State Press M agazine Inside State Press © C o p yrig h t, S ta te P re ss, 1992 T em pe, A rizo n a Thursday, April 23,1992 Arizona State University’s Independent Morning Daily Voi. 75 No. 130 Darryl Webb/State Press 2 dead, 3 w ounded at Tempe Smitty’s B y R IC H A R D R U E LA S S ta te P ress A 25-year-old Tempe man armed with a .45-caliber handgun opened fire in a Tempe Sm itty’s re sta u ran t Wednesday, killing a pregnant woman and seriously injuring three others, including his wife, before finally shooting himself. Donald Lonny Prunty, 25, shot himself in the head after killing waitress Barbara B arrin g er, 34, who was six- to sevenm o n th s p re g n a n t, a n d w ounding h is e s tra n g e d w ife, Robin P ru n ty , 31, a Smitty’s waitress for 10 years. Robin Prunty was in stable condition at M arico p a ¡C ounty M edical C e n te r Wednesday night. She suffered gunshot wounds in both legs. •Witnesses i horror of Smitty’s shooting- page 13. •Rash of domestic violence in Phoenix explored—page 7. Donald Prunty B eata B resn a n , 24, a h o stess, and Edward Horkey, 76, a customer, also were shot. B resnan was taken to thè county hospital, where she was, listed in stable condition w ith gunshot wounds to the shoulder. Horkey was taken to Scottsdale M emorial H ospital, where he also w as listed in stable condition with shoulder wounds. B arringer was 'shot in the chest and died a t Scottsdale M em orial H ospital. Doctors th e re were unable to save her unborn child. The two m inutes of te rro r began a t 12:42 p.m. Wednesday when Robin Prunty called 911 and told police in calm voice t h a t h e r h u sb a n d w as “s ta lk in g th e parking lot a t Smitty’s;” A ta p e of th e call show ed t h a t 45 sec o n d s in to th e ca ll, Robin P ru n ty screamed “Oh, God” after Donald Prunty fired two shots. ? Donald P ru n ty shouted to his wife, “Get over here. Get up! Get up right nowP as he fired more shots. Robin Prunty and Donald Prunty, who were m arried in October 1990 and had one child together, were separated. Robin P runty had an order of protection filed Irwin Daugherty/State Press A ngie C ota com forts S m itty’s em ployee S hirley Spencer, w ho w itnessed gunm an Donald Lonny Prunty, 25, open fire in th e Southern and M ill S m itty’s restaurant. (To p le ft) R o bin P ru n ty, th e 31-y e a r-o ld w ife o f gunm an D onald P ru n ty, is p laced in an a ir am bulance a fte r her husband opened fire in the S m ifty’s restaurant w here she w orked. Donald Prunty killed a pregnant w om an and injured three others before turning th e gun on him self. against her husband because he had come into the re sta u ra n t one other tim e and threatened her. Sgt.A l T aylor of th e Tem pe Police Department said police are not sure how many shots were fired because the bullets may have fragm ented and split, b u t he said at least five were fired because there were as many victims. Police arrived on th e scene a t 12:44 p.m. By th at time, Prunty had finished his shooting spree and tu rn e d th e gun on himself. Prunty entered the coffee shop a t 3232 S.M ill Ave., w hich w as crowded w ith lunchtime diners, and shouted, “Robin,” witnesses said. They said he then pulled th e handgun out of his w aistband and began firing. P runty, an E arh n h ard t Ford service employee, entered th e south side of the restaurant, firing at Bresnan and Horkey. Bresnan, a Tempe resident, ra n into the women’s room, where she stayed until Turn to Smitty’s shooting, page 11. 5 employees laid off in first ASU-West budget cuts B y C H A D R E D W IN G S ta te P ress The first layoffs in ASU West history were handed down this week as part of a 21-position downsizing plan to counter the effects of next year’s budget cuts. Five people Were laid off, including four classified staff and one administrator, while 16 non-academic vacancies will not be filled. The latest reductions bring the total n um ber of layoffs a t ASU M ain and W est since la st March to 100. i, . “This is the first time th at we have had the reductionin-force policy used a t ASU W est,” s a id ASU W est Provost Vernon Lattin. The decision, according to Lattin, was also designed to spare academic programs. “We have to prepare for the potential, and likelihood, A fresh coat: Tempe gang committee tajces measures to repaint a grafitti, covered wall. Page 2 of a reduced state budget in order to protect our academic programs,” he said. The reductions in classified staff at ASU West were in th e D e p a rtm e n t of In fo rm a tio n R esources a n d Technology as well as in Business Services. Karen M innihan, adm inistrative assistan t for ASU West adm inistrative affairs, said, “There is a general feeling th a t people are hoping th a t this won’t go any further, especially considering th a t these cuts actually only affected five people.” M innihan added t h a t she hopes th e layoffs will increase the communication between the campUs and the state* Legislature. “Personally, I hope this will encourage a more open dialogue between us and the Legislature, to let them know th at these are people being affected and not ju st budget figures,” she said. Lattin said the layoffs were handled with sensitivity. : “Obviously everybody is disappointed th at we have to go through this,” he said. “We are trying to do it in as humane and positive way as possible.” L attin added th a t he did not know if th ere will be more layoffs. “We hope th at this is the last time,” he said. “We won’t know for sure until we get the state budget and then we will have to evaluate the situation. But at this point, it doesn’t look like we will have anymore layoffs.” T he la id off em ployees w ill h av e th e o p tio n of consulting with a career m anagem ent group to try to locate other jobs. “I t is to help w ith th e ir tran sitio n of w hat is, we recognize, a very difficult period,” said ASU West Human Resources Director Jacqueline Weatherby. Solar power: Cat attack: ASU philosophy student Russ Payne has an enlightened idea to operate his trailer. T he ASU softball team is swept by UofA Wednesday night. Page 10 Today’s weather: Sunny and warm; d e a r at night. High in the m id to up p er 90s. Classifieds...... rn m ic s ........... Page 15 Sports............. ........18 ..........6 ........14 19 Page g State Press ThuradajjAprf^^WS Tempe geared to w ipe out gang graffiti By D .J . BURROUGH S tate Press Hie battleground is the sides at buildings and long-running walls, and Tempe wants to wrest control of them away from gangs. H ie city of Tempe’s Mayor’s Advisory Committee on Gangs has organized a community painting project for April 25 that will paint over a wall extensively covered with gang graffiti. The gray-block wall runs east and west and is adjacent to the Southern Pacific Railroad tracks just south of Apache Boulevard. John Osgood, a Tempe management assistant who is on the committee, said volunteers will paint the south side of the wall from Rural Road to McClintock Drive. “We’re mobilizing community resources in an effort to create an awareness in our community that there is a strategy in place for combating gang graffiti,” he said. “It is letting them know that they can do something about it.” Osgood said he expects about 25 volunteers for the painting project. Members of the police department’s gang unit and city staff members will join with a Boy Scout troop and citizen volunteers in painting the mile-long wall. “We’ll stay out there as long as it takes to get it done,” said Tony Ippolito, an officer in the city’s gang unit. “The more people we can get out there the better.” The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed on a space-available basis as a service to the ASU com m unity. Cam pus clubs and organizations can subm it w ritten entries to th e S tate Press, located in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter, Room 15. Entries are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. D eadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m . the previous business day. Meetings •A lcoholics Anonymous: closed m eeting, noon, Newm an C enter on C ollege Avenue and University Drive. •N arcotics Anonymous: open m eeting, 5:30 p .m ., Com m unity Christian Church, 1701 S. C ollege Ave. •S igm a Tau Delta: lecture: guest speaker Ron Carlson, director of A S U ’s creative w riting departm ent, topic: generating story ideas, 7 p .m ., LL B 205. •G u n Devils: m eeting, 5 p .m ., M U Santa Cruz Room. •C hi Alpha Christian Fellow ship: B ible study, all w elcom e, Ippolito said the wall is covered with multi-colored spray-painted gang symbols, copy-cat gang graffiti, vulgarities and drawings. “It’s just a hodgepodge,” he said. “We want to get all that stuff off.” Gang graffiti is a way for gangs to advertise their existence and to stake out their territory, Ippolito said. “They’re sending out a message saying, ‘This is who we are and this is the territory we are claiming,’ ” he said. “We’re going to paint over that and the message we’re going to send is that, ‘OK, we’ve seen your graffiti and now we don’t want you here.’ ” Besides improving the looks of the noon, M U G ila Room . •M U A B C ulture & A rts Com m ittee: A SU Cham ber O rchestra and string quartets perform , 11:45 a .m . to 1:30 p .m ., M U Program m ing Lounge. •R adio-Television News D irectors’ Association: Bruce Kelly o f Y -95 . w ill speak, 12:30 p .m „ S tauffer H all, Room A 207. •E piscopal Cam pus M inistry: m eeting, 6:15 Lutheran C enter, 15th S treet & M cA llister Avenue. p .m ., •C olleg e o f Education Council: m eeting, 3:30 p .m ., EDB 7E. •SEAC: last m eeting of sem ester, future goals, 7 p .m ., M U Kaibab Room . •H onors C ollege Council: m eeting, 3 p .m ., M cCtintock H all Study Lounge. •C hristian S tudents Fellow ship: Bible study, 12:30 to 1:30 p .m ., M U Pinal Room . •Y ou n g Dem ocrats o f A SU : m eeting, officer nom inations neighborhood, Ippolito said the painting of the wall to one color will discourage gangs from painting on it again. “We’ll keep painting over it as many times as we have to,” he said. “We don’t want gangs here in Tempe.” Osgood said painting over the graffiti is a way of telling the gangs that, “This is not turf to be fought over.” “When you cover up gang graffiti as soon as it hits the wall, it tends not to turn up again,” he said. Paint for the project is being supplied by the city and the businesses and apartments that the border the wall. fo r next year, 4 p .m ., M ulticultural Lounge, Services Building, second floor. Student •C o lleg e o f Liberal A rts & Sciences Council: m eeting, o fficer elections, 4:30 p .m ., M ulticultural Lounge, Student Services Building, second floor, •B a p tis t Student Union: free lunch, devotional & fellow ship, noon, 1322 S . M ill A venue. •G olden Key N ational H onor Society: regipnal/national conference, 3:30 p .m ., M cC lintock H all, Room 138. •S toryshare: hear & share favorite stories, all w elcom e, 8 p .m ., W est H all Courtyard. •G am m a Beta Phi: m eeting, 4:30 to 6 p .m ., Life Sciences Building, Room 191. •A s ia n C o a litio n : la s t m e e tin g , e le c tio n s , a ll representatives required to attend, 6 p .m ., M U third floor. •U ndergraduate Law Club: Snell & W ilm er tour, 5 p.m f, Arm strong H alt Room 105. • “ V ictory Together at A SU ” : guest Dr. Stew art w ill speak in support of the King holiday initiative, 3:30 p .m ., PS H 152. S t a t e P r e s s . . . t h e r e ’ s n e v e r a. d u l l i s s u e YOU SPEND YOUR DAY IN CLASS. WHY NOT LIVE IN STYLE THE COMMONS...ALTERNATIVE CAMPUS LIVING M odels Open D aily UNIVERSITY RURAL >Spacious, fully furnished suites > Kitchen com plete with m icrowave, dishw asher & disposal APACHE ■ A N P «è Why live in a dorm when you can get the most out of ASUliving at The Commons. The perfect atmosphere for study and fun, The Commons offers advantages to campus living that are anything but common. Stop by today for a tour -availability is limited. >2 full baths p e r suite >A W asher and Dryer in every suite >Large heated pool .______________ 8 2 9 -0 9 3 3 • Regulation sand volleyball court Raquetball court, weight room and redw ood sauna Planned social activities Roommate m atching service W alking distance to cam pus THE COMMONS T MEMBERS O N IV World/Nation P age3 Thursday, April 2 7 ,1 9 9 2 State Press Nearly 200 arrested in abortion protest A M H ERST, N.Y. CAP) — Police ■arrested nearly 200 abortion opponents who charged a women’s clinic Wednesday in a melee that was in sharp contrast to th e s ta id •ab o rtio n a rg u m e n ts being presented before the U.S. Supreme Court. A nti-abortion dem onstrators surged onto a four-lane highway and tried to rush p a s t police b arricad e s and ab o u t 150 abortion-rights activists in front of the suburban Buffalo clinic. The arrests occurred on the second day of large-scale abortion demonstrations in the Buffalo area by Operation Rescue. At the same time, the Supreme Court was hearing argum ents on an abortion case from Pennsylvania. Several hundred dem onstrators also waved placards and chanted outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. In Philadelphia, about 100 abortionrights activists demonstrated in front of the Liberty Bell and another 40 marched to th e city morgue, predicting the high court would curtail abortion with drastic consequences. About 300 abortion opponents rallied at the Illinois Statehouse in Springfield to demand passage of a bill requiring women to be told th e ir options before having abortions. In Buffalo, the Rev. Robert Schenck, an abortion protest organizer from suburban T o n aw an d a, sa id th e d e m o n stra tio n hadn’t been tim ed to coincide w ith the Supreme Court arguments. Protesters went limp and were carried or dragged by police through the crowd of abortion-rights dem onstrators to buses. Police bound p ro te s te r s ’ w ris ts w ith plastic handcuffs. Police also used the handcuffs to bind the feet of the Rev. John Hunter, an anti­ abortion leader from nearby Lockport, a f te r he broke th ro u g h th e lin e of a b o rtio n -rig h ts a c tiv is ts an d d ash e d toward the clinic door. Some of those arrested lay handcuffed in th e s tr e e t for 30 m in u te s as demonstrators on both sides taunted one another from opposite sides of the road. Police blocked traffic on the highway, and about 100 officers tried to keep the two sides separated. A bus in which some Operation Rescue d em onstrators had arriv ed w as towed away from the front of the clinic. . Abortion-rights activists chanted “God is a woman, and she’s pro-choice!” They mocked abortion opponents by shouting, “A baby a year until you drop!” A nti-abortion dem onstrators prayed and sang hymns, holding signs such as “A Baby Is a Person, No M atter How Small,” and a poster showing a baby in the womb A n ti-a b o rtio n a c tiv is ts a re taken to a w aitin g bus by A m herst P o lic e a fte r chargin g acro ss barricades and kneeling in Sw eet Hom e Road a t th e drivew ay entrance to D r. Shalom Press’ c lin ic abo ut W ednesday m orning, w ith th e caption, “Mommy, P lease Go Home, I Want To Live.” “We have some very courageous and L onging fo r L enin conscientious people who a re b rav in g humiliation to save human life,” Schenck said. Strong quake rocks southern C alifornia LOS ANGELES (AP) — A strong earthquake made buildings sway in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday night, and rocked structures from the Mexican border to Santa Barbara and as far away as 100 miles east in Palm Springs. Lucy Jones, a seismologist a t the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena said the preliminary estimate was a 6.3 on the Richter scale, which can cause strong damage. Buildings rocked from San Diego to S anta B arbara 200 miles up the coast, according to broadcast reports. The epicenter was given as nine miles east of Desert Hot Springs, site of an earlier temblor 110 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. The swaying motion th at began shortly before 10 p.m. continued for at least 10 seconds. The downtown bureau of the Associated Press momentarily lost its television reception, which resumed less th an a m inute after the temblor struck. “It rolled for a good five to 10 seconds, a real strong-’ Associated Press photo one to the point where it didn’t seem like it was going to M uscovites shout slogans in sup po rt o f S o viet fo u n d er V la d im ir L e n in durin g a ra lly in M oscow m arking th e 122nd end,” said Mark Sayre, a broadcaster with KESQ-TV in anniversary o f his birth, W ednesday. A p ortrait o f Lenin is displayed at le ft. It w as th e firs t tim e since Lenin’s death in 1924 th a t th e governm ent did not organize o fficial celebrations to m ark the b irthd ay o f th e fie ry revo lution ary w ho founded th ePalm Springs. “People bolted out of their doors.” T h ere w ere no im m ed iate re p o rts of in ju rie s or Soviet Union in 1917. damage. “The animals have been going berserk for the past 20 m in u tes (before th e qu ak e),” said M arie K innon in Palmdale, 50 miles north of downtown Los Angele. “I felt* it and it scared the heck out of me.” Other people said they felt a long duration. A statem ent by Pemex, Mexico’s state oil monopoly, GUADALAJARA, Mexico (AP) — A se rie s of “It jiist shook for about a minute,” said Joan Randolph explosions in th e sewer system ripped Open stree ts, said the explosions were caused by liquid hexane, used to of Culver City, about 10 miles west of Los Angeles. “The knocked down buildings and hurled trucks and cars in extract edible oils from seeds. The hexane leaked from a th e a ir in Mexico’s second la rg e st city W ednesday. private cooking oil factory, La Central, into the sewage chandelier is still moving but it wasn’t th at bad here.” E arlier W ednesday night, a m oderate earth q u ak e Witnesses said 129 bodies had been recovered, and 600 system, Pemex said. rocked parts of Riverside and San Bernardino counties on people were reported injured. Policeman M artin Bonales said he had called the The federal government sent the army to keep order police and fire department since Tuesday to complain of Wednesday, knocking out- some telephone service. There in the city of 3 million, where telephones, electricity and the gas smell. Government agencies told him everything were no reports of damage or injury in th at earlier quake. The 7:25 p.m. earthquake measured 4.6 on the R ichter. w a te r serv ices h ad been cut. R e sid e n ts said th e y was under control, he said. scale and was centered nine miles east of D esert Hot' complained of a gas smell for more than a day, but were Residents had begun removing manhole sewer covers S p rin g s, s a id C a lte c h q u ak e spokesw om an J u lie told everything was under control. in the neighborhood to let the gas out. At least nine explosions beginning at 10:30 a.m. (12:30 Hake will. Even in cool weather, a spark or the rumble of a truck p.m. EDT) blasted enorm ous craters and left jagged can ignite hexane violently. It was followed by several aftershocks, including one . * trenches along Gante Avenue and other streets in the “The leaders of th e police and fire d ep artm en t of measuring 2.7, she said.”Desert Hot Springs is about 110 Reforma district of southeastern Guadalajara. miles east of Los Angeles. Guadalajara should be tried as those responsible for the Some re s id e n ts of th e low er- to m id d le -class T here w ere no dam age or in ju ry rep o rts in Palm catastrophe,” Homero Aridjis, a poet and the leader of neighborhood dug feverishly in rubble With picks and • Springs, 15 miles southeast of the quake’s epicenter, said Mexico’s biggest environm entalist group, said in an axes for neighbors. At least 700 rescue workers were a city Police Departm ent records officer who identified1 interview in Mexico City. searching for victims. herself only as Cathy. The city’s fire chief m aintained the-explosions were Rescuers helped free passengers trapped in a bus th at “I was leaning on a file cabinet when th e cabinet j caused by gasoline. Hexane smells like kerosene. fell into a hole caused by the blast. Cars were crushed by began to shake,” she said. Gov. Guillermo Cosio Vidaurri ordered the homeless falling debris or flipped over like children’s toys. The quake knocked out some telephone service in Some residents wandered aimlessly among the ruins. housed temporarily in the state university and two sports Yucca V alley an d in T w entynine P alm s, said G ary s ta d iu m s. M a k e sh ift m o rg u es w ere s e t up in Others stumbled through the area in tears, their clothing Daigneault of KCDZ radio. gymnasiums and hospitals. , shredded. E xplosion rips th ro u g h G uadalajara Opinion P ase 4 State Press Thursday, April 8 3 ,1 9 9 8 Students’ voice I'M A FE T U S, to the editor t etters I'm Covered uirnt foRMAU>EH'fC>e, Mp I'MINv/ouR Sexist representation BVCJE./ D ear Editor: As a lesbian I applaud the decision of Ms. Patricia Mah to write a story on “coming out and being gay in today’s society.” I also applaud those people willing to take what they perceive as a great risk in having their names and experiences revealed in the State Press. However, as a lesbian feminist who has been quite publicly “out” both on campus and in the wider Phoenix com m unity for a num ber of years, I find the article biased and disturbing for a number of reasons. While the tone of the article was supportive, the information that was included was not representative. For example, Ms. Mah has included the experiences an d o p in io n s of fo u r gays a n d one le sb ia n (She referenced b u t did hot include th e experience of one other lesbian). Moreover, she attem pted to discuss the issues of “coming out”*without defining it, included the experiences of a select few (most of whom are current members of LGAU) as being representative of the lesbian and gay population at ASU, and portrays the lesbian and gay community as a homogenous group. “Coming o u t” is often a long process. It in itia lly involves self-acceptance and deciding with whom self­ disclosure will take place. “Being out,” which is perhaps a b e tte r p h ra se for describing w h a t h appens a fte r “coming o u t,” is a long Continuum. All of us are a t different places on it. It begins with self-acceptance and progresses through relationships, socializing, joining groups, political activity, etc. Some lesbians and gays decide to live th e ir liv es a t an y p o in t along th e continuum. O thers of us reach a point where we are totally self-accepting, as lesbians or gays, and do not allow our sexual/affectional orientation to color our perceptions of everyone in our lives, or everything. The tru th is, “coming out” may be painful, or then again it may not. Often one’s coming out experience, as to emotional difficulty, is determined by one’s religious background. Being out m ay be dangerous, and then again it may not. In my personal experiences a t ASU betw een th e years 1986 and 1988 it was dangerous. Currently, for me, “being out” is not dangerous. There are two factors th a t have changed — in the campus community, and my own Way of presenting myself and being on the same political issues as in the past, yet my sexual orientation no longer colors my perceptions and interactions with members of the ASU community. By choosing only to include the younger lesbian and gay members of the student population, and only those currently involved with LGAU, Ms. Mah has ignored the: experience and perceptions of a very large group at ASU. There are at least 4,000 lesbians and gays on campus. LGAU only has an active membership of 20-40, at least two-thirds male; Statistically that is about 1 percent of the population. Additionally we come from every ethnic, ra c ia l a n d socioeconom ic, re lig io u s a n d g e n d e r background. Ms. Mah, the lesbian and gay community is not a homogenous group. While she included the “coming out” experience of one lesbian, she failed to include any of the experiences, relationship styles, political or social groups of lesbians. By definition the lesbian experience is different from the gay experiences. J u s t as the heterosexual community cannot be represented by only white males, neither can the lesbian and gay community. While many lesbians and gays feel a discussion of n a tu re vs, n u rtu re is im portant, many of us do not. In fact, many of us feel th a t th e en tire discussion is heterosexist because it s Uff IT S HARD To AR^ÜG WW THM" KINDOF UX,IC implies th at same-gender sexual orientation is less than normal. We recognize th at in term s of dealing with the political system and certain fundamentalist religions the discovery of a biological cause would make th a t task easier, but we also recognize (and are honest enough to admit) th a t there is an elem ent of choice in any ones sexual behavior. We also believe th at it is necessary to recognize th a t o th er legally recognized m in o rities, religion and veteran status, are also freely chosen. As to the issue of being openly affectionate in public, while th e re can be problem s, I have n ev e r received h a ra ssm e n t because I k issed or held h an d s w ith a woman. 1 have received h a ra ssm e n t because 1 was politically Vocal. Being able and willing to be publicly affe c tio n a te is a fu n ctio n of self-acceptance, selfconfidence and a n unw illingness to allow anyone to define my personal life, as long as I am not h u rtin g anyone else.' Ms. Mah, m any of us have had problems, as have m any h e te ro se x u a ls a n d b ise x u a ls, m any o f us undoubtedly related them to you — but the questions you asked elicited th at response. I resent the fact th at the view of the lesbian experience was not only limited, but presented through the eyes and voices, for the most p art, of m en. I am a person, I am respected on th is campus, whether I work, in the political community, and in my hometown — Mesa, Ariz., neither because nor in spite of my sexual/affectional orientation because of who I am. D en ise H eap Senior, W omen’s S tu dies Progress depends on Earth D ear E ditor: la m tir e d of h e a rin g people th in k of environm entalists as scummy, pot-smoking idiots who only like to sit around and find something to bitch about. I am a n e n v iro n m e n ta lis t a n d I do n o t sm oke marijuana, nor only like to complain. I, like many other environmentalists, am all for the progression and well­ being of hum anity (both of those factors going hand in hand for most people). The environmental movement is not a n y th in g like th e peace m ovem ent aro u n d th e Vietnam war in the 1970s. It is a totally different issue. It’s sim ilar to the peace movement because it is about th e su rv iv al of m an. I t ’s also sim ila r to th e peace movement because people use it to be trendy. Yet, the environmental movement is ju st another step th at man m ust take in order to progress. Unless, however, you want the quality of our lifestyle to go downhill, like the Bush administration has so clearly provoked. ' . ■S M argaret O vson Freshm an, Photojournalism Fraternaties neglected D ear Editor: f . I would like to congratulate the ASU chapter of the I n s titu te of In d u s tria l E n g in ee rs on w in n in g th e O u ts ta n d in g C h a p te r A w ard from t h e ir n a tio n a l organization: On a different note, I would like to condemn the State P ress on th e ir selective and prejudiced coverage of w o rth y new s sto rie s. T h is p a s t su m m er tw o ASU fraternities, Delta Kappa Epsilon and Sigma Chi, were named the best chapters in the United States by their respective international organizations. Both of these awards are the highest honor th at can be bestowed upon a local c h a p te r, y e t th e S ta te P ress ig n o red th o se accom plishm ents. The p aper was inform ed o f th ese honors, both in person and in writing, b u t chose not to recognize these fraternities. Several of the Valley’s large newspapers did choose to ru n stories about Deke and Sigma Chi honors. The reason why these incredible achievements w ire ignored by the State Press is the fact th at the recipients were fraternities. I have been here a t ASU for four y eirs and can count on one hand how many positive stories about fraternities have been printed. Coverage seeftns limited to the negative aspects of the Greek system. Why can’t th e S ta te Press editors look beyond th e ir own prejudices and allow both the positive and negative. Bair and equal representation is all th at I ask for the Greek S ystem co n sists of over 10 p ercen t of th e s tu d e n t population and raised over $30,000 for charities, donated countless hours to community service, and its members a re involved in alm ost every cam pus organization. Scholastic enhancement, leadership training and Social development are ju st some of the benefits of being Greek. T o g eth e r, th e G re ek s a re th e la r g e s t s tu d e n t organization on campus and I believe the system should be treated with respect. B ill Kavan Form er P resid en t, D elta K appa E psilon MICHELLE ROBERTS, Editor PATRICIA MAH, Managing Editor KRIS M AYES J ’______ ______ ____ ____ -C ity Editor KEN BROW N..................... KAY OLSON............ ...... LARRY SALZM AN........ ANDREW FAUGHT........... IRWIN DAUGHERTY....... SEA N O PEN SH A W .......... ............... .... Asst. Photo Editor DAN ZEIGER.......... DARREN U RBA N.... ............. ............. .Asst. Sports Editor VICKI CULV ER. ............... LAURIE N O TA R O ............ REPO RTERS: D.J. Burrough, Christopher Driscoll, Margo Gillman, Carol Ann Hansen, Blake Herzog, Lisa Kranz, Corey Lewis, Shannon Loughrin, Cecilia M arquis, Chad Redwing, Jackie Rutyna, Sondra Roberto, Irma Rosales, Richard RuelasSP O R T S R E PO R T E R S: Brian Charles, Michael Flores, Greg Sexton. MAGAZINE STAFF: Dawn DeVries, Richard Ruelas. CARTOONIST: Ken Collins. PHOTOGRA PH ERS: Henri Cohen, Michelle Conwaty, T.J. Sokol, Darryl Webb, Carl York. COPY ED ITORS: Joanna Glickler, Kate Wagstaffe. C O LU M N ISTS: Nicholas Gerbis, Lois Griffitts, Lorenzo Sierra Jr., Ashahed Triche. PRODUCTION: Christine M. Armstrong, Kai Barrett, Celia Hamman C ueto, Jeff Hams, K evin H eller, Barry Kelly, A n g ela L a P o rte , Je fre y L ucas, D an R ic k erb y , E hren Schwiebert. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Jesus Barron, Sonia Benson, Tom Curtis, Heather DeShong, Lori Guthart, Brittin Karbowsky, Shawn Loos, Lance Newman, Jennifer Rishel, Neil Schnelwar, Dennis Talbot. The State P ress is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona Statn. University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. Individual members of the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: two pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with die university) and phone number. O nly signed letters w ill be considered fo r publication^ R equests fo r anonym ity w ill be granted o nly w ith an appropriate reason. / Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. ' All letters must be either brought in person with a photo T.D. to the S ta te P ress fro n t desk in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter or else addressed to S ta te P ress; H Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. MICHELLE R O B E R T S ........................................E ditor PATRICIA MAH ........................................... Managing Editor LARRY SALZMAN......................................... Opinion Editor Front Desk......«.,...¿¿.^..,..¿.......................*.«....,.........965-7572 T h e S ta te P ress is the o n ly new spaper e x clu siv e ly published for and circulated on die ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Editorial Board State Press Phone Numbers Newmen The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers cm any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than Magazine......,..,...,.....;............965^1695 Display A d v e r t i s i n g ^ . ¿ , . , . . » . ; . « . , 9 6 5 - 6 5 5 5 Classified Advertising..............................................965-6731 Page 5 Thursday, A p ri 8 3 ,199g P olice Report ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: • Four ground lights in Parking Structure 4 were damaged. Estimated cost of repair is $3,000. • A man not affiliated with the University was told to leave ASU’s football practice fields after police received reports that he was acting suspiciously. •B est Hall received a bomb threat. The building was evacuated and searched. No bomb was found. Tempe police reported the following incidents Wednesday: • A 35-to 40-year-old black man described as 6-feet tall with a heavy muscular build, clean shave, gray T-shirt, black pants and light colored tennis shoes, assaulted a Scottsdale resident in the west parking lot of Jack in the Box, 3214 S. Mill Ave. The suspect grabbed the victim around the neck from behind, took her purse and threw her to the ground. He fled west. The woman was taken to Tempe S t Luke’s Hospital where she was treated for minor cuts. • A 43-year-old Tempe woman was arrested in the lobby of the Tempe Police Department after she removed her shirt and exposed her breasts to four officers and other police employees. She had been taken to the Maricopa County Mental Hospital three times previously and officials there refused to admit her again because she has repeatedly signed herself out the next day. She was released from the county hospital seven hours before this arrest. • A 31-year-old Mesa resident was arrested at Tempe Justice Court for kicking a door open and slamming it shut after he was found guilty of failing to register his vehicle. • Three men entered Discount Water Beds, 1911E. Apache Blvd., and one, a white man, fr-foot-5, 300 pounds, with dirty blond hair, grabbed an employee by the throat and pinned him against a wall while he demanded a waterbed mattress and heater he said were owed to him. Two other men, both white, 18 to 19 years old, with brown hair, each grabbed an arm of the employee as the first suspect took a king-sized waterbed mattress, valued at $150. The three fled in a black stretch limousine. Compiled by State Press reporter Richard Ruelas. U.S. income fails to keep up with inflation WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans’ per capita income in 1991 grew at the slowest rate since the Eisenhower administration and, when adjusted for inflation, actually shrank for the first tim e in nine years, the government said Wednesday. Personal income averaged $19,082 per person last year, ju st 2.1 percent more than in 1990, the Commerce Department said. That was barely more than half the 4.1 percent inflation rate as measured by th e d e p a rtm e n t’s in d ex for p erso n al expenditures. It was the first time since 1982 th at growth in income per capita failed to keep pace with rising prices and i t was th e slowest grow th since p er c a p ita incom es rose j u s t 1 p ercen t in 1958, a recession year. Income growth has declined in each of the last three years. P er capita income grew 5.4 percent in 1990, 6.9 percent in 1989 and 7.1 percent in 1988. “From a p u rely po litical p o in t of view, you couldn’t ask for a worse thing to happen if you’re George Bush,” said economist William Dunkelberg, dean of Temple University’s business school. ' “If you’re a Democrat, you wonder why you don’t h av e a d ec en t c a n d id a te to r u n d u rin g th is wonderful opportunity,” he said. T he incom e fig u re s show ed th e co n tin u in g reversal of a mid-1980s trend, dubbed the bicoastal economy, of incomes growing faster on the E ast and West coasts, where incomes already were higher, than in the country’s heartland. “The states th at were the highest flyers in the 1980s w ere p ay in g th e h ig h e s t p rice in th e recessio n ,” said econom ist B ruce S te in b e rg of Merrill Lynch. Last year, six states registered income gains of 1 percent or less: Rhode Island, 0.2 percent; Nevada an d M aine, 0.7 p ercen t; New H a m p sh ire, 0.9 . percent; and Idaho and Maryland, 1 percent. Only seven states m anaged income increases equal to or better than the national inflation rate la s t year: Wyoming, 5.1 percent; M ontana and N orth-Dakota, 4.8 percent; Hawaii, 4.6 percent; L o u isian a, 4.2 p e rc e n t, an d New Mexico and Arkansas, 4.1 percent. “The defense cutbacks are having a big impact,” said Rudolph E. DePass, a Commerce D epartm ent, analyst. “The high-income states (in the 1980s) ... were generally all p re tty heavily involved in the defense industry.” Still, income growth was lower in 1991 than a year earlier in all 50 states, reflecting the scope of th e re c e ssio n t h a t b eg an in J u ly 1990 an d co n tin u ed , acco rd in g to m an y eco n o m ists, throughout 1991. T he slu g g ish n e ss w as m uch m ore w idely dispersed them in previous years. In 1990, 40 states reported slower income growth than in the previous year. Twenty-five states reported a slowdown in 1989. E conom ists p red icted incom e grow th would im prove m o d estly th is y e a r as th e econom y recovers. State Presspofeü ■ 1 - 111 — ■ KAPLAN TEST PREP We Set The S ta n d a rd . .. You Set The Pace. GMAT MCAT GRE LSAT ¿ STA N LEY I t K A PLA N Take Kaplan Or Take \bur Chances 967-2967 FREE Diagnostics & Tuition Assistance Available 1000 E. Apache • Suite 211 (1 block east of Rural) Tempe Page 6 Thursday, April 8 3 ,19 9 8 E d u cation co m m ittee goes again st o p en m eetin g s law , so m e o fficia ls say PHOENIX (AP) — The Attorney General’s Office says its review of a recent dinner gathering of members of the House Education Committee indicates the meeting went against the open meetings law. However, Rob Carey of the Attorney General’s Office says there’s really nothing to be done a t this point except m ake s u re t h a t la w m a k e rs u n d e rs ta n d th e open meetings law in the future. He also says he feels sure the problem was a re su lt of m isunderstanding and th a t there wasn’t any intent to break the law. The d in n er p arty idea grew out of a conversation am ong a few m em bers who felt th e re was need for Vf* Aeuyt N uttrC iri 8 Viit Deliwryl Open Daily for Lanciti discussion and clarification of general philosophies in light of the number of education issues lawmakers are facing. After checking with the House rules attorney and being told the dinner would be OK, they went ahead, and nine members of thè committee attended. The House Ethics Committee came to the conclusion th a t since there was no intent to take any action and Since there wasn’t a quorum present a t any given time, the meeting didn’t violate the law. C arey says th a t’s wrong and th a t th e sta n d a rd requires an open meeting for discussion of anything that could conceivably come before the committee for action. Broaden Your Horizons R e a d t h e S t a t e P re s s OPINION S e c t io n the State Press has them covered! r » i i i i i BACKfo rWAXING m en $35 reg-,5° i BIKINI WAX $ 1 S « g .* 2o M erid ia n Êfm C orners y (f & J| New Hours M-F 9am-7pm Sat 9am-6pm Sun 10am-5pm 970-0084 1st tim e dients only ^ c o t t s d a le ^ ^ ïT hqhton^ ^ "" “ "" “ "" “ " $2 OFF 1355 s. M cClintock Tem pe, 894-2798 Hours: M on-Sat 8 -6 Sun 10-4 G re a s e 'n G o 's Valvoline Lube, Oil & pnter Service R eg. Price $ 2 1.95 Good only with coupon. Not vafid with any olher offer. Close to ASU 4 Pools Volleyball 2 Jacuzzi's Lighted Tennis Court ■ Large Homes ■ Furnished Avail. ■ Patios/Extra Storage ■ Large Closets "Ask A b o u t FREE Rent" Bike to Campus 1440 E. Broadway Rd. Tempe, 966-5818 Leisur e S tudies - S ummer 1 9 9 2 1st 5-Week Session REC 150 O U T D O O R P U R S U IT S Line Number: 64332 Daily 7:40-9:10 a.m . REC 458* IN T ’L T O U R IS M Line Number: 62869 Daily 9:20-10:50 a.m. REC 160* L E IS U R E 8e S O C IE T Y Line Number: 66470 Daily 11 a.m .-12:30 p.m. REC 498 S T : F U N D R A IS IN G Line Number: 54428 MWTh 7-9:40 a.m . REC 340 O U T D O O R S U R V IV A L Line Number: 61662 Daily 9:20-10:50 a.m. ‘ Course fulfills general studies requirement. 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In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 4-23 CRYPTOQUOTE D S Y D Y K D W B V V Y P K DEPARTMENT OF LEISURE STUDIES Register Early!! A B O D E S D E A R T H 0 E F A e E W H A A B C S M O O S W P O U R N c O F F E E K N U R L S 1 L 1 C C A 1 N A A G O G N B Ò N E DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to work it: For additional information contact: Dixie Gammage Hall 204 965-7291 CROSSWORD B H N Y ' i X I A K D X G N Y B K B V D N C Z X X U D X H Y G Q D Q G J A D S H B U X V Y K . — J YV U Y N N J A N N F A Y Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: THE’ONE THING EV­ ERYONE IN THE WORLD WANTS AND NEEDS IS FRIENDLINESS. — WILLIAM E. HOLLER e 1992 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Romance-related violence rising, experts say By SONDRA ROBERTO S tats Press L ast Thursday the usually-routine morning opening of a Paradise Valley department store was halted suddenly when a crazed gunman took his boss hostage and held police at bay while demanding to see his psychologist. “Apparently, I’ve been pushed to my limit," Jay Griffin told a police officer during a tape-recorded phone call from Dillards. Soon after, Scottsdale police found Jay Griffin’s wife of four months and a male neighbor dead in the neighbor’s apartment. Less than a week after the hostage ordeal dropped off the front pages of Valley newspapers, another incident resulting from domestic hostilities left a pregnant women dead and three others injured at a Tempe Smitty’s supermarket. Valley experts said the two incidents are reflective of increasing violence stemming front romantic relationships gone sour. “We are certainly experiencing a lot of hate, and it’s just unbelievable that people are turning so violent as they have been,’’ said Dick Steely, public information officer for the Tempe Police. “It’s indicative of what we’re seeing around the country as far as guns, drugs and gangs,” he said* “It’s all coming together and domestic violence is just part.” Increasingly, women find themselves in danger of someone they know well — their husband or boyfriend. About 40 percent of all women who are murdered are killed by their partner, according to FBI reports. , Murder by their current or former lover is the leading cause of death among women, according to. Nancy Russo, director of ASU’s women’s studies program. “It’s not just an event that sets them off," Russo said. “It’s very likely that there is a history of battery for that woman, and if it’s not nipped in the bud, it’s like a snowball going down a mountain.” Newspaper reports last week said Griffin’s wife had told friends that her husband was abusing her. Likewise, toe exwife involved in Wednesday’s incident had placed a restraining order on her exhusband, suggesting previous problems of abuse; Steely said a restraining order is ineffective in deterring an estranged p a rtn e r “ because if the person is disrespectful of toe woman in the first place, a restraining order certainly isn’t going to get their attention." Guille Sastre, a counselor at Phoenix Crisis Unit said many women who seek help at the 24-bed shelter suspect their spouse or boyfriend would kill them in a fit of rage. Sastre added that she cannot determine whether toe number of battered women has increased because “we are always packed.” “Sometimes we have to refuse a lot of people because we don’t have toe space,” she said. Steely said he is unsure how many domestic violence calls are received weekly by Tempe police but “we get a lot”’ Although it would seem by the number of cases making the news that domestic violence is increasing, counselor Judy Mattingly of toe Camelback Hospital Crisis Center said the violence has always been prevalent. “I don’t think it’s just that domestic violence has increased, I think that society in general is more aware of it, women and neighbors are more apt to call toe police than they used to and police are arresting more,” she said. Y o u c a n se ll j u s t a b o u t a n y t b i n g i n th e 50 19 ¿¿W estern States Cj u j t ir e a n d a u t o s e r v ic e $ 36 so G O O D pYEA R v v 101 S . 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A vailable Custom M in i Blinds Throughout W asherVDryers in Select Units W oodbum ing Fireplaces in Select Units Large Sparkling Heated Pools and Jacuzzi Sand V olleyball Court Private Patios/Balconies •Front W heel Alignm ent •Referencing Thrust Line •M ost C ars & Light Trucks •W arranty 6 months or 6 ,0 0 0 m iles Rural, $ •Check Only •Includes Printout with Specs •Most Cars & Light Trucks V EH I C L E A L I G N M E N T $ COMPUTERIZED $ s 46 1st Street Apache b b s m b h H mm 50 •4-w heel Alignm ent with M echanical R ear Adjustm ent (Shim Type Extra) •R oad Test •M ost Cars & Light Trucks •W arranty 6 m onths or 6 ,0 0 0 m iles 'S p e c ia lfo r A S U stu d en ts & fa c u lty " Expires 5-23-92 ■■ mm * ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ^ * * * * ¿ | DID YOU GET THE FALL '92 CLASSES YOU NEED? SummerCommunicationClassesStill Open Pre-Session(May11-29) COM363 (SB,G) AdvancedIntracultural COM453 (SB) Training&Development SummerSessionI COM100 (SB) IntrotoCommunication IntrotoInterpersonalCommunication COM110 IntrotoCommunicationInquiry COM207, COM222 (LI) Argumentation COM225 (LI) PublicSpeaking COM230 (SB) SmallGroupCommunication COM250 (SB) IntrotoOrganizationalCommunication Business&ProfessionalCommunication COM259 COM263 (SB,G) IntrotoInterculturalCommunication NonverbalCommunication COM275 COM308 (L2) ResearchMethodology GenderandCommunication COM316 COM321 (L2,HU)RhetoricalTheory COM329 (SB) Persuasion Thursday, April 8 3 ,19 9 8 Page 8 Adrenaline Def Leppard Mercury /Polygram * * * 1/2 rated on a Jive-star scale ►If there was ever a band that had the same bad luck as the fictional Spinal Tap, It has to be Def Leppard. Consider this. Since recording their breakthrough album Pyromania in 1983, drummer Rick Allen lost left arm in a car accident and most recently, guitarist Steve Clark died from problems related to alcoholism. All this leaves fans of the British rockers wondering "What next?' For the time being, however, the Leps have managed to pul themselves together to release what will most likely be their biggest selling album ever. Surely, Adrenalize will out-do Def Leppard's last release Hysteria in commercial success, but it is not necessarily the band's best effort. Sadly, the first three songs on Adrenalize are cheesy recordings that should be called Hysteria 11. “Let's Get Rocked,” “Heaven Is” and “Make Love Like a Man” make it seem like the most current tragedy put too much strain on the creative force of the band. Fortunately, things get better from there. "Tonight” takes the band tn a different trail, but not a different direction. Then comes the fifth and best song on Adrenalize, “White Lightning.” This sevenand-a-half minute epic is as good a song as Def Leppard has ever recorded. In the middle of Adrenalize, Def Leppard puts out some high quality material using its patented catchiness with a little crunch. Ju st when you think thts is the best thing you've ever heard, the second to last song, "I Wanna Touch U.” reverts back to the empty headedness of the first three tunes. It's almost as though the last cut. “Tear it Down” tries in some small way to apologize for “I Wanna Touch U.” Overall, this release is worth buying on sale. Adrenalize refills a void that was left when bands with substantive lyrics began to rule the sales charts. Def Leppard is like a corny sit-com. You don't have to turn your brain on, but you feel good afterwards, by Lorenzo Sierra Jr. >Stanley, Son o f Theodore: Yes, it’s yet another alternative music sampler. Far from rare, these beasts are thundering around a record store near you in great numbers. Even as we speak, a helpless clerk at Tower Records is pinned beneath an ever-growing pile of alternative music samplers. The great thing about these samplers is the plethora of unreleased remixes, rarities and live tracks that the record company feels obliged to unearth in hopes of attracting more buyers for not only the sampler but also for the lackluster artists in the company’s catalog. On Stanley, we get a remix of Shamen’s “Make it Mine." a live version of Pearl Jam ’s “Alive,” a non-album reggae/rap cut “Woodtop" from Shabba Ranks, and a beautiful acousUc version of ex Yaz crooner Alison Moyet’s “It Won’t Be Long.” Ironic, isn’t it, that these are all courtesy of corporate greed. There’s also some great guitar pop courtesy of Senseless Things (“Everybody’s Gone), biting rock from Manic Street Preachers (“Love's Sweet Exile”), acoustic folk from Sun 60 (“Out of My Head”), and a sonic Velvet Underground cover by Eye & 1 (“Venus in Furs"). Of course, you have to put up with the usual garbage to get the good stuff. After you get done wading through junk by the Indigo Girls. Bruce Cockbum, Poi Dog Pondering, Big Audio Dynamite II and Gregg Alexander you almost forget why you bought the damn thing in the first place. -by Randy Hawkins Scream in Blue Midnight Oil Columbia Records Stanley, Son oj Theodore Various Artists Columbia/Epic/Def Jam ★ ★ rated on a Jive-star scale rated on a Jive-star scale ►Midnight Oil made the right decision in choosing to release a live -album at this point in the band's distinguished existence. * Scream in Blue allows the environmentally active Peter Garrett and company to reexamine their older material and reevaluate it in light of their more recent success. Although songs like “Brave Faces” and “Hercules” sound stale in the shadow of the hard-hitting earthy rock on 1988’s Diesel and Dust and 1990’s Blue Sky Mine, they also provide an interesting perspective on Midnight Oil’s musical approach. Scream In Blue opens with the * title song, an instrumental that begins with a furious screaming guitar, soon tempered by keyboards and a steady rhythm section, yet never quite losing its insistent edge. The song can be seen as a metaphor for the band’s career, which began with postpunk rockers like “Read About It" and “Powderworks” but has been awarded commercial success with a more C o r n er >Beer and Soda •Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids •Compact Discs 712 S. C o llege Ave. - N ext to C o llege S tre e t Deli M-F 7:30 a.m .-10 p.m . S at. 9 a.m .-10 p.m . S u n . 11 a.m .-10 p.m . P h o n e :9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 ■ nun m i H S i ■ i l l Stale Press s » moderate sound that still retains the band's spirit. The best material on the album are the four songs from Diesel and Dust, including a blistering performance of the band’s biggest hit “Beds Are Burning." And don’t miss “Progress,” recorded at a 1990 protest in front of Exxon's New York Headquarters, and “Stars of Warburton" from Blue Sky Mine. The new acoustic song is an affecUng cap to the feats of the past, parting the way for the future. Midnight Oil's sound translates easily to a live environment, with an added energy that enhances the material, bringing an immediacy to the band's forceful environmental concerns. Although the band probably could have chosen a better mix of material for the live album, they have once again managed to record an album that demands respect even as it entertains. -by Randy Hawkins ►Chalk up another hit for the English pop: rock scene. Ex-Echo and the Bunnymen crooner Ian McCulloch’s second solo album, Mysterio, arrives hot on the heels of Jam es' Seven, giving a strong indication that a wave of British pop hits might be On its way. Not that the so-called British Invasion ever stopped in the first place. McCulloch himself has been cranking out alternative music hits for years, both with Echo and the Bunnymen and on.his own. But this Ume ju st might'be different. Mysterio is McCulloch's strongest effort to date. His musical ■ integrity has become flavored, yet not tempered, with a sharp pop bite that could be enough to introduce McCulloch to a Top 40 audience. The album couldn’t have gotten off to a better start than with the up­ tempo cuts “Magical World" and “Close Your Eyes.” McCulloch continues to come into his own with “Dug for Love," a gospel tinged number with a solid dance beat. A passionate cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Lover Lover Lover," the entrancing “Vibor Blue," and the urgent “In My Head" round out the album’s brightest moments. McCulloch's lyrics deliver starryeyed naivety permeated with a wry cynicism. “Is it really such a magical world?" McCulloch wonders aloud on "Magical World." On the whole. Mysterio is a confident thrust that discovers the potential often suggested by McCulloch’s material. -by Randy Hawkins Eye 81 i Eye & 1 Epic Records ■★ ★ ★ rated on a five-star scale ►“Our songs aren’t necessarily hardcore," explained Eye & I drummer Ritchie Harrison, “but our energy is." This energy is most likely what landed the six-piece black rock coalition band Eye & I a touring gig opening for Ice T"s hardcore Body Count. Although it took the crowd a while to accept the band's Uysterio Ian McCulloch SlTe Records 1/2 rated on a five-star scale * '> -, , 1 eclectic blend of rock, jazz, funk and hip hop. the band soon won the masses over with Its larger than life sound and dominating stage presence. Harrison thinks that the band's self-titled debut album is an accurate measure of the band's potential and ability. “It’s still there." he said. “The flre and all that is still there." In a sense he’s right. Some of the tracks exhibit the undeniable power the band casually displayed onstage during a show at Club Rio last month, such as “Prisoner in Babylon," with its funk rock urgency, and “Venus in Furs." the throbbing redecoration of the Velvet Underground classic. Other notable points on Eye & I Include the first track “I Ain’t Low" with its hip hop bridge into the reggae undercurrent of “Can’t Live Without Your Love." Living Colour’s Vernon Reid also contributes a blistering solo to “World Without End." The album’s good intentions implode with “Virgin Heart" and “Easy Goodbye." a pair of sappy love ballads in the Anita Baker vein that were obviously added for their commercial appeal. More emotionally powerful love songs are found in the Insistent “Down to Zero” and the jazzy hook of “No Promises." The band's half-hearted attempts to sell out backfire. Eye & I Is at its best when delivering its uncompromising fusion of modem rock with earthy rhythm and blues, but the music suffers when the band bows to the great god of commercialism. -by Randy Hawkins r a d i a t i n g n Spooky Lush Reprise Records rated on a Jive-star scale ►Don't write off Lush as just another Cocteau Twins ripoff. Sure, both bands share the same musical strategy: Mid-tempo rhythms, Insistent guitar strumming and high pitched female vocals. Sure, Lush's intricate songwrtting and intricate arrangements are Instantly reminiscent of the Cocteau Twins. Sure, Robin Guthrie of the Cocteau Twins contributed lavish production to Spooky, Lush's second LP. But Lush brings a warm full sound to what could otherwise be antiseptic standard four-piece pop rock depressants. Although not consistent, this British band occasionally manages to tap into pure human essence, and deliver that sensation to its listeners. “Untogether," “Monochrome," and “For Love,” the second single from Spooky, are perfect examples of what Lush can accomplish when they don’t let style get the better of substance. Although persistent,.“Nothing Natural," the album's first single, is a lengthy example of what happens when Lush gets hung up on the neat noises they can eke out of the studio. After the first three minutes, the song becomes quickly tedious and repetitive. -by Randy Hawkins e w s o u n d s new and used albums, cassettes, compact discs imports • domestics • indies • posters • t-shirts • singles buy sell trade CURE/BRU Ot / VBEASTI E W Y S / \S P I N A L T A P / N / E D O B S O N A N D BASELINE 8 9 7 -7 1 0 9 COUNT/ \D E F / U K/ \ MICHELLE SHOCKED/ GUS SAYS 99< slices X b y r n e /k in g s x / \ lo s r a m o n e s / Y tanita tikaram/ \ IAN M'CULLOCh/ X anteitan/ \ * X ^ COMPACT DISC E X C H M IG E X \BODY It., EYE & I Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday only / \ SORRY. / \ N O X 8 2 9 -3 9 9 5 “You’ve tried the rest, now try the best.” / y a n n i/ \ / V Plus 22 other hit titles!! 933 E. U niversity n J jf P S L 966-3125 In th e A r c h e s N O L IE : We pay the Valley's top prices for your CDs! H $1 OFF I (Behind Kinko’s) JEn any ***&' LARGE OR X-LARGE PLUS 2 FREE 32 O Z. SODAS p g J |g m .... Valid with Dine-ln upK --Not valid with any other coupon. FAST, FREE DELIVERY checks accepted Hours: Mon-Thur 11-2 Fri-Sat 11-3 Sun 12-2 Page 10 Thursday, April 2 3 ,1998 ASU student gets charge from solar energy Payne said the potential life span of photovoltaic panels is unknown because Russ Payne makes his home in a 28-foot they have not been around very long. The Silver Streak in a small trailer park just off Real Goods Source Book, a how-to guide and Terrace Drive. Many people would say he ca talo g fo r so lar equipm ent, said lives in tight quarters, but Payne said he is photovoltaics were invented in the comfortable. mid-1950s. He has a refrigerator, a kitchen sink, a Payne said aerospace photovoltaic panels bathroom, a stove and something almost no with designs similar to the designs of one else in Tempe can lay claim to — total consumer panels have been successfully independence from electrical utilities. generating electricity on satellites for more Payne said he has lived “off the grid” than 20 years. These panels receive sunlight since mid-October. He made it through the 24 hours a day, he said. winter using the electricity generated by a “For all I know, I may be reading by the 32-watt solar photovoltaic panel and stored light from this very panel when I’m 70 years in a deep-cycle marine battery. old,” he said. Photovoltaic cells, which use crystalline Payne said the price of photovoltaic silicone to convert sunlight into electricity, electricity Will eventually fall below the for years have been considered too costs of electricity now produced by fossil expensive to produce electricity at a fuels. practical cost. “If you look at the rate we’re burning oil The price of electricity produced by a and coal, the price is bound to go up,” he photovoltaic panel over its life span has said. been estimated to be as high as 50 cents per He brought out a copy of Real Goods and kilowatt hour for some units, looked up a 30-year amortization table that Payne, a 28-year-old philosophy graduate showed photovoltaic energy rates being student at ASU, said he has been interested in solar power since high school, but that i t ; roughly equal to fossil fuel rates by 1999. The diart predicted the panel in question became economically feasible for him only would pay for itself by 2010, recently. He bought his panel used for $170, a Payne, who has lived in the Valley for 15 fraction of the cost he would have paid for it years, said he is not overlooking the need for new. He projected that the electricity cooling during the summer. He has just produced would cost about 11 cents per kwh installed three more 35-watt panels on his if the panels were used for 20 years. roof. They will be used to power a lowPayne said the price is competitive with energy use, 12-volt swamp cooler that was the Arizona Public Service price of about designed locally. eight cents per kwh. He said he could pay for Payne said living off solar energy is not the storage batteries, with the money he for everyone. would save by not paying the monthly “To go off the grid, you just about have to service charge most utilities tack onto the do it in a recreational vehicle,” he said. electricity cost. By LO U IS PO RTER C ontributing w riter RVs are more practical for solar conversion because they are already wired for 12-volt and because they were designed with low energy use in mind. He said apartments were designed for “unlimited energy use.” Payne said the only 120-volt appliance he really misses is his home stereo, but he has installed a 12-volt car stereo that seems to reproduce music accurately. “When you’re living on the sun, it does make you more aware of how much energy you are using, but it doesn’t lower your standard of living,” he said. A photovoltaic system is easy to use once it is installed, Payne said. He plans to shift the angle of his panels to match the sun’s path once in the spring and once in the fall. “That’s also a good time to do the only other required maintenance on a PV panel, ” he said, “And that’s to hit it with a bottle of Windex and a paper towel.” Payne said he recently discovered unused photovoltaic panels similar to his own that number “in the hundreds” on the roof of ASU’s Noble Library. He said he attempted to buy a few of them from the University but that they were “not available for sale for bureaucratic reasons.” Payne said dollar cost comparisons between solar and fossil fuels are not a c c u ra te b ecau se they don’t tak e environmental costs into consideration. “You can’t put a price on clean ait,” he said. graduate stu d en t, uses so lar pow er to operate his 28-fo o t travel tra ile r. Get experience before your time is up. The "catch 22" about getting a good jot» when you graduate is that most companies want people with experience...but how do you gain experience without a job? We've got the answer. The State Press is searching for highly motivated students to earn their experience as advertising sales representatives. An advertising sales representative sells, designs and implements marketing plans for local businesses. It's a fast paced position requiring excellent communication skills and impeccable time management. If you are as dependable as a Honda and can operate efficiently with this demanding agenda...please call Jackie Eldridge today at 965-6555. • Close to ASU • 5 min. from airport • Covered parking, weight room • 2 pools, jacuzzi • 24 hour maintenance • Covered cabanas • Outdoor picnic areas ‘ Call Today and ask about our summer specials!* 625 W. 1 -S t. Between Hardy & Mill -968-5444- H AYD EN PLACE ^ Hurry...your m eter is running. y Thursday, April S 3 ,1 9 9 2 State Press Page 11 S m itty ’s s h o o t in g C o ntin ue d fro m page 1. Darryl Webb/State Press A p o lic e fo ren s ic crew loo ks in to a c a r th o u g h t to belo ng to a sh o o tin g v ic tim o u ts id e o f S m itty’s superm arket W ednesday. The bum per sticker on th e car reads "practice random acts o f kindness and senseless acts o f beauty." t h u r s d a y 1 /2 o ff w A S U / S C C c o v e r - M C h e r sh o u ld e r w ound w as tr e a te d by paramedics. H orkey, an A h w atu k ee re s id e n t, staggered north into th e grocery store adjoining the restaurant and was helped o u t to h is car, w h ere p aram ed ics administered aid. Barringer was waiting on customers at the north counter when she was shot. Robin Prunty, a red-headed mother of two, had-wounds in each leg, which police ’ spokesm an Taylor said came from th e same bullet. Since Robin Prunty obtained an order of protection last month, which barred her husband from coming near her home and Work, police records show th a t’ Donald Prunty violated the order three times. Taylor said, “We’ve h ad experience w ith th e fam ily in th e p a s t. W e’ve responded at their home to other domestic violence calls.” A custom er in th e re s ta u ra n t, who wished to be identified only as Helen, said she dived under a table when the shots were fired. She said P runty came hack into th e west banquet room, “looked a t me, and said I could go.” “I went.” Cheryl Bennett, 24, was working in the restaurant as a waitress When the shots were fired. “Everybody was pretty scared. We got out as fast as we could,” she said. Bennett ran into the restroom, where she was joined by Bresnan, who had ju st been shot in the shoulder. Bresnan, whose nickname is “Sarge,” referring to her time spent in the service, “was a trooper through the whole thing,” Bennett said, adding th a t Bresnan kept p re s su re on h e r w ound u n til th e paramedics arrived to treat her. John Feckanin, a Tempe resident, said he was sitting at the counter when “I just heard shots and looked and he was about 10 feet over. I ju s t about fell off my chair. “E verybody th o u g h t it w as a firecracker. (Donald P ru n ty ) was ju s t going around taking random shots.” RÌed Kruck, 79, a regular customer at Smitty’s, said he Was at the coffee shop a month ago, when Donald Prunty entered and threatened Robin Prunty. Kruck said Prunty “got mouthy” with his wife until three police officers arrived. “(The officers) brought him out and told him to beat it,” Kruck said. Kruck did not blame the policé for not taking further action to prevent Donald Prunty from seeing his wife. “Cops a re n ’t tra in e d to d etect who needs new parts in their head,” he said. Kruck added th at Barringer, who was k ille d , w as alw ay s jo k in g w ith h er customers. He called her “real sharp.” “The tru c k d riv ers a re going to be pretty sad,” he said. Donald Frailty’s orange Toyota Corolla liftb a c k w as p a rk e d e a s t of th e restaurant. Inside police found a holster and a box of am m unition, along with a baby s e a t a n d toys. A U .S .M arin es bumper sticker and a dealer’s sticker from South Bend, Ind., were on the back of the car. • D ian e L an e, a spokesw om an for Smitty’s, said employees would be offered coUnseling.“Some are quite distressed,” she said. “We’ll give th em 'all th e help they need.” T he Store w as ev a c u a te d and employees were taken to the Pyle Adult Recreation Center, 655 E.Southern Ave,, for counseling. Lane said the grocery store portion of the 2.4-hour supermarket was to be closed until 6 a.m. today. The re sta u ran t will remain closed indefinitely. C I.D . Kami's Monster Beers Domestic bottles Wells Shots of Maui Schnapps THE GUNMAN 1. Donald Prunty, the gunman, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. THE VICTIMS 2. Barbara Barringer, a waitress, was shot in the chest and pronounced dead at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. Barringer was 6-7 months pregnant; doctors were unable to save her unborn child. 3. Robin Prunty, a waitress and the wife of the gunman, was wounded in the legs and taken to Maricopa County Hospital. 4. Edward Horkey, a customer wounded in the shoulder, was taken to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital. 5. Leata Bresnan, a waitress, was wounded in the Shoulder and taken to Maricopa County Hospital. 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ASK ABOUT OUR FREE LIFETIME WARRANTY ON COMPLETE CLUTCH AND BRAKE REPAIRS 864-8338 955-1996 788-5433 NORTH PHOENIX 8820 N BLACK CANYON 731-9490 Page 18 State Prêts Thursday, April 8 3 ,199g Delegation asks governor for shelter, political leaders The m eeting w ith th e governor centered on th e possibility of finding immediate shelter more than on money, Ms. Barbon said. She said the group identified 15 v ac an t state-ow ned buildings t h a t m ight be used, including a warehouse she said could provide Shelter for 500 individuals. However, she said the group did ask for $1 million but t h a t its b u d g et a c tu a lly was only ab o u t h a lf t h a t amount. Figures developed by the homeless group indicated th e m onthly cost of o perating four form er A rizona Training Program buildings as shelters 24 hours a day would be $55,300 a month, though what it would cost to put them into useable condition wasn’t known. She also said it a p p e a rs t h a t q u e stio n s of th e building’s safety and the state’s possible liabilities might prevent their use. W hat’s needed in addition to s h e lte r is political leadership, Mrs. Barbon said. “ You can’t talk money until you get the political will,” PHOENIX (AP) — A delegation of advocates for the homeless on Wednesday urged Gov. Fife Symington to exert his political leadership to help get people off the streets into safe shelter, a spokeswoman said. B arbara Barbon, one of the 12 who spoke with the governor in his office, said Symington “seemed a little more compassionate” after the meeting and appeared to have “a little more understanding it’s unsafe on the street.” One might argue whether everyone has a right to a home, “but certainly we all have the right to be safe,” she added. Ms. Barbon, who said she was homeless in 1987 but rents a Phoenix home from a church now, also said the hom eless group encam ped a t th e C apitol M all has decided to extend its stay another week. “Camp Gimme Me A Chance” is in its second week living out of shopping carts and sleeping on pieces of cardboard in between the House and Senate buildings. she said. “There’s a real people will out there; there just isn’t a political will.” And what must be done is to ask the question, “what will it take to get these people off the street,” she added. She said thè homeless are w ithout homes because of such things as lack of living wages, lack of health care and lack of affordable housing, but these don’t address the problem. Pointing to a toddler, she said finding out th a t a child’s homeless because its m other lacks p arenting skills or is a crack addict or couldn’t pay electricity doesn’t lead toward a solution for the homeless child. “I lost my best friend because she had surgery and lost her home and committed suicide because th at’s the only way she could take control of her life,” Ms. Barbon said. Steve Chasteen, described as the camp administrator, said the homeless need to be given a sense of worth and achievem ent, ra th e r th a n being told, “H ere’s a bed, here’s some food.” State Press 965-7572 r . i H U N T IN G ? London $290* Both com m unities are close to ASU and offer: • Heated Swimming Pools • W hirlpool • Exercise Room & Saunas ‘ Reserved Covered Parking • Private Patios w ith Extra Storage Frankfurt------ $324* Amsterdam ...$324* CALL N O W FO R FALL RESERVATIONS Paris------------ $324* M adrid---------$324* •Fares are each w a y from Phoenix based on a raundtrip purchase. Taxes not included. Restrictions may apply. Fares subject to change. Marry other destinations available. ¡ ■ B | g America's o ld est and largest stu d en t travel organization. Council Travel L ocated a t Forest and University, directly across from A.S.U.I 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 966-3544 Coll for a FREE 1992 Student Travel Catalog! Don't Haul It Hom e... STORE IT! wmm mm University Dr. MINI-STORAGE 967-3900 B ro ad w ay a t R ucho i MUMIETTA ___ B roadw ay Rd. ^ • -O o S u p erstitio n "rwy. "5 5 ▲ w ¿ V 1 I : -i « Supeisiílfóñ Freeway ] I N Bring coupon for Special Student Rate •Not to ba used with any other specials N e w ly R e m o d e le d C lu b h o u s e •C a r d lo v a s c u la r/W e ig h t C e n te r « L ig h te d B a s k e b a ll/ •Your lock, your key j •Full security •Visa/Mastercard •Open 7 days I 1905 E. Apache Blvd. University jc T > cs?. & 1n ' Apacha C a m e ro n C raek Vista aH Cerró Vy 4-mos-price of 3 U U n iversity i * » A p ach e Blvd. T e n n is C o u r ts •W a s h e r /D r y e r 1 1 1 H o o k -u p s CALL TODAY ■ ;3 :-‘ CC C 0) Ö :q \; to o s ■ *C Q. Stet* Press Page 13 Thursday, A p ril 8 3 ,1 9 9 9 Witnesses recall scene during minutes of horror By CAROL ANN HANSEN and SEAN OPENSHAW S tate P rê ta Ralph Freshour, an 84-year-old Tempean who has eaten lunch in Smitty’s restaurant for the last 18 years, heard screaihs and then saw the bloody woman stumbling toward him. “She fell right in front of our booth,’’ Freshour said later, as he sat on a cement bench outside the east entrance to the store, trying to recall the minute of horror that unfolded before him during a busy noontime rush. “There was an awful lot of blood and I had to step over her to get out of the booth.” Freshour was one of about 25 people who were inside the restaurant at 3232 South Mil] Aye., when a distraught gunman hunting for his estranged wife went on a shooting spree. Within a minute, Donald Prunty, 25, had shot four people before shooting himself to death. The victims included Prunty’S wife, Robin Prunty * who was injured seriously; Barbara Barringer, a six- to sevenmonth pregnant waitress who died from bullet wounds she received; Leato Bresnan, a 24-year-old waitress who was seriously injured; and Edward Horkey, 76, a customer who received a bullet injury to his shoulder. Freshour, who was eating lunch with a friend, Anne Marsh, was shaking as he described the instant he saw the seriously injured Robin Prunty fall before him. He said she had been his waitress at Smitty’s for 10 years. “She was sensitive,” Freshour said. ‘’She was always so nice to everybody.” Freshour and the other diners at the restaurant who witnessed the shootings were grabbed by police and questioned before they were allowed to talk to the massive number of reporters and gawkers at the scene. III z o 1 0 ° / o .2 Henri Cohen/State Press A Tem po p olice investigator leads a S m itty’s em ployee aw ay fro m th e crim e scene to ask h er questions. get the mail. Jim Kowl, a passer-by who has eaten breakfast in the restaurant for 15 years, said he could not believe what had transpired in the store. “Something like this happens everytime you turn on the radio,” he said. “It makes you wonder what’s going on in this town and it scares me a little. “If they aren’t shooting out of car windows, they’re killing people in restaurants — and it’s not even 100 degrees yet.” KEGS 10 GO Precision Collision Repair Papago Liquor with coupon —1 i That’s the ticket! O o z < m H w te* u m L am b ert & Son A u to B o d y * > S tate Press C lassifieds Tom Hervol and Lewis Trout had just sat down for lunch when shots rang out in the restaurant. “We had just started to look at the menu, when bang, it started and everybody went down,” Hervol said. Hervol, a 42-year-old Tempean, said his initial impulse was to duck under the booth he was sitting in and lie flat on the ground. Trout, who said he eats lunch regularly at Smitty’s, said he was on the floor for about a minute while Prunty fired “what looked like a semi-automatic .45” before the gunman ordered all of the customers out of the restaurant. Outside the store, people pressed against yellow police lines trying to catch a glimpse of the bodies. Jesee Quiroz, a Smitty’s employee who was waiting outside to begin his afternoon shift in the store, said he was disappointed he missed “all of the action.” “I wished I would have been here, man,” he said. “That’s what pisses me off more than anything, because these things don’t happen all of the time.” But others considered themselves lucky, or even blessed, they missed the shooting. “I guess it was fate or God that told me not to go in there yet,” said Smitty’s employee Ricky Mitchell, Who decided to get his hair cut across the street before meeting a friend at the restaurant. “You would never figure that something like this would happen to people you know,” the distressed 25-year-old said. Don Smith and his brother John were headed to get a cup of coffee in the restaurant when a police car “screeched up and a policeman jumped out with a gun.” “We just missed it by five minutes,” Don Smith said, adding that they would have been in the restaurant at the time of the shooting if they hadn’t returned to their house to ON Next to Blue Iguana SW Corner, Scottsdale & McDowell BODY? PAINT Insurance Work A c cep ted 946-0715 Tel. 9 6 6 -8 8 7 0 Mon-Thur 10am-10pm; Fri-Sat 10am-1am; Sun 12-8pm 207 S. M c C lin to c k Coupon expires 6-1-92 - Saturday, April 25th/Outdoors/All Ages/$7.00 Gates Open at 7pm/After Hours Until 4am RKQ and Silver Dollar present MEAT PUPPETS SAVE 30%-65% SA V E AN ADDITIONAL 30% WITH TH IS C O U PO N PIZZA 2107 S. Rural Rd. ON A LL SUN GLASSES! ! 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N o cover before 10pm Silver BIG DRILL CAR D ollar Pacific £yes & T s Sat., April 25th, 6 -10pm Inside, All Ages, $5.00 with Swamp Cooler •Serengeti o Thurs., April 23rd, 9pm -1am Suggested retail from $60 to *69” 8 ..................... BRINGING • THE • CITY • TO • PHOF.NIX..................... *2 7 " 1» ' This is your last chance to see Meat Puppets before they leave for their Australian tour! *39" 4 17 » E • MADISON » BUNGING • THE « CITY • TO • PHOENIX • 2 5 8 - 0 6 6 7 C O R N E R S TO N E 7 2 5 S . Rural Rd. Across from A SU in Tem pe 96 6-5 560 921-FAST Coupon orice from •Vuamet Suggested retail from $105 with P h u n k Junkeez and special guest Choiceof Crusts: Original or HoneyWheat HOURS: SUN-THURS II AM-2 AM FRI-SAT 11 AM-3 AM (921-32781 I DA M M IT Medium Cheese Pizza ¡ ^ * $ 3.99 MADNESS " B Extra Large Cheese Pizza : Only $ 5.49J D oonesb u ry Calvin State Preis Thursday, April 23,1992 Page 1 4 and by g ar r y tr u d eau Hobbes STM AWM. SUSIE ! I DONT WWW ANN BIG DIVIDENDS, SOT IT ? DONT LISTEN TO HOBBES.1 THE. STARS AND PLANETS ARE DO\NG TH'S/ I CANT HELP IT/ MV AURA IS ONCONTROÚ.ABLE/ T H E F A R S ID E ByGARYLARSON by B ill W atterson VTS THE BUS / THE BOS VS HERE / YIUEEEI'M SAFE ! V0U CANT DO ANYTHING NOW? HA HA .' I'M OFF TO SCHOOL.’ HOORMY/ THE WAT CALVINS BRAIN IS HIRED, TOO CAN ALMOST HEAR THE FOSES BLOWING. ■ \ “Look. We know how you did it — how is no longer the question. W hat w e now want to know is why. . . . W hy now, brown cow ?” • PHILADELPHIA (AP) — When her favorite teddy bear left home seven weeks ago, Anne Wheeler had no idea if she would ever see it again. When her father handed it back to her Monday, Care Bear had traveled 80,000 miles and been to more than a dozen countries. The 2-foot stuffed toy also brought back a log book full of messages and keepsakes from people around the world. “The way people took to the bear is incredible,” said Anne’s father Mark Wheeler, a USAir customer service representative who had suggested the flight as a geography lesson for his daughter’s kindergarten class. According to the log, the toy usually flew first class or rode in a cockpit jump seat. In Honolulu, it got a Mai Tai cocktail. And it was booted off a flight to Stockholm because there wasn’t time for it to go through security X-rays. Anne, who turns 6 on Sunday, could barely contain her excitement when her father came home with the bear. “Let me see! Let me see him!” she begged. An inspection revealed that the bear was covered with airline pins and buttons, tiny flight bags loaded with toys, a set of passenger headphones and an eye mask for taking a-nap. ‘ “Oh, boy! Different stamps! Neat-o! What kind of coins are these? ” she asked. There were also puzzles, card games and coloring1 books — some in foreign languages — and an Arabic flight magazine with a picture of “Home Alone” star Macaulay Culkin on the cover. Tiie flight began March 1 when the bear left Philadelphia with a sign around its neck: “Hello, my name is ‘Care Bear.’ I am traveling on a nationwide geography project for the children, of Hillside Elementary School in Berwyn, Pennsylvania. My purpose is to visit as many cities as possible from now until April 15,1992.” The sign asked flight crews to log travel information in a notebook in the bear’s waist pouch and pass the toy on to any outbound USAir crew. Wheeler said the air fares would have added up to $50,000 for a paying customer. When Wheeler met the plane returning the toy to Philadelphia, there was Care Bear, strapped in the jump seat behind the pilot. “It was a real breath of fresh air,” he said. “With all the problems we have around the world, to see the many countries it went through and how well it worked.” • HOBART, Australia CAP) — A man who trampled his mother to death to the Bob Dylan song “One More Cup of Coffee for the Road” was let out of prison for a night to see his idol perform. Allowing Richard Dickinson to attend Saturday’s concert was the idea of his doctors, who said he was responding well to treatment for his schizophrenia, Corrective Services Division Manager Ben Marris said Wednesday. Dickinson, 25, was found not guilty by reason of insanity after he killed his 59-year-old mother five years ago when she complained because he was playing Dylan’s album ’‘Desire” at 4 a.m. He told police at the time he thought his mother was an evil character from the album and that the music had given him the strength to kill her. He sprinkled instant coffee over her body afterward. Use your Marriott Maroon & Gold Card on all Domino's Pizza orders until the end of the semester! diet or Classic Cokes available for 494 eachor $W 9 a six pack TWO PLU S C H E E SE ! $For 8 on .9e 9' / $ 1For2 tw.9o 9 W ith ou r IW oP lu s C heese P lease Pizza F east, you can hove an y tw o toppings you p lea se, p lu s m ore o f th e ch eese you lovcl Order one medi­ umfor only 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. $8.99 o r tw o m edium s fo r o n ly $12.99! UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT _________ HOURS: 11:00am-1:30am Sun.-Thors. ll:00am-2:3QamFit.-Sat. 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Our drtvara « f ñauar pahafcted ter tela daterai««. a l t ! » Dqrdno’« P te». f r i Sports 4b Thursday, /Sprit 93,1999 P g e lS UofA dominates all ph ases o f twinbill in sweep o f softball N orm ally dorm ant W ildcat bats explode in w ins top-ranked Bruins, that means that this weekend’s doubleheaders against Oregon ASU softball coach Linda Wells made no and Oregon State in the Northwest certainly excuses after her team dropped a pair of loom large. games to in-state conference rival UofA “They’re both good teams,” Wells said. Wednesday night. “We’ll need to put our hitting shoes on and “We just ran into a better team,” Wells hopefully jump on them early and come said of the second-ranked Wildcats after away with some wins.” they beat the Sun Devils 6-0 and 4-1 at Sun Wells was hoping her Sun Devils would be Devil Club Stadium. “We needed to play our able to do (hat against the Wildcats best ball to beat them and we just didn’t do Wednesday, a team they had already faced that.” twice this season, losing both games by 1-0 f o r a while it looked like the 20th-ranked scores. Sun Devils (25-19,5-7 Pac-10)) might be able In the first game, ASU had a chance to to steal a game from the Wildcats (48-4,11-1 strike quickly, loading the bases with two Pac-10) — a feat which would have vastly outs and junior Cheri Keller up to bat improved their postseason chances. against Wildcat pitcher Debby Day, one of Instead, the Sun Devils dropped into a the nation’s best. third-place tie with California in conference Keller lined a blooper that looked like it play behind league front-runners UCLA and would drop in safely for a hit. UofA center UofA. fielder Jamie Heggen raced in to make a With only six games remaining on the sliding catch to at least two runs and also schedule, all in conference, Wells realizes kill the Sun Devil rally. that the Sun Devils can finish only as high as “She had a couple of catches that you third place in the tough Pac-10. could call defensive gems that really hurt us And with its final two games against the Torn to ASU-UofA, page 16. By MICHAEL FLORES S tate Press W ednesday n ig h t. M ind games become priority for Sun Devil archers ASU looking to begin hot streak at regionals By GREG SEXTO N S tate Press •M ehta. Conway/State Praaa A lison W illiam son and th e ASU archers travel to D avis, C a lif., th is w eekend to r th e W est R egtonala. If there’s one thing ASU archery coach Sheri Rhodes always stresses, it's a tough mental attitude. Rhodes maintains that once archers get to this level of competition they have the form and the equipment — all that remains necessary to win is mental intensity. “It becomes a mind game,” said Rhodes, who in her 15 years as as a Sun Devil coach has tutored more than 100 All-American archers. “It becomes mind over m atter.” And with the rapidly approaching U.S. Olympic trials, scheduled for midMay, the ASU archery team will look to gain some positive momentum this Saturday and Sunday when it goes to the West Regional Collegiate in Davis, Calif. B esides the Sun D evils, N avajo Community College will make the trip and join many Pac-10 schools in the two-day competition. “We will see competition from some strong California schools,” Rhodes said, adding that most of these schools have tough shooters that the Sun Devils haven’t faced since earlier this year at the Indoor Championships in Salt Lake City. Rhodes Will take five men and six women on the two-day coast excursion. The meet w illbea good indication of how well the Sun Devils’ shooting skills are going into the Olympic trials scheduled for May 11-15 at ASU. Rhodes said she will take senior Jim Cassidy, sophomore Tim Huedepohl, who p l a c e d f o u r t h i n t h e 1991 U.S. Intercollegiate, and juniors Jamie Loesch, Brian Kellums and Jerem y Dwiggins. Loesch ended third in the 1991 Collegiate and Dwiggins is a two-time Rhode Island state champion. For the women’s squad, Rhodes will rely on the depth and talent of senior Janet Schaffer, who is a frontrunner in the Olympic trials. Schaffer won the 1990 Collegiate and racked up a third-place in Turn to Archery, page 16. Foreign legion provides ASU Olympic swimmers B razilian co n n ectio n leads way; S un D evils feature 10 hopefuls B y DARREN URBAN S ta te Press <^p It’s only a natural offshoot of ASU men’s swim coach Ron Johnson’s recruiting pattern — l y m p ic with the massive foreign con­ tingent brought into Tempe, rea m s the Sun Devils always keep one O n e in a »cries of profilai eye on international competi­ of A S U atk lcU t w ho are tion. candidates to com pete in In an Olympic year such as th e sum m er O lym pics in B arcelona, Spain. this, one eye becomes both. Johnson’s squad already has t-i seven athlètes qualified fen* the Summer Games in Barcelona, Spain, ami the ASU women’s team has two more probables, making the Sun Devil program one of the biggest single collegiate suppliers to the Olympics in swimming. “Probably no other team in the country has as many,” Johnson said. “We’re pretty proud of that fact. It’s pretty phenomenal.” O D The bulk of ASU’s Olympians comes from its “Brazilian Connection.” Originally the men’s foursome of Eduardo Piccinni, Cristiano Michelena, Renato Ramalho and Emmanuel Naseimento, it has come to include two others. Johnson is serving as the Brazilian coach and technical director for the 1992 Games, and Sun Devil Ana Azevedo, although not yet qualified, should make Brazil’s women’s team. Other ASU Olympic members include New Zealand’s Richard Tapper and Simon Percy and France’s David Holderbach, while Robert Shamosh (Mexico) and Therese Lundin (Sweden) are both good possibilities for their home countries. “One of our primary goals is to try and get as many athletes as we can qualified into the Olympics,” Johnson said. “With this many, it’s a source of pride.” Johnson said while the Pac-10 and NCAA competition is still a major focus at ASU, the team makeup usually lends itself to farther-reaching goals. Athletes often participate in international events when they come up — even during the school year — and the Olympics become a logical progression. “With all the international competition it is kind of a Turn to Olympic swimmers, page 16. Darryl Wsbto/Stats Praaa F rance’s D avid H olderbach Is one o f seven Sun D evil sw im m ers th a t have q u alified to r th e 1992 O lym pics. 1 liu n 4 a j£ A p rirë ^ 9 W O ly m p ic s w im m e r s Continued front page 15. natural flow from one season to the next,” Johnson said. “ Once the Olympic year begins, it kind of becomes an obsession with us.” Nascimento, who is one of four second-timers at ASU — Remalho, Michelena and Holderbach are the others who participated in the 1988 Olympics — said he is taking a more business-like approach in 1992 than he did four years ago. “This time is a lot different,” said Nascimento, who was only 18 years old during his first Summer Games. “I was young and I didn’t work out hard until the year before the Games. I was basically there to watch.” That Michelena is returning is another story. A shoulder injury kept the freshman out of the pool for more than a year, and only a major effort by Johnson persuaded Michelena to continue the difficult rehabilitation needed to return to a world-class level. But it is that type of attitude Nascimento said is the reason ASU is a good place to train — whether there are many Olympians or one, it doesn’t matter. “As long as you have people that want to train, it doesn’t matter if they áre going to the Olympics or not,” the senior said. “It’s the attitude that counts, and the motivation is high here.” ASU women’s coach Tim Hill said Azevedo and Lundin both have their national trials in early May after final exams are oyer in Tempe, but added that the duo will probably be included in ASU’s Olympic connection. “Lundin was the best in the fly in Sweden and she’s ninth in the world,” Hill said. “ They’ve asked her to go through qualifying, but she should be in, as should Azevedo.” Johnson admitted medal-winning would be difficult, after the always-strong U.S., German and Australian squads make their runs. But making the finals are within reach. “I think several guys this week have a chance to finish as finalists in the top eight, and that’s pretty difficult,” John&on said. “ (But) I’ve coached 24 (Olympic) finalists and 14 medal winners, so I’ve had pretty good luck.” Nascimento added that the Sun Devil program is conducive to success in everything, and that Olympic training doesn’t hurt ASU’s normal NCAA quest. “I think it’s good to have teammates from all over the world,” Nascimento said. “Here, we do a program that can do both — train for (NCAA competition) and train for our own countries.” . A rch ery Continued from page 15. last year’s competition. Also scheduled for this weekend’s shootout are seniors Lori Tetford and Susan Page and sophomores Michelle Jolly, Heather Collins and Alison Williamson. Schaffer, who is ranked fifth in the nation, said she has been training hard for the Olympics and added she is shooting at a good level. Williamson has snared two consecutive titles (Arizona Cup and ASAA Outdoor) and is a leading contender to make England’s Olympic team. She shared her secret to success. -Tve been shooting a lot,” Williamson said, adding, that she sometimes practices twice a day. “ I set myself one goal- For me, it’s easier to achieve one simple goal rather than attempting to achieve many harder goals,” Rhodes said she has been impressed with her team this year, adding she is most proud A S U -U o fA ^ C Continued from page 13.. (MasterCard] in the first game,” Wells said of the Wildcats junior center fielder. ASU had a couple of other run-scoring opportunities later in the game, but were unable to cash in as Day (27-2) got noticeably more effective as the game wore on. All four of the senior right-hander’s Strikeouts came in the last three innings, including two of the last three batters she faced. UofA scored three runs in the fifth off senior pitcher Terri Carnicelli (10-7), who took the loss. The Wildcats added two more in the six to round out the scoring. “We weren’t able to put hits together and turn them into runs,” said senior center fielder Rachel Brown, who had one of the Sun Devils four hits in the first game. “We would get one or two, but we needed to get three our four in order to make something happen.” Brown, the team’s leading hitter at .357, gave the Sun Devils a scare in the seventh inning of the first game when she hurt herself diving unsuccessfully fora looping line drive off the bat of Heggen. The ball fell in for a double and Brown had to come out of the game. “My hip landed on a rock or something,” Brown said. “It hurt pretty good at the time. Right now it’s more stiff than sore.” Brown did not start the second game, but came in to pinch hit in the fourth inning for Keller, delivering a run-scoring single. But Brown was unable to come through in the sixth inning, when she came up with sophomore first baseman Wendy Johnson on first and no one out. Brown, swinging on the first pitch, could only pop out to shortstop. “I had a key hit early, but I wish I would’ve come through later,” she said. The Sun Devil batters were again tested in the second game, this time by sophomore pitcher Susie Parra, who improved her record to 2i-2 with her eight-strikeout performance. Sophomore pitcher Mona Nard (9-5) suffered the loss for ASU, although Wells said the lefthander pitched well. “We’ve been asking her to do so much,” Wells said of Nard, who also plays first base and bats third in the ASU lineup. “It’s tough for her and I think she suffered from a bit of anxiety out there.” Sun Devil junior Dottie Conroy, who had a hit in each game, said it wasn’t a matter of being overpowered by the Wildcat pitchers. "We just couldn’t get the timely hit,” Conroy said. (nadenYourHorizons ReadtheStatePress OPINION Section State Presa ** ' ‘T look for the telltale signs of how they felt, but mainly I rely on their assessment of how they felt with their game and we work with that.” You can charge your classified ad over the phone! V/S4* M ini-Storage * V ehicle S torage sniff f i Arizona Storage Inns n SPECIAL STUDENT RATES 5x5 5x10 T w o L o catio n s to C hoose F ro m ! 10x10 10x20 2235 W. 1st S t • Tempe 9670210 Ih t M M if Miti-Stenti F a s t, 1020 W. 1st St. • Tempe 9683133 Free D elivery 894-6666 TRAM! WandGymand Aerobics ofScottsdalewMen&wunen mmÆ P M . Ajalas 0 U L kaM fu . 65 AEROBICS CLASSES WEEKLY! 5 MINUTES FROM ASU! ARIZONA’S FINEST FACILITY! 15jOOC S quare Feet • A ir C onditioned • New, & S pacious F a c ility • R eebok S tep A erob ics » H i'L o Im pact A erob ics • W orld G ym P ro S hop • T he W orld C afe Ju ice B ar • W olffe Tanning B eds • O pen E very D ay!! • V isito rs alw ays w elcom e! * D a ily R ales CUEAN No C ontracts •$35 Initiation F èa “Taste the DiffcteoceT D IN E IN H o u rs 504 T O PPIN G 11 a.m .-Late N ight Every CA RRY OU T M on.-T hurs. 7 Day* a Week ■■■ WÊÊÊÊ HBB ■■■ ■■■ 'OHS BHPM 1 RMB ■ ■ Wmm ■■■ MÈMI HMW _ JC A I ItA -L A A U i I 2-TO P PIN G P IZ Z A L i mm it “We have been working on tightening our form,” Rhodes said. “Mostly a lot of little things that we learn from tournaments. Things like concentration breakdown and tiredness. STATE PRESS A £ r £ 7 3 1 STATE PRESS C lassified s I Classifieds I $4.99 You can find almost of the women’s squad improvement. “Most of them can say they have improved over last year,” Rhodes said. “But as far as the ladies go, they are shooting much better than last year. It hasn’t been easy. They are jiist putting in a real effort.” Still, Rhodes has been preparing her team mentally. She has been doing personal assessments and helping team members with their individual games. MM M 2 SUBS, 2 SODAS $6.99 mm a e r i V alid only Monday-Thursday • Limited Delivery Area 1250 E. Apache, Tempe 894-6666 BRING YOUR W ORLD GYM $35 COUPON AND W E W ILL W AIVE YOUR INITIATION FEEI Classifieds mmmm PageV ^ H l » N l > ______________________ __________________________________ ______________ Thursday, April 8 3 .19 9 8 ANNOUNCEM ENTS ATTN. GREEKS!! Did you know you can put Greek sym­ bols in your State Press personal ad for an extra fifty cents? Ask us for details. Call us at 965-6731 or stop by our Mat­ thews Center basement location today ! FRIENDS O F Dr. Punk, write: c/o The MLF, 2130 Fillmoore Street, Suite 287, San Francisco, California 94115. GRADUATION Special rates for ASU students with I.D. Tem pe M otel. $ 2 2 /n ig h t (sin g le ), $30/night (double). 894-0909. APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ rooms. W alk to ASU, Pool, laundry room, 1 block south o f University on 8th Street. Now accepting reservations on a 2 bedroom for Super Summer Spe­ cial. $199 move-in! Cape Cod Apart­ ments, 968-5238. ° EXTRA LARGE 3 bedroom , 2 bath apartment. Easily accommodates four people. Call: 968-4725, FEMALE SHARE large 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool; Jacuzzi, etc. Broadway/Rural. 784-0926/829-3282 (message). M O V E -IN SPEC IA L! IF YOU need a ride back to the East coast' after fi nal s o r want someone to follow call Matt 921-3834. LOVE TO dance? Hate the bar scene? You'il love the all singles dances, Fri­ days at b e tte r v alley Hotels. $4.56.,; Recorded information 946-4086. 1/2 Block from Cam pus B eautifu lly fu rn ish ed , huge 1 bedroom. 1 bath; 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ments. All bills paid. Cable TV. heated pool and spacious laundry fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , courteous management. Stop by today! Terrace Road Apartments 9 5 0 S. Terrace 966-8540 PICTURE THIS You can have a bold centered headline on your State Press liner ad for «an addi­ tional $ I! What a great way to get atten­ tion! Ask us fpr details! Gall 965-6731 or stop by today! SINGLES: EVENTS, advice, personalsArizona Single Scene newspaper. Free sample, 990-2669. APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishw asher, seif-cleaning oven.. 968■8183. :> 1 OR 2 bedroom. $250 move-in: Pool, laundry, bike to ASU,« quiet. Call 967-4568/894-8143, 1, 2 bedroom, 1 block from ASU,- fur­ nished, laundry, special $ 190. 8205027,966-1136. NEED A place for die summer? Killer deal! Keep my $200 security deposit. Keep my queen-size black futon. Keep my table. Move into my large 2 bed­ room, 2 bath apartment at Rancho Murietta. My lease ends July 31 and you can k eep e v ery th in g you can. A lso go mondi-to-month after that if you desire. 1 need to move out asap. I'm offering a great deal to students who need a break. Cail me today and leave a message at 966-48Q3! that you can place your classified ad over th e phonew ith Visa, M asterC ard or American Express? (Sorry, personals cannot be accepted over the phone.) Call 965-6731 today! ANNOUNCEM ENTS LEASE UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo, 56th Street & Thom as. SRP, fireplace. Available 6/1/92. $535 per month. Evenings 952^-8978. LUXURY 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, Questa Vida, washer/dryer, pool, avail-' able 6/1, $7Q0/month, (714)673-3122. PAP AGO PARK II, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, unfurnished, pool, avail­ able July 1. $575/month. Plan for the fall, semester now. 494-9105. QUESTA VIDA 2 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/ dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, covered patios, extra storage. Very clean. $675. Available May. 994-0811.. LOOKING TO rent 4 bedroom house close to ASU, May 1992 through May 1993.966-7371. TWO BEDROOM house available May I. C lo se to cam p u s, low u tilitie s. $385/month. Call Mary 968-7354. TO W NHO M ES/ ^ N D ^ JO R JIN T . I BEDROOM, fully furnished, dishes, linens, 2 twin beds, washer/dryer, pool. $400. Phyllis 844-5900. BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with fireplace, dinette, walk-in closet. L5 m iles from ASU. includes wash­ er/dryer, dishwasher, refrigerator, ceil­ ing fans. $500 per month + electric. Felix 256-8129. ANNOUNCEM ENTS ASSUME, NO qualify, $64,700, low down. 2 bedroom condo, Price/Southem. Ñarcie, Prudenial, 730-5200. CHEAPER & better than rent. FHA loan 2 bedroom , 2 bath, built 1984, common pool; spa, perfect. Call Wendy Cyr 991-3300 Prudential. Bob Bullock Realty Executives ROOM IN. fully furnished contempo­ rary home available today. Beautifully landscaped, diving pool, satellite, fire­ place, etc. $375 includes utilities. Reli­ able nonsmoker, please call 820-2875. : ROOMMATE WANTED! 3 bedroom, 1 bath. Own room plus study room . Quiet and cozy $275 negotiable plus 1/2 utilities. 894-4643. DRASTICA LLY REDUCED 3 bedroom , 1-3/4 baths, masonry construc­ tion, new roof, newly painted exterior. Large yard, in-ground sprinkler, citrus tre e s. D ouble c arp o rt, la rg e ' storage/workshop area. Easy access to ASU. Friendly neighborhood. $59,900. Call Cynthia DjeWys, 893-2888. EX E C U T IV E 3 bedroom , loft. Price/Broadway. Fireplace, 2 c ar ga­ rage, spa, private. Narcie, Prudential, 730-5200. SUNS PLAYOFF tickets, Sunday 2nd home game. Good seats for $40 each. Call 945-9595,967-4476. HAYDEN SQUARE 3 bedroom/2 bath "Super D" 4-Sale $135,000 FA C U LTY FA M ILY seek s to buy house near ASU, prefer Broadmor Ele­ mentary. If you are thinking of selling, Call Kathryn and Donald at 967-3510. 7-FOO T HAMILTON drafting table with Bruning Drafting machine. Spare top. $300; 952-8978. LA RA D A 'S ARMY S u rp lu s has all your cam ping needs- inexpensively; A lso more w eird stu ff than you can iniagine. 7 6 4 W est M ain, M esa 834-7047. ' ' ■; PHOTOGRAPHIC ENLARGER, black and white, with paper safe, accessories, excellent condition- $ 150. 968-0454 after 4pm. ~ Sell your books for cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the p urchase o f an y th in g in the sto re. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc. Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 Mill Avenue, 966-0203. FURNITURE BEAUTIFUL WHITE lacquer bedroom set, includes queen-size bed and all dresser and amenities. Like new. $600 or best offer. Call 784-4652. FOR SALE: Black dresser from Z Gal­ lery, will sell for half o f current price. Call 941-0538 Susan. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS STATE PRESS Classifieds - 965-6731! quadrangles village /Mnilm the beat! STUDIO • ONE BEDROOM ■ TWO BEDROOM University Dr. inft1TnT*f 8j 968-8118 kà AMHCM YÖUI1 HositLS 1046 E. Lemon St. Tem pe • 894-5128 AUTOMOBILES ONE W AY to Philadelphia, Female o n ly on US A ir. Leaves on M ay 11, 1992. $250/offer. 894-9539. Seized. 89 Mercedes $200,86 VW $50, 87 M ercedes $ 100, 65 M ustang $50. Choose from thousands starting $25. Free 24 hour recording reveals details (801 >379-2929. Copyright #AZ10KJC. DRUGLORD TRUCKS MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BUDGET TRAVEL •S tu d e n t flig h ts •E u ra il p asses •H o ste l card s •In t. stu d e n ts ID 's •T ravel eq u ip m en t •L o ts m ore! LONG DISTANCE Rider, One way? di­ rect to Philadelphia, departs May 11. Best offer. Call J.P. 921-3689. CHEAP! FBI/U.S. REAL ESTATE HEADED FOR Europe this summer? Just $269 will get you there (and/or back!) any time from SFO or LAX on a commercial jet, no «catches, just be min­ im ally fle x ib le . A irhireh (R ), 1(800)397-1098. ADC HAS free cars available to most ar­ eas. Gas allowance. Over 21 only. Re­ fundable security d eposit required. Auto Driveaway Co. 956-1406. 87 D O D G E Om ni. G ood condition. R uns g re a t, $19 9 5 / o ffer. C all 224-2214 day, 759-5989 night. "8/1 Occupancy" • Free Cable TV • Free Hot Water • Great Location * 3 Refreshing Pools • 2 Soothing Spas * Lush Landscaping • Exercise Room • Ample Covered Parking TRANSPORTATION 1990 JEEP Wrangler, excellent condi­ tion, white with gray, soft-top, 4 cylin­ der, A lpine S tereo , 3 0 ,0 0 0 m iles,. $10,500.649-7547^ 968-0917 BOOKS KISS TICKETS, big time fan needs tick­ ets, pay top dollar. Leave message, call John 833-4)621. 1990 JEEP Wrangler, red, sand interior hardtop. Must sell! $8500 or best offer. Call 730-9247. QUEEN SIZE futon bed/ couch, like new, $400.820-7229. 1 856 JEWELRY SPECIAL TERMS for 1992 Graduates. No qualifying. Private owner will carry bn these condos. Studio; 1 bedroom and two bedroom condos include al 1 ap­ pliances even washer/ dryer. Payments from $240/ month (based on selling price of $ 17,000, $500.00 down, 9%. 20 year fixed loan- 1 bedroom and two bedroom units higher) 8800 North 8th S treet, Phoehix. D iam ond/ A nne 861-0632. ADVERTISERS! The best way to reach ASU, ASU West, MCC and SCC is through the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! %iipi ntfi MACINTOSH CLASSIC II, 4 months old, under warranty, 40meg harddrive, Lotus, Excel, Word.Gwen 938-4836. TICKETS RECYCLE FOR $$$ HOMES FOR S A L E _ DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap, in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places USA. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. DESPERATE! NO qualifying, $1500 down, take over $734 payment, lower in 6 months. Close to ASU, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished, 1128 square feet. Great investment. 494-7290 or 921-0506. RO O M S FOR RENT CLOSE TO ASU, rooms in spacious 4 bedroom house, pool, w asher/dryer, $225 plus 1/4 utilities. 491-8776. TRAVEL CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers, 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. 9 98-2992 FEM A LE N O N SM O K ER to share room in 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment in Quadrangles. May 15 through May, '93. $ 175/month + 1/3 utilities. 921-3996. LARGE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, ja-. cuzzi, tennis, dishwasher, etc. Southem/Rural. $230.784-6091,437^1048. COMPUTERS FOR SALE: Apple IIC computer, print­ er, color monitor, Apple W orkspro-gram. $175. Call 941-0538 Susan. A LW A Y S BU YIN G je w e lry o f all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 South M ill A venue, Tem pe C enter, 968-6074: G et Lucky at Papago. 3 bdr repo $60,000 RENTAL SHARING FEMALE SHARE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, dishwasher, etc. Hardy/UnivéFSity $2 l7/month. 829-7173/437-1048. LARGE 2 bedroom, across thé street from Gammage, 12th & M aple: Call Tim 894-0288 C O N D O yO R ^L ^ WHY PAY rent next year, take over condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, tennis. (714)499-4065: R e s p o n s i b l e person, superb summer sublet. Two bedroom, Scot­ tsdale, lig h t, spacious, golf, biking. 5/15- 8/15, $ 1200/month, 423-9314. G O RG EO U S 3-4 b ed ro o m . 2 bath house, Old Town Tempe, 129 East Vista Del Cerro. Tim 894-0288 D ID YOU KNOW ... FURNISHED CONDO, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, dishwasher, pool, close to ASU. $60Q/month. 830r6244. FEMALE ROOMMATE share 2 bed­ room townhouse. Own room/bath. $200 + 1/2 utilities. 230-3206. HOMES FOR RENT TO W NHO M ES/ FURNISHED 2 bedroom, 2 bath, I mile from ASU (Worthington Place). Pool, volleyball, clubhouse. Summer and/or fall occupancy. Tracy 894-2848. TAKEOVER LEASE summer or ex­ tended. 2 bedroom , 2 bath, close to A$U $470 month 829-0758. UTILITIES FREE. Ask about special. Unfurnished studios and 1 bedrooms. Call ?em-5pm weekdays: 966-8597. 2 BLOCKS south o f ASU, 1 bedroom apartments. Pool, spa, laundry facili­ ties, covered parking, free basic cable TV, special student rates. University A p artm en ts, 1700 S outh C o lleg e. 967-7212. FOR RENT: Questa Vida 3 bedroom- 3 bath- washer/dryer- all appliances- unfurnished. Pool- racquetball- jacuzzi$795 p e r m onth. C o n ta ct D arryl 759-2133: • ;",-V - . ; ; '.s j-; ; ROOM FOR rent South S cottsdale, p o o l, a ir, w ash er/ d ry e r, $225 p e r month 1/3 utilities 945-6225. TWO BEDROOM house available May 1. C lo se to cam p u s, low u tilitie s . $385/month, Call Mary 968-7354. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath unfunished, washer/dryer in unit, walk to ASU. Dorsey and Lemon area. May-August. $375. 496-0562,893-1994. DELUXE 2 bed, 2 bath condo, wash­ er/dryer, pool, tennis, covered parking. Tem pe/M esa border. No pets. $495. Call Bob 965-4971; 967-1044 or John 965-7239; 829-8079. FEMALE ROOMMATE nonsmoker to share large 2 'bedroom, 2 bath luxury ap artm e n t at D obson R anch. $220/month plus utilities. 838-9384. to 2 BEDROOM d e co rato r apartm ent. North Tempe. private patio, self-clean­ ing oven; pool, covered parking. 8941041. TO W HO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT $100, '86 Bronco $50* *91 Blazer $150, '77 Jeep CJ $50. Seized vans, 4x4's, boats. Choose from thousands starting $25. Free 24 hour recording reveals d e ta ils. (8 0 1 )3 7 9 -2 9 3 0 . C opyright #AZ10KKC. For a Prince of a Deal call KAR KING 967-6350 1 .1 9 8 6 S u n b ir d T u rb o G T S3195 2 .1 9 7 9 C h e v 4 x 4 S2995 3. 1985 C h e v S IO P.U S2195 4. 1980 S u b a ru 6 9 K m ile s S1795 5 .1 9 7 9 A M C S p ir it $ 1 2 9 5 Several others in all prices ranges. We buy cars too!!! MOTORCYCLES '87 HONDA Elite ISO. Must sell. $400. 844-9461. 1978 YAMAHA 400 DT. Low mileage. Graduating. $600/offer. Call 965-3585 before 5:00.784-6029 after. Jeff. 1981 HONDA 650, looks good! Runs good! Very dependable. $650.; Please call 350-9121. 1986 HONDA 80 Elite scooter. $600. G ood c o n d itio n . C all Suzanne829-3793. 1986 HONDA spree 50ce. New rear tire, includes new helm et, red, good condition. Glenn 921-7623. 1987 HONDA Elite 150. Good condi­ tion, $ 1 ,0 0 0 /-offer. 9 4 1 -5 2 2 2 leave message. BICYCLES SCHWINN CLASSICS, vintage bikes, discount on 10-speeds, tune up $7.95 "Spoke Easy", Mill Avenue 350-9320. TRAVEL AIRLINE TICKET for 5/10 to New Jer­ sey. $150 or best offer. Female only. Rich 732-9876. D EN V ER: O N E-W A Y , M ay 7th, males. $99.964-4962. STATE PRESS Classifieds - 965-6731! ONE-WAY TICKET-Phoenix to Denv­ er, May 17th. $125. 835-7308. ONE-WAY; LOS Angeles to Phoenix, leaves 1:40pm on 5/17. Best offer. Male only. 829-3759. HELP WANTEDGENERAL A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs a permanent full/paft time front/back office person; Experience helpful but will train. Typing and computer skills. G ood salary. A pply in person: 7701 East Indian School, Suite E, ALASKA SUMMER employment- fish­ eries. Earn $5,(X)0+/month. Free trans­ portation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or female. For employment pro­ gram call Student Employment Services at 1(206)545-4155 e x t 1603. APPOINTM ENT SETTERS needed, fle x ib le full o r p a rt tim e. C all 481-9200. ATHLETIC DEMIGODS need driver for all day athletic event 5/2. Must be fun lo v in g and re sp o n sib le . C all 23B-I655. SUMMER JOBS TO SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT EARN $250043500 National campaign positions to promote comprehensive recy­ cling, pesticide reform; and cub global wanning. Available in Phoenix, 29 stales arid D C. Campus interviews 4Æ3. CaB Jamie: 1-800-75-EARTH. BE ON T V, many needed fo r com ­ mercials. Now hiring all ages. For cast­ ing information call (615)779-7111 ex­ tension T -130. CALL SM ALL businesses fo r infor­ mation to quote employee benefit plans. Part time days, $5 depending on ex* p e rie n c e. S c o ttsd a le A irp ark . C all Tony, 991-4525. CHILD CARE attendant needed in our Tempe office. Flexible hours, MondayFriday, $4.25 an hour. Please call Cindy 829-8741 before 4pm weekdays. CONSULTANT Trainee needed for dynamic, aggressive national company. Must have BS, 3.0 G PA, stable history, self-motivated* m anagement skills, possibility to re­ locate. Position opening May 1st. Send resume to: John McCollum, P.O. Box 26451, Tempe, Arizona 85252. COPYWRITERS The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for copywriters. This is a fun at­ mosphere and a great way to get your work in print. Please apply in room 50, Matthews Center or call 965-6881 for more information. * Page 18 HELP W ANTED -G ENERAL COUNSELOR AT residential treatment center for emotional handicapped adol­ escent. M ales enco u rag ed to apply, I0pm-8am, $12,000, resume: P.O. Box 8500, Phoenix, Arizona 85066. './ CRUISE LINE, e n try . level, onboard/ landside positions available; year round or summer (612) 643-4333. DEPEND ABLE PERSON heeded to contact Scottsdale businesses. Pail time, fle x ib le ho u rs, no s e llin g , au to re ­ quired, salary plus commission; Call: for 4 8 3 -1477, C om prehensive B usiness S ervices, 8040 E ast M organ .Train, Suite 6, Scottsdale DISC JOCKEY wanted for parties, club work and weddings, 759^7977: GRAPHIC ARTIST needed for startup venture to put ideas for series o f child­ ren's books, board games, and software into pictures. Contribute labor for fu­ ture profits and exposure. Hard-work­ ing, creative person only. Send creative expression (no cartoons) o f interest to Smart Ideas! 2147 West Isthmus Loop, Mesa 85202« IM M EDIATE PO SITIO N , fulL part tim e clerical people needed. Ternpe area. Data entry; typing and general of­ fice sk ills. G ood , c re d it a m ust. 966-0709. JOB BULLETIN fißr Arizona Students' Association is con­ ducting a search for qualified candidates to assume the position o f ASA Execu­ tive D irector for the 1992-93 fiscal year. ASA is a state wide independent non-profit organization. ASA's mission is to represent, advocate, and lobby on behalf of issues that impact Arizona uni­ versity students' education. The ASA Executive Director works in Tempe for a nine member tri-university student board o f directors. Interested applicants should submit a letter o f interest, re­ sume, and two letters;o f recommenda­ tion by May 8 to: Randall Udelman; Ar­ izona Students' Association, 511 West U niversity, Suite 4, Tem pe, Arizona 85281. ORDER CLERKS 12 persons n e e d e d fo r inside sales o rd e r d e p a rtm e n t. $ 5 /h r g u a ra n te e d plus b onus, ben efits a n d ra p id ad v a n c e m e n t. T em p e lo catio n . A M /P M shifts. P art-tim e. Call N eil 9 6 8 -1 9 6 6 O HELP WANTED -G ENERAL PAID SUMMER internship; opportun­ ity for travel, average $475/ week, 3 hours college credit. Call Varsity Com­ pany 894-5283. Open to all majors. PHOTO EDITOR The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for a Photo Editor. Must have pho­ tography experience and be able to su­ pervise a photo staff. A portfolio will be required. Apply in M atthews Center room 50, or call 965-6881 for more in­ formation. PHOTOGRAPHERS The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for photographers. This is a great opportunity to get your work in print. Please apply in room 50, Matthews Cen­ ter o f call 965-6881 for more infor­ mation, SECTION EDITORS The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for section editors. This position re­ quires some yearbook expérience. This is a great way to get involved with ASU. Apply in Room 50, Matthews Center or cal! 965-6881 for more information. SIM PLY UNBELIEVABLE! JLG is seeking quality appointm ent setters. Earn $4-12 per hour depending on per­ formance. Do not call Unless you can work 9arn-2pm or 2pm-7pm, 6 days a week. Immediate employment. You will work 30 hours/week in a. plush office. Motivation and confidence à must. Earn money this week. Call 24, hours, ask for Patrick, 967-7866. START AT $360.00 weekly. International retail chain has summer openings in re­ tail sales, customer service and display. O p en in g s are th ro u g h o u t Phoenix, Southern N evada, and the following Southern California counties: San Die­ go, Riverside, San Bernardino, Orange, Kern, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and Los Angeles. No experience required. In­ ternships an d scholarships available. Flexible hours. M ust call now , start after finals! For the Placement Center nearest you, call oUr Regional Place­ ment Directory: (714)991-2752. . START YOUR summer job early! All : Green Corp. is looking for students to fill part time position in oUr customer service departm ent. M ust have good communication skills and flexible even­ ing schedule. No gelling required. $5 an hour base salary + incèrttive 966-8788. Ask for Zachary . SUMMER JOB in the White Mountains, June-August, Fundraising Director to coordinate summer money-making ac: tivities. Base pay plus lucrative com ­ missions. Only ambitious, energetic and earnest need apply. Resumes only to: Humane Society o f the White Moun­ tains, PO Box 1070/ Pinétop, Arizona . 85935: SUMMER JOBS LITTLE ONES & Co. Nanny positions available throughout summer valleywide ! $4 ah hour, transportation and ex­ perience required. Part o r full. time. Also, nanny needed, Central Phoenix for l-J/2 year old, Tuesday arid Thurs­ day 7am 6pm , F riday 2pm -6pm . 4 3 1-9216. immediate openings! Full time/ part time; Phoenix/Mesa area company has 15 openings for students marketing our product line throughout the Valley. Good pay, good hours, 9 sch o la rsh ip s also o ffe re d . C a ll I (806)773-1777, ask for Mr. Davis. LIVE- IN / sleep over. 2 positions ; teach, care and assist developmentally disabled adults inrgroup home. Work mornings and evenings^ days free from 8am to. 4pm, $5.55- $6 per hour. Apply TCH 2720. South Hardy #2, Tempe. Perfect for students, day and night time positio n s, a v ailab le from 15-35 hours/week. Hiring immediately. Call Bob at 921-4044. EQE LOOKING FOR bright dynamic indi­ viduals w ith strong backgrounds in physics, chemistry, and biology to teach for. the nations #1 test prep company. Also, must score high on standardized tests. Part time« evenings and weekends. Call the Princeton Review 967-1480. LOOKING FOR motivated political sci­ ence student to head up campaign for District 27 State o f Arizona; Contact Marc 921-9838. MA 1L ORDER softw are com pany is looking for full-time or part-time sales persons. Engineering majors with pro­ gramming experience preferred. Con­ tact personnel at Programmer's Ware­ house, 443rÔ580. /» State Pukm Thupday¿ April 2 3 ,19 9 8 M EN ’S C LO TH IN G m an u factu rer seeks student for internship. Must have art or design experience. Fashion back­ ground helpful. Duties include sketch­ ing, drafting styles, general office. Ap­ p ro x im ate ly 10 h o u rs p e r w eek. 947-9710. MODELS Print & TV for gals & guys. Experience not necessary. Part-time OK. En Avant A gency 8 3 9 -1 9 6 9 4 5 0 0 South Lakeshore Drive, Tempe. NOW LOOKING for enthusiastic, hard working, go-getters for an exciting car­ reer as a night club DJ, some experience necessary. Apply in person 2-5pm Mon­ day 4/27 at 7000 E. Shea B oulevard, Scottsdale/ask for Gary, SUMMER JOBS HELP W ANTEDSALES GAIN EXPERIENCE A X Q LAUREN- We’ll play the cards and foil the dice and I'll keep the cham­ pagne on lots of ice! Get ready for a night to remember! -Lee. LIFESTYLES. UNLIMITED income for the ambitious. A no brainer that just requires som eeffort 924-2930. The B ar& G rill PHOENIX, LAS V egas, S an Diego! Will you be in any of these cities over the summer break? if so, call now to see how you can earn a lucrative summer income, 921-7755,1-4pm, W e work with 15 of AZTs largest em ployers since 1972 • 25 -40 % commission • exclusive accounts • flexible hours • part-tim e/TulM im e positions available Clean cut professional dress C A L L 2 6 7 -0 5 0 0 for immediate consideration ATTN. GREEKS!! Balls AZTEC COURT PLAZA 1301 EAST UNIVERSITY DRIVE 829-7344 PERSONALS ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT with good com m unication sk ills, typing, computer knowledge helpful. 437—1048. PART TIME office person, must have super phone skills, light bookkeeping, general office« 30 hours plus per week, good hourly rate. Leave name and mes­ sage on m achine fo r appointm ent: '966-2526. Kell Distributing/The New York Times, 9 6 6 -3 1 4 7 7 th & M ill CHI OMEGA pledge class- We did it! Pledge Class of the Year!! XO DAN R.- Hi, Sweetie Pie! Hope you have a great week. I know I had a great weekend—with you! DEAR SHAWN, only one more day, have you taken your vitimans and noti­ fied your next of kin for ZBT Formal, Mitch* ■' „• , • " ATA THOMPSON- Have a happy 21st tomorrow. Don't forget to save room for Saturday. -Bird. AA THE Greek Review is hiring now for Fall*92! Positions include: Ad Sales, staff writers, editorial assistant, graphics/layout and photographers. Applica­ tions available at BMOC/GR office at 712 South College in the basement of Campus Comer- enter around back. Or call 829-1411. OM* W ILLIE: It'S tim e for sashi and suki. Won't you come with? W LST PHOENIX real estate office, part time receptionist/secretary. Hours flexible. Gall Pick 951-8666. HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965-6731 ! GAMM A PHI H eidi, thanks fo r all you've done for Gamma Phi. You will be missed. Love your sisters. GAMMA PHI Marcie hope senior week is awesome! You're almost there! Love your, secret sis. _ Q .'. ■ GAMM A PHI Seniors we will miss you. The best of luck to you all ! GAY HAPPY 22 Birthday. I hope this is a good one. Love Tanya & Liz. l COCKTAIL SERVER Jockey Club night club, 52 East Camelback, Phoenix is looking fo r part time evening, 20-25 hour/ week, experience required. Call Bobby at 279-7777. CORK ’N CLEAVER accepting'applications for lunch wai­ tress. W ill tra in ; C oncern w ith ap­ pearance^ reliability and personality are important. Apply iii person MondayFriday 2-5pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th/Gam elback) 952^0585; ; HOSTESS NEEDED. Apply in person at La Casa Serrano, 6440 South Rural, Tempe, 345-0044. | “In th e Cornerstone” !\ f - 1 Purchase any small, ■m edium , or large ! yogurt and receive any ■small size for FREE \ Toppings extra ! 968-9512 NOW HIRING cooks. All shifts, full . tim e/part time. Experience required. A pply in .person. EOE. 1343 W est Broadway, Tempe. . BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES “ SUN, FUN in the mountains! Whitewa­ te r ra ftin g o u tfitte rs, re so rts, dude ranches and summer camps now hiring for this summer in Colorado. 24 hours: 1(363)331-2451 • l INCREDIBLE OPPORTUNITY! Make $20+ per hour working for yourself in any part of the country. We're looking for a few good reps. C all W ilm a 998-9059 for further information. . CHINESE (WRINKLE dog) Shar Pei. Extremely rare "Albino" puppy worth $1,500- will sell for $550. 820-2875. FREE LO S T/FO U N P LOST: BLACK Day runner organizer. 1 really, really would appreciate it if re­ turned. No questions asked. Call after 9pm: Al 843-1822. LOST: PUPPY, white with tan spots, no tags- m issing since 4/16. Rew ard if found. 894-1215. RESTAURANTS/ BARS TRAVEL AND earn college credit in an J 1-w eek paid sum m er in ternship. 731-9460. 10c WINGS' DRAFTS 70C WANTED: COMPUTER programmer working on Database, Dataflex, Novell Advanced Netware. Part time. BarrettJackson 273^0791, B u d .B u d L ig h t 3 -7 p m M -Th , BRfWPUG THIRSTY THURSDAY Bud$4 25ü"ken Amstel I ■ ^ecks Coors Light All 12oz. Bottles 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 1 3 0 1 . E. U n iv ers ity :- A DOZEN beautiful red roses delivered only $20.00 + tax. We also have baloons: 894-3419. AA YOU can hear the moaning. But from where does it com e? You may know more tonight - that is, if you're lucky enough to be one of the Women of Fever *92. «Foresi ALPHA PHI- Mrs. Conroy- Distraction isn't a reason for being late, but the sign of Green Gorilla- do not enter- could be a cause. " y:/ '; ;- ' Did you know you can put Greek sym­ bols in your State Press personal ad for an extra fifty cents? Ask us for details. Call us at 965-6731 or stop by our Mat­ thews Center basement location today! 1/2 M ile fro m A S U (N e x t to S u n n y 's ) HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL ADPI KELLE- It begins today. Are you ready? with 10 KEGS 200 shots where? Tomorrow Theta Delts, Louie Louie I. EARN $300 a day, during the summer, starting your own specialized residential cleaning business. For complete manu­ al, send $9.95 to W.M., P.O. Box 1026, St. Louis, Missouri 63031. TH E W EKEËLA C am ps, C anton, Maine. One of America's most prestig­ ious camps, seeks creative dynamos for staff positions J une 2 1-August 22 for tennis, athletics, gymnastics, competitve swimming, water skiing, sailing, piano, guitar, dance/ballet, drama, song lead­ ers, ceramics* art, woodworking, pho­ tography/yearbook. Also kitchen and m aintenance positions.; If you think you're tops, reply to: 130 South Merkle R oad, C o lu m b u s, O h io 43209. (614)235-3177. * a x q AXQ LAURA S. Congratulations on being named the "official" Sigma Phi Epsilon sweetheart! HOTEL SALES Manager for Phoenix airport hotel. Experience preferred. High energy, professional person re­ sponsible for ASU education and enter­ tainment markets. Fax resume to 8940326. PETS PERSONALS Congratulations on winning the Greek House o f the Year Banner three years in a row!! Way to go Zeta Pi! National marketing firm willing to train energetic males or females, locations across the USA. 921 -1849. SU M M ER W ORK. $ 3 60/w eek full tim e, $ 180/w eek part time. Interna­ tional retail chain is filling 15 positions. No experience required. Scholarships available. Call 352-7037. SURVEY INTER VIEWERS, no sales, part time« flexible afternoon, evening and Saturday shifts. Comfortable office environment. Frequent raise reviews. Walk from ASU. Apply 4-8pm Tuesday through Friday. Higginbotham Asso­ ciates 829-3282. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS Stete P ir e Pase 19 Thursday, April SZ3, 199« C H ILD CARE P ER SO N A IS PERSONALS rB BROOKS: Up for a sprint? Have a great week! You're splendid! K A 0 DENISE G .— Day: 3 is upon us and things are just gettin' started. Only twO more days til the Dixie Ball— KA Pledge Andrew- r«t»B C H RISSY , congrats and good luck! Looking forward to sun. Love, your secret S.W^A.G. BBS PJ>B CRAYEDI: You swag! Congrat­ ulations on all you've done. We love you! LARRY S.- I wuv my gushy wushy bunny bear soooo much! Kissy, kissy! All my wuv, Lady X. . ART LET'S GO Yankees! Thea and Maria, -stop playing with your food! Happy Or­ thodox Easter! a -m a -b o b s PICTURE THIS Add Spice to Your Personals! A sk us about them ! You can have a bold centered headline on your State Press liner ad for an addi­ tional $1! What a great way to get atten­ tion! Ask Us for details! Call 965-6731 or stop-by today! : : 965-6735 State Press C lassifieds. FRIENDS KNOW WHEN TO SAÏWHEN. r e s CRESCENT sisters Sarah, Sha non, and Lesley, and the rest o f the Spring pledges ¡have, a great week. Love your orescent sis, Brett. Fd>B LAUR A T. I had a great weekend, thanks. I'm psyched for this week, just retnember 1 like to get even! Love your Jil sis, Brett. FEMALE SITTER/DRIVER needed af­ ternoons summer, in exchange for room and board. Pleasant accomodations in Tempe. Must have car and good driving record. Contact Mary Ann 839-9820. LO O K IN G FOR a b a b y sitter fo r 3 young children, northeast Scottsdale. Will pay top dollar. Call 860-0742. PERMANENT PART time position for responsible babysitter. Children ages 6 and 9. References required. Some over­ night. Excellent pay. Paradise Valley. ,998-5812. ~ A D O P T IO N r4>B NQ: NAME, gotta love it!! Love your big sis. . PIZZO: YOU’VE done a great job this semester. The fall will be even better! BK ' •:V- . '■ ■ T