gun holes before, but these were much larger,” Sejlundt said. “We have nothing personal against Kevin, but when the club first opened, we felt that it was to be a form of non-profit activity for young kids.” Seijlundt said the age of the clientele has risen considerably this year, Anderson said he has tried to resolve his neighbor’s complaints, and said police have stepped up patrols in the area. R D S !T 4 'S MEXICAN FOOD ■ 1■ 1 U niversity FREE DINNER A O With purchase of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. ' Tempe location only. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 5-4-91. R o sita’s P laza, 960 W . U n iversity, T em p e, 9 66-0852 He became president of the Ford Motor Company in 1960 and served as president of the World Bank Group of Institutions from 1968 until his retirement in 1981. McNamara’s speech will include his “program of national revival,” which consists of a list of unmet needs and sources of finance to meet those needs. His plan calls for cuts in health and defense spending, which would allow for increased funding for education, technology and environmental concerns. Reducing the number of citizens living under the poverty level — particularly ch ild ren — is anot her pri ori ty .of McNamara. The Economic Club of Phoenix was established by the College of Business and its 100-member Dean’s Council. It serves as a “support group for the College of Business,” said Kelly Connolly, development officer in the College of Business. Connolly said the club provides research grants and money for the Economic Outlook Center, a research center on campus that monitors economic trends. Have you had a Breast Enlargement? If y o u ’re a c o lle g e w o m an w ho has had a b re a s t e n la rg e m e n t, th e State Press n e e d s co m m en ts on y o u r s atisfactio n or lack th e re ­ o f, reg ard in g yo u r d ecisio n . C o m p le te ly c o n fid e n tia l. P le a s e c a ll C h risty at 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 o r 9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 . ACCIDENT7 INJURED 7 IF YOU HAVE BEEN IN A N AUTO ACCIDENT . OR HAVE AN ON-THE-JOB INJURY SEE ADOCTOR! •a l l L e g a l c a s e s a c c e p t e d •MOST INSURANCE ACCEPTED •WORKMAN’S COMP •NO OUT OF POCKET COSTS SAM E DAY APPOINTMENT 24 HOUR ON-CALL We Can Help You Find an Attorney 9 5 6 -4 6 5 5 VALLEY GENERAL PRACTICE 7701 E. IN DIAN SCHOOL RD: SUITE É Student Loans... When"feu Need To Know... T ra ffic a c c id e n ts h a p p e n a ll th e tim e . Cars a re d a m a g e d . P e o p le g e t h u r t . B u t d id y o u e v e r re a lly t h in k o n e w o u ld h a p p e n t o y o u ? N1-800-W OHAW ? TNOW You m ig ht th in k you’ll never need it, b u t here's a phone num ­ ber to rem em ber anyway. 1-800-WHAT NOW. It's a direct line to the G eorggin & Shann law o ff ice nearest you, and if you're ever the innocent victim o f a car accident, w e can help. W e'll do all we can to ge t the settlem ent o r award you deserve. And ou r fee comes only from w hat we collect fo r you. So remember the number. 1-800-WHAT NOW You m ight need it someday. Z ions First N ational Bank o f A rizon a Your Quick Response Student Loan Bank O R G G IN & S H A N N Phoenix 3030 N o rth 3rd Street A u to A ccid e n t A tto rn e y s Mesa 1201 South Alma School Road Lender Number; 817 455 Glendale 5800 West Glenn Drive Arizona M anaging P artner Joseph A . Silence, Member Arizona State. Bar Ernest G Georggin and M ichael A. Shann, Members C alifornia Bar only. 1-800-678-2425 Member FDIC » W e P rtM Wednesday, April 17,1991 Page 7 E xperts to d iscu ss future u se o f h yd rogen By ANITA CARCONE State Press The dream of using hydrogen gas as an inexhaustible and pollution-free energy source — long regarded as an impossibility — soon could be feasible, some experts say. Five volunteers from Teihpe’S American Hydrogen Association, a 200-member, nationwide organization, will tell how this dream may become a reality at 7 p.m. tonight in Room 62 of the new Architecture Building. “ The hydrogen solution has been overlooked by a lack of public awareness, dismissed as a technology that is 20 years in the future or discounted as uneconomical,” said Herb Hayden, vice president of engineering for AHA. The volunteers will discuss the basic aspects of hydrogen, how it can be used and stored and how it can replace petroleum. The volunteers scheduled to speak include Hayden, Demetri Wagner, manager of racing program development at AHA, Tim Hibbs, representative of the Grand Canyon Project, Roland Darr, ASU’is AHA student chapter advisor and Roy McAlister, president of the American Hydrogen Association. McAlister said that for decades, scientists have dreamed of using hydrogen as a substitute for oil and other fossil fuels that have been linked to global greenhouse warming, acid rain, urban air pollution and ozone depletion. “You can never run out of hydrogen. It does not-pollute, and it is renewable. You can never run out and make it when you need it,” he said. Hie simplest of all chemical elements — hydrogen — is an environmentalist’s dream come true, he said, because it is an exceptionally clean-burning fuel that produces no carbon monoxide, Carbon dioxide or soot — the principle constituents of air pollution. Hydrogen also can store energy and be moved through natural gas and pipelines for use in cars, aircraft and industry. McAlister said because hydrogen can be converted into electricity through the use of fuel cells, it often is viewed as an ideal “energy currency.” He said that hydrogen can be made out of sunlight, garbage and sewage, adding that by hydrogenating garbage, the hydrogen would be used to make petroleum and carbon for the construction of buildings and bridges. “Right now, we should be at the task of getting rid of garbage instead of letting it sit on Indian reservations,” he added. Kennedy C ontinued fro m p a g e 3. contact anyone else at the house that weekend,” Barry said. Schnapp said he could not discuss Barry’s comments. Palm Beach detectives went to the Washington area the following week to interview family members and obtain blood and hair samples from Smith, who refused to be interviewed. ^ Jack Freese, a state attorney’s spokesman, would not comment Tuesday on whether the difficulty in interviewing the Kennedys was considered an obstruction of justice. Police were studying the results of forensic lab tests received Monday on specimens taken from the woman and from Smith. Police Chief Joseph Terlizzese said Tuesday he has not M illio n s ____ C o n tin u e d fro m page 3> telephone calls Monday seeking comment on Kroll’s statements. Kroll and his associates also have investigated the finances of former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, former Philippines president Ferdinand Marcos and convicted Wall Street insidetrader Ivan Boesky. In the Iraqi case, he said, the assets are seen the results and they won’t be made public immediately. The chief confirmed there were new witnesses in the case, but wouldn’t say how they came to police attention. He said investigators were trying to avoid extensive comment on the case, but promised that all details eventually will be made public. more likely to be recovered because of the strong international cooperation in the effort to find them. In addition, the U.N. Security Council’s Gulf War cease-fire resolution, which took effect last Thursday, imposes a special levy on Iraq’s oil export revenues for paying war damages. Legal experts say it probably will take years for claims against Iraqto be settled. C h a n g in g H ands bookstore Browse through our 3 flo o rs o f: • New & Used Books • • Calendars & Cards • • Books on Cassette» Sell or Trade your books at Changing Hands. For quality doth and paperbacks (no tentbooks, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 Mill Avenue • Tempe * 966-0203 Student & Youth Travel WAY TOGO fO j —ROUNDTRIPS— From Los Angeles LONDON from $526 TOKYO from $575 SYDNEY from $929 AMSTERDAM from $598 PARIS from $735 BELIZE from $420 FRANKFURT from $669 COSTA RICA from $498 BALI from $910 NYC/BOS/DC from $303 SOVIET UNION TOURS • Flights WsridwMe • Osgartums hemLAX,Similar Law Col FansIran 16 MajorU.S. Cities • law Cost0m W*yFain m Request • RetmdaMe, Changeable, FleiiMe. • Euraii Passes, l.D. Cards, Tam «CMer Wide1st FreeIrschats. 7204Vi M ELR O S E A V E LO S A N G E L E S . CA 90046 1 - 8 0 0 - 7 7 7 - 0 1 1 2< l .a .) 2 1 3 -9 3 7 -5 7 8 1 STATRAVEL 120 OFFICES 'WORLDWIDE State Press Wednesday. April 17.1991 a§5? 55JésS1 ;ot e ^ ° n ’'«'i* 11SP-' ■ ■sSSf4« ^ H & * « * ¥ J nteei< p ^ « > « p 0, i l l i ¡sa b lilPli» ‘I't -niijffgi Assorted Stvh '* P 9 A id s HSetimg £ Carts V O V R C H O IC E ¡^§ß; pss ÉÉÉ KTSP < Channel II Pharmàq Low Prii Survey Winncj ) r u g W k i^ ß E m p o r iu m WL “We are locally owned.” S to re H our»: M o n .-S a t. 9am -9pm • S un. 10am -6p m Tetnpe Tem pe G len d ale C handler N o rth Phoenix N orth Scottsdale W est Phoenix East M esa M esa j iSwaail ìm 110 ft Eliot Road 893-2702 893-2867Rx Curry f t Scottsdale 891-9733 894-2515R* _ 5» r = 3 *! '' 1 E 3 I1 59th Aosnuc f t B el Road 843-1211 843-1282Rx Dobson & Ray 786-1179 786-1192Rx 19th Avenue f t Bell Road 866-1581 863-1757R* Scottsdale f t ThunderiM 483-2083 483-2102Rx mmm 43rd Avanue f t Indian School 247-2884 247-3363Rx Power f t Sotdhern 981-9878 981-0650R* Country Club f t Southern 834-4905 834-5796Rx _____________________ Wednesday, Apr« 17,1991 ___________ _ _ ____________________ P o lic e R e p o r t ______________ _____________________ ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday : f . •An ASU employee said an unknown male called him at his room in Palo Verde West and threatened his life. •A silver 1967 GMC pickup was stolen from the first floor of Parking Structure 1. Estimated loss is $12,000. •Police approached an ASU student in the Business Administration Building’s computer lab after he was identified as a possible suspect in an indecent exposure incident. The incident occurred March 15 at Meridian Corners apartments, 1440 E. Broadway Road. The suspect said he did not know where the complex was located. •Police arrested a man and accused him of reckless driving, driving under the influence of alcohol, resisting arrest, failure to stop for a red light and failure to stop for police at Encanto Drive and Rural Road. •An ASU student received a neck injury while attempting a maneuver in his ROTC training class at the Aquatic Complex. He was transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital for treatment. •A Trek mountain bicycle, valued at $400, was stolen from the east side of the Language and Literature Building. •A Cannondale mountain bicycle, valued at $675, was stolen from a bike rack on the northeast side of the Language and Literature Building. •A white Huffy bicycle, valued at $200, was stolen from the west side of Palo Verde East. •A red bicycle, valued at $135, was stolen from the MU’s loading dock. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •A police officer was injured Monday in a two-vehicle accident in the 7500 block of Rural Road after another driver rear ended the officer’s patrol car. The officer was treated for neck injuries at Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital and released. Hie driver of the second vehicle was not injured. •Police arrested a man on Saturday and accused him of public sexual indecency after he allegedly masturbated in front of a woman a t MegaFoods in the 1600 block of E. Southern Avenue. •Police arrested an ASU student Saturday night and accused him of delaying and obstructing a police officer after he allegedly broke a window at 1255 E. University Drive and fled when approached by police. •Police arrested a 21-year-old ASU student Sunday and accused him of shoplifting on April 8 in the 1900 block of N. Scottsdale Road. Compiled by State Press reporter Teena Chadwell. No Credit Card? Under 21? • WE RENT TO EVERYONE ! pre sen ts ASU DANCE CONCERT *91 ★ V CARS ★ • COMPACTS • MIDSIZE ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡y f u l l s iz e A p ril 18 & 19 ★ V AN S* DAILY * ■ 1 WEEKLY MONTHLY LUXURY & CONVERTIBLES Gammage Auditorium Admission: $8, $6 Students and Senior Citizens 1/2 Price * luxury «MINIVANS « 7 ,9 ,1 2 ,1 5 PASSENGER SPEC IA L M ONTHLY RATES UNLIMITED MILEAGE AVAILABLE Tickets available at Fine Arts & Gammage Box Offices and all Dillard's Outlets We featu re gm pro d u c ts MAJOR CREPIT CARDS • OPEN T DAYS |S For information, call 9 6 5 -5 0 2 9 ENVIRONMENTAL LAW SOCIETY SPONSORS C a r e e r O p p o r t u n it ie s in E n v ir o n m e n t a l L a w Panelists representing the private, government and public interest sector of environmental law will d iscu ss views and career options. 3625 W. INDIAN SCHOOL RD. • 2934 E. McDOWELL RD. Treat y o u r p a re n ts to a ll th e service a n d am en ities y o u've com e to expect fro m M arrio tt to r o n ly $6 (Ask for ASU Graduation s a m o li q uites E very W e d n e s d a y s ta rtin g a t 4 p m Scottsdale P a n e l i s t s in c lu d e : J o h n L eshy Teaching & Public Interest J a m es D erouin Private Law Firm Meyer, Hendricks, Victor, Osborn & Maledon B eryl D u lsk y Government Attorney General's Office D ate: Thursday, April 18 Time: 12:3 0 -1:30 p.m. Room: 105, ASU College o f Law Bast Third fo re . Scottsdale, AZ 85251 (602) 945-1550 Old Town Scottsdale Every room is a suite! Free Food Buffet ’til 7pm 2for1 at the Bar 3 .0 0 Pitchers of Beer 6 .0 0 Pitchers of Margaritas &Teas NO COVER & be here tom orrow for THURSDAYS 25 C Beers 7pm -11 pm 4 3 0 N. Scottsdale Rd. 894 0533 Page 10 State Press Wednesday, A pril 17,1991 Budget _ _ C ontinued from page 1. not necessary because the governor is recommending a lump-sum budget. With spending discretion left in the hands of university officials, cuts can be taken in other areas, according to the governor’s staff. ASU Budget director Alan Carroll called the claim “absolutely not true.” “Everything that’s been laid out assumes a lump-sum budget,” he said. “The first things we will be looking at are nonacademic areas, but there are some things you just can’t cut.” . A report drafted by Carroll states that Symington’s budget proposal would result in the elimination of at least 400 courses, the loss of teaching positions and the closure of ASU’s Downtown Center. The governor’s staff suggested that ASU officials may be exaggerating the negative impact of proposed budget cuts to gain legislative sympathy. Doug Cole, thë governor’s spokesman, said he did not know the specifics of ASU’s budget situation. But he suggested that ASU’s report is an attempt to get an exaggerated reaction against Symington’s budget. “This is nothing new,” Cole said. “It’s a common thing to go out publicly and get support for an agency’s cause. And they usually pick something very visible — very tangible. * “It’s a strategy.” The state budget draft, after passing the House of Representatives, will go on to the Senate and enter conference committee discussion for final changes before going to Symington for approval. Attention: W State Press Advertising... W e help you find it! II Architect TL a Design Students Wc use the finest quality perms! & S tu d y n a t u r e . . . one hole at a time 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. (6 0 2 ) 9 2 1 -8 0 7 0 th e a lte r n a tiv e c o p y s h o p 1125 E. Rio Salado Parkway Tempe, Arizona 85281 Across from Sun Devil Stadium offers th e Following specialty products. •PERM S* $ 2 4 .9 5 •HAIRCUTS* $ 6 .9 5 • D ra ftin g adhesives No appointm ent necessary. Union Plaza 9 *7 -4 0 « 1453 N. Scottsdale Rd. 0p9e.g Temps D aily [ "Stickey backs" • Transparencies • Large F o rm a t copies up to 36 " wide, any length • C o l o r copies Canon color laser copier • M acintosh Com puter's Laser p rin te r Phone: 825*7992 712 S. C o lle g e R ate only availab le to ASU fu ll-tim e stu d en ts. C u rre n t p h o to ID re q u ire d . You C an Become A DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC Find O ut How. FO U N TAIN SUITES H O TEL Saturday, April 2 7 ,1 9 9 1 • Phoenix Fax:829-8909 2577 W . G re e n w a y R d ., S u ite E • 2 :0 0 PM A Palmer College of Chiropractic West Admissions Representative will discuss: Careers in Chiropractic i PHOTO i I DOUBLE PRINTS ¡ PALMER WEST IC;4 " i EVERY DAY 24 Exp. C o lo r P rin ts Palmer West's Program and Facilities COLLEGE OF CHIROPRACTIC ! Santa Clara, CA Admissions Procedures & Financial Aid Opportunities For further infonnation on this Palmer' West Prospective Student Meeting, calk 1 (8 0 0 ) 4 4 2 *4 4 7 6 W e SdayFlexipass »230 15 day 1st class $390 1 month youthpass $425 15 day youth Flexipass $340 Eastern Europe pass $160 Britfrance Bass $220 many other passes w aiM ble. iu r a ilp a s s —stM i th e b a s t w s y to s e e E u ro p e! jjb è ¡ ¡ ip U s e d Ii p L e v i 5 0 1 f Ifjä| S 1 IH BMI! tnl 1 TPSb ||| M f W ä /Ä ' Coundl Travel 120 E. University Drive, #E Tempe, AZ 85281 966-3544 B u y g M ain J e a n s ! W A IST S IZ E S 27 T O 40 0°° W E PAY UP TO $ 1 EACH W e Also Buy: Lee & Levi Jackets (up to $10°°) Letterman Jackets (up to $15°°) Bib Overalls (up to $7°°) M en’s Class Rings (up to $30°°) 3 5 N. A lm a S ch o o l, S u ite 204 461-8141 Hours: 9 a .m -5 p.m. State Press Page 11 Wednesday, April 17,1991 P la n C o n tin u e d fro m p ag e 1. welcome people into the campus,” planning consultant Ignacio Bunster said, adding that the restored corner will remain a shopping area. The committee, in an attempt to address what it has called “deplorable” bicycle paths, suggested that pedestrian and bike paths be completely separate from one another. Paul Nick, an ASU freshman liberal arts major who rides a bike on campus, asked the committee how pedestrians will be kept off the paths. “They said they would make the textures of the two paths different. That’s What they do now, and it is unenforced,” Nick said. The proposal calls for bikes to be routed through the campus on 15-foot paths with a bicycle-free inner campus. Bunster said the bicycle corridors would be on the four major malls that encircle the University. “The idea is not to to treat them as second-class citizens,” Bunster said. Tedde Scharf, associate director of Disabled Student Resources, questioned the committee on whether carts for disabled students would have adequate access. “The circulation will be much more improved than what it is today,” said Jennus Burton, associate vice president for business affairs. Burton added the carts would be able to use service routes prohibited to pedestrians. Scharf said she was satisfied with the answer and “just wanted to make sure that they allow us to dp it.” In an attempt to solve another circulation problem, Bunster said the committee has proposed underpasses for pedestrians and bicyclists at Rural and Terrace roads, and beneath Apache Boulevard. “The University of Arizona has used the idea. (The UofA tunnels are) wide and friendly, and they really don’t look like tunnels,” he said. ASASU. C ontinued from -page 1. D o n ’t b e a b ir d - b r a in . R e a d D A V E B A R R Y e v e ry throw it on tee roof and it’s not a campaign violation,” McGuire said. If found guilty of destroying an opponent’s campaign materials, an officer or candidate is automatically disqualified from office. T h u rs d a y T he S ta te P r e s s in C o m m itte d to e x c e lle n c e G re a t G r e a t P ric e * onty E X C E L L E N T B IC Y C L E S L e t W iz z a rd s give you a full s e t o f BniD CESTont g re a t looking s c u lp tu re d nails fo r R e g .$ 4 0 °° „ -¡ s '. $199S (m NOW $49**, Reg. $699S Very complete overhaul. FREE pick-up & delivery. NOW $14®*, Reg. $2495 Very complete tune-ups. FREE pick-up & delivery. , W &ZA RD S ‘ 1 0 4 1 E. L em o n , T e m p e . 644-1233 NO H A SSLES 644-123 3 9 6 7 -2 3 6 0 u d d y fo x 644-1233 U ST PIC K UP TH E PHO NE 1530 N. C O U N TR Y CLUB THURSDAY NICHT NO COVER - LA D ES A LL NIGHT THE BAND A U OF ASU IS TALKING ABOUT "Q U A R T ER PO U N D ER S " 25416 oz. DRAFTS BUD/UGHT 8-10 794 " W E C A L L IT-U S L A M IT " BUZZARD SHOTS A L L NKHT 504 LYNCHBURG LEMONADES ALLNIGHT $2.50 33 oz. "EXTRA L000N G 1 ISLAND ICE TEAS 8-10 919I THETRIPTOYS / PERFORMING SONGS BY 5 TRIPTOYS % Hey Frats$ 1 .0 0 O ff Cover fro m 8 -1 0 p .m . w ith G reek ID APACHE I H g ) _$2d"oo_OFF OVERHAUL“ $10 °° OFF TUNE-UP Limited tim e offer. C losed S un. & M o n . SC O TT Mountain Bike Specialist a really g re a t p ric e . THE« S 921-9775 - M * bo o ze » bauds Page 12 State Press Wednesday, April 17,1991 Workshop focuses on legislator communication By PATRICIA MAH S tate Press Arizona legislator^, lobbyists and a Board of Regents member will be holding a workshop on how to communicate with legislators this Saturday from 8 a m. to noon. Maren Lee, a student member of the ASU Task Force for Legislative Communication, said the workshop will ‘‘empower a lot of people” by educating them about university issues and teaching them how to communicate with legislators. “A lot of us have good intentions and goals, but how to accomplish them is sometimes unclear,” said Lee, a junior political science major. “This conference will give them a clear perspective.” The event, sponsored by the task force, will be held in the Mil’s Ventana Room. Legislators scheduled to attend include Reps. Mark Killian Of Mesa and Bev Hermon of Tempe and Sen. Doug Todd of Tempe. Regent Andrew Hurwitz also is scheduled to speak. John Wheatley, member of the Legislative Task Force Committee, said he would like to see the community and students attend. “They need to voice their concerns to the legislators,” he said. “Their voices need to be heard.” Wheatley said the workshop will consist of présentations and round-table discussions. Hurwitz also encouraged students and faculty to become involved, because historically only ASU- s administration deals with the Legislature. People don’t become involved because they think it won’t make a difference, he said, adding that this attitude is a misconception because “three people calling into the legislature is a landslide. ” Hal White, chairman of the task force, said the purpose of the task force is to “inform the campus community of what is going on the Legislature and encourage more involvement in legislative affairs.” The Task Force on Legislative Communication, which is made up of ASU students, faculty and staff, was formed last year to help establish better communication between the ASU community and legislators. Those interested in attending the workshop can make reservations by calling 254-8444. McDonald’s, said it wasn’t easy to abandon white carryout bags. “The decision to go to a brown bag was very difficult, ” said Langert, one of four company representatives on the task forcé. “In focus groups we got more negatives than positives,” he said, with people saying the brown bags seemed cheap and not as clean as they expected from McDonald’s. But once the bags were introduced in stores, along with an explanation of the environmental benefits, “what came out of the real customer opinions was 100 percent positive,” Langert said. T r a s h ______________ Continued from page 3» “It’s entirely possible that we can divert more than 80 percent of our on-premises solid waste,” Magnuson said in an interview. “That came as a great surprise.” The plan also has environmental goals other than waste reduction, such as converting to unbleached brown paper when possible, or to paper bleached with processes that don’t use harmful chlorine. Robert Langert, director of environmental affairs for the Perseco Co., the exclusive packaging purchaser for Richard Denison, a senior scientist for EDF, said the McDonald’s initiative Could set a trend for the food service industry. “They have a major role to play. They can serve as a catalyst,” Denison said. “We felt if we could find solutions that would Work for McDonald’s, it would work for others.” U n i v e r s i t y W o m e n ’s C l i n i c , I n c . rCAM PUS-i lC ornerj Experienced Nurse Practitioners providing professional, confidential, and personalized 712 S. C o lle g e I : I I I I I I CYCLE INCLUDES:: I *■*»-■*■.. I J ASU SWEATSHIRTS: 1/2 PRICE : W h e n yo u b u y - a n o th e r o f e q u a l o r g re a te r v a lu e . N o lim it. Excludes sale ite m s . 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BUY ONE SNO AND GET 2nd ONE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE! FLAVORS DAILY Cornerstone 725 S. Rural Across from ASU in Tempe 965-5560 § Now Open In The Superstition Springs Mall 6555 E. Southern Ave. 924-6001 Including: Straw berry • Pineapple C herry • Lemon 967-1114 Coupon good through 4-30-91. Not good with any other offer. Comer of Lemon & Rural • 967-1114 G O O DFO O D&C O O LC O M P A N Y C o lle g e C u lt u r e S ite Pigi» Page 13 Wednesday, April 17,1991 Final exams are ju s t the tip of iceberg th a t cause students to be ... STRESSIN' OUT BY LESLIE AN DERS ON f you think stress is synonymous with finals, think again. It’s been there all along. The stress most people are able to identify is just the tip of the iceberg, according to health professionals. I “Oftentimes the mistake that is made is that people think it can be solved just like that,” said Bob Zubia, a counselor that specializes in stress at ASU’s Counseling and Consultation. “It is as if somehow, they think if they come in here a week before finals that I can make all their stress go away. It just isn ’t true. People just don T realize how complex the whole thing is.” Stress, defined as the body’s response to any change in a person’s physical, mental or emotional state, has both positive and negative sides to it. Short-term positive stress can give a person ah extra boost to finish a project dr win at sports, while long-term negative stress has been linked to high blood pressure, irregular heart beat, high cholesterol, insomnia, ulcers and heart disease. Stress can create irregularities in sleeping, eating and living patterns, creating even more stress for the body and mind to process. “ If we have stress we can’t overcome or think we can’t overcome, then it begins to wear on us even more,“ said Karen Moses, coordinator of health education at ASU’s Student Health Center. “Definitely sleep patterns change. For some people sleep increases, for others it decreases. It just depends on the person. Also, if you don’t eat properly, through poor nutrition, you exasperate the effect.” Included in that is the increased use of caffeine and alcohol, both often resorted to drugs by college students seeking to stay awake to study or wind down. Moses highly recommended staying away from either during high stress times, as tempting as they may be. Both disturb sleep patterns and in the case of caffeine, create irregular heart beats and increased stomach acid. Either drug makes students less efficient mentally, she said. According to both Moses and Zubia, symptoms created by stress arc the body’s physiological response to stressful situations, the so-called fight or flight syndrome. When a person comes under some kind of stress, originally a physical threat, the body prepares by pumping more adrenaline and other hormones into the blood stream to prepare that person to either “stand their ground or run like hell,” said Zubia. During the first couple of seconds when a stressor first appears, “ a ton of things happen to your body,” said Moses. “Blood pressure increases, your heart rate >. increases, your pupils dilate, you perspire, your muscles tense up, getting your body ready for action.” In pre-cosmopolitan days, that was great. But now it can be dangerous. ‘The fight or flight syndrome was created to help us survive in the hostile environment of the wild,” said Zubia. Whenever there is a threat, the body automatically goes into action, making us really strong to fight or run like hell. Our bodies become energized. By fighting or fleeing, you release that energy. But today, most of us don’t face a saber tooth tiger anymore. We are faced with situations that arc not physical.” Moses agrees. In the past people were able to confront what it was that was “stressing” them. But in today’s world, stessors arc much more subtle and often times continuous. “Finals can stress you out before they are actually here because they arc looming out there, plus the studying Short-term Ways To Handle Stress 1. Relax where you a re — close your eyes and visualize yourself in a pleasant setting, perhaps standing on the beach watching a beautiful sunset or fishing in a mountain stream. 2. Take a break— get some exercise or fresh air, or go somewhere private and yell or cry. 3. Ask yourself whether it’s worth being upset over the situation. You can choose to stay calm and ignore it. If the issue is important, confront it directly, talk it out with a sympathetic friend, or write it out in a letter that you don’t send. 4. List all the things you think you need to do right away. Then prioritize the list and do only the top few. The rest can be first priority tomorrow. Turn to Stress, page 14. ASU’s Dance department closes season w ith choreography collage BY CHRISTY TOMLINSON f you visit the ASU dance department’s annual concert this Thursday and Friday and if, at first, you don’t like what you see, I DON’T LEAVE! T think if people come and don’t like my piece, they should stay, because they’ll probably see something they like later,” said Beth Lessard, the chairwoman of ASU’s Dance department and the choreographer of the concert’s opening J piece. “The show has a lot of variety, so I think everyone will see something they like.” After a year of preparation, the ASU dance department will close their spring season with a diverse collage of seven faculty works. The concert begins at 8 p.m. in the Grady Gammage Auditorium, and tickets are $8 and $6 ($4 for students and senior citizens) at Dillard’s and Gammage Fine Arts box offices. “We really try to go for broke on this,” Lessard said. ‘T his is our most extensive production effort of the year. We plan about a year in advance so we will know who will choreograph for the next year. I’ve been working on my piece, specifically for this concert, for four months.” Lessard said that her piece, entitled “WHOLE, she enters the WHOLE,” deals with her philosophy on life. “I’m very optimistic, and there’s always a lot of challenge in life,” she said. “I believe that you learn lessons and go on. It’s about a woman who kind of awakens and goes Turn to Ounce, page 15 C o u rte sy o f Jam es C ow tin Choreographer Douglas Nielson's "Are You Afraid of the Dark?" Dancers are Erinn Sullivan, Tracy Bishop, Katherine S. Longstretch, Sheri Kush, tonartene rarrani, Cassandra ca ssa n d ra Fowfer, row ier, Gregory G regory M. m . Catallier, uatainer, Steiios ste iio s Polychronides. ro iycn ro m o es. Charlene Farrant, Page 14 State Press Wednesday, April 17,1991 Stress _________ C ontin u ed from p age 13. getting ready for them,” said Moses, “We have so many daily stressors that the stress builds up. Most of our stressors are no longer physical. You can’t fight your term paper or flee from it without getting a bad grade.” According to Moses, stress isn’t always bad. “Falling in love produces the stress response,” she said. “Your body has the same reactions, the sweaty palms, the racing heart, but it is not a bad thing." The key to stress, said Zubia, is how you deal with it. Actual events don’t cause stress, a person’s interpretation of that event does. “What makes an event good or bad is our interpretation of it,” Zubia said. “Let’s say a young man asks a young woman out on a date and she says no because she has to finish a paper or she has a boyfriend. Most young men will interpret that as rejection. Although it is a threat to the ego, the body still responds the same way. The brain is too dumb to know it is a threat to the ego, not a physical one.” He also feels that stress can be a productive part of life. It is all a matter of dealing with it properly. “Our goal is not to irradiate stress,” Zubia said. “We need some amount of stress that is productive. Our goal is to reduce it to a level that is useful. “If you have too much or too little stress, you are ineffective. We all need to find that level of stress which is right for us.” Junior civil engineering student Giao Pham has seemingly found that balance. He carries 16 hours of school and between 20 and 25 hours of work at the MU inform­ ation desk, a high traffic, often stressful job. “1just keep it in perspective,” Pham said. “You realize that you’re doing the best that you can and you let them (customers) know that and don’t let it bother you. Time management is really important, too.” He often uses sports and a support system of friends to help him deal with those times when things start getting tough. Zubia said that such tactics are important to maintaining peace of mind. Often, he said, lack of time management can create a double whammy. “There’s no way anyone can say to me that T don’t have time to exercise,”’ he said. “You have got to make time.” Symptoms of stress range from hyper­ ventilation to nightmares to feelings of “the blahs” and anxiety attacks. In some cases, people become incapacitated to carry on with the normal functions of life. Both Zubia and Moses suggest getting professional help when things start to get that out of control. However, for short-term stress, or even long-term stress, there are some things that people can do. The first thing is a change of lifestyle. “Learning how to deal with stress is usually a lifestyle change,” said Zubia. “But if you arc finding that stress is getting out of hand, exercise is probably the best, simple, single thing to do. Anything that gets the cardiovascular systems going and gets rid of the pent-up energy. But it has to $50 $50 OFF Hair cut & style Reg. $15 men $16 women Have you had M ononucleosis within the last month? 0 H a ir S tu d io Expires 4-27-91 F o r a d d i t i o n a l d e t a i l s c a ll S h e l i a M e d l i n T e m p e D o n o r C e n t e r • 894-1338 _______ 933 E . U n i v e r s i t y # 112 , T e m p e 966-5462 •lii the Arches next to the Warehouse Deli* ■Forest and University. ‘ $2.00 Off Grease 'n Go's I f so , y o u r p la s m a c o u ld m a k e a v a lu a b le c o n tr ib u tio n to re s e a rc h Sc e a rn y o u $ 5 0 a t th e s a m e tim e ! Oroomin Hum ons MONO be done daily. You have to develop skills over time.” Another short-term reliever of stress and helper in getting over anxiety attacks is taking deep breathes, allowing the oxygen to gel to the brain, he said. Moses also suggests that lifestyle changes arc in order. Not just for health now, but later on as well. “If you arc putting yourself in a stressful situation, you increase your risk of coronary heart disease and heart attack,” she said. ‘There is an increase in risk for some serious consequences without learning ways to deal with that stress.” Zubia is concerned that young people, in particular, do not see the impending dangers of stress mismanagement. In an upcoming stress management workshop, seven of 11 people signed up are over the age of 35. “Young people think that they arc immortal,” he said. “They don’t listen. What you arc doing in the future is determined by what you are doing today.” Valvoline Lube, Oil & Filter Service 1355 S. McClintock Tempe, 894-27S8 G ood only w ith coupon. N ot valid with any o ther offer. • , , * Reg. ; Price UM UM E ... .. . P eople w ho know use V a lvo lin e ! $21.95« ______ I Bdl's Tryingto stretch dollarswhen j you're computer shoppingdoesn’t mean Apple introduces the Macintosh Classic. you’re willingto makesacrifices. That’s whyyou shouldconsiderthe new, affordable Macintosh®Classic®computer. It has everythingyou need—includinga monitor; keyboard, mouse, 2megabytesof RAM,anda ^megabyte hard disk.Just plugeverythinginarid the MacintoshClassicisready to run, because the systemsoftwareisalreadyinstalled! 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C 1990 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer. Inc. SuperDrive and T h e power to be your best* are trademarks of Apple Computer, Iric. Classic is a registered trademark licensed to Apple Computer; Inc. M S-D O S is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation. O S /2 is a registered trademark of International Business Machines Corporation. Pay 15 Wednesday, April 17,1991 Dance_________ Continued from Page 13. through different experiences of life. “I stumbled across the title for the piece in an ancient scriptal text,” she added. Choreographers for the concert include Lessard, guest artist Douglas Nielsen, Xenia Chlistowa, Ben Hazard, Marion Kirk Jones, Cliff Keuter and Pegge Vissicaro. Vissicaro’s piece, entitled ‘Terra Samba,” is a couples’ dance based on her experiences in Brazil last summer. “I was there for four months, and there are elements of Brazilian social dance that I learned and incorporated into my dance,” Vissicaro Said. Her dance will reflect the popularity of the Lambada in Brazil. “The Lambada was very popular there last summer, more popular than I ever imagined,” she said. “The thing that I want the audience to recognize is the energy of people dancing together,” she added. “That energy is very obvious in Brazilian life, and on the surface, that is represented in the piece. Brazilian people are full of energy and very wild. “My piece is how I see the world. It’s like a little slice of Brazil.” Jones, the concert’s creative director, has been involved with the ASU dance department for 21 years. Her piece, “Dream Walkers,” came from a dream of hers. T woke up and I thought, ‘Oh, that will make a dance,’” she said. ‘T he piece is sort of strange and other-worldly. The dance has different fantasy figures in a dream, and there are sort o f three different dreams in the dance.” Jones commented on Nielsen’s piece, “Are you Afraid of the Dark?” “It will be a very interesting part of the concert,” she said. Nielsen’s dance was inspired by Salvador Dali’s painting, ‘Table Solitaire.” The painting involves a desert scene with a camel, and so does Nielsen’s dance. Nielsen said that Dali’s surrealist style is emphasized in the dance, which asks the audiençe to find its own answer to the question, “Are you afraid of the dark?” On Monday, the seven choreographers practiced in the auditorium with their dancers, working through the spacing and lighting on stage. “It’s been pretty wild,” Jones said of her recent hectic schedule. “I like working with the dance department because everybody does their jobs and it runs pretty smoothly.” ‘T his is really the high light Of the year,” Vissicaro said. “It’s our creative research. Choreography fora choreographer is their research.” For reservations or more information about the concert, call 965-6447. CAN Y O U SAY B IG BU CKS FO R BO O KS? M R . R O T H E R 'S CAN r .7c Just 3 m iles N orth o f ASU 423-8499 'S : Scottsdale Road ft M cD ow ell SW C om er Papago Plaza .. R O T H E R ’S BOOKSTORES 625 E. Apache 967-5445 Next to Alumni Center 620 College 829-1128 On the Drag 7th st. n o w it h M a r k a n d th e S o u n d s o f S te e l D r u m s are b a c k ! LONGNECKS8-10p.m. 894-M AM A 106 E. University Dr. DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS W a tc h f o r O u r E v e n in g S p e c ia ls $1.50 Longnecks 10-1 $1.00 Long Islands All Night ♦ ♦! HODAYSIXTEPRESSSPECIAL Advertised Exclusively in th e STATE PRESS $1.50 G N E C K S CO8:30-10:30 CKTAILS LON 4:00-10:30 '4A Â -DJ JEFF BEVERIDGE "M usic so. HOT# th e last d u b he played BURNT DO W N" 11 atn-2 pm TUES W ED t l am-2 pm IM — 1 1H U K r o í Buy 1 Slice & D rink, G et A n o th er Slice f R E E of Equal or lesser value SPAGHETTI DINNER W ith Salad & Garlic Bread "KILLER" CALZONES Personal 10" Pizza with 2 F r e e Toppings $4% 4 9 / $^99 $ jy 2 9 / "H OM EM ADE" * LASAGNA q> w ith Salad & Garlic Bread " In a H u r ty — C a ll A h e a d " M ale P ie « Wednesday, A pril 17,1991 Page 16 by Bill W atterson Calvin and H obbes THE FA R S IM By GARY LARSON by Garry Trudeau Doonesbury h avin g to fe n p fo r m y s e lf THESE RAST SEVEN MONTHS HAS MAPE ME MUCH MORE SELF-SUFFICIENT. A N P I STICKUP FOR MYSElFjA A LOTMORE. YOU KNOW, M R S QUITE RIGHT, S IP I HAVE CHANCEO... FOR INSTANCE.SEVENMONTHS AGO, 1 PROBABLYNEVERUXXW HAVE m m O NEP HOWINCREDIBLY OFFENSIVE I FtNPTTTHAT YOU'RECHECKING OUT M Y GOP RIGHT NOW! HEY,CMON! FROMNOWON , WHATPO YOU ALE BUSINESS THINK I PRIVE IS S IR tC IP f , BUCAR OUTHEVE FORPHONE! THE VIEWY “C’mon, c’m oni You two quit circling the table and just sit down!” by Julie Sigwart Rainey Days QUITIT RAINEY? ..Jmdenraged YOU'RE GETTING ON My NEMES! \ w ith jassiSn,, Kyle ¿¿pressed how. I touched h isim e m st becoeS me -to 1 Lattie’s D og 1 by Ford M. NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Females are a weak and troublesome breed. At least when they’re green and spearlike. That’s the opinion of Rutgers University, which is suing a plant nursery for feminizing its product — a ‘‘super m ale” asparagus — through “ gross contamination with females.” The university says that in 1984 it developed an all­ male asparagus that produced offspring only as manly as itself. When crossed with a female, the macho seed’s offspring would be male every time. A crop of the hybrid can yield up to four times as much vegetable as a sexually mixed crop, partly because its energies are not diverted to produce flowers and seeds. The unwelcome comeback by the female element is significant in a country that eats almost 245 million pounds of the vegetable a year. Rutgers stands to lose more than $1 million. And Nourse, a commercial nursery responsible for reproducing the super-male seed in South Deerfield, Mass., denies it did anything wrong. Under a licensing agreement with the nursery, Nourse sold the seeds to growers and retailers, giving Rutgers more than half the gross sales. Last year the university and the nursery made about $500,000 each on about 2,000 pounds of seeds. State Press Page 17 Wedngdaj^ApriMT^jWI ASU baseball, hoops make signings Brock acquires solid battery in O’Heam, Cady ERA of 6.24, their worst since 1986. With Sean Rees and Gary Tatterson sure draft picks and Scott Dodd a possibility to go While the ASU baseball team hopes to solidify its run pro as well, O’Hearn and current freshman Doug Newstrom toward the NCAA tournament with a three-game series at could be thé top tvio starters next year. Cady is a 6-foot-4, 215-pound senior at Grossmont High USC beginning Friday, the Sun Devils have done the sainé with their roster for next season with two student-athlete School in San Diego: As a junior in 1990, he was named the San Diego California Interscholastic Federation Player of commitments. Paul O’Hearn, a pitcher from Santa Ana, Calif., has signed the Year and was a first-team all-state selection, “Todd is the catcher we’ve wanted all along,” Brock said. a national letter of intent to play baseball at ASU next season, “But he decided not to sign early (in October). We decided to Sun Devil coach Jim Brock announced on Tuesday. The signing of O’Hearn is the second major coup in a week wait in hopes that he would choose Arizona State in thé for ASU, who also lured Todd Cady, a highly regarded spring, “He’s already an accomplished hitter and I feel his catcher from LaMesa, Calif,, last Wednesday. O’Hearn, a 6-foot-2, 185-pound sophomore at Rancho potential as a catcher is outstanding. This is a major signing Santiago College, is undefeated in two seasons of junior for ASU baseball.” Cady batted .442 with 10 homers and a state-leading 62 RBI college play and has led the Dons to a 31-8 record so far this year. He is 7-0 in 1991 with a 1.73 ERA and 69 strikeouts in 72 in only 31 games. The switch-hitter, who is an honors student with a 3.8 grade-point average, also stole 22 bases in 23 innings. “Paul is pitching exceptionally well right now, as his stats attempts. Cady was the only catcher in this year’s recruiting class indicate,’’ Brock said. “He has very good command of his pitches, and we think he has outstanding potential. He’ll be and will be a candidate to start next season should Clarke Rea and first baseman Dave Robson, who is also the backup an excellent addition to our team.” O’Hearn should add depth to a pitching staff that suffered catcher, sign with a pro team. from a lack of it this Season, as the Sun Devils sport a team T iara to B aseb all, p a g e 18. By DAN ZEIGER State Press Frieder to bring in star California prep guard From staff reports Tes Whitlock, an explosive shooting guard from Anaheim, Calif., signed a letter of intent to play for ASU, Coach Bill Frieder said Tuesday. Whitlock, the 6-foot-2 four-year starter at Loara High School, averaged 33.5 points, 8.5 rebounds and 7.0 assists this past season. Whitlock poured in games of 68 and 58 to become one of the most prolific scorers in the state’s prep hoop history. As a senior, he earned all-C.I.F. honors as well as capturing every Laora offensive record except rebounds in a season. The Sun Devils were expected to sign a junior college guard for experience, but Whitlock comes with kudos as one of Blue Ribbon College Basketball Yearbook’s “100 Stars of the Future,” a Street and Smith’s high honorable mention All-American and The Sporting News’ No. 8 shooting guard in the nation. C u ltu re s h o c k Reidy unknown but successful By MARTY MURPHY State Prette One week you are playing in front of 24,000 screaming fans in a hot and humid arena of a foreign land, where your autograph is a commodity. The next week you return home to your college campus, where you are unknown to nearly everyone that passes by you. In fact, when you go to pick up your books, the guy behind the counter cannoni distinguish the sport that has brought you fame overseas badminton , — from lacrosse. Could that really happen, or is this Walter Mitty, the fabled day dreamer? ASU’s Tom Reidy is the athlete behind the story, With his recent trip to Tokyo, badminton fans realized he is the sport’s rising star. Reidy, born in Brooklyn, N. Y., but basically raised in Ireland, is perhaps the premiere badminton player in the nation. He is the Catalyst on this year’s national championship team. In fact, the ASU program is as much a module of success as Reidy himself. The Sun Devils own nine consecutive men’s and mixed doubles national titles to go along with eight successive women’s titles. Reidy was a triple crown champion in the 1990 U. S. Collegiate Nationals, winning the men’s singles, doubles and mixed doubles. He repeated the hat trick in this year’s national championship on March 22-23. Next up on the slate for the talented s o p h o m o r e w ill be th e W orld C h a m p i o n s h i p s / S u d i r m a n Cup in Copenhagen, Denmark, on May 1-12: That will be followed by June’s Pan American Games in Jamaica. Those three tournaments will be part of the nearly 40 tournaments that will determ ine qualification for the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Spain. As a member of the Olympic qualifying team, Reidy will have to play in a least eight of those t o u r n a m e n t s in o rd e r to gai n an international badminton computer ranking. “In order to qualify in the singles for the Olympics, you will need to be in the top 70 in the world,” fourth-year ASU coach and U. S. national team member Guy Chadwick said. “In doubles, you would need to finish in the top 40 or something like that.” Chadwick went on to explain that the qualifying period started in October 1990 and runs through April 1992. Reidy said the road to Barcelona will be a tough one, especially because he is a full­ time student. “The problem with qualifying is that it is hard to work around school,” Reidy said. “School comes first. I want to finish college for my father’s sake. He never had the opportunity to go to school. “ Each time you beat someone in international competition, you get ranked. But due to my schedule with school, I am limited in the tournaments I can play in, so I must do well in the ones I play in.” Reidy went on to explain that he felt his best chance at a trip to Spain in ’92 was going to come in the doubles competition, where he will be teaming up with former Sun Devil Benny Lee. “Benny and I will have to play a lot more tournaments to qualify — at least five more,” Reidy said. “ I think, however, that doubles is my best chance to qualify. Singles is just too tough.” Reidy may feel that making the Olympics as a singles player is out of reach, but his coach begs to differ. “I don’t know that he couldn’t get there in singles,” Chadwick said. “The difficulty in that is he won’t be able to get in a quantity because of school.” Reidy, a 22-year-old criminal justice major, spent his youth in Ireland eventually T u rn to R eid y , p ag e 18. 1 Jo e Bameson/State P r a tt ASU badminton player Tom Reidy has twice been a three-tim e champion at the U. S. Collegiate Nationals, winning In men’s singles and doubles as well as mixed doubles. Softball to finally meet Wildcats in makeup doubleheader By LORENZO SIERRA Jr. State Press It was Mother Nature who kept the ASU softball team from facing in-state rival UofA three weeks ago, but the elements will not be a factor this time as the two teams meet in a key. confer­ ence doubleheader at Tucson. The Sun Devils meet third-ranked UofA in a make-up of the doubleheader that was rained out on March 28. Today’s first meeting between Ariz­ Wells ona’s desert schools can put one of the teams in great position in the Six-Pac race. “No matter what else, we would have seen these games as important,” ASU coach Linda Wells said. “It is foremost in my mind to play well against Arizona.” If ASU (34-11 overall, 6-2 Six-Pac) can win both games, it will be in sole position of first place with a half-game lead on UCLA, which is now 7-2 in league play. A sweep by the Wildcats (43-8, 5-3) will drop ASU to third place. Currently, the Sun Devils are riding a four-game winning streak with a doubleheader sweep over the Oregon schools. Several ASU players used the weekend to boost their batting averages.1Kim Anderson made the biggest jump going from .189 to .248. Jackie Amara made the best of the weekend by breaking the .200 mark to .215. For Christy Serritella, the move put her batting average to .309, up from .286. Cheri Keller also moved up 30 percentage points to .333. The game against UofA marks the final road game of the regular season for the Sun Devils. ASU will have played 18 straight games away from Tempe. j,, “I feel like we’ve been very successful on the road,” Wells said..“We had to be mentally tough to do the away things.” On the up side of the equation, the team plays its final 12 games at Sun Devil Club Stadium. “It will help to keep us rested,” Wells said. Another factor that makes this doubleheader important is possible home-field advantage in the NCAA regionals. Due to geography, ASU and UofA are usually matched together in the first round. The only way to avoid a first-round meeting between the two is for both teams to be ranked in the top four. State Picas Wednesday, April 17,1991 Page 18 Gambino m akes turnaround; ASÚ faces FSU By DARREN URBAN State Prase The ASU men’s tennis team’s weekend in the Bay area was not the most productive, but it was encouraging for sophomore Chris Gambino. Gambino, who began the campaign with a mediocre 5-5 singles mark, was the only two-match winner in the losses to Stanford and California. The two victories boosted his record to 19-7 going into the Sun Devils’ match with No. 25 Fresno State today at Whiteman Tennis Center at 1:30. Gambino’s big weekend included a 7-6, 3-6, 7-6 win at Berkeley, in which Gambino fell behind 4-0 in the final set before rallying. “ 1 don’t like Stanford or Cal, and I’d like nothing better than to beat them,” Gambino said. “But the best thing is to try and relax. If a team has a relaxed atmosphere, that may be the difference in this conference.” ASU (17-9) has shown signs of wear as it helping in that match. Now I’m just trying to contribute, getting used to the climate and the higher level of play.” Gambino's slow start bothered him early until he reassessed his priorities. “I’ve been very frustrated with my game,” Gambino said. “I haven’t played up to my potential in a couple of matches . . . but at some point you can get so obsessed with this game and I took a step back.” Belken said it was natural for Gambino to be critical of himself . “Chris still has a tremendous record," Belken said. “Like a lot of athletes, he is hard on himself. I wouldn’t be surprised if he had the best record in ‘big’ matches on the team. He’s starting to play better and starting to show what we expected of him.” ASU will have a difficult meet in today’s matchup with the Bulldogs, intentionally placed on the Sun Devils’ schedule this week so that the rematch With UofA in Tucson has labored to a 1-7 conference mark, and Gambino said the squad needs to regroup. “I think the whole team is frustrated,” Gambino said. “We’re a little negative about certain things, but I think if we can channel our energies, we can get something positive out of it.” Sun Devil coach Lou Belken is not surprised at his team’s mental state. “That’s a common reaction to a tough part of the season,” Belken said. “There’s been a lot of stress for the last three weeks, but that’s part of athletics. We have people pressing right now." Gambind,* a New J e r s e y native, transferred to ASU from Indiana after his freshman year: After sitting out last season, Gambino said he was prepared for the rigors of Pac-10 tennis. “I think I was ready to go,” Gambino said. “It was hard to watch them play last year because I would think of how I could be B a s e b a ll BUD LIGHT C ontinued from page 1% With the commitments of O’Hearn and Cady, the Sun Devils have now acquired a total of 10 recruits for the 1990-91 academic year (eight of the players signed in the fall). Brock hopes that his program will not suffer a repeat of last season, when five top recruits elected to not attend ASU and enter pro ball. Baseball rules state that players can be drafted straight out of high school, but if one-decides to enroll at a four-year college, he cannot be drafted again until after his junior year of eligibility. BEER R e id y C ontinued from page 17- graduating from St. Clements College in Limerick City in 1986. An all-around athlete, Reidy was a member of junior national soccer teams in Ireland. Reidy was the U S. Olympic Committee Male Badminton Player of the Year and a gold medalist at the U S. Olympic Festival in 1989. “ Reidy is smooth,” Chadwick said. “He is just smooth talent. He doesn’t look like he is working when he plays, just like (John) McEnroe. He is a pleasure to coach. “He is in line with the tradition at ASU.” Saturday is not the week’s focus. “That’s one of the reasons you schedule Fresno State right now,” Belken said. “We lost to them last year. It’s going to be a tough match.” There is no chance to look ahead to the Wildcats, Gambino said. “We’re thinking about Fresno State,” Gambino said, “yhink we’re in the NCAAs, but it’s an im]»rtant match for us for seeding.” Gambino added that the championship potential of this season’s squad has had an effect on the season. “At times, we may have put extra emphasis on the NCAAs,” Gambino said. “We were concentrating too early on it, but we’re realizing now what our flaws aré. We need to improve steadily as we go into nationals . . . Right now, we’re trying to get mentally together. We need to focus on winning.” - AND AETI PRESENT S PEC IA L S T U D E N T F A R E S CHICAGO..................$230 $222 ST. LOUIS ........... 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LIVE ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY MONDAY 9 T U E S D A Y Paychotic- Open Mie Reaction 1« M I I 61.SO m * a lp i g i Domestic Bottled mmmm Beer MÊÈÊÊK , , 9 6 7 -2 9 4 1 WEDNESDAY Southern Rock with Renegade 62 Weil Drinks (East of Min avc.) HAYDEN CAR WASH . i l l / «JTO DETAIL CENTER 1 0 7 E . B ro a d w a y , T e m p e ______ ________ . 8 2 9 -9 5 8 4 A lpha D rive M ,, - C a m /n il L U a n tx s State N u Page 19 Wednesday, April 17,1991 Phelps left w ith respect from colleagues intact (AP) — Lately, Digger Phelps’ win-loss record — 28-33 over the last two seasons — wasn’t nearly as good as his graduation rate — Notre Dame’s usual 100 percent. Now, after two decades of having Digger prowl the sidelines in a three-piece suit with a green carnation in the lapel, the Irish are shopping for a new basketball coach. How come? Temple coach John Chaney thinks he knows. “ If you graduate 100 percent,” he said, “you’d better be careful to win your games, too.” Which the Irish did not do last winter. They went 12-20 — only Phelps’ third losing season at South Bend —and the fans even booed him at home games. “If I were sitting on that side, I would have been booing, too,” he said. Phelps, who turns 50 on July 4, will never be considered a failure, but as Chaney says: “In athletics, you’re only as good as your last time out. “What makes a guy a failure? Is the guy who strikes out seven times in 10 at-bats, but hits .300 a failure? That is a matter of perception.” Graduating? W hat about health insurance? North Carolina coach Dean Smith thought Phelps managed the always difficult juggling act of balancing academics and athletics very well. “I think the profession will miss Digger,” Smith said. “He’s meant a lot, recruiting student-athletes, graduating them, improving and winning. He must be pleased with his record, I’m sure.” North Carolina, like Notre Dame, runs a squeaky clean program. “We recruit the same people,” Smith said, “Duke, us and Notre Dame. Lately, we and Duke seem to have been getting more of them.” There were enough athletes to go around, according to Smith. “There are so many good players capable of college work,” he said. “Digger didn’t believe in the numbers. You’re allowed 15 scholarships. Most use 12. He’d take 10 or “We’ve built this monster about graduation rates but we use another measuring stick about firing and hiring. WaS it wins and losses that forced Digger out? It certainly wasn’t graduation rates.” 1 1 .” Smith said there is tremendous pressure to win in basketball, and the cleanliness of programs and their & \o c Graduate from college, and you're normally off your parents' health insurance. And not • having insurance can be risky. Apply now for Option One short-term health insurance providing 30, 60.90 or 180 days of coverage. Various deductibles available. Coverage begins the day after postmarked. Simple application. Affordable rates. graduation rate are sometimes overlooked. “It’s hardest in basketball of all sports,” he said. “There are 290 schools who think they should be in the Final Four.” Smith, of course, got there again last season for the eighth time in 30 years. Phelps made it just once in 20 years. Chaney said it’s not the coaches who determine the graduation rates of their players. “You can change coaches and Notre Dame’s graduation rate will still be 100 percent. The coach should have nothing to do with that,” he said. “The coach doesn’t teach classes. It’s not the coach’s graduation rate. It’s Notre Dame’s graduation rate. Digger either left or he was fired. But what was the criteria? His 100 percent graduation rate for 20 years? We’re measured by some other measuring stick. & - ¡fr . iß . ÎmgÎmIÊ wWÊÊ- O PTIO N ONE S P Ë C f l* U n ^ h v r it t e B - b y C a lifo r n ia P h y sic ia n s In s uran ce C o rp . : For Information Call 864-3537 Ask for Yvonne CSA MARKETING RESOURCES INC 4415 South W endter Drive« Tempe, Arizona CSA MARKETING RESOURCES, INC* is a wholly owned subsidiary of Blue Crate & Blue ShieM of Arizona^ Inic. .. Rimai Ç Apache•'CeMpe ASASU LECTURE SERIES presents. 2nd Annual l i f eBFFR "THE G R E A T DEBATE" v / C --A Tw o -M an Invitational Friday, S atu rd ay & S unday April 19, 2 0 and 21 on The Existence o f G o d A L L G PEEK BLOW OUT SATURDAY NIGHT A T THE K APPA SIG HOUSE Formal debate followed by a question and answer period. ■Dr. Theodore G uleserian • A rizona State University, Associate Professor of Phi-, losophy, 1971 - present • Ph.D . Yale University, 1963 • A rea of Teaching Expertise - M etaphysics, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of R e­ ligion, Philosophy of Lan­ guage, Espistem ology • C .L .A .S . Distinguished Teaching Award for Fac­ ulty, 1985 Dr. W illiam Lane Craio • Université C atholic de Louvain, Belgium , Visiting Scholar, 1987 - present • Ph.D . in Philosophy, Uni­ versity of Birm ingham , England, 1977 • D. Theology in Philosophy, U niversität M ünchen, W est G erm any, 1984 • Associate Professor of R e­ ligious Studies, W estm ont C ollege, 1986 - present A D M ISSIO N IS FREE.» - U ó MU e ° teDlhlH SJJ FOR TfHIKKAAICHT IKFORAIATIOÜ CALI IHHBSHILLIIIAY 'N Murdock Hall Orange St. Phys. Ed. West Awards C erem ony S unday Afternoon at n inin r W here: M u rd o c k H all, room 101 W hen: Thursday, A pril 18th N Tim e: 7:30 p .m . f w Cash Prizes and Redsand Clothing for 1st-3rd T O P ’S L IQ U O R S 7 8 4 -9 2 5 8 967-5643 Come by and check Proceeds to benefit the St. Mary’s Food Bank i Wedneda^prjMTjjwi^ Page 20 State Press U o fA to m iss W illiam s ^la^ TUCSON (AP) — UofA coach Lute Olson says Brian Williams fulfilled a commitment to stay and play two years. Now, after a season of considering whether to turn pro, it’s on to the NBA for the 6-footrll, 240-pound power forward. “I’m ready to leave,” he said. “We’ve lost a young man who I think was a real plus to us, not only in terms of his play,” Olson said. “We certainly wish him the very best and we’ll look forward to following his progress in the NBA.” Williams told Olson on Friday of Iiis decision and announced Saturday that he would forego his final season of eligibility. On Monday, he told reporters his decision came after season-long consideration, and that he chose to leave, not because of any dissatisfaction with UofA basketball, but because it was something “ I have the opportunity to do and I want to do.” Olson said Williams, an all-Pacific-10 Conference player and honorable mention All-American during his justcompleted junior season, has been “a really great representative in this program.' ’ He said Williams has “gone above and beyond anything that we’ve asked him to do” in speaking to school children, hospital visits and other community-related activities. He called Williams “a quality young man,” whose “great quickness and athleticism for a guy his size” made it worth considering leaving and will make him “an outstanding pro.” Williams had “an unbelievable year of development” in the just-completed season, Olson said, and would have been a preseason honors candidate as a fifth-year senior. But Williams said he “wanted to move on from this year not necessarily thinking about what I could attain from next year.” Olson said he also was extremely pleased with Williams’ development “as a person.” “Brian is a very caring young man,” he said, an individualist with diverse interests who told him “he didn’t want to be known as a dumb jock, that he wanted to be somebody that could appreciate other things.” Williams said his strong season finish “sort of confirmed” his decision. UofA won its fourth straight Pac-10 title and made it to the NCAA Sweet 16. Williams said he had had contact during the season with agent and attorney Fred Slaughter of Los Angeles, whom he hired Friday, before informing OlSon of his decision. The coach, he said, knew leaving was “a 50-50 chance,” and “is, was and will continue to be supportive.” Williams also said he had told his teammates he might declare himself eligible for the draft. Williams sat out a year after transferring from Maryland following his freshman season. His sophomore season was disappointing. He started slowly after recovering from a hairline fracture in his foot the summer after his redshirt year and played inconsistently. But he came back to average 13.8 points and 7.7 rebounds during the just-completed season, which UofA finished 28-7, and was shared the team’s most valuable player honors with senior Matt Muehlebach. Williams and Olson said they had discussed the pros and cons of leaving and staying nearly two weeks ago, and Olson told Williams he needed to talk to such people as former NBA coach Billy Cunningham, who had no vested interest and could help him make the most informed decision. Olson declines to advise his players. Both said Williams had fulfilled a commitment to play for two years, given when Olson was trying to decide two years cds Stale Press C la s s ifie d s U N E R A D RATES: 15 word* or Im CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: : $3.00 p e r d ay fo r 1-4 days $2.75 per d a y fo r 5-9 days ' $2.50 p e r d a y fo r 1 0 + days 15« each additional w ord. The firs t 2 w ords are capitalized. No b old face o r centering. . 1 tim e : $7.85 per col. inch 2 -5 tlm e s : $7.00 p e r col. inch 6 + Jim es: $6.50 per cot inch s P ersonals (15 w ords o r less) ere o n ly $1.751 M ust p la ce personal a d In person w ith stu d e n t ID. A d s m ay run fo r any length o f tim e. C anceled ads w ill be credited to yo ur account. S orry, n o refunds. AD VERTISING PO LICY: The State Press reserves th e righ t to e dit o r reject a n y advertising co py subm itted. C A LL N O W 965-6731 ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS HEADING FOR Europe th is sum m er? Je t there anytim e w ith A irh itcb (r) fo r $269 from the W est Coast, $160 from the East Coast! (Reported in New York Tim es and Let’s G o!) A irh itch (r), (212)864-2000. A sso cia te d P ress p h o to Brian W illiams has given up his final year of eligibility at UofA to enter the NBA draft. ^ M oti Eligible Singles Directory" receive photo*, phone m an b e n , occupati(me and ahm t p ro filé e o n aD o f ou r subscribers! M .E .SJ). IS NOT A DATING SERVICE!! IDEAL TENANT seeks landlord. Professor and obedience-trained canine com panion o ffe r ow nership, care, your sabbatical hom e or rental, 1 year. 5/1S o r 6/1. Leave m essage, 438-1087. Par m ow M u e Hm pieeae caD 602/870-0027 w tLooerom eD m senaeiiiK Tornm ruw ui RENT W EEKENDS. P rescott. V ictorian cottage. W alt to square. Faculty, sta ff only. Everything provided. 966-2362, 632-5421. ago whether to remain at UofA instead of taking a coaching offer from Kentucky. “Frankly, when Brian came here, it was with the understanding that he would probably stay two years,’’.Olson said, “so this was not going against anything that Brian had said.” Williams said money was not a major consideration, noting “there are no financial difficulties in my family,” and that coming out next year might have brought more money initially. He said a lot of people are saying “I’m turning down millions of dollars to do it this year.” But he said he is comfortable with his decision, though admitting that if he were only a junior scholastically it might be different. Both he and Olson said Williams might be picked from seventh to 13th in the draft. “It’s a big step,” Williams said. “You have to pay your dues. You’re stepping up to another level that demands a great deal of focus and a higher level of playing. And I’m just ready to start climbing that hill.” Louisiana State center Shaquille O’Neill’s decision to remain in college “does make it a little bit more enticing” to come out this year, Williams added. But he said he basically had made up his mind before O’Neill’s announcement. Other big men including Georgetown’s Alonzo Mourning and Duke’s Christian Laettner will be turning pro a year from now. Williams will finish the semester, and intends to return at some point for the additional semester he needs to obtain his degree. But he said he’s tired of school at this point, and that staying another year would not make him happy. “At this point, my dreams and my desires are to do it now,” he said. SEND YOUR sig n ifica n t other a p e rso n a l, today! Come down to M atthews C enter basem ent. SPORTS FANS! Books, Etc. has The N ational Sports d a ily and is g iving away N ational T-shirts and caps! R egister now and check out our enorm ous selection of m agazines and new spapers. Draw ings held A p ril 22-26. Books, E tc., Tem pe C enter, 967-1111. Pass it on. GETTING MARRIED? (please) Save 20-40% o n nationallyadvertised bridal gow ns & veils. For m ore info, call: H elp us begin« a successful recycling program on campus by putting the State Press ■ back in its original rack or kiosk when you've finished reading it. This w ill allow another person to read it and/or be easily picked up for recycling. Discount Bridal Service, Inc. 1- 602 - 493-5675 SHORT AFFAIR? thank you. Recycle. It Works. 9 6 6 -9 1 9 9 A rizona S h o rts 5th & Mill (If you w o rk it.) — ■ ■ E i* Levl»ouess*cap«and others Traiirw* I St. Luke’s H ospital M y Preschooler Eats Like a Bird! ome days your preschooler doesn’t eat enough to keep a bird alive but other days he or she won’t stay away from the refrigerator. This is normal for a preschooler. By the time your child is two years old, he or she should be eating a diet that consists of the four basic food groups: milk products; meat, poultry, fish and eggs; grains; fruits and vegetables. Keep in mind that every child’s energy needs are different and you shouldn’t force your child to eat—this can create long-term feeding problems. See your pediatrician if you are concerned about your child’s diet. At Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital, we’re experts at taking care Y of women and their families. Wb can answer all your questions about everything from pregnancy to childhood immunizations. Our women’s services include obstetrics, mammography, pediatrics, general surgery and more. And our Family Care Center is the perfect place for your sick child to recover. For a copy o f our free booklet "Women’s Services at Tempe St. Luke's: Welcome to the Family" or for S W eil WOMAN’S W iE L L C B .O T M M S ? T lf lt H T a physician referral, please call 784-5637. Because your health matters. h — ■L 491-2029 I A * has Help Wanted sections to Help you bring home the State Press ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS 2% M ONTHS Free! Cam eron Creek 2 bedroom , 2 bath. Take over lease. 966-0953, Karin/M eredith. ASU AREA. S tudio, 1 and 2 bedrooom for rent. $260 and up. 966-8838 o r 967-4908. We Buy & Sell Fine Used and Out-Of-Print Books Mon-Sat Page 21 W W n«da^x¡M 7t l991 10-6 808 S. Ash Ave., Tempe 784-2292 BEAUTIFUL ONE bedroom , one bath, pool, jacuzzi, sauna, tennis courts, a ll am enities! $360/m onth. P erfect location. J ill, 967-3850. San M iguel Apts. Large 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Next to ASU. Utilities Included. 910 E. Lem on 9 6 6 -8 7 0 4 APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOM furnished, $250-$350 plus u tilitie s , no pets. 1339 South Sunset Drive, Apartm ent 9 967-3658 o r 968-7012. 1 block south o f Apache and 1 block west of R ural. $199 MOVE-IN S pecial! 2 bedroom , unfurnished W asher/dryer hook-up, pool, covered parking, cam pus area. Clean, qu ie t 966-2465. 1 AND 2 bedroom s- S uper Summer S pecial. 6 m onths only $ 1 ,200 total. P od. 967-4568, Don fo r details. $200 total m ove-in. C lose, east o f ASU. Believe it! NEWLY REMODELED 1 b e d ro o m 2 b lo c k s fro m A S U Pool, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. A sk for specials for A SU students. 1700 S. College, Tempe 967-7212 “ I'L L PAY your dep osit,” Devon Apart­ m ents, 926 East Spence, 370-2366, next to Holiday Inn. SUPER SUMMER m ove-in special. Beaut­ ifu l new large 1 and 2 bedroom s. W alk to ASU-. P od, laundry room , 1 block south of U niversity on 8th S treet. Cape Cod Apart­ m ents, 968-5238 YOU SAY it, we display it! O nly in the S tate Press C lassifieds! 2 BLOCKS from ASU, 1 and 2 bedroom , pool,, laundry, dishw asher, free cable. C heck our sum m er specials. 1014 East Spence, Sunrise Apartm ents, 968-6947. STATE PRESS P roduction Departm ent p ro v id e s ty p e s e ttin g , p a ste -u p and process cam era services. C all Donna at 965-7572 fo r rates and inform ation. 1 block o ff campus 1 bed: esse 2 b e d :$ s 2 s Also, 3 bed available $160 deposit Call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache 1 block east of Rural 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, furnished. No pets. A v a ila b le M ay 1 5 th . 967 -3 6 5 8 o r 966-3735.1420 East Hudson D rive, 1 m ile East of ASU! $600/m onth. CUSTOM, REMODELED, spacious home w ith p o d . 4 bedroom , 2 bath plus den. A ll appliances, close to ASU. A vailable to 8/15 $875. 969-4480. Locating Service 4 3 7-10 4 8 Room m ate m atching service also available. 4 3 7-10 4 8 1440 E. Broadway Rd. Tempe » 966-5818 SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now For Fall! WALK TO ASU! O n ly V i b lo c k fr o m c a m p u s . B e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th ; 2 b e d r o o m , 2 b a th a p a r t ­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV, heated pool, and s p a c io u s la u n d r y fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly, co u rte o u s m anagem ent. Stop by to d a y ! T e r r a c e R o ad A p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S. T e rra c e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 HOMES FOR RENT 3/4 BEDROOM, 2 baths, fenced yard, close to ASU. $595/m onth. 967-4908 dr 966-8838. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath- 10 m inutes from ASU, w ith R efrigerator, washer/dryer. $500/m onth plus u tilitie s . A vailable June 1. C all 431-1434 evenings. MOTORCYCLES 1 BLOCK south o f cam pus. Have to see to believe . 1420 S outh C ollege. A lan, 731-9251. ' 1962, VERY w ell-m aintained, 55’x10’ m obile hom e. W alking distance ASU. $ 3 ,8 0 0 ,1 w ill carry 34% . 894-0413. HONDA ELITE 80, *87 m odel, $475. C all Sara, 921-3695. FEMALE ROOMMATE needed— $275 including u tilitie s . M any extras, quiet. 894-9270. IN HOME w ith m other, 51, daughter, 19. Fem ale only. 4 m iles from cam pus. $250 includes u tilitie s . 838-6224. 1 AND 2 bedroom condos and tow nhomes» Papago Park and Q uesta Vida. Bob Bullock, R ealty Executives, 998-2992. ROOM |N 4 bedroom townhom e. $200 plus u tilitie s . Sw im m ingpool, w asher/ dryer. B aseline/R ural. 839-1064. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, ceilin g fans, covered parking, w asher/dryer, 2 m iles/ ASU Jerry, 730-1441 ROOM IN d e a n , qu ie t house w ith 3 ASU students. Bike—ASU. $200, share u tilitie s . 931-2672. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, large hom e, H ardy/ U n iv e rs ity area. $60 0. C a ll C h ris, 894-8140 VERY CLEAN house w ith pool and a ll am enities. Im m ediate availab ility. $275 plus V« u tilitie s . C ontact M ark at 897-0183. 3 BEDROOM/2VY BA TH tow nhom e. W asher/dryer, p o d , tennis courts. Los P ra d o s A p a rtm e n ts . $ 8 5 0 /m o n th . 921-1838 HAYDEN SQUARE 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished. $800 plus deposit fo r sum m er. 966-0711. HAYDEN SQUARE: condom inium ; 2 bedroom , 2 bath, fo r sum m er rental. Call M ike, 967-6181. LARGE 3 bedroom . 2Vfe bath, 2 stories, 1 m ile from cam pus. A vailable 5/1/91. $625. 968-0686 LOS PRADOS 2 bedroom , 2% bath. W asher/dryer. Vfe m ile/ASU. $600/m onth. A vailable sum m er o r longer. Althea, 966-9706. LUXURY CONDO 3 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/dryer, fenced patio area, pools, tennis court. $800/m onth. Near ASU. 967- 4908. PAPAGO PARK II, 2 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/dryer, a va ila b le 7/2/91. Plan ahead! CaH 494-9105. Meridan Comers MOBILE HOMES TOW NHOM ES / CONDOS FOR RENT PAPAGO II: 2 bedroom , 2 bath. C lean, covered parking, poo l, spa, dishwasher, washer/dryer. $550. 966-4167. 1-2 Bedrooms Close to ASU Lots of amenities ROOMS FO R RENT ROOMATE W ANTED, m ale/fem ale, nons­ m oker. Own room and bathroom . Furn­ ished, d e a n , pool, $250 plus Vfe u tilitie s . N ot fa r from ASU. C all G reg, 941-8487. HAYDEN SQUARE 3 bedroom , 2 bath c o n d o . A ll a m e n itie s in c lu d e d . $ l,l7 5 /m o n th . Located in dow ntown Tem pe. C all John o r D avid at 968-2279. 1 M ILE south o f ASU. 2 bedroom , 1 bath. A ir conditioning, covered parking. $395. 968-0413, 967-7542. 2 AND 3 bedroom apartm ents from $395, >h m onth free. Covered parking, gas barbeque, p o d , private patios. Casa G rande Apartm ents, 1855 East Don C arlos, Tempe. 968-6926. HOM ES FOR RENT PAPAGO PARK II, 2 bedroom , 2 bath, washer/dryer, $550/m onth. David Cohen, 957-9233,829-3862. PAPAGO PARK I, 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished. $790 a m onth. 391-3826. RENT OR sale: 3 bedroom , 2 bath condo U niversity Ranch, Tem pe. M icrowave, large w asher/dryer, w ater p u rifie r, ceilin g fans, fireplace, icem aker. $750/m onth. A vailable May 1. (602)451-0773. ’ You say it, we 'll display it! Only in State Press Classifieds. HOMES FOR SALE FREE SEMINAR, pizza— How to buy HUD/VA governm ent, RTC hom es. For inform ation, call Sue K./Hom es Plus, 966-0595/892-9107. OK! SUN D evil! W ant a house w ith that pool? 3/2, extra-large pool, 3 level, beauti­ fu l home, Arizona room w ith fireplace, large living room , large service room , 3 m iles from ASU. $84,500 M argaret R ider Realty, 990-1945. S P A C IO U S /E L E G A N T ... LA R G E 4 bedroom hom e nea r cam pus. O nly $122,700. C entury 21 G old, 730-8808, Karol. CLOSE TO ASU, fem ale to share 3 bedroom house. M aster bedroom , private bath. $230/m onth plus e le ctricity. Call 345-6235. FEMALE ROOMMATE. Near A S U / 4 bedroom , 2 bath, pool, w asher/dryer, a ll furnished, Tem pe. $250/m onth plus V* u tilitie s . 966-2360. FEMALE ROOMMATE, own room , share bath, pool. $250 a m onth, V i u tilitie s . Tem pe. 921-3728, K risty. A vailable by M ay 9. / HAYDEN SQUARE condo— Sum m er only! Fem ale share 2 bedroom , 2 bath. B e autifu l new fu rn itu re . 966-1335. M ALE ROOMMATE to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath from 5/10 to 8/20 furnished. $250 plus V i u tilitie s . 967-0279. NOON IS the deadline to get classified lin e r ads in the follow ing day. Don’t m iss it! M atthews C enter basem ent, 965-6731. FURNITURE FURNITURE, GREAT condition— new. C all 894-1407. ONLY $100 down fo r ’’The Commons on Lem on” 2 bedroom , 2 bath u n it w ith aH appliances and som e furn iture . Save over $35,000 a t only $43,000! W alk to cam pus and stop renting! G reg Askins, R ealty Executives, 966-0016. ONLY $100 down fo r 2 bedroom Los Prados townhom e w ith in w alking distance to cam pus! Save alm ost $30,000 a t only $38,000. G reg A skins, R ealty E xecutives, 966-0016. PAPAGO PARK V illa g e . Im m aculate upstairs, 1 bedroom , 1 bath, northeast exposure. Num erous upgrades and FHA assum able. 829-3895. Buy of the Week Low down, no qual. Papago Park & Questa Vida. 1 ,2 ,3 bd. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 PAPAGO PARK V illage 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhom e, $950/m onth; 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo, $750/m onth; Both furnished. 829:3895 SHARP 2 bedroom , 2 bath poolside condo. M cC lintock/U niversity. $67,900. M ary Ramseyer, 820-5506, C entury 21 A llsta r R ealtors. THE BEST o f the beet. A ttending ASU and you w ant to be w here it’s happening. Hayden Square is w here it’s at. This u nit com pletely upgraded, 2 bedroom , fire ­ place, pool, spa, next to shops and ASU! $91 ,000 . K a re n , P ru d e n tia l R e a lty , 951-8578. like FUTON SET; includes Queen size couch, coffee table, end table . C om plete set $250. Couch only $220/offer. C ristine, 944-3772/973-1782. GRADUATING- MUST s e ll- fu ll size bed, $100; sofa, $70; coffee table, $30, negoti­ able. C all 894-4630. KING-SIZE w aterbed, dark wood w ith heater and liner. $120 o r best o ffe r. C all Traci, 838-3492. SO FA, LÔVESEAT» burgundy, good condition, $280. Tw in-size futon m attress, 8 " th ic k , $75. C all 731-9954. Vz M o n th O ff on 6 M o n th L e a s e • Close To America West and ASU • Spacious Studios, 1 Bedroom, 2 Bdrm/2Ba • Covered Parking •Weight Room • 2 Pools « Jacuzzi ASK ABOUT OUR 12-MONTHLEASE SPECIAL Also nowpre-leasing for fall &summer leases H A Y D EN PLA CE 625 W. 1st St. - Between Hardy & Mill - 968-5444 il ÉH Needa roommate? Cheek the Rental Sharing section dbily in the •T o p M i r Paid •Pick op A Delivery Available •C om ing back next fall? Ask about our Relum ing Student D iscounts 994-8400 u Ä r n h o o J o COMPUTERS RECHARGE YOUR laser prihter, toner cartridges $39.95. C all 225-8049. HONDA INTERCEPTOR 250cc, bea utiful blue on w hite, m int cond ition, 2 bie ffe helm ets, m oving. S2,200/offer. 921-8823. COMPATIBLE SYSTEMS A ll w ith 1meg RAM, 40meg HD, co lo r VGA m onitor A 16btt card KAW ASAKI KZ 440, 1981. Very reliable transportation. G ood cond ition and excel­ le n t gas m ileage, 50-plus MPG. Ideal fo r student. $500. Danny 8390350 o r leave m essage. 286-12M Hz * ' * * * ** * * * > * * * * * * $950 386-16SX * * * * * * * * * * * * * *'* ** $1275 386-25MHZ * * * ? *>•* * * * * * * * * * $1495 386-33MHZ * * * * * * V * * * * * * * *$1575 486-25MHZ * * * * *• * M * * * * * * * *$2295 SUZUKI KATANA 1982 low m ileage. Loo ks and ru n s g re a t. M ust s e ll. $1,250/best otter. 829-0477. CaN 967-7500 BICYCLES JEWELRY ALW AYS BUYING je w e lry of a ll kinds, in cluding gold, ste rlin g , gem s, pearls, antiques» etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill Avenue, Tem po C enter, 968-6074.° CASH FOR gold, diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 South M ill, S uite 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. SEND YOUR s ig n ifica n t other a personal today! Come down to M atthew s C enter basem ent. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 5-PIECE GLASS and brass com plete dinette set. A sking $80. Size 10 wedding d re s s , n e v e r w o rn . A s k in g $80 0. 962-3774. *''■ BRAND NEW unm ounted 1991 Volk! renntigers 200cm , $350/offer. C all Pete, 784-0503. JAPANESE LANGUAGE students: half price on texts, dictionaries fo r 101, 102, 201.202.964-8599. TW IN-SIZE FUTON w ith adjustable fram e, 8 layers th ic k , hardly used, $110. 3-speed Schw inn bike With m ountain handlebars, very reliable , $30. 19” co lo r TV; $100. D ig ita l m icrow ave, $50. Turbo G raphics system w ith 6 gam es, $200. 921-1287, anytim e. NISHIKI OLYM PIC-12, $100/offer; Benotto 10-speed, $175/offer. M ust se ll, great condition. C all T erri, 966-7310. TREK 1200 alum inum /14-speed Shim ano 105 com ponents. $400. C ontact: C hris, 996-3336. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Stati» Press Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Hayden'» Ferry Review Student Handbook Mätthew* Center. Basement 965-7572 TRAVEL 1 ROUND-TRIP. Phoenix to H onolulu. M ay 13-18. M ust be m ale. $290.267-8015. 2 ROUND-TRIP tic k e ts P h o e n ix -L a s Vegas, Saturday 4/20 to M onday 4/22. M ust se ll, m ake offe r. T ricia , 784-8413. ALL LOW EST airfares guaranteed to any internatio nal destin ation. C all Best Fares, 443-7476. AMERICAN AIRLINE round-trip ticke t. Phoenix to Providence, Rhode Island, June 11 to 18, $200. 944-4633 o r 496-4488. AM ERICA W EST/AMERIGA W est. 25% o ff anyw here they fly . C all 949-1990. AUTOMOBILES 1985 HONDA CRX. Red, AM /FM cassette, clean. $2,800. Thad, 945-3544, extention 103. APARTMENTS CASH FOR YOUR MOTORCYCLE OR SCOOTER SECTIONAL COUCH- m edium brown, 6-piece w ith ottom an. Lam p and pillow s included. Southw estern style. $400/offer. John, 967-9283: 1980 DATSUN 310GX, runs good, $800. 963-5819.' RENTAL SHARING HONDA ELITE scooter 1989, great condi­ tio n , low m ileage. C a ll 784-8562, leave m essage. LOTS OF nice fu rn itu re fo r sale. W e're leaving so everything m ust go. For in for­ m ation c a ll Lisa o r Lea at 968-5738. TO W NHO M ES/ CONDOS FOR SALE RENTAL SHARING AHW ATUKEE- FEMALE attorney seeks fem ale to share la rge 3 bedroom , 2Vfe bath, new hom e. A ir conditioning, pool, w asher/dryer. $275/m onth plus u tilitie s . Kim , 598-0536. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS: S tate Press, Sun D evil Spark Yearbook, Hayden’s Ferry Review, S tudent Handbook. M atth­ ews C enter basem ent, 965-7572. 1988 M USTANG G T, every optio n. C u sto m w h e e ls , a la rm , F lo m a s te r exhaust. M ust sa crifice . $9,100/offer. 730-6254. 1988 PONTIAC LaM ans. 4-speed, 39 m iles/gallon. AM/FM cassette, hew tire s, tra n s fe ra b le w arranty. E xcellent condi­ tio n . O rigina l owner. M ust s e ll. $3,950. - ,■ J_________ ‘71 SUPER Beetle, runs great. $1,500 or best o ffe r. C onnie, w ork 966-6726, home 838-3913. ‘77 TRANSAM, red, V 8, autom atic, pow er steering and brakes. $1,200. 839-4406. FOR SALE: 1986 C hevrolet 4-door. G reat c o n d itio n . 5-speed. M ust s e ll... I’m g ra d u a tin g . C a ll a n ytim e . R achael, 968-8015. LET STATE Press C lassifieds w ork fo r you! C all 965-6731 fo r inform ation. LOW EST COST — Y our best bet is our one-stop student tra ve l shop. S tudent-fare flig h ts , tra ve l backpacks and accessories, books and maps. E u ra il passes, youth hostel m em berships \apd in ternational student ID cards — a ll issued on th e spot! C ontact A m erican Y outh H ostels at 894-5128 o r v is it o ur tra ye l center a t 1046 East Lem on S treet, Tem pe. MUST SELL: O ne round-trip, Phoenix to M inneapolis, M ay 18-23. $230. 966-2513. MUST SELL round-trip tic k e t Phoenix to H onolulu. Depart M ay 10, return M ay 27. A m e ric a W e s t. $ 2 8 9 /o ffe r. L ea ve m essage, 892F3296. PHOENIX TO C hicago, round-trip. Leave 5/19, re tu rn 5/27. $150 c a s k C all 470-1868. PHOENIX TO Newark, round-trip, 5/15/91 to 5/25/91. $153. 731-9172. R O U N D -TR IP DENVER to P hoenix, Thursday 4/18 to Tuesday 4/23. M ust se ll, m ake offe r. T ricia, 784-8413. State Pro« Wednesday, April 17,1991 Page 22 TRAVEL RO UN D-TR IP, PHOENIX to S eattle. Leave 5/15, return 8/15. Fem ale. $200. 423-9314. SOUTHW EST PARTNER Pass— Enables you to buy one tic k e t, get one free. $25. C arolyn, 784-7203 TRAVEL CHEAP in your nam e. I special­ ize in quick departures. M ost places USA. $285-450, round-trip. Alaska, $550-650. Also w orldw ide. I also buy transferable coupons. 968-7283, TW O ROUND-TRIP ticke ts from Phoenix to Boston, Leaving 5 /1 4 /9 Í. Real cheap! C all 829-1889. BUSINESS O PPO RTUNITIES AIRLINES HIRING. Seeking students and grads to fill m any positions. A irlin e w ill tra in . E xcellent salary and trave l benefits. Phone (303)441-2455. EARN MONEY w h ile tra in in g part-tim e for a career w ith fin a n c ia l services com pany. C all 948-5667. PERFECT STUDENT business, leasing lo fts, $30 to $50 per hour. Sacrafice $3,000. 863-4437, HELP W ANTED— GENERAL $5.25/HO UR GUARANTEED plus oppor­ tu n ity to earn m ore. F lexible hours, day or evening, rio experience necessary, conve­ nient W est Mesa location. 6496661. APPLEONE IS curre ntly recru iting exper­ ienced banquet servers. W £ ll work you around your schedule. Apply at: 20 East U niversity, Suite 101, 829-3782. TELEMARKETERS •$5/hr. •No high-pressure sales •W ork hrs.: 4pm-9pm, M-F Sat.: 8:30am-2pm CallAnytime! 829-3910 HELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP W A N T E D GENERAL HELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP W ANTED— CLERICAL ATTRACTIVE PAY plus excellent hQurs. $5.50 guaranteed plus d aily bonuses. M onday-Friday evenings plus Saturday. G reat fo r students. C all Paul fo r interview , 968-4457. EARN GREAT Cash- $8 50-$20/hour guar­ anteed. O utside sales fo r rapid ly grow ing W est coast m arketing firm representing A m erica's la rge st autom otive service com pany. P a rt-tim e /fu lltim e , fle x ib le hours, 12 hours per week m inim um . Call S co tt P erlstein or R ick N ordling at 602-433-8226. OPINION RESEARCH interview ers. Abso­ lu te ly no sales. E vening/w eekends, $4.40-$5/hour (rapid raises). Tempe. 967-4441, Susan. SELLING FLOWERS M other’s Day. Need car. $5/hour. C all 894-3419. RECEPTIONIST. JENNY C raig W eight Loss C entres seeks m ature, enthusiastic in dividual who enjoys w orking w ith people, accurate w ith figures, excellent phone s k ills and like s a busy, fast-paced environ­ m ent. O pening in S cottsdale. W ork hours, Sam to 5pm . C all Jennifer, 949-0119. BEFORE/AFTER SCHOOL program aides needed. P art-tim e/$5.00 per h o u r Apply at 4309 East Belleview , Phoenix. CASTING CALL: Talent fo r prin t, TV, m ovies, photos. CEEC Entertainm ent, 'S ta r Seekers’ hotline, 274-6362. COUNSELORS FOR boys’ cam p in. M aine. O penings in m ost activities: W ater S afety Instructor, Tennis, Basketball, C rafts, Archery, Lacrosse, Soccer, etc. Upper classm en preferred. T e rrific work­ in g co n d itio n s , fu n and in te re s tin g sum m er. W rite ; Cam p Cedar, . 1758 Beacon S treet, B rookline, M assachusetts 02146 or call: (617)277-8080. EMPLOYERS — LOOKING fo r help? Place a State Press H elp W anted ad. We have three H elp W anted sections— G eneral, C lerical and Food Service— to help you keep your business grow ing! Specialty restaurant/deli now accepting applica­ tions for the following positions: •Service Clerks FT/PT •Bakers assistant PT/AM Excellent growth potential Competitve wages Call 9-5 GARCIA’S RESTAURANT now h irin g for: server assistant, cocktail waitresses and hostess. No experience necessary. Apply in person, M onday through Saturday, 2-5pm , 7633 East Indian School Road. GOOD INTERNSHIP experience to put on your resum e. C all Senator DeC oncini’s O ffice fo r inform ation on sum mer and fa ll internships. C all C arrie at 3796756 or M im i at 379-4998. HERBERGER THEATER C enter Parttim e supervisory positions available in house and box office. Resumes to: Kelly, HTC, P.O. Box 1430, Phoenix 85001. Apply in person: .6107 N. Scottsdale Rd. (Hilton Village) COUNSELORS. PRESTIGIOUS co-ed Berkshires, MA Summer cam p sdeks skille d college ju niors, seniors and grads. W ater Safety Instructor, Tennis, S ailing, W aterski, C anoe, A th le tic s , A rchery, G ym nastics, Aerobics, G olf, A rts and C rafts, Photography, S ilver Jew elry, M usi­ c a l D ire c to rs , P iano A ccom panists, S cience, R ocketry, Cam ping, Video, Newspaper. Have a rew arding and enjoy­ able sum m er! Salary plus roonfj and board. C all Camp Taconic, (800)762-2820. CRUISE LINE positions. Land-side and on-board entry-level positions available. S easonal/perm ahent. Travel benefits. (303)440-6933, ext. 7. S U M M ER JO B S We are hiring 100 students and teachers for a variety of temporary clerical positions. If you have office skills such as typing, reception, clerical, WPO, secretary, etc., please call for appointment: Tempe Phoenix 966-1100 264-4537 STIVERS TEM PORARY PER SO N N EL v ■ '• ■* iM-.C.-'.’ : >■ HIGHEST PAID in terns in country: Earn college credit w hile gainin g experience for future in national internship w ith Thom as Nelson Company. C a ll 694-5283, M ichael. APPOINTMENT SETTERS needed parttim e or full-tim e. W ork in Phoenix, hourly pay. C all 860-8524, leave m essage. O R U IS E S H IP J O B S , p e rm a n e n t, tra in e e s (904)432-5945 s e a s o n a l/ w e lc o m e . JOBS JOBS jobs. G et started now! 1(800)258-6322 fo r free career catalogue/ Jobfink registration. ARE YOU energetic, have a great attitude and w ant to earn $6-$10 an hour? CaH M iracle Shine, 277-2845; W om en encour­ aged to apply DEGREED ENGLISH teacher needed in Spain. ESL experience required. Resume to : 1128 East W atson, Tem po 85283. MAKE $200 per week, part-tim e, sellin g Kool-spokes. C all 8334131 fo r details. ATTENTION BUSINESS M ajors: South­ western Com pany intervie w in g fo r fu ll­ tim e sum m er em ploym ent. G ain experi­ ence in sales and business m anagem ent. Leave Arizona, resum e college credit, m ake $5,200. 821-8213. DELIVERY PERSON needed for Tem pe/ Phoenix area. M onday through Friday, varies 1pm to 6pm . M ust be able to lift 50 pounds and have ow n tru ck o r large vehicle. $5/hour plus m ileage fo r the right frie n d ly and professional person. C all Jim at 731-9225. PART-TIME/FULL-TIME PHONE sales, no so licita tio n . O ur custom ers c a ll us! Paid trainin g fo r brigh t, pleasant-voiced men an$ women. We are the best because of o ur people. Year-round positions. Call 266-1111, or P.O. Box 23774, Tempe 85285-3774. Sum m er Jobs No experience necessary. PT & FT, flexible hrs. Start immediately at $12/hr. 966-6122 “Country Glazed Ham” PAPA JAY’S has openings fo r delivery d riv e rs and cooks. E vening hours, 966-4292. MAKE EARTH Day every day w ork w ith G reenpeace Action to save the planet. F u ll, part-tim e, and sum m er positions available. House to house fundraising and pub lic awareness. Hours: M onday-Friday 310:30pm . Pay: $150-230. Apply: Cady M a ll M ondays and W ednesdays o r 9631986. T.(9. Cggington’s An exciting breakfast and lunch restaurant is accept­ ing applications for exper­ ienced waitress positions. Must be available some weekdays and weekends. Apply in person after 2 p.m. 1660 S. Alma School Rd. PERFECT FOR student! Close to ASU, 20 hou rs/w ee k. A cco unting m a jo r w ith 3.25-plus GPA— C all Ju lie , 3437818. RUNNER, 20 hours/week. 8am -12 noon. D riving com pany vehicle. M ust have valid Arizona driver’s license and good driving record. M ust be dependable, trustw orthy, s e lf-s ta rte r w ith in itia tiv e . 966-2874, Tem pe. EOE. * ★ EASY CASH ★ ★ C o m p le te ly a u to m a te d d o n o r p la s m a p h e re s is . Discover how easy, safe and fast it is to: Earn $30 + a week! w h ile d o n a tin g much: needed plasm a. M ention this ad for a $5 bonus on your first donation. (M on da y-S aturda y) O nly center in Valley paying: $10 — 1st donation, $20 —- 2nd donation in same week. UNIVERSITYPLASMACENTER Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 South Rural Road, Tempo 894-2250 SALES TRAINING: E ntry-level opportuni­ tie s fo r recent graduates or M ay gradu­ ates. M ust be aggressive, self-starters. T rain w ith no. 1 o ffice nationally. Salaryplus equals $24,000-$30,000. Never a fee! M arge, 730-6050. SECURITY HELP needed, upcom ing local events. M onday-Friday, 9-5. 8397939, 420-0575. STUDENTS — LOOKING fo r work? Check the State Press H elp W anted sections daily! TELEMARKETER/OFFICE ASSISTANT: 2 p o s itio n s op e n , 2 0-40 hou rs/w ee k, $5/hour. C all Barb or Davy at Arizona Tool W orks, Inc., 437-4773. TENNIS CLUB attendant. Evenings and Sundays. C a ll 9435990 fo r appointm ent. RESTAURANTS/ BARS The New Red Robin Restaurant o f Tempe is accepting applica­ tions for all positions starting today! Please apply In person: 1375 W . E lliot (P r ic e C lu b P la z a ) THE STATE Press advertising departm ent is now hiring com m issioned advertising sales representatives to begin trainin g for Sum m er and next Fall- W e are looking for highly m otivated students, who are in ter­ ested in preparing them selves fo r a future in sales/advertisingi/m arketing. You m ust have a vehicle and not be graduating before Decem ber o f 1992, Interested? Call Jackie E ldridge today at 965-6555. TRAVEL AND earn college cre d it in a 12-w e ek p a id sum m e r in te rn s h ip . 894-5283. VALET PARKING attendant. 3 nights per week, $ 3 7 per hour (th is fig u re has your tip s averaged in). M ust have clean driving record, at least 20 years old, be w illin g to w ork in Paradise V alley, Scottsdale or C entral Phoenix. 861-9384, Shawn. HELP W ANTED— FO O D SERVICE BUSTER’S RESTAURANT— Scottsdale is now hiring experienced food servers, cocktail servers, busers and hostesses. Please apply in person: 8320 North Hayden (M ercado del Lago). COCKTAIL W AITRESS— Jockey Club N ight C lub/R estaurant, 52 East Camelback (C entral and C am elback, Phoenix). P art-tim e evenings, includes weekends. Experience required, m ust be at least 19 years old. C all Bobby fo r appointm ent: 2737777. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lu n ch w a itresse s. A p ply in person, 10:3311:30am or a fte r 1:30pm : 5001 East W ashington. HELP W ANTED— GENERAL HELP W ANTED— GENERAL WALK TO WORK I Nationally respected telemarketing company needs team player now! W e’re looking for people who enjoy helping others, have good communication skills, are dependable, enthusiastic and self motivated. We offer: •$5 per hour guaranteed PART TIME $8°° to $10°°/hr. Full Training $550/h r G uaranteed • New 15,000+ sq. ft. OFFICE SPACE • • NEW COMPUTERIZED WORK STATIONS • , • NEW LOCATION • Walking distance from A S U (Univ. & Rural) «Flexible hours «Team Environment «Excellent Benefits •Chance for bonuses each shift «Tw o shifts available 2-6pm, 6-9:30pm • NEW OFFICES* • NEW EXPANSION • • NEW HOURS • early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, weekend As our Telem arketing Representative, you would w ork in a fun, professional environm ent contacting customers nationwide for m ajor clients earning g reat part-tim e m oney on a schedule that you set up. For confidential interview, please call extension #33 at: DIALAMERICA 894-0264 Ask for extension #33 / State Press Jjfednw da^gril^^lW l PERSONALS ADOPTION GAMMA PHI pledges thank you fo r a w onderful evening, W e are lo oking forw ard to seeing you again soon. KA pledge class. ADOPTION— FREE, 1 pair, never used, outstanding parents fo r w hite newborn. W e wish to give your baby a hom e and a ll our love and care. C all collect, Linda/Lee, (714)957-6226. GAMMA PHI Beta N icol, you ard doing a great jo b !! You w ill always have our support. Love in PKE your sisters. ADOPTEE-BIRTHPARENT. Search and support group, free in ternational registry. 276-3479. HEY ASU! Think you fit in w ith the . • the H all? W ell put your best ¿ ki forw ard. U S. Concepts/HBO SeriouSiy Dangerous Comedy C om petition, spon­ sored by the MUAB Comedy Com m ittee. To register or for m ore inform ation, call 965-M UAB o r stop by th e MUAB office (3rd flo o r, M em orial U nion): : HAPPILY-MARRIED COUPLE wish to give secure and lo ving home to newborn. Legal/m edical expenses paid- Please call Bob and Kathy, co lle ct: (602)886-8422. W ARM, LOVING, childless couple seeking to give your w hite newborn a finan cially secure life fille d w ith love and affection. Ken and D iane, 991-1191: GREEK-MEN Alpha P h i Open is around the corner! W ho's going to.be the best of the best th is year? I HUMP DAY BUY down at I WE CAN help each oth e r! C aring couple m arried 11 years can give your newborn a loving fam ily and a warm , finan cially secure hom e. Please c a ll co lle ct, P atricia and Jerry, (802)235-2312. KAPPA ALPHA’S Pokey and S tealth: Let’s do Friday, southern style! D eltaluv Julie and M ichelle. KAPPA ALPHA brothers O ld South W eek is here. L e t’s- rage and have a great tim e, STATE PRESS P roduction Departm ent p ro v id e s ty p e s e ttin g , p a ste-up and process cam era services. CaH Donna at 965-7572 fo r rates and inform ation. KA S ADAM and E ric: W e’re s till holding your Bunny hostage. D etails la ter. The Bunny snatchers. Buy a large y o g u rtpay for a medium Buy a medium yogurt pay for a small Buy a small yogurt pay for a childs TOPPING EXTRA 968-9512 In the Cornerstone I MAKE MORE MONEY Fbod 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 m ove to a higher quality food service establishment... ...This seminar is forYOU! If you want to get your application into the hands of the people who are going to hire you... C A LL 9 4 8 -7 6 9 1 Find out how just a few dollars can put you on top in your field. THE BEST OF TASTE. IN C HOTEL « R E S T A U K A N T T R A IN IN G PETS ' KKG SCARLET Begonia- KA is in the air? O ld South is com ing! I’m really happy we’re going together, it w ill be a high tim e. Love yóur favorite KA Deadhead. KRISTIN— PLEASE stay! You can’t leave! Next year w ill be the best. San Diego weekends, nights in the closet, etc! Love ya Megan. LB— LET m e put you on a ship on a long drunken trip , your boots next to m y boots. A ll the cow girls in the ocean, none I’d rather be w ith. TuCsdn was great but nothing com pared to our private party afterwards? Let's get funky! From G. w ith love. MATT J. Good luck th is week; I hope you p itch a ll no hitters. Luv ya Krystle. SERVICES GOING AWAY? Need som eone responsi­ ble to housesit? I’m a clean, q u ie t responsible nonsm oking student in search o f a dw elling fo r sum m er. Have refer­ ences, c a ll and le t’s negotiate. Please contact Sarena at 784-8538. W HY HAUL it home? Store it! See our ad today. Best L ittle W arehouse in Tempo. 967-3900 \ NYTHINC TO XmNTWHERE.INC Personal shipping MOTORFHEIGOT-AIRFSEnST PACKAGING t CRATING ( 602) 649-0080 MIKE S. If you’ll e d it e d it, I ’ll edit edit. Then we can edit. Rose G. PHI SIGMA Kappa— we are getting “ H appy" fo r our happy .hour tonig ht! See you then, the Ladies o f Alpha Gamma D elta. Fallen off any more chairs yet? You're our ch-ch-ch-chia j Pet! From DW and TA A-PH I’S FORGET-Me-Not form al is here, grab a man and get ready to rage. ASU GREEKS— interested in playing in the Kappa Sig 2-m an volleyball tourney A p ril 18-21 c a ll Don S hillida y 967-9688. AXO JUD E thank for everything! I'm so happy you’re my mom. I love ya! AX Dot Am anda. C .J.— THANK you fo r m aking me sm ile, fo r m aking me laugh, and fo r m aking me so happy. Love E.J. DELTA SIGS— Thank you fo r the awesome soccer gam e on Sunday! Love, N ot just TYPIN G ! •F u ll te x t e d itin g •S p e ll ch eckin g •S y n ta x ch eck •G ra m m a r c o rrec tio n •G ra p h ic s c a p a b ility •E x p e rie n c e d e d ito r •F u lly co m p u terized •Q u ic k tu rn aro u n d •N e a r th e u n ive rs ity •B e s t ra tes In to w n 945-6793 ASU AREA typing, w ord processing, edit­ ing and tran scription. C all anytim e for fast service, 966-2186. ASU W EST is only one m ile from Precision Typing and W ord Processing. C all M ary at 978-8686 fo r student discount. love the Men o f AEPI. SIGMA NU C hristian- Happy B irthday! D ating a younger man can be hard, at least your a year older. I love you! SW IMMERS— THANKS fo r the Happy Hour, last night. It was a blast! Love, Delta Gamma. TO OCTOBER bears frie n d . I have alot to say but can sum it up in three words, I Love You! Lbve, S tinker. EDDIE, BEWARE o f the sm oking pooks hiding in the suitcase underneath your bed? Love, M arilyn. FU I ‘COACH ”- thanks to r m aking my birthday the best ever! You’re the great­ est! Love ya lo ts! Y our No.1 girlfriend? TRI SIGMA pledges you g irls are great! Thames fo r the good tim es painting and partying. KA pledge class Gentle Touch Hair Removal •Bodywaxing« Gentle organic wax leaves skin soft for weeks. •Electrolysis* Permanent hair removal, free consultation, licensed eiectrologist. Private. Confidential. A»Plus Electrolysis Clinic 962-6496 eocoooooooooooo g CAR TRANSPORT g o o o o o a H eart t o H eart M PI IO T O G R A IT IY ▼ 839-3999 Coverage begins under $300. PREGNANCY COUNSELING Crisis Pregnancy Center Free pregnancy testing and counseling. 24-hour Hotline 966-5683 MISCELLANEOUS TWO PAIR of EYEGLASSES and/or CONTACTS* S 39 ” WANTED PROFESSOR AND fam ily needs 3-plus bedroom in Tem pe/M esa area b e g in n in g J u n e 1 9 9 1 . P le a s e c a l l c o lle c t, (215)660-0218. HEALTH AND FITNESS pair nationwide ui/ion center Tempe Mesa 966-4991 844-7096 •Relationship Difficulties •Dysfunctional Families •Sexual Abuse •Stress Anxiety Most insurances accepted for full payment. Cat! Leslie Metellus, Ph D 'some restrictions apply 261-0340 or 966-1174 YourIndividual Horoscope = Frances Drake |- |W v n g v f f t A W 8:00 a.m .-5:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 1953 E. University Dr., Tempe • 967-4851 P t PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the M en o f AEPI . SIGM A NU Brian W ebber: I’m longing to feel your touch again. Your adm irer. SERVICES Factory Trained M echanics PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the M en o f AEPI. PHOTOGRAPHY i •Tune Ups •Engine Rebuilding •Com plete Brake Service Pi PHI get psyched for Jacuzzi A Thon SAE SHANON! So you look good in a Tux? Ummm? I heard cable women needs a date A p ril 26th! Rem eber shes“ Roman” and oh those balloons! The only string attached is Sedona. Ypu know who! NEED TIM E to study? W e do APA/MLA form ats. $1:50, double-spaced page. Call B o b b i, 9 6 8 -9 1 6 6 or J oanne, 966-1516.(Please leave m essage). SPECIALISTS COMPLETE FOREIGN AUTO REPAIR P i PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon , love the Men of AEPI. S h « rl P a tric k - 9 6 M 4 II fr« « le n c « Sdc’u. S ervie« « D e s k to p N b fe s h h g Term P e p a r i/M a w ilttfa r s R ts u m e s /G ro p h lc i Lossr P rtnWsg M otoru P ublic I D o y S c r v /7 D a y s W eak D iscoun t S tu d e n t P rie « » RESUMES, REPORTS, presentations and m ore. C all Docum ents, E tc. a t 961-7924 fo r reasonable and quick turnaround tim e. Ask fo r Linda, DATSUN • TO YO TA PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the Men o f AEPI. ACCOUNTING, FINANCE, and M ath professional in struction, study aides and exam ination strategies. State-approved tutor. 921-2211; Sun-D evil Tutoring, G il. rides-To-Be PROFESSIONAL PRINTING fo r Paupers: Resumes, papers, business cards and desktop publishing. Low fees. Pauper P rinting, 863-9653. fibAutomotive Inc. PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the Men of AEPI. TO THE w onderful person who found my w allet on 10th and Farm er Saturday afternoon. Thank you! Like to thank in person. C all 965-6822, ask fo r Geno. Thanks again! the A lpha Gams 968-5555 PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the Men o f AEPI. PROFESSIONAL W ORDPROCESSING at reasonable rates. LaserJet printer, choice of typefaces and paper, guaranteed errorfree fo r your best presentation. 497-6572. APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/W ord processing. Need it fast? CaH Jessie, 945-5744. Delivering pizza fast at America’s universities. Mention this ad fo r $1.00 o ff any regularly priced pizza. A-PHI JENNY G eorge, always rem em ber G randm a loves you! Your the best! Love ' you, Susan. ■■ ACCURATE, EXPERIENCED typist/w ord processor. W ordPerfect 5.1. S tudent/ faculty. Any size jo b . $l.5 0 /p a g e . Call Laura a t 8204)305. Don't forget to give D and P an "OW BABY!" PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the Men o f AEPI . ALPHA PHI pledges and holdovers tw o m ore days till In itia tio n . Get psyched! Love your sisters ACCURATE, FAST w ord processing, typing, $1.50. G raphics, $2. Free pickup and delivery: Sharon, 892-0281. LETTER QUALITY w ord processing for your typing needs. APA/M LA, fa st turnar­ ound. Close to ASU. $ 1 .50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825 FAST, F R E E & HOT DELIVERY 903 South Rural - Tem pe ADPI—; STACEY, C ara, G retchen, K ristin , Cara, thanks for. your help and support coaching the Cham pionship hoop team ! Love Sigm a Phi Epsilon ACCURATE, REASONABLE, fast turnar­ ound w ord processing w ith laser p rin te r/ cassette tra n scip tio n . S tudent/facuity. M ill/U n iv e rs ity . A utom ated S ecretary, 829-8854 0 PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the M en o f AEPI. , A DOZEN roses delivered, $20. C all 894-3419. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, le tters, resum es, etc. A t your service word processing. Linda, 839-6167. R oses are red Violets are blue Blondes can be ditzy But they're ftinny too L _J FREE LOST/EOUND PERSONALS^ PAPERS TYPED— $1.25 per page. G raphics, resum es, etc. K ris, 899-3522 or 838-2974. ITIIF Happy Birthday Hooka! (aka oar hag) PI PHI get psyched fo r Jacuzzi A Thon love the Men o f AEPI. FOUND?! LADIES' w atch. Found last Friday near Life Science Building. C all to " identify. Craig, 784-0891 $1.25 PER page. N ear ASU. Fast, accu­ rate. Rush jobs ok. Lisa, 921-9202. FLYING FINGERS has M aclntosh/laser qua lity and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 fo r details. G O LD EN RETRIEVER pup pies, six weeks, firs t shots, both parents. $120 or best offer. 431-0331 FOUND: BLACK and brown fem ale puppy, near Commons on Apache. CaH 921-7032 fo r into: TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING Call JIM MEGAN, THIS weekend C alifornia o r bust! M arilyn M onroe. TUTORS TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING Service includes: ELECTROLYSIS— PERM ANENT hair rem oval. Remove unw anted h a ir forever. Student discounts. C a ll fo r m ore inform a­ tio n : 969-6954. I d o m iik 1 PIZZA RESTAURANTS/ BARS Page 23 by truck I o o o All States Transport o _________________________________ o ^ We Ship A utos C oast To Coast! Vn A' »Fast, Safe Delivery «Fully Insured «Lowest Rates ^ C% g Call ASAP to insure a spot! O N e il (6 0 2 )9 6 8 -0 0 7 4 O O O O O O O O O O O Q O O O o O» 9154533 Mr iÉÊÉmÊÊÈÊà^ÊÊ FOR THURSDAY, APRIL 18,1991 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) A bond of frieodship grows stronger now. You may meet with some delays or red tape in connection with business. Tonight finds you very self-expressive. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Some minor financial mix-ups could occur now, but you *11 straighten these out before day’s end. Visits with old friends and dealings with advisers are favored. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) T ravel has rom antic overtones. Singles veer closer to making a commit­ ment. Minor frustrations are job-re­ lated. You sparkle now at a group, activity. Friendship is accented tonight. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Financial interests are favored now. Undercurrents affect a relationship with a close tie. A private business discus­ sion gives the promise of future succes­ ses. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You may receive a benefit in connec­ tion with work done in the past Distrac­ tions could interfere with routine mid-day. Tonight brings you a social success. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) A child makes you proud in some way. You may be making vacation plans now. Feelings grow deeper in romance. After a hum-dram beginning, things pick up for you in business. Some care is needed regarding finan­ cial interests today. Re wary of decep­ tive propositions. Affectionate ties grow deeper now. Tonight brings-new business ideas. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You’ll take pride in what you ac­ com plish at work today» A slight misunderstanding with a close tie is cleared up with a heartfelt and honest discussion. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Y o u ’ll feel especially close to a rom antic interest today. V isits to favorite recreational spots are favored. Sluggish thinking at work gives way to perceptive insights. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You*U get the chance to know an ex­ isting romantic tie better now. Creative interests are highlighted today. You and a Child are on the same wave length. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You’ll find a solution to a long stand­ ing problem in connection with home. Judgment is sharp about financial inter­ ests today. Shopping too is a plus! YOU BORN TODAY often have ad­ ministrative talents and sometimes an interest in reform. Both the arts and sciences are likely tb appeal to you. Often, you’re visionary in nature and can succeed in business for yourself. You can be impulsive and temperamen­ tal and need periods by yourself to recharge your energies. At times you can scatter your forces and need selfdiscipline to m ike the most of your talents. Birthdate of: Hayley Mills, LIBRA actress; Clarence Danow, lawyer; and (Sept 23 to OcL 22) Property dealings are favored now. Leopold Stowkowsld, conductor. Some receive a ¿ f t or financial help from « relative. Evening hours favor heart-to-heart talks. Partners are in rap­ port SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Copyi^l U tl by K l f PiMum lyrtirten, he. Pagc24 H fP lW Wednesday, April 17,1991 / ' CLEARANCE SAVE 33% 25% SAVE SPORTSWEAR DENIM FAVORITES M ake a spring break into Add to your collection SPRING DAYDRESSES SAVE sum m er with t-shirts, woven with jeans, jackets and skirts Choose from Gunne Sax® in assorted colors. Available My M ichelle, Irresistible, in sizes 3-13, waist sizes All That Jazz® and more in 26-32 and S-M -L. pure cotton. Sizes 3-13 O rig. 44.00-84.00, 33.00-63.00. in solids and prints. and knit shorts and skirts from a favorite San Francisco maker. In sizes 3-13 and S-M -L. 33% Orig. 25.00-86.00, 16.75-57.62. O rig. 4 0 .0 0 -1 0 6 .0 0 , 2 6 .8 0 -7 1 .0 2 Selection varies by store. Limited to stock on hand. Sorry, we cannot accept phone or m ail orders on this merchandise. Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday112-9 . In Phoenix at Metrocenter, Paradise Valley, Fiesta Mali, Chris-Tbwn, Scottsdale and Superstition Springs. Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 12-6 at Park Central and Westridge. D illard’s We welcome your Dillard’s Credit Card, The American Express* Card, Diners Club International, Mastercard* Visa? and The Discover Card.