ff © C opyright, S tate Press, 1991 Tem pe, Arizona Thursday, April 18,1991 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 74 No. 60 C om m ittee nam es provost fin a lists By JENNIFER FRANKLIN S tate Press ASU’s provost search committee named four finalists Wednesday for ASU’s No. 2 administrative position. The finalists for the position of senior vice president and provost are Milton D. Glick, interim president and provost of Iowa State University ; Ross D. MacKinnon, dean of the faculty of social sciences at State University New York at Buffalo; Jam es C. Moeser, dean of the College of Arts and Architecture at Pennsylvania State University; and Anya P. Royce, vice chancellor for academic affairs, dean of faculties and academic advisor to the president of the eight-campus Indiana University system. , The committee, which began meeting in December, reviewed the applications and nominations of nearly 200 people before arriving at the list of finalists, said Mort Munk, chairman of the search committee. “We’re very happy with the candidates and their qualifications,” he said. Each of the candidates will visit the campus for interviews and meet with students, faculty and staff in public forums. Royce, the only woman finalist, Will meet with faculty and academic professionals from 3 to 4 p.m. and with students and staff from 4 to 5 p.m. on April 26 in the MU Pima Room. Moeser will meet with faculty and Turn to Provost, page 13. Budget cuts com e under stiffASU West opposition By KEN BROW N S tate Press Bookish M arty Tow naand, a g ra d u a l* English m ajor, clw cks out the selection o f books a t th e Phi Alpha T h eta Book S ale on C ady M oll W ednesday. M em bers o f Phi A lpha T h eta, A SU 's N atio n al H istory H onors S o ciety, hope funds raised during the book sale w ill help o ff-s e t operating coots. About 150 .students, administrators and Valley residents gathered at ASU West Wednesday to convince legislators that a hard battle must be fought against Gov. Fife Symington’s proposed cuts to the branch campus. “To cut money from ASU West would be cutting off your nose to spite your face,” said 22-year-old Patricia Herbert, a junior English major. “What we get from this campus we give back to the community.” Four members of the Senate Education Committee scheduled last night’s meeting to field input on the proposed budget cuts from the public. Symington’s budget draft, which is e x p e c t e d to p a s s th e H o u se of Representatives today with virtually no changes, recommends more than $3 million in funding cuts for ASU West. Lawmakers expect some Democratic opposition to Symington’s budget in the Senate, but most changes are anticipated when the budget draft enters conference committee discussion. Symington has request«! to take part in the discussions, offering his own office as a meeting place. In a report distributed at the campus meeting, ASU West officials said the cuts would result in a hiring freeze, the closure of the Sundome Center for the Performing Arts, elimination of the school’s nursing program and layoffs in student services personnel. A proposal by the Joint Legislative B udget C om m ittee, w hich will be considered alongside the governor’s draft in budget talks, recommends nearly $2 million m ore th a n la s t y e a r ’s le g is la tiv e Turn to B udget, page 13. International students want to be recognized as fifth minority Bouzari, former chairman of the International Student Council, said if the CDC endorses international students as a International students seeking formal recognition as ASU’s fifth minority, he will apply for international student fifth minority Will present a petition to the Cultural Diversity " representation on the Associated Students of ASU’s MCAB. Committee April 30, in hopes of being represented on the University’s Multicultural Awareness Board. “ International students have special needs, and those ‘International students have needs have not been addressed, ’’ said Alex Bouzari, senatorelect for the College of Business. special needs, an d those But a minority representative said the four coalitions needs have n ot been addressed existing within the MCAB adequately represent international students. — A lex B o u za ri “Most international students come under either Asian or the Hispanic constituency,” said Michael Lane, an acting representative for Native Americans and a former MCAB “The MCAB has a lot of advantages that we need,” Bouzari member. “Constituency (Within the MCAB) is based on culture, and said, citing a financial link to minority students as an example. they should fit within those major categories.” Mary Charette, program coordinator for the CDC, said she The MCAB serves as a communicative link between campus minority groups and student government. It also, supports Bouzari’s plans to increase international student distributes money provided by ASASU to fund cultural involvement. “I know that international students make up a large diversity events. University-defined minority groups include percentage of our enrollment population, and they don’t have Native Americans, blacks, Asians and hispanics. By SO NJA LEW IS S ta te Press L ife o f Fife: An ASU student spends*» day with Gov. Fife Symington and his mom. Page 6 A lternative invasion: Three bands that will be playing at the KUKQ Birthday Bash are featured this week. M agazine the resources available to them as do other students,” Charette said. “They don’t Understand that they can participate in political and social activities, and there hasn’t been an effort to increase their involvement.” But Leon Shell, associate vice president for Student Affairs, said he is not certain that placing an international student on the MCAB is the best way to increase international student representation. “I think there’s a legitimate concern for the further representation of international students, but I’m not sure if the MCAB is the proper vehicle to do that,” Shell said. “That’s for (ASASU) to decide.” MCAB Director Melissa Lopez said this is the first time she has heard about Bouzari’s petition but agreed that “international students are underrepresented.” But, because MCAB follows die University’s definition of “minority,” she said it is questionable whether an international representative could be a voting member of the board. Lopez added that ‘‘the MCAB and diversity coalitions would be willing to help international students anyway they can” in order to ensure adequate representation. Today's weather; Sunny with a high in the 80s. Tonight: Low in the upper 50s. Classifieds i ‘ ,;„ ., ;.., 4.........17 •C om ics 4 y. ; * , ...... ó ..- .......................... __ 14 C ro ssw o rd ................... Sports.................5 ...i.,..,..... .8 Stete Pr««» Governor gives pep talk tò Republicans PHOENIX (AP) — Gov. Fife Symington gave House Republicans a brief pep talk Wednesday, urging them to “hang tough’’ in the face of Democratic opposition to his budget, which is scheduled for a House vote on Thursday. The House, meanwhile, passed bills that would replace an unpopular environmental tax with a fee paid by retailers and change the law to allow a major Scottish distiller and brewer to operate a resort in Arizona. Symington, who met Tuesday with Senate Democrats to explain his decision not to request additional mental-health funding next year, thanked House Republicans for supporting his budget plan. Speaker Jane Hull, R-Phoenix, plans to take the Symington budget to the floor on Thursday and Says she intends for it to pass without amendments. “Your action will put my budget in a good negotiating position,” Symington said. “I realize some flexibility is called for, but this will put it in a strong position. ” Symington said it was his understanding that minority Democrats would offer a number of “potentially embarrassing” amendments to the budget and urged the Republicans to stand their ground and to pass the budget intact. The House voted 50-3 to replace the socalled “Drano tax” on hazardous products such as motor oil, drain cleaners and paint thinners with a $10 annual fee paid by virtually all retailers in the state. The 8*,4 percent tax on the wholesale price of hazardous products was enacted by thè Legislature last year. It was meant to be a major source of funding for the state’s W ater Quality A ssurance Fund, or “Superfund,” which would pay for the cleanup of hazardous-material spills and other threats to drinking water supplies. The tax is to take effect July 1, but it has been criticized by retailers who say it would be difficult to collect and expensive to administer. ; _ The $10 fee would permit retailers to sell or use any of the dozens of hazardous products listed in the legislation, “It would include virtually anybody who has a transaction privilege (sales tax) license,” said Rep. Herb Guenther DTacna, the chief sponsor of the measure. He said an estimated 312,000 permits would be issued, which would raise about $3 million for the Superfund. The measure was amended to require the Department of Environmental Quality to conduct a study of major users of hazardous products who would escape paying the fee because they are not retailers. It also would require the Department of Revenue to Study ways of collecting fees from those users. The bill (SB1170) now goes back to (he Senate for concurrence with House amendments. The liquor bill (SB1435) would provide a way around a state law that prohibits a producer of alcoholic beverages from operating a retail liquor business in Arizona. Under the legislation, a company that produces liquor could own a resort where alcohol is sold, so long as the facility has at least 550 guest rooms, swimming and tennis facilities and a golf course. The resort also would have to be built and licensed between the time the bill takes effect and the end of 1996. The company also would have to buy its liquor from a wholesaler with no direct interest in the property and contract with a third party to run its retail liquor operations. It is intended to -allow Guinness Enterprises, the Scottish company that makes Guinness liquors and publishes the Guinness Book of World Records to build a resort somewhere in the Phoenix area. The exact location has not been disclosed. The bill passed the House 42-10 and now goes to the Senate. Kromko voted against the bill, which he said is “special legislation” aimed at a particular company and location. T o d a y ____________ The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the U niversity com m unity. Any cam pus club or organization can subm it entries fo r publication to the State Press, located in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15. Entries must be leg ible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. D eadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m . th e previous business day. Meetings •A lcoholics Anonym ous w ill have a closed meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •G un D evils w ill have a meeting at 5 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •S k i D evils w ill have a meeting at 7:30 p.m, at Flakey •A rizona C enter fo r M edieval and Renaissance Studies Jake’s. w ill present a lecture by James Heifers at 3 p.m. in LLC319. •S tu den t A theists of ASU w ill have a meeting at 6 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •C hristian Students Fellow ship w ill have a bible study at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room. •U nited Campus C hristian M inistries w ill have a meeting at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •U niversity Toastm asters w ill have a meeting at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. •P ub lic Program s College Council w ill have a meeting at 3:30 p.m. in Wilson 132. •W om ens Studies Program w ill present a lecture on “ M ulticultural Women in the W est” at noon in SS 103. •W om en Students w ill have a meeting at noon in the Women’s Student Center. •E n viro n m en tal Law Society w ill have a career symposium at 12:30 p.m. in the ASU College of Law Room 105.' •A m nesty International w ill have a meeting at 5 p.m. on Hayden Lawn. •M U A B Film Com m ittee w ill have free Oscar passes available from 8 a m. to 5 p.m. in the MUAB office. •A SA SU Lecture S eries w ill present a debate on the existence of God at 7:30 p.m. in Murdock 101. •N a tiv e Am erican Student Association w ill have a meeting at 6 p.m. in the M ulticultural Lounge. •G olden Key Honor S ociety w ill have a meeting at 3 p.m. in M cClintock Hall 138. •EASSC w ill have elections and pizza at 5:15 p.m. in ECG 320. •F in an cial M anagem ent Association at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Ventana Room, •SPM A A w ill have a meeting at 3:15 p.m. in BAC 216. •B ap tist S tudent Union w ill have a lunch and devotional at noon at 1322 S. M ill Ave. ; ÍI * Ili Three new ways to survive college. A fncéo 9 Energy | R esources g ♦.Oil ; t NaturalCat | |XCi*! i ‘S'Uranium i I▲Hydroblectrú B TbeM adm oshlC The M acintosh lisi The M acintosh Classic With Apple’s introduction of three new Macintosh* computers, meeting the challenges of college life just got a whole lot easier. Because now, everybody can afford a Macintosh. The I Macintosh Classic* is our most affordable model, yet it comes with everything you n e e d including a hard disk drive. The ««M W H H M com bines color capabilities with affordability And the E m S f l D i s perfect for students who needa com puter w ith extra power and expandability No matter which Macintosh you choose, you’ll have a com puter that lightens your work load without giving you another tough subject to learn. Every Macintosh com puter is easy to set up and even easier to master. And when you’ve learned one program, you’re well on your way to learning them alLThafs because thousands of avail­ able programs all work in the same, consistent manner. You can even share information with someone w ho uses a different type of com puter-thanks to Apple’s versatile SuperDriveT which reads from and writes to Macintosh, MS-DOS, OS/2, and Apple* II floppy disks. See the new Macintosh com putéis for yourself, and find out how surviving college just got a whole lot easier. T he N e w S ystem s A re O n D isp la y A t COM PASS 9 6 5 -2 3 7 9 For M ore Inform ation O r D em onstration Stop By To Speak W ith A R epresentative O f ComputerPro Æ Æ C o nnecting P o in t ® Û * A u th o riz e d E d u c a tio n S ales C o n s u lta n t A p o ie th e A p p te lo g o an d M a c in to sh are re g iste re d trad em ark s o f A ts p ie C o m p u te r, In c S u p e rD riv e an d "T h e p o w e r to b e y o u r b est" ere tra d e m srlrs o l A p p le C o m P W ter,Inc.ClassicisaregisteredtrademarklicensedtoAppleComputer,Inc. CIMOAppleComputer,Inc ms-OOSisaregisteredtrademarkofM icroao#Corporation.08/2Iraregi*toredtt«d#maritofInternationalBuainesaMachinesCorporation W orld /N ation StOtO PtKSS Thursday, ApriMgLj9 9 1 _ _ _________________ N ationw ide w alkout id les train tracks Freight trains ground to a halt Wednesday in the first nationwide railroad strike in nearly a decade, halting rail shipping of everything from coal to car parts and interfering with most Amtrak trains and some commuter services. “ Anyone out there want to give me a lift to New York? I’m at the railway station,’’ said Australian tourist James Veel, who was stranded at Raleigh, N.C. In E l ' Segundo,- Calif., a freight train blocked an intersection for nearly 30 minutes after its crew stopped the train and walked away, police said. Congress and the Bush administration sought a quick end to the strike, with talks focusing on a cooling-off period that would allow a. new em ergency board to m ake recommendations for settlement on a contract to replace one that expired in 1988. Freight carriers and unions scheduled no new talks after last-ditch bargaining failed to produce a settlement before the midnight Tuesday expiration of an initial cooling-off period. The strike waged by eight unions and honored by three others against 10 companies, started at 7 a m. The strike by 235,000 rail workers over wages, work rules and health care costs could also idle as many as a half­ million non-railroad workers. “Three years without a contract is long enough,” said Jim Davis, a coach repairer for Norfolk Southern in Roanoke, Va. “ If they can give management anywhere from $20,000 to $100,000 bonuses why can’t they give us something?” said Richard Zietler, a Conrail accountant in Philadelphia. Earlier this week, the Bush administration said Congress should enact legislation to stop the strike and force the unions to accept the recommendations of a presidential emergency board that issued a report in January. „ In Lincoln, Neb., state Sen. Spence Morrissey, a Burlington Northern track inspector, said the strikers believe the emergency board’s recommendations are far from a compromise. “They represent to us what is a 30 percent cut in real wages Turn to strike, page 8. The n ation ’s Big Three autom akers W ednesday prepared to shut dow n factories and lay o ff thousands o f w orkers as a nation-w ide rail strike grabs th e U S. econom y and dries up th e flo w o f parts to a u jb p la n ts . U nited Transportation Union m em bers Tom Robinson and Ken Sischo both o f Dearborn H eights, and Ed Braddam o f Lincoln Park are show n a t a CSX railw ay sw itch yard next to th e F o ld M o to r C o. ’s spraw ling Rough com plex. ’80s prosperity, income grow th benefits East Coast WASHINGTON (AP) - People living along the East Coast enjoyed the fastest income growth during the record prosperity of the 1980s, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. At the top of the list were residents of New Jersey, whose per capita incomes jumped an average 8.0 percent annually, to $24,968, between 1980 and 1990, according to a study by the department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. The national average was 6.5 percent annual growth, to $18,685, for the decade. Other top growth states, during the longest peacetime economic expansion in U.S. history, were Massachusetts, up an average 7.9 percent each year to $22,642; and New Hampshire, up 7.8 percent to $20,789. Tied for fourth place, with 7.7 percent annual growth, were Connecticut, at $25,358, and Maine, $17,200. Wyoming, whose per capita income growth averaged just 3.8 percent annually, to $16,398, was at the bottom of the list. Just above it were Alaska, up 4.6 percent eaqh year to $21,761; Oklahoma, up 5.1 percent to $15,444; and Louisiana, up 5.2 percent to $14,391. Per capita, income is the annual total personal income divided by the resident population. Despite topping the growth list for the last decade, residents of New Jersey were not the wealthiest people in the nation as the 1990s began. That distinction went to those living in Connecticut, who had a per capita income totaling $25,358. New Jersey was No. 2, followed by Massachusetts, $22,642; New York, $21,975, and Maryland, $21,864. The next five were Alaska, $21,761; California, 20,795; New Hampshire, $20,789; Turn to la só m e, page 10. Gorbachev’s plea for investm ent gets icy reception in Japan TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s elite toasted and cheered Mikhail S. Gorbachev on Wednesday, but turned a cold shoulder to the Soviet leader’s frank plea for aid and investment as talks failed to resolve a territorial dispute. Gorbachev, in a speech to parliament, urged Japan to join the “new spirit in Soviet-U.S. relations” that began with the end of the Cold War and promised that the Soviet Union would never attack Japan. He also claimed broad Soviet military reductions in Asia and said he did not intend to interfere with Japan’s most important relationship, its security treaty with America. Yet midway through Gorbachev’s historic four-day visit, deep-seated Japanese doubts about their giant Soviet neighbor and its economic stability were proving more difficult to overcome than Cold War hostility. Accompanied by his wife, Raisa, the 60-year-old Soviet president entered the wood-paneled main chamber of the Diet, or parliament, to a standing ovation. He received another when he finished speaking 45 minutes later. In his most plain-spoken request to date for foreign aid, Gorbachev warned that “the development of a new peaceful world order will largely depend on the outcome of perestroika. ... We are counting on support for our efforts, particularly now as we go through this critical stage.” “If we let the new social processes get out of hand, the country may really be thrown into the chaos that gives birth to dictatorship,” hè said in a speech interrupted seven times by applause. At a luncheon meeting earlier, Gorbachev was blunter Turn to Soviet, page 13. U.S. analysts: Saddam has strengthened grip on pow er M ark Colby D avidson, VP fo r S m ith B am oy investm ent counselors, h as a personalized licence p la te . H e has been w aitin g fo r th e DQ W to d o s e o ve r 3 ,9 0 0 , today It did fb r th e firs t tim e e v e r - 3 0 0 4.4 0 . WASHINGTON (AP) —Despite President Bush’s desire to see Saddam Hussein toppled or exiled, U.S. government analysts say the Iraqi president has strengthened his grip on power since the war’s end by snuffing out two major revolts. Bush and his administration had fanned the flames of rebellion by urging the Iraqi people to rid themselves of Saddam. With the failure of the Shiite and Kurdish revolts, the administration is looking to senior military officers or leaders of his ruling Socialist Baath Party to remove Saddam. “ But it’s a long shot,” said one government analyst who spoke only on condition of anonymity. This analyst said the administration has a “kind of pious hope that those surrounding” S arid am would get rid of him when they realized the ruin he has brought on his onceprosperous country. But the catch is that those in the best position to remove Saddam are also the ones probably most loyal to him, having survived numerous purges to weed out any real or imagined opposition, he said. “ Saddam ’s dom estic position has improved greatly with the regime’s victory in the last month,” said another analyst with access to information about Iraqi politics. “ He does face enormous long-term problems and threats,” he added. Government planners are also hoping that these problems — namely Iraq’s economic ruin — will make it impossible for the Iraqi leader to recover and will hasten his political demise. For now, the administration is stymied. “Much of its thinking is wishful,” said one government analyst. Asked by reporters on Tuesday whether Saddam was any closer now to leaving power, Bush answered, “I would think so, but I can’t prove it.” Reflecting his frustration, Bush said he might consider granting safe passage to the Iraqi leader if Saddam agreed to relinquish power and leave Iraq. But Bush also said he Tarn to Saddam, page 1 }. £22 £ ± Bravo to , ASU’s provost search Committee for finally coming up with a list of four finalists for the long unfilled No. 2 administrative position. Boo to defeated executive vice president candidate, Adrian Fontes. Fontes recently filed two complaints a lle g in g q u estio n ab le ca m p aig n violations against Executive Vice President-elect Christian H»"''- •;'’ .u, Adrian; don’t he • .„„»user '"»i A bellowing, ballyhooing boo to Gov. Fife Symington for his pitiful allotment toward education in the newlyannounced budget plan. Officials originally feared ' the worst possible education scenario would come from the legislative staff. But Symington, who ran on a campaign platform that boasted “top priority” education, made initial proposals seem light. He hacked the education budget beyond repair while f a t t e n i n g th e s t a t e ’s to u r is m department. Bravo to the ASU M aster Plan Cor" e’“ tee for making a sincere effort to inn»” -»- students and surrounding neighborhood associations in the planning process for University growth. Boo to Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega for contradicting himself. Ortega criticized a student (who was rejected by the student regent selection committee) for having a “poorsport attitude” when the rejected candidate personally delivered his own resume to the governor’s office. Earlier that same week, Ortega wrote a letter to Symington, endorsing Rob Miller (another selection committee reject) for the same spot. "Go bacitodeep,Adrian. Electionsace over.v News, gossip hard to distinguish between E llen G ood m an W ashington Post Writer’s Group BOSTON Did Teddy Kennedy Have Anything On Underneath His Oxford Shirt? Did Nancy Reagan Have An Affair With Frank Sinatra In The White House? Do I Rave Your Attention Yet? Gossip and news. News or gossip? Not even my dictionary makes a very helpful distinction. Gossip is mildly defined as “the casual talk about other people’s affairs.” News is staidly described as “information about recent events.” Tell me where one ends and the other begins, and I’ll make you editor. This week, the Kurds are dying in the Middle East while the headlines are focused on whether it was a rape or a romp at the Kennedy Compound in Palm Beach. The hole in the ozone has grown while the lead story says that Nancy recycled presents. Unemployment has grown to 6.8 percent while Julia Phillips’ down-and-dirty book about Hollywood is die No. 1 best-seller. And before any of us get too selfrighteous, I give you the words of m y neighbor, a think-tank type who downed an entire page of Kennedy copy with his morning coffee and told me: “I regret to say that I read every word.” That just about sums up everyone’s ambivalence about gossip-news. Dove to read it. Hate to have read it. Inhale the dirty details. Exhale criticism of the reporters Who write diem. Ivana Trump, Gary Hart, Elizabeth Taylor. In the global village, there is an odd parity between celebrities of every stripe from Washington to Hollywood. They are our neighbors and we want to know them. National Enquirer aside, how should a reputable newspaper Cover the rich, famous and occasionally infamous? This is the sort of question that editors actually worry over when we get together, as we are doing this week in Boston at the American Society erf Newspaper Editors convention. The best part of talking about coverage is that it gives us a wonderful opportunity to repeat all the juicy details without being caught gossiping. Is it news when th e nephew of Sen. Kennedy, William Smith, is named as a rape suspect? Absolutely. Is it news when someone says they saw a naked woman with long hair walk into the water at their beach? Uh. Do we have the right to know if Nancy, not Ronnie was running the country? Yup. Do we have the right to know if Nancy’s mother loved bathroon jokes, or if her husband was stepping out on her the night Patti was born? W ell.. . . We come up with all sorts of excuses for reporting information that is something between scandalous and scurrilous. We can write and read about sex and sleaze while under the guise of Character and governing. K itty Kelley herself, author of the Nancy Reagan book, which came Federal Express for immediate publicity, once won an award for “Cultural” reporting. Her hatchet still carries samples of blood from other victims, including Jacqueline Onassis. But this time, she justifies her work as investigative journalism: “It goes to the heart and soul of hypocrisy.1’ So does that comment. W hether new spapers ru n Kelley’s reporting or bur own, we salve our conscience by debating the journalistic “standards” of gossip-news. Do you have two sources on Teddy’s undies or lack thereof? Did Kitty lift quotes from her book on Frank? Can Julia ¡Phillips prove that Warren Beatty is “priapic”? These sometimes ludicrous standards are ways that we attempt to responsibly report the irresponsible. After all, in West Africa there is a tribe called the Ashanti that cuts off the lips of members caught gossiping about the chief. But here we have to figure it out on our own. W arts and all, Kelley's book shows famous flawed C o d y S h ea rer North American Syndicate WASHINGTON — I felt a bit virtuous last week when Kitty Kelley’s shameful and sloppy book on Nancy Reagan hit the bookstores. Ms. Kelley had called me on several occasions in recent years to have lunch with her in order to lay out some of my stories about the Reagans, since our families grew up near one another in Pacific Palisades, Calif., though we were not close friends by any means. Every time she’d call I’d refuse her request, and even those from persistant mutual friends who called on her behalf. I turned Kitty Kelley down, not because I’m an unfriendly person. I make a point of always trying to help colleagues. It’s just that my past experiences with Kitty Kelley led me to believe that she was less than trustworthy. In a way, she and Nancy Reagan are quite sim ilar. They are both unscrupulous, ambitious and ruthless. This is an important fact to know when reviewing Kelley’s slimy opus, because it leads one to believe that none of Mrs. Reagan’s inner circle of friends would have ever confided in Kitty Kelley, given her background. You never trust anyone you don’t feel good about and Kelley is that kind of person. My hunch is that Kelley only interviewed low-level characters, who didn’t know that much about the real Nancy Reagan, which explains why the book is full of unsubstantiated allegations and innumerable acts of guilt by association. Many of Kelley’s claims would never have made it past a city editin' on a small suburban newspaper. Kelley’s suggestion that Nancy Reagan and Frank Sinatra were getting it on upstairs in the family quarters of the White House is not proven. Though the book says staffers snuck Frank Sinatra upstairs when President Reagan was out of town and would hold her phone calls, that doesn’t mean anything. Did Kelley ever interview two or three of Mrs. Reagan’s closest friends who described Mr. Sinatra’s performance in bed? Of course not. That is what Kelley needed to prove her point and she didn’t get it. In this case, she and Simon and Schuster ought to be ashamed of themselves. No one can miss the bottom line in Kelley’s book. Nancy Reagan and her husband were a bunch of conniving, social­ climbing hypocrites, without any dqep-seated convictions. As a case in point, Kelley repeatedly emphasizes how cheap Nancy Reagan was. This is nothing new. All Kelley had to do was travel to the Brentwood Mart in West Los Angeles and interview the butchers in the meat department. They would have told her that Mrs. Regan routinely asked for discounts and free food when she was the governor’s wife. I suspect she did this because she felt insecure about not having as much money as her Rodeo Drive friends in Beverly Hills. Moreover, Kelley makes no mention of the fact that Nancy Reagan often solicited other friend’s clothing for her husband. Her technique was to come up to someone at a party and comment on what a wonderful tie, belt or shirt they were wearing. She’d then say something to the effect that Ronnie would love one of those. Whereupon her flattered friend would take off whatever they were wearing and offer it to her husband as a gift. What’s important is that Mrs. Reagan acted as a freeloader while her husband traveled around the country giving speeches about welfare chiselers. In good conscience, how could Ronald Reagan attack welfare cheats when his wife was hustling everyone in Los Angeles? So what if Nancy Reagan happened to be tight with a dollar, does that change Ronald Reagan’s place in history as one who helped end the cold war ? How are these facts related to one another? While Kelley emphasizes that Nancy Reagan ran the country for eight years, she completely overlooks why the former first lady persuaded her husband to break bread with the Russians. Nancy Reagan did this, according to close family friends, because she wanted to prove to daughter Patti in a spiteful m anner that Ronnie wasn’t an out-of-touch, facist warmonger like Patti always believed. By maneuvering her husband to the negotiating table with the Russians, in response to their initial overtures, Mrs. Reagan played a critical role in U. S. history. Who knows if Kelley ever, learned of Nancy’s true motivation? It may not m atter to her since she received $4 million advance from Simon and Schuster, which encouraged her to insert every negative anecdote she’d ever heard about Nancy Reagan in her book. Unfortunately, unless you’re acquainted with the Reagans, one doesn’t know what to believe, I know Nancy Reagan’s manipulative, heavy-handed ways, but I doubt she ever helped her daughter obtain an abortion, as Kelley contends. There’s no question Mrs. Reagan was obsessive about her children, to a fault. During Parents Weekend at Yale University in fall 1976, for example, she and Ronnie had gone out to dinner with their freshman son to get a pizza when the threesome happened to encounter some of young Ron’s drunken roommates on campus. Being Parents Weekend, Ron introduced his roommates. At which point, one of the more intoxicated ones in the group happened to vomit at Mr. and Mrs, Reagan’s feet. Mr. Reagan tried to comfort the embarrassed young man and did so by telling him he also used to do the Same thing “all the time.” But Mrs. Reagan was horrified and eventually tried to convince young Ron to move into another college at Yale. Regardless of all the failings and omissions in Kelley’s book, there is value in some of her reporting, such as President Reagan paying for an abortion in the 50s, because it underscores what an inadequate job most national political reporters do in covering politicians. Too many areas of import are off limits. It’s unfortunate Kelley never had the guts to reveal some of what she learned in a magazine article years befpre, when the American people really needed to know more. At a time When public figures spend so much effort and money portraying themselves as something they are not, a view from second-level staffers, however imprecise, provides an important reminder that famous people are flawed humans too. Kelley has done jtist that, wartsand all. O p in io n State Press 1 L E Page 5 Thursday, April 18,1991 T T E R S ^ 5 -----J ^ Don’t take it personally. Editor: I recently observed “Lattie’s Dog” come under fire again. The letters all have different authors, but the underlying theme is the same: the State Press should discontinue publishing the feature because the cartoon is rude, insulting, profane, childish, immature, juvenile, moronic, racist, etc. Furthermore, some people believe that it promotes date rape and alcoholism. Hey people ! Wake up ! I'll be the first to admit the subject matter of “Lattie’s Dog” is not always the purest in nature. But if you happen to be one of the people taking offense to Ford M.’s idea of humor, that’s too bad. Maybe if you kept quiet, he might switch to a different target for laughs. But by continually whining and sniveling, you will only get pummelled further. The main purpose is to make the readers laugh. Periodically, some person or group is going to be at the short end of the stick. Don’t take it personally. Lastly, for those of you who think “Lattie’s Dog” should be discontinued because it’s gross or disgusting, take a look at “The F ar Side.” In all my time here, I have yet to see one complaint about Gary Larson. Most would agree his idea of humor is far more disgusting than Ford M.’s, but it’s funny nevertheless. Take the’cartoon for its face value — a cartoon to make people laugh or get a chuckle. If you want something wholesome and pure, read the Christian Science Monitor. So the next time you read “Lattie’s Dog,” and you find yourself so completely outraged that you can’t see straight, just relax. If that doesn’t work, quit reading the comic section. Dan Vasehko Senior, Geography ? i . o s A N Bogus bill Editor: Currently, during the annual charity campaign, each state employee receives a booklet which provides information about various charities. Most of the listed charities are affiliated with the United Way, but many are not. There is a bill in the state Legislature, Senate Bill 1433, which proposes to change the law to allow the Board of Regents to provide a different list to University employees. The regents plan to list only United Way affiliated charities. v -This means that the Nature Conservancy, UNICEF, NAACP, the Sierra Club and Planned Parenthood plus many other groups that don’t quite fit the United Way mold will be left off the University list. SB 1433 has already passed the Senate (with considerable lobbying by the United Way charities) . I urge everyone to call their state representative today and voice their opposition to SB 1433. The toll-free number for the Legislature is 1-800-352-8404. John Kromko State Representative, District 11 , Free speech guaranteed 'Shelter in the m ountains , massoud the rebel struck o il . m a s s iv e MILITAR* AID TOR THE OPPRESSED PEOPLE Of KURDISTAN WILL ARRIVE SHORTLY, vwile buhdihó a Not a laughing matter Editor: I know you receive many comments, both pro and con, about “Lattie’s Dog,” and-1 usually don’t have much of an opinion one way or the other. How to liaise Finals Scores ip Monday’s State Press was “cute. ” However, Tuesday’s strip was beyond anything even resembling a mere hint of humor. I don’t know if Mr. Ford M. has the slightest inkling of how many bomb threats the University receives over the course of one year, but in our college alone, threats S T A F are numerous. This is not a laughing matter. It poses a very real terror in the lives of those people working in the buildings on campus as well as disrupting the business of the University (namely teaching students). I would hope that the State Press would take some responsibility in what it allows to be printed (at least to insure the safety and well-being of the students, faculty and staff). Marsha Giles Administrative Assistant College of Fine Arts Editor: In response to the article in the State Press about the ASU Review, and in response to the first issue of the Review i t s e l f , I w rite to c o r r e c t a few misinterpretations that both may have created. First, the Campus Environment Team (CET) has not recently broadened Hie code of conduct. At the recommendation of a separate study committee, the president adopted an anti-harassment code last May, before the CET was appointed. Second, one of the first acts of the newly appointed CET was the drafting and recommendation of a set of interpretive guidelines that ensure that the anti­ harassment code would not be applied to infringe upon constitutionally protected speech. I was the principle drafter of those guidelines, and the ACLU and the First Amendment team at a major law firm helped with the final drafts. President Coor heartily supported that effort, and he officially adopted the guidelines as an inseparable part of the anti-harassment policy. Copies of the policy, complete with the interpretive guidelines, are available in the Offiee of the General Council, ASB 202 or the Office of Equal Opportunity, ASB 113. Third, President Coor, the CET and E F State P ress SUZANNE ROSS Editor TENNY TATUS1AN Managing Editor COLUMNIST: DanNowidd ---- .HOBART ROWLAND City E d » o r . ^ _ w - . — — CARTOONISTS: Rob Minton, Julie Sigwart. Asst. City Editor.________________ ______ ___ KEVIN SHEH Copy Chief___________________ _______ DAWN DEVRIES MAGAZINE STAFF: Caaebeer, Michdle Craft, Vkki Culver Asst . Copy Chief_____________________ KRIS TIMMONS Joel Gelpe, Randy Hawkins, Christine Herfaransotv Mary Rose News Editor.______________________KRISTEN JOHNSON Lafreniere, Aaron Levy, Laurie Notaro, Chanda R. Shahani, Opinion Editor.____________________________ MICHELLEROBERTS Christy Tomlinson Mark Jas.iynan, Jon Wab; Kramer Wetzel Asst. Opinion Editor._____________ MICHAEL LAMANT1A Photo EdiAr..^ J. SOKOL PRODUCTION: Cassaundra Cavineas, Celia Hamman-Cueto, — - "Sports-Eijitpr------------ ------------------------------ PAUL CORO Holly Hiatt, Barry Kelly, Jeffrey Lucas, Mark Nothaft, Frank N. Asst. Sports Editorm~.«fm.M.w.»..m« . » .^ ~ . .D A N ZEIGER Ran ilia, RenatoSalomon«, Eric Zotcavage. Graphics Editor.....______ :........................STEVEN KRICUN Magazine Editor............. .— ....................NICOLE CARROLL SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Colt Dodrill, Leo Gonzales. Magazine Managing Editor.......................CAR1N CUMMINS Todd M artin, C hristine M illan, Lance Newm an, Neil Assoc. Magazine Editor._______________ STEVEN KRICUN Schnelwar, Dan Thompson, John Vaccaro, Danielle Webster. REPORTERS: Kenneth Brown, A nita Carcone, Teena Hie State Press is published Monday through Friday during Chad well, Andrew Fa light, Jennifer Franklin, Kellye Kratch, the academic year> except holidays and exam periods, at Patricia Mah, Kris Mayes, David Pundt, Diane Santorico, Judi Matthews Center^ Room 15, Arizona State University, Tiempe, Tancos. Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (802) 965-2292. We do not answer SPORTS REPORTERS: Marty Murphy, Amy Slade, Lorenzo questions of a general nature. Advertising and Production: Sierra Jr., Darren Urban. (602)965-7572. The State Prese it the only newspaper exclusively published PHOTOGRAPHERS: Joe Barnason, Irw in D augherty for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views Jeorgetta Douglas, Scott Troyanos, Tamara Wofford. published in this newpaper are not necessarily those of ASU COPY EDITORS: Sonja Lewis, Tabitha Privett-Dromiack. administration, faculty, staff or student body. D I T O R I A L B student leaders have acted courageously and responsibly this year in encouraging freedom of expression while addressing problems of racial tensions. I have described these efforts in detail in letters to the State Press and to the College of Law student newspaper, the D evil’s Advocate. Indeed, a nationally syndicated columnist plans to publish a column within a few weeks praising ASU for distinguishing itself from the many universities that admittedly have adopted a less careful approach to these problems. The University has not violated free speech rights, and it has no intention of doing so. If it ever does, I hope that the State Press and the Review can bring the problem to the attention of the University community so that we can all react appropriately. Finally, I welcome the Review to the marketplace of ideas on campus. The CET encourages discussion and debate of c h a lle n g in g is s u e s d e a lin g w ith n o n d is c r im in a tio n , f r e e s p e e c h , m ulticultural education and political correctness. If any reader desires copies of letters and press releases reflecting the CET’s statement on these topics, please send me a note at the College of Law. Charles Calleros Chair, CET O A R D Unsigned editorials reflect the views of thè editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and thè board decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include; Suzanne Ross Editor Tenny Tatusian Managing Editor Michelle Roberts Opinion Editor Hobart Rowland City Editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, and major (or any other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement of Matthews Center or else addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1502, Stata P r»» Thursday, April 18,1991 Page 6 A d a y in the life o f Fife in clu des speeches, lu n ch eo n s TERI JANUS C ontributing W riter It was 6 a.m. on a clear Wednesday morning when the alarm next to Gov. Fife Symington’s bed roused him for work. A conversation Symington had late the night before with the U. S. Ambassador for Kuwait still weighed heavily oh his mind as he let the two dogs out and slopped his pet pig, Hampton. An hour later, the governor was showered and dressed, waiting for his two Department of Public Safety bodyguards to arrive and escort him through the day. A picture of confidence, Symington looked the part of governor in a neatly pressed navy suit and polished black shoes. While waiting, he reached into his pocket for a tube of chaps tick, a ritual he repeated several times throughout the day. At 7:30 a m., Symington met for a weekly breakfast with Republican legislators to discuss the week’s major state issues. Almost two hours later, the governor arrived at Sky Harbor Airport’s Department of Public Safety office in Phoenix. Symington’s mother waited in a DPS car for him. She was meeting a friend in Tucson for the day, but planned to attend her son’s appearance at Sahauro Elementary School in Casa Grande. In tiie air, the governor and his press secretary, Doug Cole, discussed a letter between two high-ranking national officials. Symington told Cole he wanted to stay out of it After the plane landed in Casa Grande at 10 a.m., the governor took a car to Sahauro Elementary School where a second-grade class was awaiting his arrival for a live press conference. The second-graders were the reporters, of course. The children questioned Symington about his job, his favorite food and his favorite animal. Symington, always smiling, told the children about his pet pig, Hampton. After the 20-minute conference, the governor called it the best conference of his career and headed to the schoolyard to address 500 students. At 10:45 a.m., the governor boarded the plane for Tucson, grabbing the second of what will be five meals that day. He said he remained on a campaign diet between bites of tunafish and potato chips. “I still manage to lose weight,” Symington said. “I eat small amounts every time, and 1 jog three miles every other day.” Arriving in Tucson at 11 a.m., Symington traveled to the Doubletree inn where Peggy Gitting from KUAT-TV is awaiting his arrival for a taped interview. Gitting questioned him for 15 minutes, then Symington left for a Rotary Club luncheon. On the way to the luncheon, Cole comments that Gitting was pretty tough with her questions. Symington replies, “That's OK, I was fine.” At the 12:15 p.m. luncheon, the palm-pressing and ovations made it difficult to tell Symington had served only five weeks as governor. Symington used the admiration to sell his budget proposal, explaining he needed their support for his budget to succeed. The governor arrived at his Tucson office for the first time at 2 p.m. to meet with Pima County’s tax analyst, Arnold Jeffers. At 3 p.m., Symington discussed transportation issues with Bob Sundt, H. Wilson Sundt and James McDonald of the Arizona Associated General Contractors Highway Chapter. They met in the Tucson office to express their concerns about the Arizona Department of Transportation. Symington put them at ease. “Government is a service business, we are serving the public. I hope to serve my customer’s better,” thè governor said, adding that there will be definite change at the Arizona Department of Transportation. He said hé was in the process of hiring a new ADOT director. Symington’s Tucson trip ended with a 4 p.m. meeting of the Tucson Airport Authority. The governor discussed his vision of the future of aviation in Arizona answering questions concerning the introduction of a regional airport in Arizona. The governor compared, the Valley’s potential situation to Atlanta, where its regional airport created thousands of jobs and billions of dollars for the economy. At 5:40 p.m., running behind schedule, Symington helped his mother get back onto the plane. He had 30 minutes to discuss education and his proposed budget while the plané headed for Phoenix. Symington said he does not agree with the figures used by Arizona universities, adding that the universities will lose only .6 percent in general funding, rather than the 3 percent Jo« B am ason/S tate Press F ife Sym ington w aits w ith h is m other fo r a plane a t Sky Harbor A irp o rt on his w ay to speak to a group o f elem entary students in Casa G rande. ASU’s Budget Director Alan Carroll Claims. Symington said his plan is for the university administration to absorb the cuts. After the flight, Symington kissed his mother good-bye and escorted her to a second DPS car, leaving the airport to attend a 6:15 p.m. dinner at an Arizona Supreme Court justice’s house. „ His wife, Ann, met him there. He made it home in time for a pillow fight with his son, Thomas, at 10 p.m. It messed up Tliomas’s room, but it was the only chance Symington had to spend with his son that day. Symington switched on the news and checked his schedule for the following day. Finally, the governor could retire for the night. ¡iiiiiiiiU tiiiïS M iiiïiiiiis j j ü man iuHiiîiu i j iHi üi! :^ C am pus A S A S U L E C T U R E S E R IE S p r e s e n t s . . . Beer and Soda Photo Developmq Health & Beauty Aids 1Compact Oiscs ? S C O L L E G E A V E - N E X T T O .C O L L E G E S T R E E T D ELI 10pm Sat 9a m 10 pm Sun 11 a m-10pm Phone: 967-4049 DAVI D L E E R O T H "THE GREAT DEBATE" Oil The Existence o f G od DAVID LEE ROTH Formal debate followed by a question and answer period. DAVID LEE ROTH DAVID LEE ROTH Dr. Theodore Guleserian • Arizona State University, Associate Professor of Phi­ losophy, 1971 - present • Ph D. Yale University, 1963 • Area of Teaching Expertise - Metaphysics, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Re­ ligion, Philosophy of Lan­ guage, Espistemology • C.L.A.S. Distinguished Teaching Award for Fac­ ulty, 1985 DAVI D LEE ROTH A LITTLE AIN'T ENOUGH FEATURING: A UL' AIN'T ENOUGH Dr. William Lane Craig • Université Catholic de Louvain, Belgium, Visiting Scholar, 1987 - present • Ph.D. in Philosophy, Uni­ versity of Birmingham, England, 1977 • D. Theology in Philosophy, Universität München, West Germany, 1984 • Associate Professor of Re­ ligious Studies, Westmont College, 1986-present Where: Murdock Hall, room 101 When: Thursday, April 18th TAPE $109® # $ $ 8 8 ... I I c o no s • ■ I2 2 L Thursday, April 18,1991 Tempe may spend $3 m illion to lure in Angels By D A V ID A . PUNDT S ta te Press Tempe officials said it could cost up to $3 million in renovations to lure the California Angels to Diablo Stadium for spring training. Deputy City Manager Jim Piper, who is handling the negotiations, said that while talks are still hi preliminary stages, “it’s possible there could be an agreement within 90 days.” “The goals and objectives of both the team and the city are very similar,” Piper said, adding that because the Angels have their minor league facilities in Mesa’s Gene Autry complex, the city now can concentrate solely on improving Diablo Stadium “Exactly what improvements are made depends upon what the architect comes up with,” he added. Talks between Tempe officials and the Seattle Mariners, the current stadium tenants, broke off on March 22, when agreements could not be reached on stadium inprovements and a lease renewal. The California Angels said they were ready to negotiate with the city a few days later. Hie Mariners’ lease runs out at the end of the 1992 Cactus League season, and the team, which has been in Tempe since 1977, is exploring options in Tucson and Florida. If all goes as planned, city officials hope the stadium will be ready for the Angels in the beginning of 1993. Meanwhile, HOK Inc., a Kansas City, Mo.-based architectural firm, is proposing changes to the stadium that would include relocating team Offices and die press box to a second tier above the home plate seating area. “The stadium is very unique in the way it’s constructed in that once inside, you can see the field immediately,” said HOK Vice President Earl Santee. “And moving the press box and offices will enhance that even more.” While Tempe did not designate cost parameters for improvements, Santee said HOK suggestions should approach $3 million. Earlier city estimates have ranged from $3 million to $5 million. A new stadium would cost an estimated $7 million to $8 million. The Associated Press contributed to this report. City Council likely to approve World Cup Soccer bid The Tempe City Council likely will approve a request today allowing the city to bid for the chance to host the opening rounds of the 1994 World Cup Soccer Tournament at Sun Devil Stadium . Tempe City Councilman Neil Giuliano said he expects the proposal to pass at tonight’s meeting without debate. “Encouraging World Cup Soccer to come to the Valley is a very appropriate expenditure of city money,” he said. The World Cup Soccer Presentation Committee asked the city for a $1,000 contribution, support in welcoming the games and a banner displayed over Mill Avenue 30 days before the event. Deputy City Manager Gary Brown said ASU will collect ticket revenues and sales taxes from the event and bill the University for out-of-pocket expenses. “If the sales taxes collected are less than city expenses for the event, the University would owe the city the difference,” Brown said. Officials said ASU would recoup those expenses through contract negotiations with the World Cup Soccer Association. “That way our taxpayers are assured that city expenses will be covered,” Brown said. Committee Chairman Paul Wiggs, director of economic development for Arizona Public Service, said every Valley community he approached has voiced support for the request. “Mesa, Litchfield Park, Peoria and Phoenix (city) councils have all pledged to participate,” Wiggs said. “Gilbert passed their resolution Tuesday, and Glendale will consider it at their meeting next week.” Wiggs said the committee also intends to go before the Arizona Legislature to ask for a reduction in the 5.5 percent ticket sales tax for the event. VERYONE IS INVITED TO THE ' VALLEY’S HOTTEST LADIES NITE AT “ By D A V ID A . PUNDT I-CAMPUS-I lC ornerj 712 S. C olleg e i i i i i i i i_ ASU SWEATSHIRTS 1/2 PRICE W h e n yo u buy 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 . E xp. 4 -3 0 -9 1 . - I t i l i R O T H E K S BOOKSTORE IS YO UR G REEK A N Y C O I N — A N Y D R IN K HEADQUARTERS Ladies 8-1Q • G reat Prices • • Great Service • TW O ASU LO CA TIO N S 6 2 $ E . A PA CH E 9 6 7 -5 4 6 $ 6 2 0 S . COLLEGE ■ 2 9 -1 1 2 * 8-11:30 pm Beer 1 11-Close $279 MEN Come dance with the HOTTEST girls to the Shreadding sounds straight from NYC with the one & only L Foes are 1/2 K x n d trip fro m Phoenix based o n ro u n d trlp puchase. Costa Rica London Tokyo Frankfurt Paris DJ HARDWARE 829-7777 ASU. S ! £ $204 $299 $329 $345 $343 Restrictions d o a p p ly . S tudent status m a y b e rc c p re d . 1320 E. Broadway Tempe, AZ EuraHpasses issued on-the-spot! A m erica's d rie st and largest stu d e n t travel organization. Council Trave H UNIVERSITY A m s te r d a m Located a t Forest and University, directly across from A.S.U.! 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 A 1 AY BRQAQW W e'll Hock your world! NO CRY BABIES 966-3544 Mowopen Saturdays 10am- 8pmI State P fM t JhursdgjApHM^WÎ Pagejî Strike C o stta w d from page 3. “They want to take our work rules and change them at will,” be said. “These are rules that protect our days off, our hours of service, starting times and other things. These are things that those who have gone before us fought for and won over the past 100 years, and they just want to throw them out the door. “We want to work,” said Glen Trexler, a local union official in Albuquerque, N.M. “We’re not out here to be dissidents or anything. We just want to support our families.” There was some scuffling on picket lines in Philadelphia ami one man was arrested. But in Kansas City , “everybody is being civil,” said Al Mauro, vice president of Kansas City Southern. Though the striking unions work on freight lines, most Aihtrak passenger trains and many commuter trains run on tracks owned by the freight railroads and often rely on their union signalmen, brakemen and other employees. Some 21,000 commuters who rely on the state-run CalTrain on the San Francisco Peninsula had to find alternate ways to work. But in Chicago, commuter trains ran on schedule after a court order kept open one railroad’s commuter lines. Then three other railroads reached agreements to keep their commuters lines running. Ajntrak’s busiest region, the Northeast corridor from over the life of the contract along with decreased health benefits,” he said. Washington to Boston, was not affected because Amtrak owns that track, although some commuter lines outside Washington were shut down. General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. predicted a virtual production shutdown by week’s end. “We anticipate that approximately 75 to 80 percent of our operations will be affected within the next 24 hours and all plants will be affected by the end of the week,” GM spokeswoman Karen Longridge said Wednesday. Manufacturers in Rochester, N.Y., said a prolonged strike could have a disastrous effect. “If the strike lasts longer than a week to 10 days — two weeks tops — it could put a stranglehold on our economy,” said Charles M. Goodwin of the Greater Rochester (N Y.) Metro Chamber of Commerce. Eastman Kodak Co. officials said the photography company normally uses trains to deliver 40 percent of its film and products to buyers. It began switching to trucks Tuesday in anticipation of the strike, spokesman Jim Blamphin said. Farmers also were concerned. “In Minnesota, this is the planting season. There’s a great deal of fertilizer moving up to Minnesota from the south right now. The strike does threaten to cut off fertilizer movement,” said Minnesota Transportation Commissioner John Riley. Most coal-burning power plants had big stockpiles. “With our current coal inventory, it would take a long, long strike to causé problems,” said B.J. Smith, a spokeswoman for American Electric Power Service Corp. in Lancaster, Ohio. AEP operates 19 major coal-fired generating plants in seven states. Bo V P i n Botoli»* F R ID A Y N IG H T 9:30p m -1 :3 0 a m S A T U R D A Y N IG H T 11p m -2am R o c k N R o ll w ith a liv e D J P rize s a w a rd e d b o th n ig h ts) Bowling $2.40 24 We are now open hours a day! on Fridays & Saturdays! 2 a .m . to 9 a.m . - S p e c ia l D is c o u n ts o n B o w lin g an d S n a c k B ar. E le c tro n ic S c o rin g • F u ll S e rv ic e S n a c k B ar TElMàbwL I . VfSA ACADEMIC SOLUTIONS Shoes $1.25 1100 E. A p ach e • 967-1656 CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS DOWN B rin gin g New Freedom of Expression to the College Faculty The IBM Advanced Academic System can bee you to do what you do best: im part knowledge to your students. I In* HIM \(l\.m c t (! X cadcm ic S \ste m You can compose and design your own lectures and course m aterials—even add anim ation to stim ulate interest and understanding You can create im aginative literature for class or adm inistrative needs w ith the system’s graphics and desktop publishing capabilities. You can create an interactive environment with the system’s Classroom Presentation Option. By m eans erf student response keypads, your class can react to questions or discussion points projected on a screen. From research to classroom lectures, from grading papers to ad­ m inistrative and personal tasks, the system can help you be more pro­ ductive and creative. I )t‘si*MU‘nyNup* Restaurant E lig ib le Phoenix South on Central P IM A M E D IC A L IN S T IT U T E 2 3 0 0 E. B r o a d w a y R d ., T e m p e our already te rrific prices even better! O ur dinners include a fu ll course m eal With a ll the trim m ings—-from salad to dessert. So, dollar fo r d o lla r, when you’re hungry and you need a break, you can’t beat the Spaghetti Com pany! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! W ith 2 dinners fo r the price o f 1! *B u t you MUST have your current student I.D . card w ith you to take advantage o f th is offer. 15% g ratuity added to a ll discounted checks (except senior citize n discounts). 3 4 5 -7 7 7 7 Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Oi Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala and. Orders to go ARE N O T IN C LU D E D In the 2-for-1 special. in Old Town Tempe 4th Street and Mill 966-3848 H rttP rw Pag« 13 Thursday, April 18,1991 P ro v o s t—— Continued from page 1. academic professionals from 3 to 4 p.m. and with others from 4 to 5 p.m. on April 30 in the MU Pima Room. Glick will meet with faculty and academic professionals from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. and with students and staff from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. on May 2 in the MU Ventaiia Room. MacKinnon will meet with faculty at 2 p.m. and with others at 3 p.m. on May 7 in the MU Ventana Room. Munk said forms will be available for written comment on -the selection of the provost. “We hope that there is response, and that people show up to forums,” he said. Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega, a member of the search committee, said he hopes' students will attend and question the candidates. “I think students need to make sure that (the finalists) know the reason they’re being interviewed is for the students,” Ortega said. “The system is fen* students, and they shouldn’t be allowed to forget that.” Ortega said that , while “ all of the candidates look great on paper,” he is concerned that there are only four finalists. “ Four people is (a) pretty sm all (group),” he said* adding that he had anticipated m ore ethnically diverse candidates and women. ASU President Lattie Coor, who will select the provost, said he is pleased with the committee and its group of finalists. “The quality of the candidates and of the work of the search committee is to be commended,” he said. Coor said the hiring of the provost will be b ase d on le a d e rs h ip a b ilitie s , an understanding of the budget considerations a major university has to face and interest in the needs of students. The fin alist selected also should understand the direction and goals of the University in cultural diversity, economic development and community outreach, as well as the relationship between teaching and research at ASU, he said. “Then, of course, chemistry will be involved,” Coor said. institution. “ It’s such a fragile thing,” he said. “You can’t just stop in the middle of something. It’s not like we’re fully developed or half­ way developed. “We’re just beginning.” Sen. Jan Brewer, R-Peoria, suggested that ASU West depend more on the main campus in some areas, but Sen. Lela Alston, D-Phoenix, quickly responded by saying ASU Main is in financial trouble itself. “ I think ASU Main would be more happy to provide that support if they themselves were not being cut so dramatically,” she said. Former lawmakers who were key figures in developing ASU West testified on behalf of University officials, saying the “ASU West dream” is in jeopardy with the proposed budgets. Former Sen. Ann Lindeman, who with fellow lawmaker Sterling Ridge pushed for the development of the campus in the 1970s, speculated that the governor’s staff had a “personal vendetta” against ASU West. Some lawmakers contend that ASU West is too expensive to operate because of the higher per student cost that accompanies the lack of lower-division courses. The campus offers only upper-division course work. But Sen. Stan Furman, D-Phoenix, said he believes lawm akers simply were unaware of the impact of budget proposals. “It’s easier to beat up a little kid than a grown person,” Furman said. “This is a very young University, and (it) doesn’t have all the established lines of communication that some of the other schools do.” B u d g e t— C ontinued from page 1. appropriations for ASU West. Although the JLBC recommendations were initially attacked by those who claimed it robbed students, University officials hope the Legislature will lean toward the proposal in budget talks. The possible closure of Glendale’s Sundome Center for the Performing Arts — financed by ASU West — drew much of the night’s attention, but ASU West Provost Vernon Lattin said his main concern was aborted growth in the still-fledgling Soviet C ontinued from page about asking for aid. He threw out most of a prepared text in trying to persuade 600 business leaders he was serious about reforming the crumbling Soviet economy. “Our F ar East and Siberia have resources, but they lack the infrastructure to develop them,” Gorbachev said, adding that the Soviet Union has much to learn from Japan’s experience of converting military industries to commercial 'use. . S addam C datinued from page 3« hadn’t been approached by any broker to arrange such a deal. “We want him out of there so badly, and I think it’s so important to the tranquility... of Iraq, that under that condition we might” drop possible war crimes charges against Saddam, Bush said. Lawmakers are also vexed. Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., is asking the president to seek United Nations support for Gorbachev stressed'he was aware of the need for the Soviet Union to deal with its outstanding debts. “This year has been especially difficult because our oil exports have declined due to the Gulf War. But we have the resources to resolve the problem. Your understanding would be appreciated,” he said. But Japan’s hard-nosed business elders, whose saWy built this country into the world’s No. 2 economic power, said political and economic problems must be resolved before an ultimatum: Saddam and his party must relinquish power or face allied military attack. Only a few lawmakers were willing to go that far, but others supported the idea of a UN-sponsored war crimes tribunal, and House Speaker Thomas Foley suggested the international economic embargo be used as leverage to keep Saddam in check. The administration is walking a delicate line between wanting' Saddam out and they can invest. “It was all requests. (Gorbachev) didn’t have any gifts to offer us. That’s a pity,” said one executive who refused to give his name. Indeed, the Soviets are asking Japan for a loan to pay off hundreds of millions of dollars of debt for Japanese exports. As expected, there was no progress reported on Japan’s main condition for freeing up Japanese capital: that the Soviets return four islands off northern Japan seized in the closing days of World War II. fearing his removal could result in political chaos and a possible power grab by neighboring Iran and its Shiite proxies in Iraq. Saddam has skillfully played on that specter with the Sunni power elite in Baghdad, too, U.S. analysts say. Although Saddam’s power base is rooted in his hometown clan and is secular rather than religious, the country’s Sunni minority is more powerful than file generally less educated Shiite majority. “They (the Sunnis) have scores to settle with Saddam, but not at the expense of their privileged status in Iraq,” said a third analyst. “If they could get rid of Saddam without sinking the Sunni regime, a cabal of military and political leaders might do so.” But the risks are enormous. “They know they’d only have one shot, so to speak,” said another analyst. “They fail, and they’re dead.” ns . 20th Anniversary Party!. Saturday g| ’ \ a • ': - April 20th, 1991 ' --' ; ; . • 9:00 pm 7' ^ ( L iv e O u td o o r C o n c e r t J B ■ M O R N IN G S T A R ^ ;* H a 1160 E. University • Tempe featuring Walt Richardson See the BUDMAN & BUD GIRLS here on Saturday! % ■ ^ $2.00 donation to benefit BOYS HOPE CHARITY H 715 S. H ayden • T em pe, Arizona • 966-1911 (U niversity between R ural & M cC lintock) * ■ rj o 1990Perkins Restaurants O perating Company, L.P. C om ics Page 14 State Pres» Thursday; AprW 18» 1991 bv Bill Watterson Calvin and Hobbes FIRST leu DRINK. HALF TVE m u t IN "KUR THERMOS. TUM LEAVES EHCUGHRXM SiTCO CAN WAD TUE RESTOF 'KAJR. UjNCtt IN THERE. see , vere GOES MN JEILH SANDWICH AND A BANANA,/ T H E F A R S ID E LET \T SOAK TORA MlNMTE, THEN SHAKE \T AAi. OP INTO SLUDGE AND OWE VT DOWN.' Took sumach ncNt kkm the wfferehce, and \t sates Took teeth undue wear AND TEAR/ By GARY LARSON è m i ÛmwrSWS^ÿndStîj '%M f* ¥ : O óo - . 0005»......... <»e>XJ.-- V■ ■. *a4*X - by Garry Trudeau SHFS rid in g ITGFT5 m & e. YOUR SHFSAUSO MOTORCACIF* TUNING r r / Suddenly, one o f th e D prkonians began to fla g e lla te hysterically. S om ething, apparently, had .. gone dow n th e w rong pipe. by Julie Sigwart NEVER DONE ANY OF THOSE THING S/ VEAU..B U T IT 'S S T IL L . M Í PJAKY' ^t/¿¿AC^incL4ÁMm^ by Ford M. Lattie’s D og How ib Fin als scores,-. | RAFT. 3 f--------------------“ ° squire til ^tfü Soot] fi Ámb° * w a ' « Ä S s S s a ^ s ia g -^ NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Dissatisfied with your IQ? For less than $200, you can add 30 points. Tired of struggling to trim that waist? For that same money, you can buy an exercise machine that will take off inches without the StrainSound too good to be true? The federal government thinks so. That’s why it’s confiscating these products, as well as a purported breast enlarger and hemorrhoid cure, from a New Jersey mail-order company. In federal court Monday, the U. S. Food and Drug Administration was authorized to seize the supposed wonder products, found in mail-order catalogues distributed by Lifestyle Fascination Inc. Company manager Scott Carpenter insists the products work. He said he’s being targeted for purely economic reasons. ■ Take the Hemorrice, a hollow finger-shaped instrument that’s frozen before it’s applied. Because he sells a reliever of hemorrhoids, a lot of people lose money, he said. “The drugstores won’t touch it,” he said. “Let’s say you come in once a week to buy Preparation-H. If you were a drugstore, why cut all those sales by replacing it for something you would only sell once?” tt+ r FOR AN ORIGINAL 12" MEDIUM PIZZA with UNLIMITED TOPPINGS* FOR A 10" PEPPERONI PIZZA Pan Pizza available for $1.00 extra. Please mention special when ordering. ‘Single item portions only. CUI DOMINO'SPIZZA Exp. 5-2-91 Our drivers carry less than $20.00. Limited delivery areas to ensure safety. Our drivers are never penalized for late deliveries. ©1990 Domino's Pizza, Inc. SE RVING ASU SINCE 1980. University & Rural H o u rs 1 1 :0 0 a m -1 :3 0 a m S u n -T h u ; 1 1 :0 0 a m -2 :3 0 a m F ri.-S a t. Each offer not valid with any other coupons or offers. Subject to a ll. applicable state and local tax. Offers valid at this location only. State Press Page 15 Thursday, April 18,1991 Ehm ann n ot short o n b a seb a ll ta len t B y DAN ZEIGER S ta te Press With his outstanding play at shortstop this season making him a legitimate pro prospect, could it actually be possible that ASU’s Kurt Ehmann once only wanted to play football? Not that a little action on the gridiron is a bad experience, but if not for recurring tendinitis in his right shoulder that eventually ended his career, Ehmann probably would not have had the chance to become the solid baseball performer he is today. Ehmann decided to quit football after suffering his injury during his freshman year at Golden West College in Huntington Beach, Calif. Still with the hunger for competition, he elected to return to baseball by transferring to Mendocino College in Ukiah, Calif., where his father is the school president. “I went up there with a solid attitude that I wanted to get in the baseball games because I had been playing football,” Ehmann said. “I worked hard in the off­ season, and when the season did come around, I did well. I wasn’t playing shortstop — I played center field — and my concern coming here was to play short.” In his one season at Mendocino, Ehmann batted .413, set a new school record with 82 hits in 39 games, was chosen as the team’s most valuable player and was a first-team all-conference selection. He easily caught the attention of the Sun Devil coaches and was lured to Tempe with visions of being the starting shortstop. If only athletics were as easy for everyone else — Should circumstances prevent you from being a success at one sport, just move on to the next one and be a bigger star there. “My freshman year I thought I had a great season in football,’’ Ehmann said. “The coaches liked me and going into my sophomore year, I was an all-state free safety in junior college.then I got hurt, and I wound up getting back into baseball. I guess it was a pretty good thing I was injured. “I’m glad I got back into baseball. I knew it was my strength, but I kind of miss football too. Maybe I should look and see if (ASU football coach Larry) Marmie has any openings.” The physical education major certainly knows that his future is not as a two-sport star. Judging by his performance during the T .J . S o ko l/S ta te P m s ASU shorstop K urt Ehm ann has raised h is average 36 p oints to .302 by going 14-for-44 w ith tw o hom e runs and 10 RBI during his cu rren t 10-gam e h ittin g streak. last three weeks, in which he has performed at his highest level all season, Ehmann is quite content to stay on the diamond. The junior will take a career-high 10-game hitting streak into a series at No. 2 USC beginning Friday. Preseason evaluations of Ehmann said his hitting was a question, but he has raised his average 36 points to .302 by going 14-for-44 with two home runs and 10 Turn to Ehmann, page 16. Sun Devils m iss to p sp o t w ith split against UofA. By LORENZO SIERRA Jr. S ta te Press TUCSON - One pitch. That is how close the ASU softball team was to taking over first place in the Six-Pac. The eighth-ranked Sun Devils (35-12 overall, 7-3 Six-Pac) instead lost a tough 3-2 first contest to split a doubleheader with UofA and settle into second place. The Wildcats (44-9, 6-4) won the initial game on Kristin Gautier’s tworun double with ASU pitcher Karey James ahead on the count with two strikes in the bottom of the 10th. A strikeout would have given ASU a 2-1 win. “ It was a thriller,” Sun Devil coach Linda Wells said. “In the tie-breaker, something is going to give somewhere.” One ASU player who gave UofA hard times was starting pitcher Dawn Wood, who limited the Wildcats to ope run on three hits over 6% innings before giving way to Amber Tintsman. “I learned a lot today,” Wood said. “I learned that you have to battle with the batters.” On the other side of the battle was UofA ace Debbie Day, who went the distance and even drove in the Wildcats’ first run. Day, who improved her record to 22-4, gave up seven hits to die Sun Devils, who now feel they have the upper hand when the two teams meet on Tuesday. “I felt it was to our advantage that we got to see Day so much,” Wells said. “We saw her for 10 innings in the first game and we saw her in the second game when her arm was going to fall off.” Offensively, Christy Serritella and Rachel Brown both went 2-for-4 to pace the Sun Devils. In the second game, ASU dominated the nation’s No. 3 team in every aspect of the game. The Sun Devils used Brown’s third-inning RBI to chase starter Susie Parra from the game. A tired Day was greeted by Becky Davis’two-run double that capped a three-run third inning as ASU blanked the Wildcats 5-0. Terri Carnicelli picked up the win for the Sun Devils as she shut out UofA with a four-hit effort. “I felt strong from the beginning,” Carnicelli said. “I felt confident with all my pitches.” As confident as Carnicelli was with her pitches, the Sun Devil hitters were confident with their bats. Brown led the way by going 2-for-3 with an RBI. Liz Phillips went 2-for-4 with an RBI. After the heartbreaking first-game loss, the Sun Devils would have been forgiven had they suffered a letdown. Instead, the opposite happened, but Wells would not take credit for the rebound. “I didn’t know if it was anything I said,” Wells said. “I really think this is a hard-nosed group. They’re pretty mentally tough. They were appreciating that saying ‘Yeah, we should have won that game, but by golly, let’s get back at it’ and they have been that way all year.’’ After spending over a month on the road, ASU returns to Sun Devil Club Stadium Friday with a doubleheader against California. That series will be followed Saturday with a non­ conference game against Cal State-Northridge. Both doubleheaders start at 6 p.m. ASU m en’s tennis gets wins from Bulldogs, Pac-10 offices By DARREN URBAN S tate Press Irwin w u g h m y / A S U 's D ave Lom icky m akes a return In th e Sun D evils’ victo ry again st Fresno S tate On W ednes­ d ay a t W hitem an T en nis C enter. On Wednesday morning the ASU men’s tennis team had 17 victories on the season. By the afternoon, after a two-for-one feat courtesy of the conference offices, the Sun Devils had 19 victories with a 60 win over Fresno State at Whiteman Tennis Center. A decision from the Pac-10 giving ASU (19-9) a forfeit win over California for a rain-shortened March 15 match in Tempe, reincarnated the Sun Devils’ hopes of a 20-win season with one meet left after its blanking of the Bulldogs. “This was the most nervous I’ve been before a match all year,” ASU coach LoU Belken said. “We had a good showing coming off the weekend <5-1 and 5-3 losses to the Bay area schools). We were playing a team we had everything to lose against.” The conference gave the Sun Devils another win Wednesday morning. The Golden Bears, who were trailing ASU in singles play before the Friday match was rained out, went to Tucson to play UofA Saturday and failed to return to Tempe Sunday as per conference bylaws. “Our interpretation of the conference handbook said they had to stay,” Belken said, “They stated some reasons why they couldn’t stay. (Athletic Director) Charles Harris and (Associate Athletic Director) Herman Frazier took it to the league, and fortunately we have two administrators willing to put forth that effort.” The Pac-10 confirmed the win was ASU’s, but declined further comment. The decision put extra emphasis on the meeting with No. 25 FSU, which beat the Sun Devils last season in Tempe. Senior Dave Lomicky, who left the Bulldogs after his freshman year, struggled early in the No. 1 slot, but recovered fo ra 3-6, 7-6, 6-4 victory over his former school. “Dave did a nice job,” Belken said. “It was hard for him to play today because he really wants the win.” For Lomicky and fellow seniors Brian Gyetko, Dan Marting and Joel Finnigan, it was a clean sweep in the last home match of their college careers. “I’m kind of glad it’s over,” said Marting, who recorded a 6-4, 2-6,6-3 win. “They’re a pretty good team. Last year, we played them early in the season and we were overconfident. This year we knew what to expect.” Junior Ross Matheson, who captured a straight-sets victory, said ASU has stagnated just below its goals. “We’re borderline breaking the top five,” Matheson said. “ What the team is frustrated about is that we’ve been killing ourselves (in practice), but we can’t quite get up there. We want to do something special.” The Sun Devils wrap up their regular Turn to T ennis, page 17. Page 16 State Press Thursday, April 18,1991 B on o’s golf: ASU se n io r earn s p ra ise By AM Y SLADE S tate Press For someone who could not even break 100 as a freshman, being one of the top five golfers for the defending national champion Sun Devil wdmen’s golf team is quite a feat. Mindy Bono, the B o n o S p r i n g f i e l d , 111., native, who was a walk-on during her sophomore year at ASU, did not start playing golf until the summer after her senior year of high school “She’s worked really hard to get where she is,” ASU coach Linda Vollstedt said of the squad’s only senior. “She’s very appreciative of the opportunity that has been given to her.” “Most of the girls on the team have been playing since they were 10,” Bono said. “ ! played softball for 10 years before I decided to take up golf. . . I figured golf had a better future.’’ ;. : . * Vollstedt said it is rare for a player to walk on to such a strong program like ASU, but added that Bono was an exception to the rule because of her athletic ability . “I really admired her when she first came into my office,” Vollstedt said. “I told her if she practiced hard, didn’t cause any problems and did exactly as I told her, I’d give her a chance on the team.” En route to her present worth, which includes a low round score of 73 in the Lady Sun Devil and being a member of the 1990-91 traveling squad, Bono has spent endless hours on the course trying to perfect her skills. When she first came to Arizona, her threedigit scores were not the only thing that needed work. “When I go out and play, I ’ve got to trust my swing,” Bono said. “It’s my mental game that I heed to work on.” Vollstedt, who Bono said inspires her in the mental aspect of golf, spoke highly of Bono’s dedication to improve her game. “She has great work ethics and always practices really hard,” Vollstedt said. “She has great time management and adds maturity to our team. ” Bono’s practices consist of mostly work on her short putting, although she takes roughly 150 swings every session. She puts in three to four hours a day, four or five times a week, outside of tournament action. Bono said she gets personal satisfaction out of practice because it is the only way she improves. That rigorous schedule can get rough for a graduating senior. “I have great pride in my school work,” said Bono, who has a 3.0 grade point average. “I respect any athlete who has had a similar lifestyle throughout college, not just one year like me.” Bono, a journalism major with an emphasis in public relations, has already landed a full-time job with International Corporate Golf after graduation. Her job will consist of setting up golf outings for businessmen and coordinating various golf schools. “My goal was to stay in golf and PR was the perfect route,” Bono said. “Plus, I’ll still have time to work on my game.” Another way for Bono to improve her game, she said, is simply by watching other golfers. Former ASU Standout Billy Mayfair, Bono’s boyfriend and a PGA tour player, has served as a motivator for her as well. She highlighted last week’s Masters, where Mayfair tied for 12th, as a great learning experience. “He doesn’t want to force knowledge on me,” Bonosaid, “but he is more than willing to help if I ask.” She is still toying with the idea of pro golf, b u t know s h e r g a m e s till n ee d s improvement. “It was a lot easier going from 100 to 80 then it will be to go from 80 to par,’’ Bono said. “I’m at that stage where it is difficult to improve.” . As her collegiate career comes to a close, Bono is shooting consistently in the high 70s. With just two tournaments remaining, Bono hopes to play a key role. “I feel like I let my team down by shooting an 80 (in the third round of the Lady Sun Devil) after getting off to such a good start (rounds of 74 and 73),” said Bono, who tied for 10th. “I’ve got confidence that I can contribute and help the team win. “ I’ve put in a lot of hard work, but I’m not where I want to be.” , E h m a n n —_ _ C ontinued from page 15. RBI during the string.; One of the homers was a moonshot at Berkeley on April 6 that landed on the roof of the University of California Recreational Sports Facility, which Stands aboutnine stories high and is 380 feet from the plate at Evans Diamond. In threé games against Stanford last weekend, Ehmann had one of his best series of the year by nailing five hits and seven RBI, with a career-high four of them coming in a 10-4 Sun Devil victory on Sunday. But do not ask Ehmann the reason for his prolific hitting Spree — chances are he will look at you with the uncertainty of a graduating senior contemplating the scarcity of jobs in the market. “I don’t know,” Ehmann said. “I’d been working with (hitting) coach (Jeff) Pentland all season, and things are just starting to come through. When I came in, I had sort of a chopping-wood swing, and he’s been working with me on a more level swing that helps me push through the ball. “I think that I’ve always been a good hitter. Then I came here and had a tough fall, but I always knew I could hit here. I’m just proving the point right now. I think I can play anywhere at any level.” One of the reasons for the increase in Ehmann’s production is the fact that the entire ASU batting order has gained confidence along with him. Performing as well as they have all year are catcher Clarke Rea, right fielder Todd Steverson and second baseman Mike Scialo. With third baseman Jim Austin continuing to be consistent and outfielders Mike Kelly and Scott Samuels both breaking out of slumps, Ehmann has found no shortage of pitches to hit at his ninth spot in the order. J “I just want to continue to do what I have all season,” Ehmann said. ‘‘When I cóme up in the ninth position, if that is where I’m going to be playing the rest of the year, I want to come up and drive in runs. That is the way the coaches want it, and I’d basically like to keep doing what I have been (doing).” That work ethic has diade Ehmann a favorite of Sun Devil coach Jim Brock, who has sung the praises of his shortstop all year. Ehmann said he thinks his desire to learn and the fact that he does not mind getting his uniform dirty are the qualities that coaches enjoy most. “ I’m out here to learn and have fun,” Ehmann said “I don’t try to talk back, I try to listen and do what the coaches expect me to do. I’ve done that, and it’s been fun. When you’re not on anyone’s bad side and get along with coaches that like to teach you — well, that’s what they’re here for. “I just like to work hard and play ball, That’s about it. I guess that’s why they call it a game.” Ehmann said that is an attitude he hopes to carry into a pro career after the end of this season. He was selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1990, and the improvement he has shown this year could translate into a more attractive offer when the June draft rolls around. “ I know I have a lot of improvement left — that’s why I have been debating on whether to stay in school or enter thè draft,” Ehmann said. “I’d really like to sign if the offer is right. I have no problem coming back —it’s been a lot of fun. But the draft is something you have to take very seriously. “Maybe another year here would be good for me, and I wouldn’t mind it. But I’d like to get into pro ball as soon as I can and start playing. I think that’s what I need to do —keep playing baseball.” T .J . S o ko l/S ta te P ress Ehm ann’s w ork eth ic h as m ade him a coach’s favo rite. Stole Press Best o f ASU track heads fo r Mt. SAC By M ARTY M URPHY S ta te Press The ASU track team will be in Los Angeles for the Mt. San Antonio College track meet this week for the annual mini­ track convention each year: The event kicks off with a junior college meet on Thursday and a high school meet on Friday, followed by Saturday’s collegiate meet and Sunday’s concluding open international meet. ’ ASU coach Tom Jones will bring nearly 20 athletes to this year’s Mt. SAC meet. Four of those athletes will be the women’s 4x400-meter relay team of senior Dana Jones, freshman Shanequa Campbell, freshman Kim Toney and junior Maicel Malone. The team currently holds the season’s top Pac-10 time at 3:34.74. Jones and Campbell will also compete in the open 200 meters. Toney will compete in the invitational 800 meters, in which she has posted a 2:06.50 thus far this season. LaShawn Simmons, a junior, will be returning to her former school and will compete in the 100-meter hurdles and the long jump. Also competing in the long jump for the Sun Devils will be junior Tesra Bester and freshman Lisa Hale. Bester has a personal best of 20-feet-8*6 while Hale has gone 19-feet-2%. The fburth best high jumper in the Pac-10, freshman Shelly Choppa, will try to improve on her best mark of 5-feet-10 as well. For the first time this year, sophomore Kelly Cordell will run the 10,000 meters. Her teammate Trish Huffmaster will compete in the 3,000. On the men’s side, junior Todd Lewis will run the 5,000, an event in which Lewis will try to qualify for nationals. “I want to get a good automatic qualifying time,” Lewis said. “This is the meet that everyone tries to qualify in because the 5,000 and 10,000 are the best races in the nation. “There is always a good field there. They get guys from Europe to come over and a lot of the best guys in the country come, like collegiate All-Americans.” One of those top college runners that Lewis may face could be UofA’s Marc Davis. On Saturday night in Tempe, the two dueled it out in the 1,500 before Davis nipped Lewis a t the wire by .67 seconds. Lewis will be joined by sophomore Chris Guinnip, who also will run the 5,000. ASU will also compete in the men’s 4x400-meter relay and the sprint medley relay. Both those relay teams will consist of junior Erik Walbot, senior Robert Rucker, freshman Mike Sulcer and senior Ed Lovelace. Making th e grade: 27 student-athletes honored by Pac-10 C la s s i f i e d s ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS HEADING FOR Europe th is sum mer? Jet there anytim e w ith A irh itch (r) fo r $269 from the W est Coast, $160 from the East Coast! (Reported in New Y ork Tim es and Let’s G o!) A irh itch(r), (212)864-2000. 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. block south o f Apache and 1 block w est o f Rural. “ I’LL PAY your dep osit,’’ Devon Apart­ m ents, 926 East Spence, 370-2366, next to H oliday Inn. LOVE TO dance? H ate the bar scene? You’H love the A ll S ingles Dances, Fridays at better V alley hotels. $4.50. 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STATE PRESS P roduction Departm ent p ro vid e s ty p è s e ttin g , paste -u p and process carriers services. C all Donna at 965-7572 fo r rates and inform ation. SWIMWEAR SEPARATES 1 AND 2 bedroom s- Super Sum m er S pecial. 6 m onths only $1,200 to ta l. Pool. 967-4568, Don fo r details. $200 to ta l m ove-in. C lose, east o f ASU. Believe it! 1 M ILE south o f ASU. 2 bedroom , 1 bath. Air, conditioning, covered parking. $395. 968-0413, 967-7542. 2 AND 3 bedroom apartm ents from $395, Vi m onth free. Covered parking, gas barbeque, pool, p rivate patios. Casa G rande Apartm ents, 1855 East Don C arlos, Tem pe. 968-6926. 4 2 5 S. Mill 1 bedroom 2 blocks from ASU Pool, free cable TV, covered parking, laundry facilities. 1700 S. College, Tempe 967-7212 921-7456 SINGLES’ EVENTS, advice, personals— Arizona S ingle Scene newspaper. Free sam ple, 990-2669. SPORTS FANS! Books, E tc has The N ational Sports d aily 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. 2 BLOCKS from ASU, 1 and 2 bedroom , pool, laundry, dishw asher, free cable. Check our sum m er specials. 1014 East Spence, Sunrise A partm ents, 968-6947. 216 MONTHS Free! Cam eron Creek 2 bedroom , 2 bath. Take over lease. 966-0953, K arin/M eredith. ASU AREA. S tudio, 1 and 2 bedrooom fo r rent. $260 and up. 966-8838 o r 967-4908. BEAUTIFUL ONE bedroom , one bath, pool, ja cuzzi, sauna, tennis courts, a ll am enities! $360/m onth. P erfect location. JiN, 967-3850. MOVE IN BEFORE JUNE 1, R Q fW U T M We Buy & Sell Fine Used and Out-Of-Print Books Mon-Sat 10-6 808S. Ash Ave., Tempe 784-2292 $160 deposit call Today! Apache Terrace 1123 E. Apache 1 block east o f Rural 9 0 8 -6 3 8 3 SUM M ER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now For F all! O n ly Vi b lo c k fro m cam pus. B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a r t­ m e n ts . A ll b ills p a id . C a b le TV , h e a te d p o o l, and s p a c io u s la u n d r y fa c ilitie s . F r ie n d ly , c o u rte o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by to d a y ! T e rra 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, d o se to ASU. $595/m onth. 967-4908 o r 966-8838. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. 10 m inutes from ASU, w ith R efrigerator, w asher/dryer. $500/m onth plus u tilitie s . A vailable June 1. C all 431-1434 evenings. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, furnished. No pets. A v a ila b le M ay 1 5 th . 9 6 7 -36 58 o r 966-3735.1420 East Hudson D rive, 1 m ile East o f ASU. $600/m onth. CUSTOM, REMODELED, spacious home w ith pool. 4 bedroom , 2 bath plus den. A ll appliances, close to ASU. A vailable to 8/15. $875. 969-4480. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT LUXURY CONDO 3 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/dryer, fenced patio area, pools, tennis court. $800/m onth. Near ASU. 967-4908. PAPAGO II: 2 bedroom , 2 bath. C lean, covered parking, pool, spa, dishw asher, w asher/dryer. $550. 966-4167. PAPAGO PARK II, 2 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/dryer, $550/m onth. David C ohen,. 957-9233, 829-3862. PAPAGO PARK I, 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished. $750 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 a ter p u rifie r, ce ilin g fans, firepla ce, icem aker. $750/m onth. A vailable May 1. (602)451-0773. SPRINGTREE CONDOS. Im m aculate 2 bedroom , 2 bath, vaulted ce ilin g , ce ilin g fans, w asher/dryer, com m unity pool and spa, storage. 941-4661. RENTAL SHARING AHW ATUKEE- FEMALE attorney seeks fem ale to share la rg e 3 bedroom , 216 bath, new hom e. A ir conditioning, pool, w asher/dryer. $275/m onth plus u tilitie s . Kim , 598-0536. CLOSE TO ASU, fem ale to share 3 bedroom house. M aster bedroom , private bath. $230/m onth plus e le ctricity. C all 345-6235. DESPERATELY SEEKING one or two room m ates to share tw o bedroom apart­ m ent w ith me; Cam eron Creek A part­ m ents. $300/m onth o r $150 to share. M ay-August. C all K ristin e, 966-1692FEMALE ROOMMATE: Near ASU, 4 bedroom , 2 bath, poo l, w asher/dryer, a ll furnished, Tem pe. $250/m onth plus Va u tilitie s . 966-2360. FEMALE ROOMMATE, own room , share bath, pool. $250 a m onth, 16 u tilitie s . Tem pe. 921-3728, K risty. A vailable by M ay 9. HAYDEN SQUARE condo— Summ er only! Fem ale share 2 bedroom , 2 bath. B eautiful new fu rn itu re . 966-1335. M ALE ROOMMATE w anted to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath fu lly furnished apartm ent. Nonsm oker, no pets. $225/m onth. Call 464-2373, N O O N -IS the deadline to get classified lin e r ads in the follow ing day* Don’t m iss it! M atthew s C enter basem ent, 965-6731. THE GETAW AY. N ice 4 bedroom house, pool, w asher/dryer, m any accessories, available 5/1. Nonsm oker, m ale/fem ale. $212, Va U tilitie s: C all 998-4460,994-0040. W A L K TO AS U . m a le /fe m a le . $190/m onth, Va u tilitie s . Doug, 894-8677 or 965-7381. (certain restrictions apply) 1-2 Bedrooms Close to ASU Lots of amenities Meridian Corners 1440 E. Broadway Rd. Tempe * 966-5818 STATE PRESS Classifieds LINER AD RATES: • 15 words or lees: $3.00/day for 1-4 days $2.75/day for 5-9 days $2.50/day for 10+ days 15C each additional word. The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals (15 words or less) are only $1.751 * Personal ads must be placed at the Classlflsds Office In Matthews Center basement, and must show student ID to place personal. * Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after they are placed (if placed before noon). CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES: 1 tim e: $7.85/col. inch 2-5 tim es: $7.00/col. inch 6 * tim es: $6.50/col. inch Classified display ads can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 10am); CALL NOW 965-6731 1 block o ff campus 1 bed: t s s s 2 bed: $ sa s Also, 3 bed available W ALK TO ASU! NEWLY REMODELED Ask for specials for ASU students. From s taff reports Twenty-seven ASU student-athletes with cumulative grade point averages of 3.0 or better have been honored by the Pac-10 Conference for their academic and athletic achievement. . , The Sun Devils constitute 17 percent of the 159 studentathletes recognized by the conference. Twelve of ASU’s honorees were selected to the first team. They are Matt Anderson (men’s basketball), Licurgo DiazSandi (men’s gymnastics), Clay Harris (men’s gymnastics), Mike Strauss (men’s gymnastics), Keith Suzuki (men’s gymnastics), Janae Lautenschlager (women’s diving), David Holderbach (m en’s swimming), Emm anuel Nascimento (men’s swimming), Eric Wilhelm (men’s swimming), Tim Gressley (wrestling), Sean Griswold (wrestling) and Rex Holman (wrestling). The second-team honorees included Shari Countryman (women’s swimming), Linda Kometer, (women’s diving), Nancy Osbourne (women’s swimming), Jodi Quas (women’s swimming), Adrienne Schuessler (women’s swimming), Dawn West (women’s diving), Lisa Salsman (women’s basketball), Terry Flock (men’s swimming), Eric Mix (men’s swimming) and Richard Tapper (men’s swimming). Gymnasts Cole Alban, Jay Eller, Jessica Tudos and Tracy Butler and wrestler Wayne MeMinn all were honorable mentions. f o g e lT Thursday, April 18,1991 ANNOUNCEMENTS TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT 1 AND 2 bedroom condos and townhom es, Papago Park and Q uesta Vida. Bob B ullock, R ealty Executives* 998-2992. ROOMS FOR RENT 1 BLOCK south o f cam pus- Have to see to b e lie ve . 1420 S outh C ollege. A lan, 731-9251. 2 BEDROOM condo, 15 m inutes ASU. F ire p la c e , h e a te d p o o l, ja c u z z i, dishw asher. $435/m onth. 265-2066. 2 ROOMS available in house, 216 m iles from ASU. $2 5 0 /u tilitie s included. Nonsm oker, nort-drinker, clean m ale. Keith, 946-0602 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, ceilin g fans, covered parking, w asher/dryer, 2 m iles/ ASU. Jerry, 730-1441. FEMALE ROOMMATE needed— $275 in cluding u tilitie s . M any extras, quiet. 894-9270. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, large hom e. Hardy/ U n iv e rs ity a re a . $60 0. C a ll C h ris, 894-8140. 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- 3 BEDROOM/2V2 BATH tow nhom e. W asher/dryer, pool, tennis courts. Los P ra d o s A p a rtm e n ts . $ 8 5 0 /m o n th . 921-1838. ROOMATE W ANTED, m ale/fem ale, nons­ m oker. Own room and bathroom . Furn­ ished, clean, pool, $250 plus 16 u tilitie s . N ot fa r from ASU. C a ll G reg, 941-8487. 3 BEDROOM, 2% bath condo. W asher/ dryer, pool, tennis courts. Los Prados. $775/m onth. 966-1577. ROOM |N 4 bedroom townhom e. $200 plus u tilitie s . Sw im m ingpool, w asher/ dryer. Baseline/R ural. 839-1084. FURNISHED CONDO 3 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/dryer,’ dishw asher, pool. Close to ASU: $600/m onth. A vailable early May. 830-6244. VERY CLEAN house w ith pool and a ll am enities. Im m ediate a va ila b ility. $275 p lus Va u tilitie s . C ontact M ark at 897-0183. HAYDEN SQUARE 2 bedroom , 2 bath, furnished. $800 plus deposit fo r sum m er. 966-0711. 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 . $1,175/m onth. Located in dow ntown Tem pe. C all John o r D avid at 968-2279. HAYDEN SQ UARE condom inium ; 2 bedroom , 2 bath, fo r sum m er rental. C all M ike. 967-8181. HOMES FOR SALE FREE SEMINAR, pizza— How to buy H Ù 0/VA governm ent, RTC hom es. For inform ation, c a ll Sue K /H o m es Plus, 966-0595/892-9107. LARGE 3 bedroom , 216 bath, 2 stories, 1 m ile from cam pus. A vailable 5/1/91. $625. 9684686. O KI SUN D evil! W ant a house With that pool? 3/2, extra-large pool, 3 level, beauti­ fu l hom e, Arizona room w ith fireplace, large liv in g room , la rge service room , 3 m iles from ASU. $84,500. M argaret R ider R ealty. 990-1945. LOS PRADOS 2 bedroom . 21* bath. W asher/dryer. 16 m ile/ASU. $600/m onth. A vailable sum m er o r lo nger Althea, 966-9706. . S P A C IO U S /E L E G A N T ... LA R G E 4 bedroom hom e n e a r cam pus. O nly $122,700. C entury 21 G old, 730-8808, Karol. TOWN HOMES/ CONDOS EOR SALE FOR SALE/lease: Pap ago P a rkV illa g e I. No qua lifyin g, assum able. Pays fo r self. Tax w rite -o ff. (602)948-5697). FUN SURROUNDS th is condo! Hayden Square 2 o r 3 bedroom , 2-story, priced to s e ll at $107,000. Re-M ax Award G roup, ask fo r G ary G reen acre, 991-3337. O NLY $100 down fo r 2 bedroom Los Prados townhom e w ith in w alking distance to cam pus! Save alm ost $30,000 at only $38,000. G reg A skiris, R ealty Executives, 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 th * W eak Low down, no qual. Papago Park & Questa Vida. 1, 2, 3 bd. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 PAPAGO PARK V illage 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhom e, $§50/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 Ram seye/, 820-5506, C entury 21 AMstar R ealtors. . THE BEST of the best. Attending ASU and you .want to be where ifs happening. Hayden Square is where it’ s at. This u n it com pletely upgraded, 2 bedroom , fire ­ place, pool, spa, next, to shops and ASU! $ 91 ,000 . K a ren , .P ru d e n tia l R e a lty , 951-8578. COMPUTERS AUTOMOBILES TRAVEL EPSON EQUITY llp lu s , AT/com patible w ith M ath/287 processor, 4.0 harddrive, 1.2/1.44 FDD, V G A. card. C osts $1,000 C ontact V ish, 968-6396. ASU STU D E N TS ! N eed cash th is sum m er? $Cash$ paid fo r your vehicle running or not! 228-2189. RO UN D-TR IP DENVER to P hoenix, Thursday 4/18 to Tuesday 4/23. M ust se ll, m ake o ffe r. T ricia , 784-6413. 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, 966-8015. RO UN D-TR IP, PHOENIX to S eattle. Leave 5/15, retu rn 8/15. Fem ale. $200. IBM PC400-COMPATIBLE 20 meg hard drive, 2 floppy drives, IBM P roprinter. $500/offer C ontact Larry/V ijay, 965-1717. RECHARGE YOUR laser printer, toner cartridges $39.95. Cad 225-8049. MOTORCYCLES Get VmmSi JEWELRY ALW AYS BUYING je w elry o f a ll kinds, in cluding gold, ste rlin g , gem s, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill Avenue, Tem pe 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. •0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' MILL AVENUE JEWELERS -414 S. Mill, Suite 101 Tempe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS* C ustom Design & R em ounts Jew elry & W atch Repair G old/D iam onds/Silvcr Pulsar W atches/P ear Is M ooeooooooeooeoeoc MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 5-PIECE GLASS and brass com plete dinette set. Asking $80 Size 10 wedding d re s s , n e v e r w o rn . A s k in g $800. 962-3774 1962, VERY wed-m aintained, 55’xlO ’ m obile hom e. W alking distance ASU. $ 3 ,8 0 0 ,1 w ill carry 34% 894-0413: EM PLOYERS — LOOKING for help? Place a S tate 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! MOVING SALE: 1109 East B luebell Lane (S cottsdale Road and M cK ellips). Satur­ day, 4/20 and Sunday, 4/21, 9am-6pm Lots fo r sale— M icrowave, lam ps, chairs, kitchen accessories, books, etc. .. KAW ASAKI KZ 440, 1981 Very reliable transportation. Good condition and excel­ le n t gas m ileage, 50-plus MPG. Ideal fo r Student. $500. Danny 839-0350 or leave TWO ROUND-TRIP plane ticke ts Phoenix to Albuquerque^ Leave June 6, return June 9. $100 fo r both. For tw o women. C all 834-1481, leave m essage on m achine. CASH PORYtfKJR MOTORCYCLE OR SCOOTER •T op Dollar PUMI •P ick up & Delivery Available •Com ing bade next fall? Ask about our Returning Student Discounts •W e crate bikes for shipment 99 4 -8 4 0 0 TRANSPORTATION AUTOEAST SNOW BIRD Cars, free esti­ m ates by phoen, m ove your car on Our trucks, 1(800)736-6437. Insured college m oves. V isa —-M asterC ard—A m erican 'E xpress... GRADUATING- M UST seK- fud size bed, $100; sofa, $70; coffee table, $30, negoti­ able, C all 894-4630 TRAVEL KING-SIZE w aterbed, dark wood w ith heater and lin e r. $120 or best offer. Call T raci, 838-3492. 2 ROUND-TRIP tickets; P hoenix-rLas Vegas, Saturday 4/20 to M onday 4/22: M ust sell, m ake o ffe r: T ricià; 784-8413. LOTS OF n ice fu rh itu re for sale. W e're leaving so everything m ust go. For in for­ m ation cad Lisa or Lea a t 968-5738. 2 ROUND-TRIP Phoenix to O akland, 1 m ale, 1 fem ale. 4/19-4/22. $70/offer each. 968-5580 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. SOFA AND love seat, Southw est colors. C offee table, end table . W ill hold u n til August. M elissa after 7pm , 894-0783. so fa; LO VESEAT, burgundy, good cond ition. $280 Tw in-size futon m attress, 8” th ick. $75. C all 731-9954. COMPUTERS L e t u s h e lp y o u a d v e rtise y o u r g a ra g e o r m o v in g s a le . state press Classifieds TW IN-SIZE FUTON w ith adjustable fram e, 8 layers th ick, hardly used, $110. 3-speed Schwinn bike w ith m ountain handlebars, very reliable , $30. 19” color TV, $100. D ig ita l m icrowave, $50. Turbo G raphics System w ith 6 gam es, $200. 921-1287, anytim e. - - • YARD SALE: 1212 East Spence, Tem pe. Saturday, A p ril 2 0 ,8am to 4pm . Furniture, appliances, art supplies, fram ed a rt, elec­ tron ics, m ore. AUTOMOBILES 1980 DATSUN 310GX, runs good, $800. 963-5619. 1965 HONDA CRX. Red, AM/FM cassette, clean. $2,800 Thad, 945-3544, extention .1 0 3 ./; ■ . V '' - y - 1988 M USTANG G T, every option. 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 mMes/gallon. AM/FM cassette, new tires, tran sferrable w arranty. E xcellent condi­ tion. O rigina l ow ner. M ust sell. $3,950. 596-0847. ‘71 SUPER Beetle, runs great. $1,500 or best offe r. Connie, w ork 966-6726, home 838-3913. *87 TOYOTA Camry deluxe sedan. 4-door. 32,000 m iles, autom atic, d o th in te rio r, AM /FM cassette. C a ll Kevin. 821-6838. $7,100. HELP WANTED— GENERAL CASTING CALL: Talent fo r prin t, TV, m ovies, photos. CEEC Entertainm ent, ‘S tar Seekers’ hotline, 274-6362. PART-TIM E/FULL-TIM È PHONE sales, no solicita tio n . O ur custom ers c a ll us! Paid tra in in g fo r b rig h t, pleasant-voiced men and women. W e are thé best because of our people. Year-round positions. C all 266-1111, o r P.O. Box 23774, Tempe 85285-3774. CRUISE LINE positions. Land-side and on-board entry-level positions available. S easonal/perm anent. T ravel ben efits. (303)440-6933, ext. 7. C R U IS E SH IP J O B S , p e rm a n e n t, tra in e e s (904)432-5945. AIRLINES HIRING. Seeking students and grads to fill m any positions. A irlin e w ill train. 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 cia l services com pany. C all 946-5667 PERFECT STUDENT business, leasing lo fts. $30 to $50 p er hour. Sacrafice $3,000. 863-4437. HELP WANTED— GENERAL AAAAA REAL cheap a irlin e ticke t. O ne­ w ay from P hoenix to P hiladelphia;, nonstop. May 12. C all 784-9716. ALL LOW EST airfares guaranteed to any in ternational destination. CaH Best Fares, 443-7476. AMERICAN AIRLINE round-trip ticket. Phoenix to Providence, Rhode Island, June 11 to 18, $200 944-4633 or 496-4468. AM ERICA W EST/AMERICA W est 25% Off anyw here they fly . C all 949-1990. BAHAMAS CRUISE fo r 2 ,5 days, 4 nights lodging. $600 re ta il, m ust s e ll $250. C all 833-0531, leave m essage. DENVER AMERICA W est, one way ticket. Leaves 5/20. $115. Shaw, 784-8435. FRIDAY, MAY 10, M other’s Day weekend, 3 US A ir nonstop one-way tickets to P ittsburgh, Pennsylvania. $200 each/ o ffe r. 969-1251 o r 345-8999. LET STATE Press C lassifieds work 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 rail passes, youth hostel m em berships and internationaJ student Ip cards a ll issued on the spot! C ontact A m erican Youth H ostels at 894-5128 o r v is it o ur tra ve l center at 1046 East Lem on S treet, Tem pe. MUST S E LL round-trip ticke t Phoenix to H onolulu. Depart M ay 10, return May 27 A m e ric a W e st. $ 2 8 9 /o ffe r. Lea ve m essage, 893-3296. ': / _________ PHOENIX TO C hicago, round-trip. Leqye 5/19, re tu rn 5/27. $150 cash. C all 470-1868. PHOENIX TO N ewark, round-trip, 5/15/91 lo 5/25/91. $163. 731-9172 ALASKA SUMMER em ploym ent— Fishe­ ries. Earn $5.000-plus/m onth. Free trans­ portation! Room and board! No experi­ ence necessary. M ale or fem ale. Call 1(206)298-3691, ext. 75. ____________ APPLEONE IS curre n tly recru iting exper­ ienced banquet servers. W e 'll w ork you around your schedule. A pply at: 20 East U niversity, S uite 101. 829-3782. s e a s o n a l/ w e lc o m e . TheNewRedRObbi Restaurant of Tempe is accepting applica­ tions fo r all positions sta rtin g today! Please apply in person: 1 3 7 5 W . E llio t (Price Club Plaza) DEGREED ENGLISH teacher needed in Spain. ESL experience required. Resume to : 1128 East W atson, Tem pe 85283. EMPLOYERS — LOOKING for help? Place a S tate 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! ENERGETIC COUNSELORS needed at sm all co-ed cam p in . A dirondacks of upstate New Y ork, near M ontreal. S ailing, w indsurfing, w ater s k iirig , tènnis, fie ld sports, hiking, backpacking and more. 1(800)ITS-FUNN (487-3866) •; —i—». ----u u — 7.G . Eggingtons Art 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. SU M M ER JO B S We are hiririg 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: Tem pe Phoenix 966-1100 264-4537 STIVERS TEM PORARY PERSO N N EL TtstC ATTENTION BUSINESS M ajors: South­ western Company interview ing fo r fu lltim e sum m er em ploym ent. G ain experi­ ence in sales and business m anagem ent. Leave A rizona, resum e college credit, m ake $5,200. 821-8213. A T T E N T I O N B U S IN E S S I COMMUNICATION m ajors! Prom otional advertising com pany h irin g 4 reps fo r focal office. C andidates m ust be personable w ith a strong w ork ethic. C all 921-7755 between 1-4pm fo r a personal interview . “Country Glazed Ham” Specialty restaurant/deli now accepting applica­ tions for the following positions: •S erv ice C lerks F T /P T •B akers a ssista n t PT/A M Excellent growth potential Competitve wages Apply in person : 6107 N. Scottsdale Rd. (Hilton Village) PERFECT FOR student! Close to ASU, 20 hou rs/w ee k. A cco u n tin g m a jo r w ith 3.25-plus GPA— C all Ju lie , 345-7818. PERFECT STUDENT jo b , fle xib le hours. Aarons Car W ash. C all 964-8941. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES $5.25/HO UR GUARANTEED plus oppor­ tu n ity to earn m ore. F lexible hours, day or evening, no experience necessary, conve­ nient W est M esa location. 649-0661. FURNITURE QUEEN SIZE futon and fram e. G reat c o n d itio n . $200 o r best o ffe r. C all 966-4750, HELP WANTED— GENERAL m essage. NISHIKI OLYM PIC-12. SKXVoffer; Benotto 10-speed. $175/offer. M ust se ll, great condition. C all T erri, 966-7310. . CONTEMPORARY F U fO N : Strong black oak, full-size, folds o u t in to full-size bed, hand-painted cover. New $800, asking $575- King-size w aterbed w ith w hite leath­ erette pads, $150, F ull-size m attress, box springs and fram e, $100. Robb, 894-1687, leave message. TRAVEL CHEAP in your name.. I special­ ize in quick departures. M ost places USA. $265-450, round-trip. Alaska, $550-650. Also worldw ide. I also buy transferable coupons. 968-7283; TWO ROUND-TRIP ticke ts from Phoenix to Boston. Leaving 5/14/91. Real cheap! C all 829-1889. BICYCLES MOOOVING? 423-9314. HONDA INTERCEPTOR 250cc, beautiful blue on w hite, m int condition, 2 bieffe helm ets, m oving. $2,200/offer. 921-8823. JAPANESE LANGUAGE students: half price on texts, dictionaries for 101, 102, 201, 202 964-8599.___________________ MOBILE HOMES State Pr««» Thursday, April 18.1991 Pag« 18 GARCIA’S RESTAURANT now hiring fo r: server assistant, cocktail w aitresses and hostess. No experience necessary. A pply in person, M onday through Saturday, 2-5pm , 7633 East Indian School Road. GOOD INTERNSHIP experience to put on your resum e. C all S enator DeC oncini’s O ffice fo r inform ation on sum m er and fa ll internships. C all C arrie at 379-6756 or M im i at 379-4998. GREAT INCOME. 2 fu ll-tim e and 3 parttim e positions available. Flexible sche­ dule. No sellin g or phone work. No experience necessary. 264-7570, between 8-5pm . HERBERGER THEATER C enter. Parttim e supervisory positions available in house and box office. Resumes to: K elly, HTC, P.O. Box 1430, Phoenix 85001. EARN GREAT CASH! RUNNER, 20 hours/week. 8am -12 noon. D riving com pany vehicle. M ust have valid Arizona drive r’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. EÔE. SELLING FLOWERS M other’s Day. Need car. $5/hour. C all 894-3419. STOCK BROKERAGE firm seeking outgo­ ing, energetic business m ajor to assist stock brokers w ith telephone ca llin g for investm ent sem inars. M ust be available throughout th e summer.. C all R ich/Brad at 443-5710: TELEMARKETER/OFFICE ASSISTANT: 2 p o s itio n s ope n, 20-40 hou rs/w ee k, $5/hour. C all Barb or Davy at Arizona Tool W orks, Inc., 437-4773. TEMPORARY FULL and part-tim e re ta il positions available im m ediately. $5/hour. Apparel D esigner Zone, 966-0938. TENNIS CLUB attendant. Evenings and Sundays. C all 948-5990 for appointm ent. TELEMARKETING Need real world experience? Looking fo r marketing majors Base salary + comm. + bonus Night shift Full or part tim e 2-8pm Call Norman 731-9123 THE STATE Press advertising departm ent is now h irin g com m issioned advertising sales representatives to begin trainin g for Sum m er and next F all. W e are looking for highly m otivated students w ho are in ter­ ested in preparing them selves fo r a future in sales/advertising/m arketing. You m ust have a vehicle and not be graduating before Decem ber o f 1992. Interested? CaH Jackie E ldridge today a t 965-6555. VALET PARKING attendant. 3 nights per week, $5-7 p er hour (th is figure 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, Shaw n.. YM CA CAMP in O racle, Arizona lo oking fo r sta ff to w ork June 1 th ru August 3. D irector o f Program , Teen D irector, D irec­ to r o f R iding, C ounselors, horsback riding, rappelling, swim m ing, arts and crafts, specialists, kitchen supervisor, cooks, and c a m p n u r s e a re n e e d e d ,. C a ll (602)884-0987 or w rite YMCA Cam p, 516 N orth 5th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona 85705. $ 8 .5 0 -1 2 0 guaranteed!' Outside sales for rapidlygrow ing West Coast marketing firm repre­ senting America’s largest a u to m o tiv e service company. •Part-time/fuU-time •Flexible hours •12 hrs/wk minimum Call Scott Perlstein or Rick Nordllng (8 0 2 ) 4 3 3 -8 2 2 6 HIGHEST PAID in terns in country. Earn college credit w hile gaining experience fo r fu tu re in national internship w ith Thomas Nelson Company. C a ll 894-5283, M ichael. BEFORE/AFTER SCHOOL program aides needed. P art-tim e/$5.00 p er hour. A pply at 4309 East Belleview , Phoenix. JOBS JOBS jobs. G et started now! 1(800)258-6322 fo r fre e career catalogue/ Joblink registration. COUNSELORS- PRESTIG IO US co-ed Berkshires, M A sum m er cam p seeks s kille d college ju n io rs, seniors and grads. W ater Safety Instructor, Tennis, S ailing, W aterski, C anoe, A th le tic s , A rchery, G ym nastics, A erobics. 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 cco m pa nists, S cience, R ocketry, C am ping, V ideo, Newspaper. Have a rew arding and enjoy­ able sum m er! S alary plus room and board. CaN Camp Taconic, (800)782-2820. MAKE EARTH Day every day w ork w ith G reenpeace A ction to save the planet. F u ll, part-tim e, and sum m er positions available. House to house fundraising and pub lic aw areness. H ours: M onday-Friday 3-10:30pm . Pay: $150-230. Apply: Cady M a il M ondays and W ednesdays or 966-1986. _______________________ PAPA JA Y 'S has openings fo r delivery d riv e rs and cooks. E vening hours. 966-4292. Earn while you learn. Manpower is looking for students interested in earning great pay — plus commissions. We offer flexible hours. And valuable training and business experience. Plus free use of a personal computer. tf you're a full-time student, Junior or above, computer familiar, with at least a “ B” average and have supervisory experience, Manpower needs you as a TEAM LEADER to promote the sales of the IBM Personal System/2 on campus. For experience that pays, call today. 700 E. Baseline Suite D2 Tempe, AZ 85283 (602) 838-7507 or (602)224-2422 Pase 19 Thursday, April 18,1991 HELP WANTED— CLERICAL CUSTOMER SERVICE. A local com puter com pany has positions open fo r part-tim e custom er service cle rks. Nonsm oking ju niors or seniors w ith a 3.0 plus QPA preferred D uties in clude filin g , lig h t bookkeeping and contacting our custom ­ ers concerning orders. This is not a sales position, Job could lead to full-tim e em ploym ent. C onvenient Tem pe/Phoenix border location near ASU $5 50/hour Call K atie, 437-9388(aftem oons). RECEPTIONIST JENNY Craig W eight Loss Centres seeks m ature, enthusiastic in dividual who enjoys w orking w ith people, accurate w ith figures, excellent phone s k ills and likes a busy, fast-paced environ­ m ent. O pening in Scottsdale. W ork hours, 8am to 5pm . Call Jennifer, 949-0119. 10C W IN G S * DRAFTS70C ■ 1 fBANDERSNATCH SERVICES DELTS— You bring th e fixin gs, we’ll bring the dough, fo r an awesom e pizza party— Let’s go!. Love, AGDs. W HY HAUL it hom e? Store it! See our ad today. Best L ittle W a re h o u tt in Tempo. 967-3900. G ET PERSONAL — Send someone special a State Press personal ad. A 15-word personal is only $1.75! Come down to the basem ent o f M atthews Center to place your ad today! And rem em ber to bring your student ID! YOU SAY it, we display it! O nly in the S tate Press C lassifieds! HEY 330! You’re seconds now from being done. Now head back to room 101. HEY ASU! Think you fit in w ith the Kids in the H all? W ell put your best sketch forw ard. U S. C oncepts/H BO Seriously Dangerous Comedy C om petition, spon­ sored by the MUAB Comedy Com m ittee. To register or fo r m ore inform ation, call 965-M UAB o r stop by the MUAB o ffice (3rd flo o r, M em orial Union). « THIRSTY THURSDAY Buy it, sell it, fin d it, te ll it, in State Press Classifieds $125 S tate P ress C lassified s Heineken Becks Coors Light A ll 12oz. B o ttle s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 968-6666 HELP WANTED— FOOD SERVICE 1301 E. U n iv e rs ity BUSTER’S R E S T A U R A N T ^ Scottsdale is now hiring experienced food servers, cocktail servers, busers and hostesses. Plpase apply in person: 8320 North Hayden (M ercado del Lago) COCKTAIL W AITRESS— Jockey Club N ight C lub/R estaurant, 52 East Camelback (Central and C dm elback, Phoenix) P art-tim e evenings, includes weekends. Experience required, m ust be at least 19' years old .Gall Bobby fo r appointm ent: 27&7T77. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lu nch w a itresse s. A pply in person, 10:30-11:30am or a fte r 1:30pm . 5001 East W ashington. ►-GREEKS PIZZA & PI B ►.GREEKS ►G R E E K S 20% OFF F ajitas 18763473 KA 'S ADAM and E ric: The bunny slow ly deflates. To see it alive, you m ust sing one verse of KA Rose to the rig h t people. The Bunny Snathers. KELLI HILL, do you read the personals? I was ju st w ondering. From your secret adm irer! KKG SCARLET Begonia- I excited about drinking O live eating fish heads. Its getting South w ill rock your brain. favorite KA Deadhead. hope your Juice and close! Old Love your P i KAPPA Alpha-G am m a Phi Beta a w inning com bination in intram ural soccer. We had a great tim e. Love Gamma P hi. PLEASE HELP! If you witnessed an accident involving an auto and pedestrian M onday, 4/15 on. R u ral and U niversity, 9am , contact Lydia, 7846102, SIGMA ALPHA E psilon- we had a great tim e getting to know you!! W e look forw ard to doing m ore w ith you in the future. Love Gam m a Phi Beta. SIGM A KAPPA M ary. I’m really excited to take you to O ld South Form al. It w ilt make it th a t m uch better! Kappa A lpha Ken. SIGM A NU B rian W ebber: I’m longing to feel your touch again. Your adm irer. SIGMA NU C hris and Scott— Thanks for W hiterose, we had an awesome weekend. W e laughed alot in Laughlin. (W e haven’t been that buzzed in a long tim e), Shay and A l. ' - SPORTS & W INGS 11 screens SIGM A NU M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania M ania is here. W oodshed II Northwest comer of Dobson & Univ SIGMA PHI Epsilon— W e are excited to w in the softba ll tournam ent on Sunday!! The ladies o f Gamma Phi Beta. 8 4 4 -S H E D For all your sports viewing STACI, I am looking forw ard to old South. W e’ll have a great tim e. KA Steve R. PETS 2 YEAR old Russian Blue cat free to a good home. Take now o r in August. Call M elissa after 7pm. THE GREAT Debate on the existence of God Tonight! 7:30pm in M urdock H all Room 101. 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! EREE LOST/FOUND FOUND: BLACK and brown fem ale puppy, near Commons on Apache. C all 921-7032 fo r in fo . : m edium , or la r g e j yogurt and receive any I smaller size for FREE Toppings extra Exp. 4-30-91 I 968-9512 i FOUND!! LADIES' w atch: Found la st Friday near Life Science B uilding. C all to identify. C raig, 784-0891 PERSONALS A DOZEN roses delivered, $20. C all 894-3419 ALPHA PHI Actives are excited fo r in itia ­ tio n . O nly 1 m ore day love your sisters. HAPPY HOUR A-PHI JU LIE Repm an (P uffin) I’m so psyched fo r you to go active AOE love; Furtney. A-PHI LAURA R andol, mom I m iss you! W e have to rage soon. Congrats on your new position love you, Susan. ATO PLEDGE Rob: W ed. if I didn’t already haye a date. J. \ NYTHING TO X m .N Y W H E R E .IN C Persom i shipping MOTORFSEIBR*ADF ttff PAQUEH0 t CRATING (602)649 0080 DOMINO’S PIZZA DELIVERS FAST, FREE & HOT £=$} J hk? HAPPILY-MARRIED COUPLE w ish to give secure and loving hom e to newborn. Legal/m edical expenses paid. Please ca ll Bob and Kathy, co lle ct: (602)8866422. W ARM, LOVING, childless couple seeking to g ive your w hite new born a finan cially secure life fille d w ith love and affection. Ken and D iane, 991-1191, Now 968-5555 This ad is good for $1.00 off any regularly priced pizza. No expiration. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.25 PER page. N ear ASU. Fast, accu­ rate Rush jobs ok. Lisa, 9216202. Comerof 6th &Mill PAPERS TYPED— $1.25 per page. G raphics, resum es, etc- K ris, 899-3522 or 838-2974. PROFESSIONAL W ORDPROCESSING at reasonable rates. LaserJet printer, choice o f typefaces and paper, guaranteed errorfree fo r your best presentation. 497-6572. RESUMES, REPORTS, presentations and m ore. C all Docum ents, E tc. at 961-7924 fo r reasonable and quick turnaround tim e. Ask fo r Linda. STATE PRESS P roduction Departm ent p ro v id e s .ty p e s e ttin g , paste -u p and process cam era services. C all Donna at 965-7572 fo r rates and inform ation. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c r e t a r i a l services. 23 years’ experience. Student discounts. Southw est corner, M iller and C haparral. 994-8145. ACCOUNTING, FINANCE, and M ath professional in struction, study aides and exam ination strategies. State-approved tutor. 921-2211, Sun-D evil T utoring, G il. TWO PAIR of EYEGLASSES and/or CONTACTS* rafonuuide ui/ion center Tempe Mesa 966-4991 844-7096 *some restrictions apply HEALTH AND EITNESS T h o r b e c k e ’s Gym 966-6621 $12 per month plus $ 5 0 one­ tim e m em b e r­ ship fee. WANTED PROFESSOR AND fam ily needs 3-plus bedroom in Tem pe/M esa area beginnning J u n e 199 1. P l e a s e c a l l ; c o l le c t ; (215)660-0218. ACCURATE, REASONABLE, fast turnar­ ound Word processing w ith laser p rin te r/ cassette tra n s c ip tio ri. S tudent/facuity. M ili/U n iv e rs ity . A utom ated S ecretary, 829-8854. N ot ju s t TYPING! Service includes: •F u ll te x t e d itin g •S p e ll c h e c k in g •S y n ta x c h e c k •G ra m m a r c o rre c 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 c o m p u te riz e d •Q u ic k tu rn a ro u n d •N e a r th e u n iv e rs ity •B e s t ra te s in to w n Call JIM 945-6793 ACCURATE. EXPERIENCED typist/w ord processor. W ordPerfect 5.1. S tudent/ faculty. Any size jo b . $1.50/page. C ali Laura at 820-0305. A K'NKO ’S paper m akes the grade. K ink, ’s typesets papers, resum es, flie rs, etc. Self-serve M acintosh com puters and laser printers, too. 933 East U niversity, c a ll 966-2035. 960 W est U niversity, c a ll 921-0168. O pen early, open la te, open 7; days! APA/M LA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need H fast? C all Jessie, 945-5744. SERVICES SERVICES C cvC d fi! I I I LETTER QUALITY w ord processing fo r your typing needs. APA/M LA, fa st turnar­ ound. Close to ASU. $1.50/up. Roxanne, 966-2825. A A A T Y P IN G /W O R D P ro c e s s in g . $1.50/page. Fast turnaround. 20 years' experience. C all Linda, 962-8075. BETA THETA Pi Pre-rush Barbeque at D a le y P a rk S u n d a y , 4 /2 1 ,, n o o n . Inform ation- contact Len, 898-0056. DELTA SIG Soccer dudes- we had an awesome tim e Sunday, thanx! Stay cool, the AGD’s. ••• FLYING FINGERS has M aclntosh/laser q u a lity and now Fax-a-Shirt. C all 945-1551 fo r details. TUTORS BETA BETA Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta. 820-7878 MISCELLANEOUS AVAILABLE TO type o r word process m anuscripts, reports, term papers, e tc., at reasonable rates. C all Nancy, 964-7501. $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resum es, etc. At your service word processing. Linda, '8396167. BETA BETA Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta. DARRELL (DO UG HNUT). I love you and I hope th is never ends! Here’s to the C onductor's Lounge. Kel. 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. 903 South Rural - Tetnpe W E CAN help each other! C aring couple m arried I t years can give your newborn a loving fam ily and a warm , Financially secure hom e. Please c a ll collect, P atricia and Jerry, (802)235-2312. CAROL MCKIVER, get ready to party w ith the best at old south tom orrow ! KA Donn: ASU AREA typing, w ord processing, edit­ in g and tran scription. C all anytim e fo r fast service. 966-2186. PROFESSIONAL PRINTING fo r Paupers: Resumes, papers, business cards and desktop publishing. Low fees. Pauper P rinting, 863-9653. Call ADOPTION ADOPTION— FREE, 1 p a ir, never used, outstanding parents fo r w hite newborn. W e w ish to give your baby a home and a ll o ur love and care. C all co lle ct, Linda/Lee, (714)9576226. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING FR EELAN C E S E C R E TA R IA L. Term papers, new sletters, resum es, graphics, laser printin g, notary public. 1 day service/7 days week. Student discounts. Sheri P atrick: 961-1411. I'M LOOKING fo r a ride to/from Zuma Beach fo r the Lam bda C hi ISVT. W ill pay the gas. 829-6207. NOON IS the deadline to get classified lin e r ads in the follow ing day. D on't m iss it! M atthews C enter basem ent, 965-6731. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 2 satellites PERSONALS RESTAURANTS/ BARS •HAIRCUT * reg, $17*° NOWS1200 Tem pe C e n te r • u n iv e rs ity a M III*M 7 -3 7 S 1 necdon with your work today. You're anxious to make a trip, but a close tie may not h e able to join you. Keep peace with an adviser. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Couples will enjoy an outing to some place special now. Money due you may be late in arriving. Try not to go over­ board in your use of credit Tonight you may be in a hurry. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Y ou're enthusiastic, blit you may come on too strong in your dealings with others. Try not to overwhelm people. Do-it-yourself projects are favored now. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You veer from over-caution to reck­ less abandon today. Find a middle ground. It's a time when you should balance work and play. Avoid going to extremes. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) It's a good day to go shopping for the home. A tendency to withdraw into yourself gives way to a desire for adven­ ture, tonight you may well be tripping up your heels. YOU BORN TODAY are impulsive, restless, and inclined to go to extremes. Often, you experiment before settling on a career. You have a natural interest in politics and may be interested in reform. Though you can succeed in business, you're more inclined to the arts and professions. Independent by na­ ture, you're a person meant to do his or her own thing. Routine doesn't appeal to you and you would enjoy a vocation arguments. that involves travel or sales. Birthdate LIBRA of: Jayne Mansfield, actress; Hugh O* (Sept 23 to O ct 22) It's a good day to sign a contract and Brian, actor, and Richard Hughes, poet. to reach agreements with others, A chil * Let the S ta te Press needs your attention in some way. Mak new starts in business, but don't b Horoscopes help pushy. gov plan ypitr deal SCORPIO (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) You could receive recognition in con- FOR FRIDAY, APRIL 19,1991 ARIES (Mar. 21 to A p r.19) You*lI be making new starts at home today» but guard against arguments with relatives. A friend is a wet blanket in some way. You’re an effective com­ municator now. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Financial developments are positive» but business delays are possible. Eve­ ning hours could find you somewhat impatient, yet inclined to be late for appointments. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You shine in the company of friends today. Delays are possible in a legal matter. Impulsive shopping and ex­ travagant spending are twin pitfalls to guard against CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Behind-the-scenes developments are in your favor in business matters. The day is promising for new beginnings, but don 't undermine your goals by being petulant or temperamental. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Try not to be oversensitive in dealings with d o se ties today. Don't let a casual remark Tturt your feelings. Deal with unfinished tasks and contact friends afar. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept 22) It should be a productive workday for you. Sdll.it takes you a while to unwind now, and when you do, you're inclined to go overboard. Guard against p.m. Copynghl 1991 by KiB| State Pie— Thursday, A p ril 18,1991 Page 20 „ s . Sim plePairofsh lt* o i w if t( M b te i iîi0iÊmÊ§Ê m :-jjj0gfmliM mn ., n ui|i|)ii ' I j''7^~jy T T » C 9 Shop Monday through Saturday 10-9, Sunday 1 2 4 In Phoenix at M etrocontet Paradise Valley, Fiesta M all, ChrisTbwo, Scottsdale and Superstition Springs, Shop Monday through Friday 10-9, Saturday 104, Sunday 12-9 at Park Central and Westridge s We welcome your D illard's Credit Card, The Am erican Express* Card, Mastercard? Diners Club International, Visa? and The Discover Card.