W Stale press • ; ^Copyright, State Press, 1990 Tempo, Arizona Vol. 72 No.126 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Tuesday, April 17,1990 Legal battle over Danforth cro ss to end today 2 Christian groups ‘unable’ to file appeal By NICOLE C A R R O L L State Press ' The year-long battle over the cross atop Danforth Chapel ends today as Christian groups defending the symbol give up their legal fight, and a judge’s ruling that calls for the removal of the religious display is enacted. Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Alfred Rodgers ruled in February that the University support of the cross was a violation of the establishment clause of the U. S. Constitution that ca lls for the separation of chruch and state. He gave the student groups defending the symbol until today to decide whether they would appeal the decision and allowed the cross to remain standing during this time. Doug Drury, the volunteer attorney for Campus Christian Aglow and Christian Legal Society, said the groups are not afraid to appeal the court’s decision, but that they are unable to do so. “We’re college students with budgets who can’t afford that exposure,” Drury said. “We’re not going to appeal, but that doesn’t mean w e’re quitting,” he said. “We have other strategies w e’re working on to ensure religious freedom.” Drury would hot comment on what the strategies entailed, but Campus Aglow CoDirector Debra Ortiz said the group was not discounting future legal action. “We have had a gross misinterpretation of the Constitution, and the public at large doesn’t know that because they’ve had no education in the original intention of the establishment clause,” Ortiz said. “We’ve had absurd interpretations of the First and 14th Amendments.” Ortiz said that while she is still involved with Campus Aglow, her statements were as spokesperson for a larger constituency of Turn to Ctom , pag* 14. Meyerson to quit general counsel position in June By NICOLE C ARRO LL State Press ASU General'Counsel Bruce Meyerson announced Monday that he will leave his $92,000 a year position on June 8 to become a partner with the Phoenix law firm of Meyer, Hendricks, Victor, Osborn and Maledon. Meyerson, who has been at ASU since 1986, said he was offered a chance to work with the firm in alternative dispute resolution, which involves settling legal disputes without litiga­ tion. “I really couldn’t torn it down,” he' said. ASU President Lattie Coor said he was surprised at -Meyerson’s decision, but that “this is not uncommon; private practice can have a particular appeal.” . Meyerson “I ’m really sorry to see him go,” Coor said. “I’ve come to rely on him very heavily.’’ Meyerson is the chief legal officer of the University. He represents ASU in all legal matters and gives legal advice to senior University administrators. In his last year as general counsel, Meyerson has been involved in high-profile legal controversies such a s the policy of allowing alcohol in the skyboxes over Sun Devil Stadium Scott Troyanoe/State Press Casting Stones Joel Olson, a senior political science major, participates Monday In “TV Stoning” on the lawn outside Old Main. Olson, who said tossing rocks at television sets Is a way for students to “reclaim their brains from the tyranny of television," urged passers-by to step up and "dedicate a throw to your favorite show,” The activity was part of a series of events commemorating Earth Day; Turn to Meyerson, page 20. Parking to stop using impoundment ‘boot’ Vehicle towing initiated, citation lim it increased B y CH AD REDWING State Press State Press photo The ASU Office of Parking and Transit will discontinue the use of the “ boot” , as pictured here, as a means a moans of impounding cars with outstanding parking violations. Heating Up; The debate rages on over the question of global warming. Are we getting hotter? And by how much? Page 6 The Office of Parking and Transit has announced it will discontinue the use of the “rhino boot” as a means of impounding cars with outstanding parking citations, effective immediately. The boot has long been used to immobilize vehicles with unpaid citations on campus or in campus-patrolled areas. Under the new policy, the University will tow offending vehicles to an impoundment lot. “Our experience in using the boot has led to the determination that it is better for both the University and the individual that we tow the car to' an impound lot rather than immobilize it in place,” said John Haldane, acting assistant director for parking and transit. “The impound lot provides a location that P acifier from the President: A S U chief Lattie Coor says an A S U child care plan will be ready in a few months. Page 16 is safe and secure, and at the sam e time reduces the need to buy expensive items such as the boot.” ‘The revised policy gives everybody an added break. It is more lenient and easier to tolerate. ’ — John Haldane H ie boots used by the Parking and Transit Office cost in excess of $400 each, Haldane also pointed out that immoblizing a vehicle on the spot denied a parking space to someone who was qualified to use it. In addition to the change from booting to towing for impoundment, the number of citations required for a vehicle to appear on the University’s impoundment list has been raised. “In the past, your vehicle would be on the impoundment list if you had three unpaid citations,” Haldane explained. “It now takes five citations totaling more than $100 in value for a vehicle to appear on the im poundm ent list under our revised policy.” Vehicles that áre impounded will still be subject to the $50 impound fee from ASU. Moreover, the owners of the impounded vehicles will pay a $32 towing fee and $5 a day in storage charges to the towing company, ABT Towing. “The revised policy gives everybody an added break. It is more lenient and easier to tolerate,” Haldane said. ASU had been booting approximately 20 vehicles per week, but with the policy revisions, Haldane estim ates there will be 25 percent fewer impoundments. Out! Five ASU baseball players are suspend­ ed in the wake of Saturday’s brawl with the U S C Trojans. Page 27 Today’s weather: Increasing cloudiness with a chance of afternoon thundershowers and a high in the low 80S. Tonight:-Cool and brassy with s low in the upper 50s. Claasifleds 2» Comics ...................................................2 6 Police Report...........................................1 2 Sporte........^....«*....»..............................27 W orld/Nstion.....^,.,.....^ ..^........M ....M..>.3 State Press Tuesday. April 17.1990 Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University com m unity. A n y cam pus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center* Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. i . - ' Meetings •A I S E C will have a panel discussion Hall. •Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •Eckankar Students of A S U will discuss “ Partnership With Life” at 11:30 a.m. in the M U , Room 213. •Fellowship of Christain present former ASU Steve Patterson at Atheletes basketball Coach 7:30 in p.m. the University Activity Center, Room 35. •Liberal Arts College Council will meet at 3 p.m. in S S 236. •MUAB Culture and Arts will meet at 3:30 p.m . In the M U Graham Room . •MUAB Film Committee will show the film •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an “ Bull D urham ” at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the open meeting at noon in the basem ent of M U Cinem a. • A lp h a • N A TAS E ta Rho will h ave n o m ia tio n s elections for officers at 4 Vanderm ark of A m erica W est Airlines at Stuaffer Hall R eading Room . 7:30 p.m. in the M U , R oom 211. •PSI CHI The National Honor Society in Psychology present Dr. Peter R. Killeen p re se n ts •Arizona Aids Project presents organ recital given by Dwight Brewer at 7:30 p.m. on “ at A p p ro a c h e s the Luthern C hurch of the G o od S c i e n t if i c to v e rsu s the p.m. and M ik e in the . H u m a n is t ic M ind; A re T h ey Shepard, R eco n cila b le ?” at 2 p.m. in the Psychology •Asian Student Association will d iscu ss Building, R oom 141. the En d of the Y e a r party at noon in L L A •ReJoyce in Jesus Ministries will have a 218. bible study at 8 p.m. in the Cholla Hall •ASU Lisa Jones, mother of 16-year-old Sandra Jones on the poster, perched herself on Cady Mall Monday hoping a paser-by would recognize her daughter. Sandra disappeared Friday morn­ ing after skipping school at Dobson High School with a girlfriend. Earl R ad m acher at 6 p.m. in M anzanita from 10 to 11 a.m . in B A C 316. New m an Center. Help Wanted • C a m p u s A m b a s s a d o r C h r is tia n Fellowship presents guest speaker Dr. Earth Week Coalition present excerise Room . "E c o p o lis ” at 1:30 p.m. in the Architecture •Society of Women Engineers will meet Building, North Lecture Halt. at 12:40 p.m. in E R C 493. •Beta Alpha Psi will have lunch from noon to 1:30 p.m. on the lawn east of the Student •The Classics Club will have N ancy Serwint on women in Greco-Rom an art at 1 S ervices Building. p.m. in the N ursing Building, Room 11. ¿¿JÉ l i b Traveling’s easier with STATE PRESS Classifieds! LOANED EXECUTIVE ASU and the City of Phoenix have agreed to sponsor a Loaned Executive Program which will help further President Lattie Coot’s goal of prom oting increased interaction between ASU and the communities it serves. All ASU staff members, faculty members and academic professionals are eligible to apply for the L o an ed E x ecu tiv e position. C all 829-8907 Apache & Rural Call 834-6707 Broadway & Dobson Applicants must dem onstrate the ability to interact between the City and ASU by linking University resources to City projects and activities. Applicants should also possess th e skills necessary to support efforts by community organizations in initiating the implementa­ tion of the 21 recommendations in the Phoenix Futures Forum Report M anager's TW O GREAT SPECIAL OFFERS The successful applicant must obtain approval from his/her department or unit director and will be perm itted to fu lfill any teaching obligations. If on an academic-year contract, the City has agreed to compensate the selected applicant at his/her University rate during the summer months. The L o an ed E x ecu tiv e will be expected to begin w ork on o r about June 1, 1990 in the City’s Strategic Hanning Office and continue through the end of the Spring Semester, 1991. A pplication • Submit a letter of application to the S p e c ia l p i& p 'H u t - J u s t sa y : “MAKE IT A LARGE, MEDIUM CHARGE” and g e t any larg e pizza at th e m edium p rice. (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday only - Dine-In or Carry-Out on ly) 1 T o p p in g P e r s o n a l P a n P iz z a Office of the President no later than April 23, 1990. 1 Personal Pan . . . . $1.59 2 Personal Pans . . . $2.99 Jo b A n n o u n ce m e n t a v a ila b le a t th e O ffice o f the G eneral C ounsel, ASB 202, 965-4550. >■No Five Minute Guarantee on Pizza • Offers Not Valid with any other Coupons or Offers • Offer Good Lunch Tirne Only 11 a m to 4 p m _ Monday - Friday 4iut 00 $ 3 . ww O F F Any large Pizza (D ine-ln O nly) P i3 & -Hut. FREE SIX PACK O F PEPSI COLA® WITH ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA CARRYOUT Not valid with any other Pizza H ut* offer. S15 00 charge oh all relumed checks. Checks m l accepted at all restaurants. Pepsi Cola is a registered trademark of PepsiCo. Inc Offer expires May 1.1990. W orld/N ation Stole Press Page 3 Tuesdoj^Pri^JjjWS, Lithuania asks Gorbachev for initial meeting MOSCOW (AP) — Lithuania on Monday asked Mikhail Gorbachev to m eet immediately with the secessionist republic’s president to provide details of Moscow’s threatened economic sanctions so that Lithuanians can be prepared. It would be Gorbachev’s first meeting with Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis, who was elected after the Baltic republic declared independence from the Soviet Union on March 11. Some Soviet publications suggested Gorbachev, with newly expanded pres­ idential powers, will refuse to discuss the standoff as long as Landsbergis is leading the breakaway republic. Landsbergis told a news conference Monday night that if the Soviet Union Closes Lithuanian borders to prevent shipments from foreign countries, “We will consider it a form of aggression.” In a telegram to Gorbachev, Lithua* . . nian P rim e M inister K azim ieras u O rD aC neV Prunskiene said Lithuania wants to explain to its people what difficulties they m ay face if they continue ignoring an ultimatum Gorbachev issued Friday. Gorbachev gave Lithuania 48 hours to rescind laws aimed at bolstering its drive for independence or face a cutoff of products the Kremlin supplies. He did not spell out the items, but Lithuania depends on the Kremlin for oil, gas, machinery, raw materials, chemicals and automobiles. The deadline expired Sunday night with no visible cut in deliveries, but also no yielding by Lithuania. Prunskiene’s telegram said such broad action would damage both the Soviet and Lithuanian economy. She suggested the best way to clarify the threat would be at an immediate meeting in Moscow with a Lithuanian delegation headed by Landsbergis. If measures are not defined, Prunskiene said in an Music fans give the clenched fist salute endhold an African National Congress flag at London’s Wembley Stadium Monday, prior to the start of the Nelson Mandela concert. Organizers claimed that millions of people In 40 Countries would see the concert, either live or in delayed tape transmission. Rock concert honors M andela LONDON (AP) — A sellout crowd of 72,000 people danced, sang and chanted “Mandela is free!” at a televised rock concert Monday night honoring Nelson Mandela and his fight to end apartheid in South Africa. Mandela and his wife, Winnie, arrived at Wembley Stadium about an hour after the concert started, beaming and waving their fists in the air as the crowd cheered. They were joined in the stadium’s executive box by Adelaide Tambo, wife of African National Congress President Oliver Tambo. Tambo is recovering from a stroke in Sweden. The 71-year-old Mandela, deputy president of the ANC, flew to London on Sunday for the concert. It is the first major international event addressed by the black leader since he was released Feb. 11 after 27 years in a South African prison. Waving their fists in the air and clapping their hands, anti-apartheid supporters and rock ’n’ roll fans filled the stadium’s wet playing field and most of die stands. A huge banner across the stage read: “The Struggle Is My Life,” the title of a book of Mandela’s writings and speeches. Turn to Lithuania, page 23. Administration criticized for environmental inaction WASHINGTON (AP) — Delegates from 17 nations gathered for a White House conference on global Warming am id criticism Monday from some participants and environm entalists that the Bush adm inistration isn ’t dealing with the problem. Senior administration officials said the United States will call for increased international research on both the science of g lo b a l w a rm in g and th e ec o n o m ic implications of the ‘‘greenhouse” effect w hen the two-day conference begins Tuesday. But as d e l e g a t e s a rrived; environmentalists chastised President Bush for not calling for specific actions to ease the g lo b a l w arm in g p rob lem , in clu d ing commitments to make specific reductions in greenhouse pollutants. The Sierra Club, which announced a TV advertising campaign to highlight concerns about global warming, called the White House conference an attempt by thé administration to shift the focus of the issue away from the need for pollution controls to a debate over economic considerations. “It’s really a smoke screen for the a d m in istr a tio n ’s in a ctio n on g lo b a l warming,” said Daniel Becker of the Sierra Club. “We know enough now to begin acting on to curb global warming today.” Sonde con feren ce p articipan ts also expressed concern about the heavy U. S. focus on more research. “In spite of remaining uncertainties on some aspects of the issue, an effective response policy must be established now, without any further d ela y ,” said a statement issued on behalf of the 12 nations attending from the European Community. La urnes Jan Brinkhorst, director-general for the environment of the European Community’s Council of Ministers, and Padraig Flynn, environmental minister of Ireland, said there was an “urgent need for an e ffe c tiv e resp onse p o licy ” w hile additional research is under way. Senior administration officials have reiterated in recent days that Bush will offer no new policy proposals to curb the manmade pollution that scientists agree is causing the earth to warm. Bush, in remarks that will open the conference, was expected instead to focus on the need for additional research to resolve both scientific uncertainties about global warming and establish clearer estimates on economic costs. The conference, which is being held just days before Sunday’s celebration of Earth Day, fulfills a campaign promise Bush made to hold an international conference on global warming early in his presidency. Representatives to the meeting are senior cab in et-level ad visers on econom ics, science and the environment from 17 n a t io n s , in c lu d in g th e E u r o p e a n community, Japan and Brazil. Bush advisers said they hoped the conference would, for the first time, give e q u a l w e i g h t to e c o n o m i c a n d environmental issues related to global warming and “ensure the economics will be injected . . . into all future international forums’’ on the subject, “We hope it will raise the level of debate . . . on the science and economics of global change,” said Michael Boskin, chairman of the president’s Council of Econom ic Advisers and one of the conference cochairmen. A num ber o f E uropean countries* Turn to GramhouM, page & News Briefs Garbo gets her way: Funeral services will be private NEW YORK (AP) — Greta Garbo will be buried as she lived: privately and in all likelihood without fanfare. Officials at New York Hospital said Monday that funeral services would be private. Spokeswoman Myrna Manners said the film great had been a dialysis patient at the hospital but she released no other information at the family’s request. The Swedish beauty, whose sculpted face and throaty, contralto voice helped make her an international star and one the world’s most famous recluses, died Sunday at New York Hospital. She was 84. Born Lovisa Gustafsson in Stockholm, Garbo made her screen debut in 1923. She made 12 silent films, including, “Flesh and the Devil,” “The Temptress” and “The Divine Woman,” before uttering her first words in the 1930 movie “Anna Christie:” “Gimme a visky, ginger a le on the side. And don’t be stingy, baby.” Garbo starred in 26 films in 17 years. In 1941, at age 36, she quit Hollywood and began living a solitary life. She became a U. S. citizen in 1951 and spent much of the rest of her life shuttered behind doors, fences and windows in residences in Manhattan, France and Switzerland. When she ventured out in public, “The F ace” as she was once called, was often concealed beneath a slouch hat and dark sunglasses. Mars mission: Joint flight with Soviets said too risky WASHINGTON (AP) — Joint missions to Mars by the United States and the Soviet Union are too risky now, a panel said Monday, recommending instead that the two nations follow “a graceful path” of coordinated but independent exploration. “The United States and USSR have no prior experience with the degree of cooperation necessary to carry out a technical project of this complexity or magnitude,” said a committee of the National Research Council. The committee said it was concerned “about relying on the consistency of the relationship over a period of a decade or more into the future.” The panel’s report appeared to chill the idea frequently expressed by many experts that Mars would be explored jointly by the Soviets and Americans. Court allows school dance ban in Missouri town PURDY, Mo. (AP) % Q ) * S tu d e n t S p ecial It’s O u r 1st Ja zz & H eritage Festival LIVE OUTDOOR ENTERTAINMENT! Featuring: Groove Merchants. Dave Paradic. Vicki Rue & The Arizona Wranglers. Jack Alves Band Azz Izz Also available: Stereo. Speakers. TV. and other individual specially boxes & supplies. Student Special includes: 5-Small Boxes 7-Med. Boxes 1-Large Box 3-Flat Wardrobe 1-tape Roll only s39.95 V is a a n d M a s t e r C a r d A c c e p t e d JA ZZ JAM AND CRAWFISH BOIL COME SUCK THE HEADS & EA1 THE TAILS WIN A TRIP TO NEW ORLEANS FOR THE JAZZ * HERITAGE FESTIVAL AT THE PARTY! April 22nd S h i p p in g A v a ila b le BEGINS AT 2AK) P.M. TIL. . G . O . D . o r D ir e c t 6805 Mtiny in Avenue. Tempe %7-39l7 TRIP IVCIIOES: ROTNDTRIP AIRFARE ( OI RTES\ OF EASTERN AIRLINES. THE OFFICIAI MRLINES OFf it Tl ESIHV • HOTEL ACTOMiKM)\TKINS • TICKETSTOTHE JAZZ l HERITAGE EESTIVAl Register to Win! SPO N SO RED B Y KABTERN A nytim e a t A m l o c a tio n ! “ M o m a n d D a d c a n p a y !” C A L L M OVING M AG IC H O TLIN E Located at Tha Boxworks SHEA 7000 PLAZA 7000 E. Shea Bivd.. Scottsdale. AZ 85254 991-7969 Page 9 Tuesday, April 17,1990 State P i m Audit. Continued from page 8. water lawns, rather than flooding grassy areas. And the storage of waste water, to be used for irrigation, is being planned, Other conservation measures in use at ASU include springloaded fa u c e ts and flo w -r estricter s in dorm itory showerheads. Lane Briley, a research specialist in the department of chemistry, said som e of the audit’s results were surprising, but that he is generally pleased with efforts the campus is making toward environmental awareness. “Throughout campus, for what resources are available to everybody on campus,’’ Briley said, “everybody is trying to work for surroundings that are more ecological and economical. You have to remember that ASU is a major city within itself.’’ According to the Earth Day 1990’s News and Information Service, a random sample of completed campus audits from throughout the country reports that in a year, one student generates 640 pounds of solid Waste. Ninety percent of that is sent to land fills; only 5 percent is recycled. An estimated one-third of the nation’s campuses have a water conservation program in use and 90 percent have recycling programs. Although approximately 50 percent of the campuses purchase a recycled paper product, “m ost only purchase a small amount.” Meanwhile, Briley said, ASU can most likely look forward to ’’positive changes” in the environmental arena. “Right now, w e’re just getting started on this,” she said. Greenhouse Continued from page 3. including the N etherlands and West Germany, have advocated that industrial nations commit to a stabilization of carbon dioxide em issions by 2000 through a variety o f programs reducing energy needs. Carbon dioxide, which is produced in the burning of fossil fuels, is responsible for about half the greenhouse pollutants. Environmentalists have argued that a wide range of actions could be taken to consèrve energy and reduce greenhouse pollutants by requiring the manufacture of more fuel-efficient cars and promoting energy savings in other ways in homes and businesses. The Sierra Club, which has more than 500,000 members, will take that m essage to the public with a series of public service ads featuring actors such as William Shatner, John Ritter and Jane Alexander, The president’s chief scien ce adviser, Alien Brom ley, last week criticized' those who advocate “slam-dunk solutions” to global warm ing. The Bush adm inistration has m aintained that w hile there is widespread agreem ent “We cannot sa il blindly into the future,” said Brom ley, another conference co­ G R A D U A T IN G ? C o n s id e r A that manmade pollutants are causing the earth to warm, it’s not clear how severe the problem w ill be to warrant pollution con trols that could h ave w idespread econom ic im pact. Y o u ’v e G o t W h a t It T a k e s ! BLO O D P LA S M A C a re e r In R EA L ESTA TE • B e Y o u r O w n B oss • E x c e lle n t E n tr y E e v e l I n c o m e • N o G o ld C a llin g o r D o o r K n o c k in g • 8 D a y T ra in in g p ro g r a m H a s Y o u E a r n in g Q u ic k ly Are You Curious or Career Committed? Call C arl Today at 899-9000 The 3- hour Study Hour 8pm -Il pm 50$ Drinks $1.50 Pitchers of Beer 3.95 BBQ Beef Ribs until 9pm No Cover All Night Dancing starts at 9pm 894 0533 4 3 0 N. Scottsdale Rd. Humans Hair Studio Enjoy w atching m ovies w hile you donate! O u r fully automated donor center is m edically supervised by a friendly, professional staff. -CO- 868-5462 (UUMIMHniHT) Your Donation May Save A Life! 933 E. University if llW j S M j L , Grooming $35.00 for 2 donations in one week, for new donors and repeat donors who have not returned in 2 months. Tempe Plasma TUESDAY CutS i Style ( IM I «ITI «I Y I MI I I TI ) No T h is coupon is worth Appointment NTheQAuaktyB I Sourde chairman. Some computer models have suggested that manmade pollutants will cause a 4-degree to 9-degree Fahrenheit increase in global temperatures in 60 years as the increasing pollution traps heat close to the Earth. However, som e scientists said those projections are uncertain and may not adequately take into account clouds or other factors that might have a counteracting effect. n n m * n rtn 8 9 4 -1 O O P „Jj Mon.-Thur. S a.m.-6 p.m Frj. & Sat. 8 a.m.-4 p.m Locata« • Naxt to tfeo Warehwss Forast ft Urivarsity HOURS •Oa.m.-Opjn. Mon thru Friday ani Sat 9 a.m.-6 p.aL Y ou r choice: B e e fy o r L eafy . The $4.99 Sun Devil Deal Marches On. R ecently we offered you a full d in n e r a t Sizzler for th e cost of a cheese pizza. We th o u g h t it w as a good deal. B u t even Sizzler m ay have u n d er-estim ated th e ap p etite of th e S u n Devil crowd for a good m eal a t a fa ir price. Y our response w as fabulous. We’re so pleased, we’re extending th e $4.99 S un Devil D eal th ro u g h th e end of th e school year. You m ig h t call it o u r “F in a ls” offer. The M ill & Southern SizzLer’s I i Choose a shrim p, chicken or sm all $4.99 SunD evil Deal. I i sirloin ste a k en tre e p lu s potato, rice or E iqoy shrim p, chicken or sm all sirloin steak en ­ I vegetable p lu s a green d in n e r sala d p lu s i tree p lus potato, rice or vegetable and dinner salad. your choice of non-alcoholic beverage i Or choose th e fam ous AU-You-Can-Eat salad , p asta, I w ith bottom less refills. I taco, fru it and d esert Salad Bar. Includes non-alco­ I O r for $4.99 o ur fam ous All-You-Can- i holic beverage w ith bottom less refills. I Offer good, with coupon or ASU ID from 4pm to E a t fresh fru it & m uffins & taco & p a sta i close. Expires April 29, 1990. Offer also good at the « & d e se rt & sala d & fixins S alad B ar. I Baseline and McClintock Sizzler. I B rin g a friend, or ten . T he $4.99 S un I I Devil D eal m arches on. B u t no t forever. r I J- S iz z le r. Steak • Seafood • Salad I J Pasc 10 State Press Tuesday, April 17,1990 IT’S TIME FO B SU M M ER VACATI W h e th e r y o u ’re g o in g h o m e f o r the s u m m e r o r w an t to g e t a w a y fro m it all, A I T T ra v e l h a s th e travel p a c k ­ a g e fo r y o u . A t th é m o s t a ffo rd a b le S P E C IA L A S U CRUISE D EPARTS JU L Y 9 F ro m $ 6 7 6 ra tes a v a ila b le o n th e A S U c a m p u s ! Per p e rso n , q u ad o c c u p a n c y . C a ll u s o r c o m e b y t o d a y a n d tell u s • 5 day/4 n ig h t c r u is e o f th e b e a u tifu l C a r ib b e a n o n th e n ew C a r n iv a l C r u is e L in e s ’ F u n S h ip “T h e F a n ta s y ” • R o u n d trip a irfa re fro m P h o e n ix to M ia m i, F lo r id a • A ll m e a ls • A ll a irp o rt tra n s fe rs a n d b a g g a g e h a n d lin g w h e re y o u ’d lik e to g o . W e ’ll m a k e re s e rv a tio n s fo r y o u at th e lo w est a v a ila b le a irfa re s — to h o m e o r the c ity o f y o u r d re a m s . A n d w e ’ll in­ c lu d e th e b e st h o te l a n d rental c a r ra te s fo r y o u r v a c a tio n travel p la n s. H e r e ’s ju st a s a m p le o f th e a ffo r d ­ a b le , e x c itin g v a c a t io n s w e can b o o k fo r y o u : C O C A C O LA 8 0 W L P A C K A G E TO TO K Y O & HONG KONG F ro m $ 1 ,7 9 0 P e r p e rs o n , d o u b le o c c u p a n c y EXCLUSIVE ASU DISCOUNT TAHITI From $899 Per person, double occupancy. • 6 d ays/5 n ig h ts a c c o m m o d a t io n s in th e tr o p ic a l c it y o f M o o r e a • R o u n d trip a irfa re fro m L o s A n g e le s • F lo w e r lei g re e tin g • F a re w e ll s h e ll lei k e e p s a k e • A ll a irp o rt tra n s fe rs a n d b a g g a g e h a n d lin g • R o o m ta x e s MEXICO M a z a t la n F ro m $ 2 9 9 P u e rto V a lla rta F ro m $ 3 3 9 S a n J o s e D el C a b o / Cabo San Lu cas F r o m $ 3 99 A ll M e x ic o p a c k a g e s a re p r ic e d p e r p e r s o n , d o u b le o c c u p a n c y a n d in c lu d e : • 4 d a y s/ 3 n ig h ts a c c o m o d a t io n s • R o u n d trip a irfa re fro m P h o e n ix • A ll a irp o rt tra n s fe rs a n d b a g g a g e h a n d lin g • R o o m ta x e s T a k e 5% o ff a n y C a r n iv a l C r u is e w ith y o u r A S U stu d e n t, fa c u lty o r staff I D. G r o u p s o f 15 o r m ore, D o u b le th e D is c o u n t! HAWAII IN T E R N A T IO N A L A I R F A R E S EUROPE SOUTH PACIFIC From Phoenix, 1/2 round trip airfares From Los Angeles, 1/2 round trip airfares Destination Destination Discount Airfares from Amsterdam ........................................$320 A th e n s .... .. v . . ................................ $415 Barcelona............. $370 Berlin ......................... $330 Brussels . . ................. $320 Budapest ..... $479 Bucharest........ $479 Cairo . $485 C o penhagen.......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $355 Frankfurt . ........ $320 G en eva.............................................. $330 Istanbul . ... . ...................... $430 Lisbon ............... . . . . . . . $350 L on d on ............................................ $285 $355 Madrid ............................. Milan ............ ............ ............ . $390 Munich . . . . . . . . . . . . ___. . . . . . . $330 Oslo ___ ___ _____ _____ ____ .. . $360 Paris .................................................. $315 Prague .................... $459 Rome .......................................... .... $395 S tockh olm ............ $360 Stuttgart . . . . ........................... $330 Tel A v iv ........ $485 Vienna ............ $335 Warsaw....... ......... ........... $479 Zurich . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. $330 SPECIAL GROUP DEPARTURE MAY 14-21 From $525 SOUTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA P e r p e rs o n , d o u b le o c c u p a n c y . From Los Angeles. 1/2 round trip airfares • 8 d a ys/7 n ig h ts a c c o m m o d a ­ tio n s a lo n g th e le g e n d a r y b e a c h e s o f W a ik ik i • R o u n d trip a irfa re o n A m e r ic a W e st • F lo w e r lei g re e tin g • R o u n d trip airport/h otel tra n sfe rs • W e lc o m in g H a w a iia n c o n tin e n ta l o rie n ta tio n b re a k fa st • S ta te e x c is e a n d H a w a iia n h otel Destination SOUTH PADRE ISLAND From S244 P e r p e rso n , d o u b le o c c u p a n c y . Discount Airfares from Buenos Ai r es . . . .. .............. . $485 C a ra c a s ....................................... $205 Costa Rica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $205 Guatemala C i t y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •. $205 Maracaibo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5205 Mexico City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5135 Montevideo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... $485 Panama C it y .................... $205 Rio de Ja n e iro.....................................$440 San Jose . ........... $205 Sao P a u lo ................... . , . . $470 San Salvador................................ $205 Santiago....................... ................. 5525 ASIA Destination Discount Airfares from Bangkok.. $479 Bombay ............................................. $754 Delhi . . . . , ........... 5754 Hong Kong .......... ... .. $479 Séoul, . ......... $479 Shanghai . .................,. . $509 Singapore . . . . . ________ . . . . . . $586 Taipei ......................................... :,y.."$479 Tokyo .............. . . . . . . . . . t . $424 CALL 9 2 1 -4 3 0 1 A I T T ta v e l PARENTS HOTLINE 1-800-528-0290 THE CARIBBEAN From Los Angeles. 1/2 round trip airfares Destination Discount Airfares from Barbados ..................... . . .. $275 Freeport....... ............ ... $220 N a ssa u ............................................ $220 Port Au Prince . ....... ...... . . . . . . . $275 San Juan ................... $260 Santo Domingo ............................ $275 St. Maarten ....... ., . . . . . . . . . . . . . $260 CANADA From Phoenix, round trip only Destination Discount Airfares from C a lg a ry .............................. Edmonton ........................ Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vancouver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $207 $298 $342 $305 EURRAIL PASSES From Phoenix, 1/2 round trip airfares • 3 d a y s/2 n ig h ts a c c o m m o d a ­ tio n s o n S o u th P a d re Island, in th e s u n n y G u lf o f M e x ic o • R o u n d trip a irfa re • U s e o f a n A v is s u b c o m p a c t rental c a r fo r s e le c te d n u m b e r o f 24 h o u r p e rio d s • S o u th P a d r e Island D e stin a tio n G u id e • H o te l ta x es Discount Airfares from A u ck la n d ........................................... $435 Brisbane............................................. $490 Cairnes ................ $490 M elbourne....................... $490 S yd n e y ...................... : ................... $490 2nd Class Youth* Saver Pin** 1st Class Valid tar 15 days . .. . .......NA .......$240 .. ...$340 21 days.,. . . . . . . NA . . . . . . NA .. . . .$440 1 month .... .. . . . . 5380 . . . . . . NA .. . . . $550 2 months.. ........ .5500 ........ NA .. .. . 5750 3 mohtffs.,. . . . . . . . NA ........ NA .. ... $930 $ 1 0 Off E u rra il P a s s w ith p u r c h a s e o f Inti, a ir t ic k e t fro m AIT T r a v e l ‘ You must be under 26 to travel on a 2nd Class Youth Eurrail Pass. ” ln order to qualify for a Saver Pass, three (3) or more persons must travel together. Groups of 5 or more traveling together are subject to substantial discounts. Ask your AIT Travel Consultant for more information. INTERNATIONAL S T U D E N T S I.D. CAR D OR YOUTH I.D. C AR D $10 W ith a n y a irlin e tic k e t p u rc h a s e fro m th e A S U A I T T ra v e l office. Open M-F, 7 A M - 7 PM, Sat. 10 AM - 2 PM O N CAM PUS T h e S m a r t W a y to B u y T r a v e l M e m o r ia l U n io n — ■L o w e r L e v e l The prices quoted for all vacation packages and airfares are subject to availability and may change without notice. AH vacation package prices are per person, double o ccu ­ pancy: except for cruises. Upgrades are available: please ask your AIT Travel Consultant for details. Airfares listed are generally 1/2 of the round trip fare. Prices do not include international What we serve is you. tax and an additional 510.00 fee may be applied to one-way ticket purchases in some cases Some international departures must be made by June 14.1990. P rices may vary on the return. Please ask your AIT Travel Consultant to help you in securing the lowest airfares availablefor your individual itinerary. Advance purchase necessary. A deposit to hold space is necessary due to high demand and limited capacity. Slat» FltW Page 11 Tuesda^ApriTn^IggO C oor names former colleague executive assistant By NICOLE CARROLL State Press “ (Forsyth) is really intrigued with ASU," Coor said. “He was ready to try som ething new .” ASU President Lattie Coor has appointed the current senior vice-president and vice president for A d m in istration at the University of Vermont to be the first senior executive assistant to the president at ASU, beginning Aug. 1. Dr. Ben Forsyth, Coor’s colleague at UVM for 12 years, will work on special projects concerning campus flexibility and growth. Coor said he created this new position to help him m ake the administration more responsive to the needs of the students and that he personally recruited-Forsyth for the job. Forsyth, who has visited the campus m any tim es to m eet with student leaders, said he hopes to m ake ASU a better place for students and a ll who work there. “ It is a very exciting university,” he said. The new executive assistan t said Coor is one of the m ain reasons he is com ing to ASU. “I have a tremendous amount of respect for him ,” he said. “For m e it is im portant to work with som eone with sim ilar goals.” Coor currently has two other special assistants: Ann Bergin, who is responsible for the president’s annual report, special p r o j e c t s a n d v a r io u s p r e s id e n t ia l publications; and Larry Mankin, who helps the vice presidents implement Coor’s goals for the University. Both assistants said they are looking forward to the addition of Forsyth to the presidential team. “I think he’s a delightful person,” Mankin said. “He comes to us with a wide breadth of experience, and I think he’ll be a good addition to the staff.” ' Forsyth began at UVM College of Medicine in 1966 as an associate professor of medicine and director of the infectious diseases unit. He has served as associate dean of the division of health sciences, associate chairman for academic affairs for the department of medicine and acting chairman of the department of medical microbiology. * H e b e c a m e v i c e p r e s i d e n t fo r administration in 1978 and Served in that position for 12 of the 14 years Coor served as UVM president. Forsyth said his wife and he are regular visitors to Arizona and that they are looking forward to the “physical benefits of living in A rizona a s w ell a s the in tellectu a l stimulation of living in Phoenix.” S T A T E P R ES S W E’RE BRINGING O U R S U B S T O YOU!! A pp licatio n s for positions o n the News Staff of the State Press for the Fall Sem ester 1990 are now being accepted at room 15, Matthews Center, north basement. A ll y o u need to d o is p ic k up the phone! D ay o r night. L u n c h (11 -2), d in n e r dr late n ig h t s n a c k (4-M id nite). Y o u can have the best su b s in the valley delivered rig h t to y o u r h om e o r o ffice . C A L L T O D A Y !! "1 2 T h ere will be open in gs at most levels: reporter5684H, photographer-5 68 6H , c o p y editor5687H, assistant sports editor-5698H, assistant city editor-5690H, city editor-5696H, news edltor-5694H, m anaging editor-5693H, sports editor-5699H, co p y chief-5688H, photo editor5700H, opinion page editor-5695H, arts & entertainm ent writer-5684H*, sports reporter5684H*. *The job referral form needed fo r these positions is the sam e as reporter. SU B SHOP# Foot Long S u b s Cinnamon T ree Center 903 S. Rural Rd. 8 2 9 -0 8 6 8 or 8 2 9-0 532 $ 5 9 9 Choose any two from #1 —#13 on our menuboard. A pp licants must pick up job referral form s from Student Em ploym ent (Student Services Building, 2nd floor) and an application from room 15, Matthews Center, north Basement. Our Summer Rates Sizzle! The Commons on Apache offers x _ _ _ Your own room for the Summer y # 5 0 June 1 - August 11 New sroom Staff O p en in g s N ew spaper experience is desirable but not m andatory. T h e s e are part-tim e, salaried positions open to any student in good standing. INCLUDED* ” Single session rate $475 • Deposit $125 • $75 refundable $525 UTILITIES June 1 - A ugust 11 *$40 p e r peson utility allow ance Single session rate $375 • Deposit $125 • $75 refundable Reserve Your Space ,L tod ay! 829-0933 ! | j | A pp lica n ts must be full-time students at A S U (at least seven hours); but m ajor in any 1 departm ent is acceptable, as is class standing 1 of freshm an through graduate. *$60 p e r person utility allow ance Shared Room for the Summer j ECLECTIC CLOTH ISG & OYER 20 USES OF ENTICING SWIMWEAR! GOMMONS SCOTTSD.UK Kl 1’uebln Sluippini: I’ la/ Y U . Corner of liai den & Via de Ventura 99 S » 7 56 6 j | Page 12 J U « d a ^ £ r in 7 j9 9 0 State Press Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents Monday: •An underage male student was arrested and charged with •A gold bracelet was stolen from a student’s room on the possession of alcohol in the parking lot of Sahuaro Residence third floor of Sahuaro Residence Hall. Hall. •A fem ale student reported receiving obscene telephone calls •A man not affiliated with ASU was warned of trespassing in her room in Palo Verde Main Residence Hall from an after he was found sleeping on the west side of the Business unidentified male. Administration Building. •A window was broken at Irish Residence Hall while students •A unknown naked male entered the womens restroom in the were playing baseball. •Four young couples were warned of trespassing and Physical Science Building. He is described as a white m ale in loitering in separate incidents at the ASU Research Park his 20s with light brown hair. after police found them “talking” in their cars. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: •A non-student was arrested in Sahuaro Residence Hall and •A 24-year-old man was arrested after he fled from the scene charged with being a minor in possession of alcohol and - of a car accident in the 4400 block of South Mill Avenue. He giving false information to police officers. was found in the 100 block of East Fremont .Drive and Grease ’n Go’s Valvoline Lube, Oil & Filter Service Reg. Price «1995 1355 S. McClintock Tempe, 894-2798 FR EE turtle u*ur* (M AIL IN R E F U N D ) VAUTOLINE/, PEOPLE WHO KNOW USE VALVOLINE! Compiled by State Press reporter Tenny Tatusian Everything we sell looks like it cost lots more, but you pay less! $2 ®o Off V charged with driving while under the influence and hit and run. •A 21-year-old man was arrested after police officers found him on the overpass of Elliot Road and 140 passed out in the driver’s seat of his car with a can of beer between his legs. •A 20-year-old naked man was arrested and charged with public sexual indecency after he w as seen masturbating in front of a woman at an apartment complex in the 3100 block of South Rural Road. He was apprehended after a brief chase. •A 43-year-old man who was taking medication for depression was arrested after he hit his wife with a telephone at their apartment in the 1700 block of West Village Way. WITH PROFESSIONALLY INSTALLED OIL CH ANGE USING QUALITY VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL BE AN EGG DONOR W hat if you w ere unable to have children? T h o u sa n d s o f w o m e n c a n n o t c o n c e iv e and bear ch ildren d u e t o th e ir lack o f eggs d r lack o f norm al eggs. They Need Your Help — Donate Your Eggs. F o r f u r th e r in fo rm a tio n , call T h e A rizo n a Fertility Institute a t 468-3840. Financial compensation to donors for direct and indirect expenses. Thè neatest selection of earrings, rings and belts in the Valley at the; lowest prices. for men and women. Dollars Fashion Accessories 414 S. Mil), #201 Tem pe (above Spaghetti Co.) . ■829-1127. ; lif e Dollars. It's not ¡ust our name, it’s our prices. rOAMPus~=n I I • PhotoDeveloping • Health&Beauty □ C o r n e r ___ I 712 S. COLLEGE AVE - NEXT TO COLLEGE STREET DELI M-F 7:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat 9 a m.-10 p.m. Sun 11 a m.-10 p.m. Phone:967-4049 1S I N E A D O ’ C O N N O R ¡ “ 1 D o N o t W a n t ” ... 'p u b l ic e n e m y “ ‘ F e a r o f a B la c k P la n e t ” iR O B E R T P U N T ■‘ ‘ M a n ic N ir v a n a ” ;P A U U ABD U L / ‘ F o re v e r Y o u r G ir l” ;E R I C C L A P T O N CD $9" CD $9" CD $9" CD $9" f w - j $Qg9 ■“ J o u r n e y m a n ” V l # . S a le th ru 4-22-90 American Bartenders School EARN $15-*20 per hour ( F u l l o r P a r t T im e ) C o lle g e S tu d e n t D is c o u n t m 1 1 0 0 O F F T U IT IO N Te a ch in g Bartenders since 1933 •Flexible hours & personalized training. •Terms—COED courses. •Serving age in AZ is 19. (Financing Available) After a hard day hitting the books, nothing tastes better than a hot, fresh, made-to-order Whataburger«. 1 ^iiTwjwABURGER® I p r W 'i i w i a i i I I I I I L. I "I I I I I Offer Expires I April 27 ■ ;■ Present this coupon when ordering a regular order of fries and a 16 oz. soft drink and get a whataburger« free! Offer good only at the Whataburger restaurant at 1346 S. Rural. May not be used in conjuction with any other offer. Offer expires April 27, 1990. WHATABURGER. HOTFRESHANDMADETO0RKR. I „ J WHATABURGER, -1 3 4 6 S. Rural, Tempe 968-2340 State Press Pfl3e 13 Tuesday, April 17,1990 Student Affairs candidate promotes students’ dreams By TENNY TATUSIAN State Press “And if we cannot prove that we are doing this, w e must stop,” he said. Thomas A ceto considers him self a 53-year-old man who decided in his senior year of college that he liked the institution so much he wanted to spend the rest of his life there» Aceto is one of three candidates for the position of Student A ffairs vice president. He m et with cam pus officials and the search com m ittee Monday to discuss his view s on the role of student affairs. “It m ay scare the hell out of us, but we have to ask, ‘If w e stop doing what w e’re doing would anyone notice?’ ’’ Aceto said of the position. “We should be respected not because of the title but the im pact on students.” Aceto added that everything in Student Affairs must enhance the University’s goals. ~ T le ‘We should be respected not because o f the title but the impact on students. ’ — Thomas Aceto Students’ freedom to doubt and to question authority must be preserved at all costs, he said, adding that he left his position as dean of students at Eastern Michigan University in 1970 because he was asked to violate students’ rights. He said he w as asked to dism iss students who were protesting the Vietnam War -A-h and to ignore the students’ right to due process. m “We m ay not like what they do, but we must never stop loving them,” he said. “Every, human being should be treated with dignity and respect.” One of the biggest problems facing students is “that their lives are killing their dreams,” he said, referring to financial, family and other coheem s that many students bring with them onto campus. “As a University, we must change that,” Aceto added. Aceto is vice president for Student and Administrative Services at the University of Maine, where he has served in various administrative positions since 1978. Aceto said he is ready to leave his position in Maine because he m isses dealing directly with students. “I m iss being an advocate for students and dealing directly with the well-being and education of students,” he said. “I’ve met the needs of the university, now I want to meet som e of m y needs.” He received a bachelors degree in music at State University College in Potsdam, N. Y., and a m asters degree in college student personnel studies from Southern Illinois University. He received a doctorate degree in higher education administration from Indiana University. Christine Wilkinson, ASU acting vice president for Student Affairs, is the third can d id ate to m eet w ith the search committee. Her meetings are scheduled for next week. C h a r les S c h r o e d e r m e t w ith th e committee and various campus officials Thursday and Friday. The c o m m i t t e e will make a recommendation based on the interviews and forward it to ASU President Lattie Coor for a final decision. Provost candidate forum cancelled !% U e a rio o l SUN DEVIL SPARK YEARBOOK M atthews Center, basem ent • 965-6881. Campus visits this week by candidates for the position of provost and vice president for Academic Affairs have been cancelled until further notice, said Alan Matheson, chairman of the search committee. The visits were to begin today with an open forum, but they had to be rescheduled because all candidates have not been reached to confirm dates, Matheson said. He said definite dates end candidate names will be released during the middle of this week. The committee began its search in early February to replace Richard Peck, who will be taking over the presidency at the University of New Mexico. Peck has been at ASU since 1984. — TENNY TATUSIAN To enter the ABC Day TV Sweepstakes complete the answers on the coupon. In Pine Valley, get your hair done and gossip about whofe with whom at .the. O'-.;. ■ F a X it w In Uanview, secrets unfold at M ’a Place. In Port Charles, they get away with plenty at K ’a Diner. Passport Photos 2 for $6.57 G R A N D P R IZ E : All expense paid trip for two to the Daytime Emmy Awards on ABC. F IR S T P R IZ E : P w n a n o n i# 20" Color TVand VCR. S E C O N D P R IZ E : 500 Day .TV T-Shirts. T H IR D P R IZ E : 1000 one-year subscriptions to A B C 's EPISODES Magazine. A B C DAY TV SW EEPSTAKES OFF IC IA L RU LES NO PURCHASE NECESSARY, lb « ite r, fuNy com plelB the O fficia l Entry Form w hich is available at selected colleg e canw usas throughout the U nited States o r in the M ay 1990 issu e s o fle e n M agazine, se venteen M agazine. S assy M agazine and YM M agazine o r p rin tp u r nam e, perm anent address. zip coda, daytim e phone num ber and nighttim e phone num ber and answer each o f the three A B C th y TV Sw eepstakes q uestions on a 3 ” x 5* card. For a tist o f the answ ers send a self-add ressed stam ped envelope to A B C 0 » TV Sw eepstakes Answ ers, d o NCTV, One M adiso n Avenue. New Vbrk. N Y 10010 (W ashington S tale and Verm ont residents need not a ffix p osfcg e). R equests m ust be received by M ay 4.1990. Entrants m ust co rre ctly answ er the three q uestions appearing on the O fficia l En* received by Ju n e 4 .1 9 0 0 . W inners w ill be determ ined in a random draw ing from a ll e lig ib le en tries received, to be held on o r about Ju n e 4 ,1 9 9 0 under the su p ervisio n o f TRG Com m unica­ tions, Inc.. w hose d e cisio n s are fin a l. PR IZES: One (1) G rand P ria : Trip to r tw o to r three days and tw o nigh ts to attend the D aytim e Em m ys in New York on Ju n e 28.1090. Includes roun d-trip coa ch a ir Mm provided by TW A. double-room occupancy h o * accom m odations and adm is­ sion to the D aytim e Em m ys Suggeatod R etail Vhlua; $1500.00 One (1) First Prize: Panason ic 2 0 ” C o lo r TV. P w e so n ic barcode .VCR and tan (10) blank 120 m inute videotape cassettes. SuogesM d R etail V alu t: < 83000 Five hundred (500) Second P rizes: A B C Day T V T-sm rts. Suggested R eta il \M ue: $10.00 each. O ne Thousand (1,000) Third P rizes: One year subscriptions to Episodes M agazine. Suggested Retail Value: S3O 0 each. O dds o f w in ning are determ ined by the num ber o f e lig ib le en tries received A ll en­ trie s becom e the property o f the sw eepstakes sponsor. N ot resp o nsible o r liab le fo r lo st, late, sto len , m utilated, ille g ib le , m isdirected en tries o r en tries w hich are forw arded by colleg es and received after the Ju ne 4 .1 9 9 0 deadline. No m echanical rep rod uctions perm itted. Each m ailed en try m ust be m ailed separately. # The Grand and F irst P rize w in ners w ill be n o tified b y m ail and w ill be required to sig n an A ffid avit o f E lg M M y and U a b ity /P U b icity R elease w ithin 21 JL Colieoe . Matto: ABC Day TV S M M |||flp PC Box 2014, Murray Hill Station, New rark‘ NY10156-0612 Photo Paper 25 — 8x10 $11.08 100 — 8x10 $38.48 SUNSET CAMERA Temps Center — Mül & Univ. 829-0424 State Press Tuesday, April 17,1990 Cross. ContliHMd front pag* 1- Christians and patriotic Americans who w ere concerned over the issué. In accordance with the court’s decision, the University m ust now remove the cross. ASÜ General Counsel Bruce Meyerson said ASU would do just that. “I think that at this point the court has ruled and were just following the order,” he said- “It’s not an emotional issue for m e.” ASU President Lattie Coor said the cross would be removed within a few days in an “orderly fashion.” He said he would like for it to be placed in the University Archives “because of its place in the history of the cam pus.” University Archivist Ed Oetting said he doesn’t know exactly what he will do with the symbol, but that it would “not just be leaned against a wall; w e’ll give it a good home.” . ■ The legal battle over the cross began in October, when the Arizona Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit against the Arizona Board of Regents and former Interim President Richard Peck. It contends that the religious display on state property is unconstitutional. The ASU administration withdrew from taking a position in the suit, claiming it was not central to the educational mission of the B arbara M. A n d rew s University. The two student groups became intervening defendants in December. However, the internal campus struggle over the symbol began before.the.chapel was constructed in 1948, and w as rekindled last Spring when ASU Professor Randell Helms introduced a measure in the Faculty Senate asking for the removal of the cross. T he. F a cu lty S en a te approved the. measure and the action was echoed by the Associated Students of ASU Senate and the ASU Interfaith Council. Helms said he is pleased at the outcome of the ACLU lawsuit. “I’m glad we live in a country ruled by law ,” he said. “I think that religious liberty has been served by the court in this case, AAA Mall Service 1 enatwtOFFUPS Shipping Charges (50c o ff 0 0 12 boxes) 1 box) Im age* P rotocol*E tiq u ette P rofessional C onsultant W ednesday, A pril 18th, 3:15 p.m . Room 62 AED OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS 10% o ff p a ck in g m a terials •Free pick-up and delivery •w e also have western union service 324 S. M lllU B H ad funded by associated students o f asu Susan Carson's our freedom to worship as our conscious directs us has been served.” He added that he would rather see the rem oved cross donated to a fledgling chruch than put in Archives. Louis Rhodes, Director of the Arizona ACLU, said the case will help support sim ilar actions by his organization’s affiliates around the country. He said he is sorry that this has become such an em otional issue for som e groups, but that “when the governm ent violates rights, som etim es it’s going to hurt to redress the grievances.” ACLU attorney Ted Mote said the ca se “w as quite newsworthy, but it’s just ope of m any cases the ACLU does each year.” WiitdyCityCut» GET ACQUAINTED SPECIAL r i d i r I. Haircuts 0 0 Opin i Days Régulât it $6 ' ft Week Oft« ualid uùilt eaupM. Kat valid with any eUui «He*. £xpi*et 4-ZI-90 tr.„. 9 6 6 -0 0 7 6 ] W S. MUM(next te £eng Utowri) • 966-I0I5 (university &Min SW comer* IF YOU WANT A SLIM, SEXY BODY, HERE ARE A FEW HOT NUMBERS. Spring ahead with an IBM PS/2. :,d ......................... m 9 6 7 -1 3 7 1 2242 S. McClintock #3, Tempe Dieted Center Free Consultations Call About Our ASU Special The weight-lossprofessionals' C 1990 Diet Center. Inc Speed o f weight loss varies w ith in d iv id u a l COMPLETE BEAUTY PACKAGES u fc to o / ' « $<• a 99 v ; ,, 6 top rated, full service hair salons in the East Valley are offering 10 of the following services to use over the next four months. Retail value for these services is over $160 •Haircut with Design •D eep Conditioning •Stress Reduction Facial •Eyebrow/Lip Waxing •Hair Clarifying with Scalp Massage •M ake-up Lesson •Hair Jazzing •Therabath with Automassage •M ini Massage •Sun Glitz Color •Reflexology •Electrolysis •L A nza Pretreatment •Ravivitt Color Pick one up at 3050 S. Country Club, Suite 24, Mesa (South Point Commerce Plaza) or call 926-8673 for special delivery or call 839-4363 for night pick-up or delivery TJm NU4MAGE ÉÜÜ ■ ii K Get a jump on your work with an IBM Personal System/2.® Just turn it on. It comes with easy-to-useT.preloaded software, an IBM Mouse and color display. From writing and .revising, papers to adding impressive graphics, nothing beats the IBM PS/2.® You’ll receive an added lift from the special student prices and affordable loan payments* Let us show you how the PS/2 can get you moving ahead by leaps and bounds. P S / 2 it ! SEE THE PS/2’S AT COMPASS IN THE MOEUR BUILDING! ‘ This offer is available ohly to qualified students, faculty and staff who purchase IBM PS/2's through participating campus outlets. Orders are subject to availability Prices awsubject to change apd IÇM may withdraw thooffer at any time without written noticé. a-IBM; Personal System/2, and PS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. IBM Corporation 1990. • I« I 1 I I I ■ 1 1 I I I I State Pres» Page 15 Tuesday, April 17,1990 YOUR VjALLEY DEALERS w e l c o m t o t h e e A S U g r a d s h u m a n r a c e . 1990 N issan H ardbody 1990 N issan Sentra Graduation is the first step to success. The second step is to have a great looking, dependable car or truck that you can afford today. Any one of these valley Nissan dealers can help you with this important step. Present your A S U ID for discounts! M E SA GLENDALE SMITH M ESA NISSAN W EST VALLEY NISSAN 1701 W est B ro a d w a y R o a d M esa, A riz o n a 4850 W est G le n d a le A ve n u e G le n d a le , A riz o n a 8 3 4 -3 3 6 6 2 5 2 -0 9 3 3 SCOTTSDALE PHOENIX S C O T T S D A LE NISSAN CULIVER NISSAN 1000 N o rth S c o tts d a le R oad (Just north of Sun Devil Stadium) S c o ttsd a le , A riz o n a 2201 W est B e ll R o a d (E ast o f B la c k C a n y o n Freew ay) P h o e n ix , A riz o n a 9 9 4 -0 3 0 1 8 6 6 -6 6 0 0 B u ilt f o r t h e H u m a n R a ce ; Slate P ic« Tuesday, April 17,1990 Page 16 Coor pledges to establish better child care facilities 86 percent of students voted that ASU should have affordable child care. In the speech, Coor seemed less optimistic about his continued efforts with the state Legislature to increase faculty salaries. “The hearings to d ate are not as encouraging as I would have liked,” he said, adding that he is hoping for significant salary increases over a number of years. Coor said that the current salary structure at ASU is not healthy for a University. “We’re simply not competitive,” he said. “We have to look after ourselves.” Despite the current salary slump, Coor said most of the problems the University faces are “fixable stuff.’’ “We have very Competent people on campus,” he said. “We just have some system problems that need to be fixed. We are not designed to reward efforts or personal development.” Coor added that he would like to make the University Jess bureaucratic and more flexible through enrollment caps. B y T ENNY TATUSIAN State Press A$U President Lattie Coor said Monday that he is ready to create better child care facilities on campus, and he hopes to begin the process $oon. “I’m prepared to make a judgment within the next couple of months to make fairly clear the future of University child care,” Coor said during a luncheon with University Career Women in the MU Arizona Room. He added that campus child care is “ a supportive elem ent that needs to be present.” For the last five years, ASU has been studying child care facilities on campus and methods of making it more accessible to more students. “We certainly get a blue ribbon in studies,” Coor said. “But it’s time to stop studying and do something.” He added that the studies are valuable and that he will be basing his decisions on the information gleaned from them. D u r in g r e c e n t ASASU e le c tio n s , W e have a car just fo r you . m w ■ in the State P ress Classifieds A u to s fo r Sale 965-6731 • Matthews Center Basem ent s p e c ia l l u n c h e o n c o m b in a t io n s 1. Sweet and Sour Pork......................... .$3.75 ...375, ’ 2. Almond Chicken.................. 3. Beef with Snow Peas... .....:.....;. ....... .3.95 .3.95 4. Mongolian Beef.................... 5. Sweet and Sour Shrimp:....... .... .. .4.25 - 6. Shrimp with Lobster Sauce.............:. ..4.25 7. Pork Egg Foo Young...... ................... 375 ...4.25 *8. Kung Pao Shrimp................... *9. Kung Pao C h i c k e n . . ...............,. ...3.75 *Indicates hot and spicy dish - All the above Luncheon Specials served with I Egg Roll, Fried Wonton, Fried Rice, and I Fortune Cookie. 1 Soup not included with take out lunch. 1 Complete menu available. SZECMAN CHINESE COCKTAILS FOODS MANDARIN AND SZECHUAN CUISINE Vr*) 968-2167 6 9 E . B roadw ay T em pe, AZ 8 5 2 8 2 TO GO ORDERS AVAILABLE 1 c l o Broadway j ci /C O T 7T T L lJr r L U N C H OR D IN N E R Not valid with any other offer. Sunday thru Thursday only. Expires 4-23-90. 1-H O U R FOTOt I r r .r r m . 1 2 e x p ... 2 * 9 9 . . . 4 * 9 9 :• i s exp. . . 3 * 9 9 . . . 5 * 9 9 1 I 2 4 exp. . . 4 . 9 9 . . . 6 . 9 9 36 exp. . . 6 * 9 9 . . . 6 . 9 9 ‘FAST S Mr. l ervfee or a s volume permits (N ext Day a t M.U.). 110,126, 35mm or disc full frame C-41 color print film. Coupon must accompany order (No reproductions). Not good on reprint orders or any other coupon/offer/discount. Disc and 4" may be longer. 3Va" prints not available a t all stores. i$ r - »STERS 149 20 x 30 color poster. From 35mm neg. Sorry No cropping Good Thru 5-31-90 1 I FILM SALE W 199 36 exp 35mm S R G -3 6 -1 0 0 W h ile S u p p ly L a s ts I___ ____ I I______ - J C o rn e rsto n e M a ll (914 E. U niversity)...... 968-0027 A.S.U . M e m o ria l U n io n ............................ 9654322 ................... 839-6834 5110 S . R u ra l.. 1739 E . B ro a d w a y ..,................ 967-7590 3228 S. M i l l . . . , . ; . , .......... 966-6836 1840 E .'W a rn e r................. .....820-7154 930 W. B roa d w a y 968-8593 COUPON GOOD THRU 5-31-90 | S T O P LO O K IN G a n d start liv in g . If y o u c a n h a n d le ... IP* seo'm iw ® to th0 CORTEZ •Maid Service ►Car Wash ►Laundry Service •Pizza E V E R Y M O N T H on a 6 or 9 month lease, FREE that's what you'll receive if you move in by June 1,1990.* ' ; “V vM ^ I Í oftoooouVW» !our beautiful complexes located 5 walking minutes from ASU. XWWWWWWWW tk ^ ' ^ ' p m " f m &i m i 7, n W 2$ « 'æ «WÖM& SQUARE Of course you’ll also get: • Wall-to-wall Carpeting • Swimming Pools (one heated) • Laundry Facilities • Cable Television Hook-up • 24-hour Maintenance • B B C G rills Prices start at $298 a month. Sign a lease before April 30 and move in by June 1,1990 and we’ll treat you to a FREE 3 hour chauffeured stretch-limousine tide (seats 6). •You must reserve your apartment by A pril 30,1990. — M o d e ls Open D a i l y SIS & 1011 E. Lemon S t, Tempe I Call Now 968-4404 or 967-2544 State Press Page 17 Tuesday, April 17,1990 Tempo officials promote pool safety at Kiwanis Park By HOBART ROWLAND State Press Tempe officials said they hope to avoid the back yard tragedies, that marred last year’s swimming season by focusing this summer’s “Operation Water Watch” pool safety awareness program on those most commonly hurt in water-related incidents — children. “We need to make the children aware that there is a problem,” said Beverly Burns, public education specialist for the Tempe Fire Department. Mayor Harry Mitchell and the Tempe City Council will kick off the second annual citywide program at 9 a.m. today in Kiwanis Park’s Recreation Center. Anguilar Elementary School children from kindergarten through the third grade will participate in events presented by the Tempe Fire Department and the city’s Community Services lifeguards. T h e f ir e d e p a r t m e n t ’s p r o g r a m w ill fe a tu r e demonstrations dealing with the dangers of various bodies of water and the importance of dialing 9-1-1. An indoor wave pool w ill be used a s the centerpiece for lifeguard dem onstrations. “Although technically the swim season has not started yet, a 15-minute show designed to teach and entertain the children. This is one way, Burns said, the city will be “gearing the program toward the children.” : Burns added that although nothing can replace adult supervision, children also should lfearn to shoulder some responsibility. ‘We need to make the children aware that there is a problem.’ — Beverly Burns “Kids can be watching kids as w ell,” she said. No drowning incidents have been reported in Tempe so far this year, but Burns said that, in 1989, eight accidents — including two fatalities — localized the dangers of leaving children unsupervised near water. the V alley has already had several drowning incidents occur this year,” Tempe F ire Chief Cliff Jones said. “Through this com m unity aw areness program, we hope to increase public aw areness in water safety and help reduce drownings in the com m unity.” Tempe Fire Department clowns “M edic” and “Sir Snuffy” w ill add their own brand of light-hearted fun to the event with Most of the children involved are under 5 years of age, Burns said, adding that the two 1989 fatalities claimed the lives of an adult and a child. At this time, Tempe has no ordinance requiring pools to be fenced in, but Burns said the city is looking into a pool barrier requirement. L im ite d T im e O ffe r ONE BEDROOM .ASLOWAS$399 LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: * ChoiceoHcolorwtencrs • five hotv* QUADRANGLES VILLAGE 1255 University Drive Tem pe. .Arizona 85281 NOW TAKING RESERVATIONS FOR AUGUST BERNARD FINNEY MANAGEMENT SERVICES INC H U R R Y ! D O N ’T M ISS O U T! SHOW US YOUR CURRENT STUDENT I D YOU’LL GET A DINNER ASU EARTHW EEK 1990 MON-FRI, APRIL 16-20 T H I S W E E K ! Environmental Booths & Displays 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Daily in O ld M ain Park This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), Mike Puk» of the Spaghetti Company wiU give you one FREE dinner * for each dinner you order! It's our 2-for-1 SUNDAY STU­ DENT SPECIAL. And it's good for the whole school year at both our Tempe • and Phoenix locations. Any day of the week, for lunch of dinner, The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices even better! Our dinners include a full course meal with all the trimmings — from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you’re hungry and you need a break, you can’t beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 din­ ners for the price of 1! But you MUST have your student I.D. card with you to take advantage of this offer. 15% gratuity added to alt discounted checks (except Senior citizen discounts). Open at 11 a.m . to 11 p.m . Sundays r*®* Daily Bands & Speakers Soap Box EARTHWEEK Info Booth at Cady Fountain REI O u td o o r W orkshops at Student Ree Center Results of ASU Environmental Audit Petition Drives, Letter C a m p o n s, & D irect A ctio n s plus ^ p a g l ie t t i ( b n t p a ig * Restaurant Phoenix South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak D iJo n , Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala and orders to go ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2-for-1 special. in Old Town Tempe 4th Street and Mill 986-3848 We expect to have one o f the biggest EARTHWEEK celebrations in the Southwest. Join us & see w hat a difference you make! A d Courtesy o f ASASU Tuesday, April 17,1990 Page 18 State Press I WHY WAIT TO BE SAFE? University Women’s Clinic, Inc. ' m ■ SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES SPECIAL TESTING PACKAGE: i I I I )t Oo«f°*d!« tu*9^.fThon>p! 93.3KPKB RACE HEADQUARTERS RAMADA* HOTEL PHOENIX AIRPORT EAST TICKETS AVAILABLE AT V D i l l a r d ’s CHARGE BY PHONE 829*5955 e 800-366-3269 AND PARTICIPATING YAMAHA DEALERS NO REFUNDS • NO EXCHANGES TUESDAY, APRIL 17 - 7:00PM ASU - Education Building - Room 117 Across from Gammage on 11th Ave. & Mill * No Admission Charge! Sponsored by: The W INNER’S C IR C LE PRODUCED BY M ICKEY THOM PSON ENTERTAINM ENT G RO U P FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL (602) 955-5062 S A V E $ 3 .0 0 W IT H T H IS C O U P O N I J VAl.l.I.V DEALERS Oft V.I.P. Adult ($18 A $16) Tickets with this coupon. Redeemable ONLY at DILLARD'S OUTLETS. Not valid at Sun Devil Stadium box office. Limit two (2) V.I.P. adult discounts per coupon. This coupon may not be used with any other offer or discount No reproduction or facsimiles. Does not apply to child's admission tickets. ♦ State Press Tuesday, April 17,1990 Page 21 P u r c h a s e a n y s m a ll, m e d iu m o r la r g e y o g u r t a n d r e c e iv e a n y s m a ll e r s i z e fo r FREE. Topping Extra Expires 5/1/90 P E a ) ■ ) ■ i L i] ; ! ; M e m o r ia l U n io n A c t iv it ie s B o a r d D o e s n 't F it I Congratulates Its 1990-91 Officers ; ! ! President: Film: Entertainment: Ju lie C laiborne D aniel M iller B rian U linger Vice President: Gallery: Frank V oorvaart E lizabeth B row nlie Lloyd H um m el Secretary: Comedy: Special Events: Ju lie Givans P atrick R am pson A lona G o ttfried Host Marketing: ; j Hostess: Culture Thomas Neum ann j j j ,\V &Arts: Jill D u b e rstein Leadership Development, Activities, Programs, and Friendships FREE SEMINAR s h ip it . m whether heading for college or home for vacation, Mall Boxes Etc. USA will get y o u r things there safer, faster and all in one piece. We even pack your boxes for you! T h e P o s t O ffic e A lt e r n a t iv e /M AIL B O X E S E T C . US4» ; \ 1713 E. Broadway • Tempe, AZ Broadway & McClintock 8 2 9 -6 8 5 6 «Copyright1987,M ailBoxesEtc.USA m FRANCHISE INDEPENDENTLY OW NED AND OPERATED T O N Y 'S N E W Y O R K E R RESTAURANT a n o NIGHTCLUB * on LAW & GRADUATE SCHOOL ADM ISSIONS T h e F in e st P iz za a n d I ta lia n F o o d in t h e V a lley N e w T im e sB e s tofP h o e n ix1 9 8 9 B e s t I n e x p e n s iv e I ta lia n R e s ta u r a n t “H ow to get in to the Law S c h o o l o f y o u r c h o ic e .” “T h e Ins & O u ts of B u sin e ss G ra d u a te S c h o o l” G uest: FAUSTO RAMOS Speaker: D irecto r of A d m issio n s G uest: Speaker: C o lle g e of Law JUDY HEILALA G raduate C o o rd in ato r C o lle g e of B u sin ess T h u r s d a y , A p r il 1 9 * 6 p m a t t h e H o Ii d a y In n T e m p e A riz o n a R oo m L o ca te d on the S E C o rn e r o f R u ra l & A p a c h e T R Y O U R A L L -Y O U -C A N -E A T S P E C IA L S I Includes salad A garlic bread • In d in in g room o n ly 1 MON NIGHT SPECIAL WED n i g h t SPECIAL SPAGHETTI * 3.95 PIZZA $4.95 THE NIGHT SPECIAL T ill! NIGHT SPECIAL LASAGNA $4.95 FETTUCCINI ALFREDO $4.95 Featuring in O u r Lounge: Mon: Miscellaneous U The: Wed: Tone Def Thu: Grateful Dead Night with No Hobo Band Open Jam Night Hosted by Slim & Warbler - F rl Jk Sat: Hans Olson Son: Phoenix Blues Society Showcase of bands Nightclub Info 829-9584 T e m p e ’sH o m eforth eB lu e s IK A P LA N STANLEYH. KAPLAN EDUCATION«. CENTERIIP. For more Information 99* Happy Hour — 7 Days a W eek 15* N ew Yorker W ings All Night 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 9 6 7 - 3 0 7 3 1 0 7 E a s t: B r o a d w a y , T e m p e 9 6 7 - 3 9 4 1 l O O y a r d s e a s t o f Mill A v e n u e Stete P w » Tuwda^AglMTjJWO^ P a se 2 2 A S S O C IA T E D S T U D E N T S 1990-91 A vailable P ositions T h e follow ing p ositions with A sso ciated Students are o pen to any Q u alified student willing to serve the Student A sso ciatio n during the 1990-91 acad em ic year. A previous o r current involvement with the A sso ciatio n is not required. A ll students are urged to a pply and becom e involved. A pp lica tio n s m ay be obtained from the A S A S U office on the se con d floor of the M emorial U n ion from 8 a m . to 5 p .m . A pp lica tio n s for salaried positions must be accom p an ied b y a Student Em ploym ent Referral available at the Student Em ploym ent o ffice located in the Student Services building. A ll positions are one-year terms, unless otherwise noted. Please subm it applications as soon as possible. A S A S U is an affirmative action/equal opportunity em ployer and d oes not discrim inate on the basis of sex, race, ethnic origin, creed, color, age, handicapped o r veteran status. , A L L P O S lf IONS teEN M N G J lN A llP U C M lE T AP P R O V A L. m. m OFFICE OF - n É T V S I D S N T M . policy. EX EC U T IV E A S S IS T A N T T O P R ES ID Ell j ^ S A LÂ R IE D k A S â M th e President iti researching, » J U l n g a n i form u latil^ Jn iversfty^ fl AD M INISTRATIVE A S ST . T P PR ESID EN T (1 SALARIED ): Assist the President with g flU ra l office operations and c o m ip n ica tiq n s. S T A T E R E L A T IO N S O F F I C E M SALARIED ): Director; A s o n i t D irecfoffR êgent Afw s C o o r J a tor; Legislative A H r e Coordinator. W ^ W it o g ie President in researching, monitoring and advocating is jjjp f oH 'igheréducw ionw l concern for stjbdents oPASU. * " ß? ß W V \ P U B L IC R E LA T IO N S Og f I C ^ f a lA L A R I j D ) ; OinK^or A s s is t^ y ) ira ito r. Coordinates com m unication network tctereate awareness ç Â S A S U pkqgli^ÉÉ/events. B U D G E T A R Y A N A L Y S T (1 V O LU N TEER ): Assists President with A S A S U budgetary process. V O LU N T E E R C O O R D IN A T O R (1 V O LU N TEER): Promotes, coordinates and develops student volunteer program within ASASU . m progrim |m i|5 C A M P U S S E R V I C E L E y Ó LU N T EER ): C o ordin i* !» äfl L i I m U k J / 'yá fi OFFICE OF p f f EXECUTIVE '. LEG ISLAT IVE A S S IS T A N T (tteLLA R IED ): Assistant the Executive V ice President with budgetary m a n a g e m e n ^ ^ S e n * to o p » tk > n A C O L L E G E C O U N C IL C O O R D IN A T O R ( t SALARIED ): Assij|t^ixecutive Vice President and College C o u n cil\re s|W n tsx irw a * )n % g anlFm itStbifr^fff^,Colteg^pc>uncil programnigiig. i f ffl \ \ S E N A T E l% l|LI A l R N t M U A f f O y O LU N T E ERJS T S p r v ie M p ^ lia m e n U ^ # e lU « ^ t e m e p P M B u s T O d w T ^ je ^ R p J e f 8 f U W e ran p parliamentaryj^pcedures. B U D G E T A R Y A S S IS T A N T (1 VO LU N TEER ): Js^ ist Executive Vice President with budgetary m a h lg e M n t ln d account ledgers. % W W ÍI7 r T f r i m # 1 w - I \ ' i m . _ , m i OFFICE Of t h e CAM PUS a f f a i r s v i c e p r e s i d e n t A S S IS T A N T T O C A M P U S A FFA IR S t f t c jl P R E S ID E N T (1 SALARIED ): Assist ^ BEBynistrSte» duties of Cam pus affairs departments, budgets #nd vice]presidititial|aicles. C A M P U S A F F A IR S AID ES (3 V O LU N T E ER S): Assist in Special projeei&and programs. ' ' * x/ § K . * M t 3 f A S S O C IA T IO N G R X A N K & /A D Y E R T te llilG ^ E SALARIED ): Director; A rt Director; 3 Artists. ^ ¿ n , artwork, p ra tin g «¡id bH ItnflJ^ hese |e|Hes,,for A S A S U arid other cam pus departments. P O R T FO LIO REQUIRED.^ Ty» J y jr m $ f ^BNt* I B IK E R E ^ R |C O -{M P .f5 SALARIED ): D iiector?M anagjn 0 Consultant; 3 assistants. Duties in sta te running Bike Repair C o -op ar)d £ i| ^ in | s tu ^ ^ s in bike repair/maintenance. C O U N S E L IN G A N D 'lir o i T l J ^ l i t l n p ^ L A R IE D ^ O ire ctcfrtA s s o cia te includ^ coordinatiop and ^ o m m dn ia ti^ ^ p h Ai|U Stpqgnt Health C e n t e r in d f o « n s e lin ^ M i( M iiu lI t io n | | t t t M N a iO f t t o r s t u d e n t s . Jr M f f tetepF* > / w **'C O U R S E IN FO R M AT IO N P R O G R A M (4 SALARIED ): Dfrectlfc^piijijtant D ire 3 lN fA i^ S a l^ jB 0 d im n a to r; c b ^ d in a t ^ s>the Course Information Program publication t o lis lis t students irt-fcoIB I evaluation^ 3 a ^ 3 & ■ / m ‘:. . / Jpte*. . G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T A S tO C tA T IO N ( t S A L lB lE D ):O ire c to r; Associate Director; Summ er DirectoriT O lie s include coordinating grantf unding and operationsrefative to issues of graduate student concern. ! |ite P 1 , £& ^ **W P*® i « >/ I k ; O F F IC E FO R O I p p A M P U S S T U D E N T SENffeCES (6 S ALAR IED ): Director; 2 A sl> da% E fe ^ & rs; 3 C a ^ o rk flrtiK it id s ^ l to assist s & te n ts in steBirihO ¿fceam pus housing, ndeshare, ch ilocar& an^ re fcf^ rto r te n a n ^ m d lb rd lav^t^rificatiOTLf< . ,| '• 7 - i ¿ -a 4^ *' "f J r ’ t ■ '5, S A F E T Y E S C O R T J jp fc ^ C E ( I S A LA R IE D ; S E V E R A L V O LU N TE ER S): Director, Coordinator; 2 Base M a n a g e r s ; ,^ volun j^ rs. Duties are t o W v e a ^ 'sa ^ fy lsco rts for ASU students and to ccwrdmkto M fe ty efforts on campus. S T U D E N T O RIEN T A T IO N S E R V IC E ( f SALARIED ): Director; AssistanPDtrector: S u m m e rD ire c ^ ^Pufi^ are to c o o rd in a t^ |j^ ^ o s tp d e n y » % to rin % program to assist freshman on the A S U campub, V i S T U D E N T L E G A L A S S I S T A N T ! SALARIED): Typist, l i l i e s include assisting secretary with officejlu ties. Includes some evenirfc work. ■■ S ' A .dê$Æ% OFJ ^ o p4 h ^ c 1 \ | t i^ A S S IS T A N T T O ACTIVITIES V IC E P R ES ID EN T (1 S A LA R IE B ); Assist with aamtrtfstratlW« PJRIESj : and special pro^pots'on pf the V ice President. V IC E P R ES ID EN T IA L A ID ES (3 V O LU N TE ER S): Assist w ^ f e h ^ ^ r K H I a oartmental program s l faci)|^ tS ai% C O N C E R T P R O G R A M (3 SALARIED ): Director; Coordinator; a E progrt|nming, volunteer usher program.and concert negotiation. h^ S t L E A D E R S H IP INSTITUTE (1 SALARIED ): Director to develop leadership p ro g lim s foiA ssodfeted Students and various cam pus groups. L E C T U R E S E R IE S (2 SALARIED ): Director; Assistant Director. Duties include contract negotiations and arrangements for lecturers to appear at ASU. M U L T I-C U L T U R A L A W A R E N E S S B O A R D (2 S ALARIED ): Director; Associate Director. Duties include operations and programming to represent ethnic minority concerns and cultural activities. P O LIT IC A L UN IO N (2 SALARIED ): Director; Assistant director. Duties include arranging political forum s and debates pertinent to local/natiónal issues. S P E C IA L E V E N T S (1 SALARIED ): D irector to plan and schedule special programs on cam pus for students and various activities. UNIVERSITY BOARD & COMMITTEE VOLUNTEER POSITIONS 1990-91 • University-Hearing Board (4 students) • University Libraries Committee (3 students) • Human Subjects Research Review Committee (1 student) • University Undergraduate Adm issions Board (3 students) • Freshm an A d m issio n s S ubcom m ittee of the U ndergraduate A d m issio n s Board (2 students) • Career Services Advisory Board (5 students) • Parking Citations Appeals Board (9 students) • Student F in a n cia l Services Advisory Committee (4 students) • Cam pus Recreation Board of Governors (8 students) • Registrar's Advisory Committee (3 students) • Grievance Com mittee (5 students) • Intercollegiate Athletics Board (2 students) • Residency Classification Appeals Board (§ students) • University Scheduling Board (6 students) • Board of Equal Opportunity (2 students) • Disabled Student.Resources Advisory C o un cil (4 students) • Student Affairs Advisory C o un cil (7 students) • Affirmative Action Review Board (2 students) • Hedlth A dvisory Committee (5 students) • University General Studies C o un cil (1 student) • Recreational Sports and Student Activities Advisory Committed (5 students) • Student Publications Advisory Board (3 students) • University Perform ing Arts Board (7 students) • Safety Com mittee (2 students) • Student Development Advisory Committee (2 students) Tuesday Aprii i7f 1990_____________________________________________________ Paqej23 State Pré» G a s container exp lo d es on train, kills at least 80 NEW DELHI, India (AP) — A leaking gas cylinder exploded in a moving commuter train on Monday and set off a fire that left at least 80 people dead and 65 others wounded, news reports and officials said. .Reporters at the scene said the explosion and fire killed at least 100 people. Fire swept through two of the train’s 16 cars as it traveled near Kumrahar in Bihar state, 500 m iles southeast of New Delhi. The fire began at 9:30 a.m. Firefighters eventually extinguished the blaze, but, “The heat was so intense no one dared to enter the train for at least a halfhour after the fire,” Said S. K. Sharma, the top civil administrator in the region. Sharma said a cylinder of oxyacetylene gas, used in welding, was found in one of the gutted cars. “The outer shell of the bogies (cars) was intact, but the inside was terrible,” Sharma said in a telephone interview. Mathew John, the director of safety for the Federal Railway Board in New Delhi, said two cylinders of gas caught fire. He said one of the cylinders was leaking and apparently ignited when someone lit a match. Ram Naresh Singh, a survivor, was quoted by Press Trust of India as saying that because “I would not be able to save anyone and would get killed myself, I jumped off the train.” The United News of India quoted local officials as saying at least 80 people died and 65 were wounded. The Passengers Welfare Association said the train had no emergency brake. “ It is the most neglected train running in the state. There is no light, no water, and even no alarm chain,” said association President Rameshwar Pandey. Press Trust of India said many bodies were buried under smoldering wooden berths and heaps of luggage. Bihar is one of the poorest of India’s 25 states. The train, which was traveling from Mokammeh to Arrah, is widely used by morning commuters to Patna, the state capital. More than 10 million people ride Indian trains every day, and major disasters are reported every year. Trains are jammed, often with people riding on the roofs. One of the worst train accidents in recent years occurred in the southern Indian state of Kerala on July 8, 1988, when 103 people died after a train plunged into a lake. Two derailments in 1989 claimed 131 liv es: 67 near Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh in north Associated Press photo Passengers crowd around and atop two burned out passenger cars of a train after a gas cylinder exploded white the train moved through the eastern India village of Patna Monday. At least 80 people were kilted and 65 others injured. central India on April 8, and 64 near Mughalsarai in eastern Bihar on Nov. 1. India’s 38,324 miles of tracks form the world’s third-largest rail network after those in the Soviet Union and the United States. Lithuania Continued from page 3. interview on Soviet television Monday night, “this is a cold and very hard war, a war with the people of Lithuania, which includes people who consider themselves citizens of the Soviet Union.” Her remark implied that Gorbachev’s sanctions would boomerang, hurting loyal Soviets in Lithuania h e claims to be protecting. If fuel is cut off, many Russian factory workers would lose their jobs and plants in the Soviet Union would stop getting parts manufactured in Lithuania. The evening newscast “Vremya” ran the Prunskiene interview in an unusually straightforward broadcast. Much Soviet news coverage of the Lithuanian crisis has been slanted, despite Gorbachev’s policy of glasnost, or openness. Vilnius Radio quoted Prunskiene as saying the leadership of Lithuania’s Legislature decided that “until We see definite physical m easures against Lithuania’s industry and economy, all contractual obligations to the U.S.S.R. must continue to be carried out by all our enterprises, so there should be no pretext for possible disruption of supplies by the Soviet Union.” The telegram was sent to Gorbachev after an emergency meeting Monday of the Presidium, or legislative leadership. Journalist Vilius Kavaliauskas, who spoke to a Presidium member after the meeting, said the leadership was told the republic has two weeks’ supply of natural gas and six weeks of oil. But Lithuania's chief of foreign trade. Rimantas Purtulis, told a news conference gas supplies would last a month and oil three to four months, according to Daina Kalendra of the parliament’s press office. Lithuania gets its oil and gas from the Soviet Union at subsidized prices much lower than world market prices. The republic has little foreign currency to buy fuel from the West. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kansas, called for financial aid and credit to help Lithuania through the crisis, the official Soviet news agency Tass reported Monday, while condemning Dole’s action. Some economic sanctions against Lithuania could backfire. on the Soviet Union, Kavaliauskas quoted the Presidium official as saying. Among them : •If Moscow embargoed much-needed chemical fertilizers, that will mean less m eat and dairy products for the 14 other Soviet republics. •If a natural gas pipeline were shut down, the Russian district of Kaliningrad, which also relies in the line, would be hurt. •A cutoff of supplies for the Drob textile mill would also disrupt deliveries to a Leningrad factory that employs more than 18,000 people. Kavaliauskas said his source said the republic has enough newsprint for four or five days. “The press can be stopped,” the journalist said, referring to an attempt by Moscow loyalists to halt publication of all newspapers in Lithuania but their own. They sent Soviet troops to occupy the printing plant but the workers ignored their presence and said they would continue to print all newspapers. Kavaliauskas said the Presidium member also told him: “If Moscow will ask us to pay for goods in hard currency, we will agree. But we will ask for hard currency from Moscow for our products, and in balance, it’s not so bad for us.” V ilnius, the cap ital, w as quiet Monday a s the predominantly Roman Catholic republic celebrated Easter. Most factories and businesses were closed, according to a worker in the information office of the Supreme Council. Western correspondents have been barred by Soviet authorities from Lithuania since last month. Kavaliauskas reported long lines for gasoline as Lithuanians filled up for what they feared might be the last time,, ' ;:Romualdas Ozolas, Lithuania’s deputy prime minister, went on Lithuanian TV and told the republic’s 3.8 million people to brace for a “hectic” week. Ozolas also said another pro-independence Baltic republic, Estonia, would name an ambassador to Lithuania and Lithuania would reciprocate, according to Aidas Palubinskas of the parliament press office. Palubinskas said previous demands for Lithuania to revoke its declaration of independence seem to have been dropped from Gorbachev’s ultimatum threatening economic sanctions. He said that would permit more practical discussions. Gorbachev said Friday that “anti-constitutional” actions promoting independence m ust be rescinded, including cancellation of conscription into the Soviet arm y. IN JU R E D IN A N A C C I D E N T ? YOU SH O U LD K N O W Y •FREE Consultation to students and faculty •Auto Accidents •Motorcycle Accidents •Bicycle Accidents •Wrongful Death •Faulty Products •Slip & Fall •Dog Bites •Insurance Disputes •REDUCED percentage fees for cases of clear liability or serious injury •Home, evening & hospital appointments available B E F O R E G A L L IN G T H E IN S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y CALL BAKER & M ARCUS Personal Injury Lawyers D O N ’T G E T H U R T T W I C E 4 3 (4625SS. Wendler - Dr.,1 Suite 2 1 2 111, Tempe) W e s h ip y o u r s t u f f h o m e ! s ' 10 to 1,000 pounds, including furniture s ' Insured, custom packing s ' Boxes for sale s ' UPS, Consolidated Freight, others O 'Special "loam in place" packaging for computers and electronic equipment 1418 N. Scottsdale R d., Scottsdale 990-2552 SW Corner of Scottsdale & McDowell in Papago Plaza AMEX, V isa, Mastercard* checks accepted Not a UPS agent State Press Tuesday, April 17,1990 P a st 2 4 health Briefs Student insurance rates to increase By SONJA LEWIS State Press Student heailth insurance rates for the Arizona university system will increase by 48 percent beginning this August due to rising insurance and medical costs and student abuse of the current system, an insurance company says. The cost for yearly coverage will increase by $156 for students, $356 for student couples, $336 for students with children and $535 for families. Initially, the state’s current insurance carrier Blue Cross/Blue Shield proposed an increase of 51 percent to the Student Health Insurance Advisory Committee. The 3 percent decrease w as achieved by elim inating insurance for undergraduates with four credit hours or less and reinstating the $100 cost for outside physician referrals. Art Ashton, the Arizona Board of Regents’ strategic planning assistant, said the increase was inévitable because it is “happening all across the country.” Undergraduates with four credit hours or less were dropped from student health insurance due to the recommendation from Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Ashton said. “There would be a significant decrease in insurance premiums (if students with less than four credit hours were dropped) and generally those students are working students and have other means of getting insurance,’’ Ashton said. Clinic targets sports nutrition Ashton said that the advisory committee found that students taking less than four credit hours had “very high levels of claims," which, in turn, help to drive insurance rates up. Pamela Tom, director of the ASU Student Health Center, said this is an example of “a potential area of abuse.” “Some of those students were taking classes simply for the option of getting insurance,” Tom said. Also, the $100 fee for referrals outside the Student Health Center was reinstated because “students were coming in knowing they wanted to be referred,” Tom said. She added that making an appointment with an ASU physician only to get a referral was taking up physicians’ valuable time. Tom said that the demand for student health services will increase because of the expected decrease in outside referrals. ASU health officials are expected to m eet in the near future to discuss possible ways of dealing with the influx of students to the Health Center. Some student dissatisfaction with the new policy is expected, Tom said, but it is designed to benefit the majority of all students. She added, “I urge students to have som e sort of health insurance; it’s still a risk if you don’t have it.” Tom said the Student Advisory Committee will discuss ways of keeping insurance affordable for students at its April 27 meeting. The nutrition topic for today’s nutrition clinic will be sports nutrition geared toward athletes or anybody interested in nutrition to enhance performance. The clinic will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. in the Wellness Center, located in the Student Recreation Complex. Series to offer stress tips Tips on dealing with relationship stress will be the topic of Counseling & Consultation’s Stress Management Series from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the SRC classroom. Seminar to cover weight training A weight training seminar will take place from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the Wellness Center. Advance registration is suggested as the Wellness Center has limited space. Call to register at 965-8921. Wellness Day scheduled Wellness Day will take place from 1 to 6 p.m. on April 26 at the Student Recreation Complex in the hall outside the Wellness Center. Booths will offer cholesterol screening, posture check-ups, flexibility check-ups, percentage of body fat, blood pressure checks, stress management activities and massage. 'Mm ■ [ CPR, first aid classes offered g ill M M AH■ I X . — PSSSSSTU Earn Your Degree While You Work: H i MBA MS BS Tell us your m ostunfor­ gettable experience in college and you may win some bucks. Western International University A c c e le ra te d A s s o c ia te s , B a c h e lo rs a n d M a s te rs D eg re es in M a n a g e m e n t, A c c o u n tin g , M a rk e tin g , F in a n c e a n d C o m p u ter Inform ation S c ie n c e ■ Unique one month semester format ■ Complete minimum of 3 credits per month ■ Convenient day and evening classes ■ Affordable tuition ■ Financial aid and V.A. benefits ■ Faculty of seasoned executives and professionals ■ Linkages with Business and Financial Community ■ 18 to 1 student/faculty ratio ■ Starting Freshman Welcome ■ Member of the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business. (AACSB). ■ Flexible, time-saving degree programs (e.g. Masters Degree in 12 months) ■ State-of-the-art P.C. laboratory ■ Qualified transfer credits applied ■ Community college transfer students welcome ■ Advanced credit for prior knowledge/experience ■ London, England study opportunities. Accredited by The North Central Association of Colleges and Schools Convenient valley-wide locations. M ain Campus 10202 North 19th Avenue (Just South of Peoria), Phoenix, A Z 85021 Arizona National Guard, Phoenix Allied Signal Fluid Systems, Tempe Idea Courier, Tempe M cDonnell Douglas Corp., Mesa Motorola Inc., Mesa Motorola, Chandler Campus also in London, England Classes start first day of each month. C A L L TO D A Y. (602) 943-2311 All you have to d o is write a brief (or detailed) des­ 12 WINNERS!! cription o f your most There are four categories: unforgettable college • FUNNIEST • MOST ROMANTIC experience! Just get it to • MOST EMBARASSING the State Press Informa­ • THINGS YOU’LL NEVER TELL tion desk by 10 am April YOUR M O M AND DAD First Place (each category) <15 26. A ll college students Second Place (each category) $15 welcom e to enter! Third Place (each category) $10 WINNING ENTRIES WILL BE PUBLISHED IN THE MAY 1 STATE PRESS SPRING SHOPPER State Press Page 25 TuesdayApriM^^WO^ 'White student unions’ form on college cam puses By College Press- Service Promoting themselves as anti-racism and anti-affirmative action groups, “white student unions’’ have formed on several Midwest and southern campuses in recent weeks. Campus critics, however, maintain the groups are related to the Ku Klux Klan, the 135-year-old group that has been tied to murders of and violence against Catholics, Jews and, most frequently, black people who, the KKK charges, threaten to “mongrelize” white Protestant “races” In March, a white student union won official student group recognition at the University of Florida. Efforts to organize White student unions also were launched at the universities of Nebraska-Lincoln and Southwestern Louisiana. In February, a recruiting drive began at Bradley University in Illinois. A white student union, moreover, has existed since 1988 at Temple University in Philadelphia. Whether the rise of the scattered groups, which all use sim ilar language and organizing tactics, is a coincidence is open to question. During the height of the controversy over the WSU at Florida, a member of the campus’ Committee in Support of the People of Latin America said he saw WSU organizer Mark Wright speaking to Klan members. Wright admitted he did speak to two men Feb. 1, but he said he didn’t know they were members of the KKK. At Temple, organizer Michael Spletzer told The Owl, the student paper, that “Blacks can achieve, but they should be taught to achieve, not think there’s going to be a free ride that they can just get by on.” WSU opponents noted the sentiment is a word-for-word parroting of KKK rhetoric. At Southwestern Louisiana, White Student Union President Doug Hernandez was a worker in the successful 1988 campaign of David Duke, a Klan leader and founder of the National Association for the Advancement of White People who won a seat in Louisiana’s state Legislature. Duke refused to comment. Hernandez also notes he got advice and help in trying to pull together USL’s WSU chapter from Temple’s Spletzer. Spletzer, Hernandez said, is not a racist. “He believes whites are being discriminated against, and it’s not fair.” “I want to make it clear that the White Student Union is open to all races, creeds, religions and both sexes,” Hernandez added. All the new WSUs cast themselves as opponents of affirmative action programs, which seek to compel institutions to recruit and employ minorities, and even minority scholarship programs. Such programs are wrong, they say, not because minorities benefit, but because they don’t make similar awards to white people. “We’re going to fight minority set-asides and affirmative action, which are blatant racist programs,” Hernandez said, adding that the United Negro College Fund is discriminatory against whites. Few observers think students in general will believe the rhetoric. “I can’t imagine a group like that being hospitable toward any minority student wanting to join,” said Jam es Williams of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, headquartered in Baltimore. “From what we’ve seen of these groups, they are anti-black.” ” “When you have ties to the KKK, how can you say you aren’t racist?” asked Calvin Butler, a student at Bradley, where in February fliers promoting the American White Supremacist Party were posted on campus. “These groups just choose anti-affirmative action for a platform, but they are really racist.” Gary Barriere, chairman of USL’s African-American Culture Committee, is more open-minded about the group. “I see no problem with the organization if it’s to promote white culture. My problem is that I think there may be ulterior motives for the organization.” He added, “I’m afraid the organization will be just an extension of David Duke’s philosophy program.” In fact, Hernandez and USL’s College Republicans have invited Duke to speak on campus. School administrators generally have tried to make their opposition to the White Student Unions clear. At Florida, President John Lombardi said UF’s free speech policy forced him to let the group on campus, but promised the WSU would Hernandez have no influence on the administration. WSU organizers blasted Lombardi’s comments as unfair, charging he would never tell a black student group he would refuse to listen to it. At Bradley, officials put freshman Matt Hale on disciplinary probation after he posted fliers promoting the American White Supremacist Party. “That’s nothing but a slap on the wrist,” complained Butler. Since then, Hale has persisted in trying to form an offcampus group. About 30 protesters interrupted Hale at an April 1 meeting of about 10 members. H A YD EN 'S FERRY W R 3 DAY NATIONAL JOB FAIR • MAY 17-18 * PHOENIX, AZ Dedicated to Developing Career Opportunities in the Sports Business TOP EXECUTIVES* REAL JOBS -W BI2M SESSIONS Administration • Journalism • Market™ Business Ventures • Sporting Goods • Pro Sports Pork or Beef Ribs • Chicken • Super Sandwiches ASU'S N ational L iterary M agazine FREE SIDE DISH O NS A L ENO WFO RO NLY$5 of y o u r c h o ic e w ith a n y p u rc h a se of $ 2 .5 0 or m ore. Lim it o n e c o u p o n per person, per visit. • E xpires 5 -1 -9 0 . 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Expires 5-15-90 C o m ic s Stale Presa Tuesday, Aprii 17,1990 Page 26 by B ill W atterson The fa r Side Calvin and Hobbes churn, DIDHT HOV) SIGN VIP TD PIAS BASEBALL AT RECESS? 10V) KOST BE ^ TOU KEAN TUE ORLI BOI T M TUE WHO DIDN'T. ONLM BOT ON A M l TUL OTHERS plm gbo und ABE PLATING F U ll OF IN TUE BACK FIELDS. c A GIRLSP .' y -ì a N nA -T ' ' ' ¿ NO, VtUT? IT SURE IOOKS LIKE IT. WANT TO RIDE ON TUE TEETER-TOTTER WTO ME.? S&j y RELAX. STUPIDITI PRODUCES OU NO.' ÏM IM COOTIE CENTRAL.' I f MR FILTER.' MR FILTER.' ANTI9Ö0IES. I UMENT UAO NlT SHOTS.' / t c ©1990 Universal Press Syndicate 4 -n \ «bsk Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau MIKE*. ÙUHAT TIMEIS nt 5:30.1 DECIDED ZONKER HAS A POINT. NVNBE ME SHOULD BE GETTINO UPEARUER. TOCONSE PV E\ ^ ENERGY. by Gary Larson MIKE, JUSTBECAUSE ZONKER'S LOST HISMIND DOESN'TIHMIN YOU HAVE TOLOSE YOURS! &VE YOUR­ SELFA BREAK,M U M ? YOU HAVE THEMOST OVERWROUGHT CONSCIENCE INAMERICA ! THERES SOME TRUTH TO m ! H H O U EFT THEM6KT U6HT~~ ON! I y/7 0 Universal Press Syndicate “Uh-oh. Carol’s inviting us over for cake, and I’m sure it’s just loaded with palm oil.” A by M ike R itter Ivory Towers B0Z7-, GRADUATING MEANS THE END OF MV SEX LIFE < IT TRANSFORMS MV ENTIRE PERSONA!' I ËM0ODY TU£ IMAGE OF THE COUE&E STOP. WHAT IP I DON'T HAVE WHAT CHICKS INTHE REAL WORLD WANT? ..GO TALK To HER! RlPIOHAS TAYLOR... THERE'S A PRETTY GIRL OVER THERE - I'M SORE SHE EXPECTS nothing more Prom a GRADUATE than she Po e s from a poor college dupe ... MAYBE Hi.' iw graduating. NO,80rVoU YOU'RE right ... CAN I BOV YOU A DRINK? CAN BUY ME A CAR.. I by Ju lie Sigw art Rainey Days ( ART CRJTCS WERE CALLED TO THESCENC\ — TH IS IS S im p l y , GREAT AKT o u s t G IVES M E GoosEBt/NiPS A u . W£ HAVE WITNESSED THE BIRTH of POST-MODERN AERO-EXPRESSIONISM-. F E E L THE TENSION... THE PRAG UE AIRCRAFT... THE MASSIVE BUH DING... o ver! am azin g ! / ? X Qoo i pssrlTHCAiR. force is here.. THEY WANT THEIR YET... °°°° W «-* iu m _____ 1 The Best In Storage Space RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) — Saladinode Souza Gonzalez says he has the perfect solution for Brazilians wanting to protect their homes from burglars: guard lions. “With a lion for a guard, the thief may enter but he won’t leave,” said Gonzalez, a 45-year-old book wholesaler from Belo Horizonte, Brazil’s third-Iargest city. Gonzalez has raised lions for the past 10 years on his farm in the interior. He said Brazil’s soaring crime rate has helped create a steady demand. “I recommend a large backyard, the construction of a gate, and plenty of space. Then let them roam free at night,” Gonzalez said in a telephone interview. Three lions guard Gonzalez’s home: Gonzalez started with three lions smuggled from Africa and raises a litter every three months. When the cubs are 30 days old, he puts them up for sale for $300, using classified ads. So far, h e has sold 30 lions. “They adapt rem arkably w ell to life at home. I never have a problem selling them ,” he said. Gonzalez said a baby lion needs to be fed two to three big chickens a day, supplemented with a few cans of dog food. Adults require four chickens and about nine pounds of m eat daily, which can run to about $250 a month. Keeping lions at home is legal in Brazil, said Capt. Allan Salazar of the Forestry P olice in Minas Gerais, of which Belo Horizonte is the capital. He said non­ native anim als are unprotected by law. “Exotic anim als can be kept at home if conditions are good. The owner is responsible for security and the animal’s actions,” he said. STORE NOW! PAY LATER! Pay in Septem ber for your storage today! $4900 + tax fo r a u Sum m er A ztec Storage 966-7021 Mini Warehouses & RV Storage [ T h e fr ie n d ly m in i-s to ra g e p e o p le j AT c o m p u t e r iz e d g a t e s y s t e m A r iz o n a S to ra g e In n s R.V. AMD COMMERCIAL V EH IC LE S P A C E S S P A C E ! P R O M 25 SQ. FT TO A f i7 A 4 4 A 400 SQ. FT. O F S T O R A G E 510 I "U fc I U >235 W. FIRST STREET TEMPER S p o rts State Press Page 27 Tu«útavvAprjM2j2222i Devils, Trojans make baseball into basebrawl By SETH SULKA State Press U SC center fielder John Jackson and ASU first baseman Dave Robson go after one another during Saturday’s bench-clearing brawl at Packard Stadium, The Sun Devils won the game, 9-2. A SU opens series against Aggies By SETH SULKA State Press Although the latest battle in the Sun Devil-Trojan War has ended, its effects will be felt tonight at 7 as top-ranked ASU hosts New Mexico State at Packard Stadium for a two-game, non-conference series. The Sun Devils (36-9 overall, 14-5 Pac-10 Southern Division) will be facing the Aggies (33-12) without the services of five players and Head Coach Jim Brock, who all received onegam e suspensions for Saturday’s bench-clearing brawl with USC. Despite losing pitchers Kip Yaughn, Gary Tatterson, and Wayne Ball, first baseman Dave Hobson and shortstop Fernando Vina, Brock said that replacing Vina is his main concern. Vina, who is second on the team batting .369 while compiling 23 RBI and 15 stolen bases, will be replaced by junior Jon Halland at second base with Anthony Manahan moving back to shortstop. The sam e changes were implemented by Brock in an earlier series against Hawaii. Even though ASU, which has moved into second place in the Six-Pac, will be without its second leading hitter, a lack of offense should not be a problem. The Sun Devils, who trail Stanford by a game, have four other players producing over .300. Junior Anthony Manahan and sophomore Mike Kelly continue to pace the team. Manahan, who could become the first player since 1964 to repeat as the Six-Pac batting champion, is hitting at a league-leading .393 clip with 60 RBI. Kelly, who hit two homers against USC, is leading the team in home runs with 15 and is batting .365 with 59 RBI. However, the hottest hitter on the team has been Jim Austin. During ASU’s 20-game winning streak, Austin's numbers are,, according to Brock, “toe most amazing thing V .. •' " * . The ASU baseball team will lose five players and Head Coach Jim Brock to a one-game suspension as a result of toe riot that broke out in Saturday night’s gam e against USC, ASU Associate Athletic Director Herman Frazier said. “I’m imposing these penalties based on the NCAA Rule Book, as a result of toe incidents of April 14,1990,” Frazier said. The chaotic scene began when Kip Yaughn’s pitch sailed toward Trojan center fielder John Jackson. Jackson, who had stepped out of toe batter’s box while Yaughn began his motion, immediately charged toe mound. By toe time everything had settled down, the gam e had been delayed 40 minutes and eight players from both teams had been ejected. ASU players ejected include pitchers Kip Yaughn and Wayne Ball, shortstop Fernando Vina and first baseman Dave Robson. Later in the gam e, Sun Devil reliever Gary Tatterson and USC reliever Jeff Cirillo were also ejected for throwing pitches at batters. Due to a new rule, ejected players are required to serve a one-game suspension. The rule also stipulates that if a pitcher is tossed from a gam e for throwing at a batter, the head coach from that team will also be suspended for one game. The brawl became so out of hand that campus police were called to toe scene. “It is not generally our responsibility,” Deputy Chief of ASU Police Doug Bartosh said. “But it got too far out of hand for toe coaches and umpires, so we went on the field and intervened. “I think that it definitely helped to calm things down.” Bartosh, who arrived oh toe scene after things were somewhat settled, said that , according to reports from officers, toe Trojans’ coaching staff displayed a lack of cooperation in helping restore order. “ (Our police officers) heard obscenities from Head Coach (Mike Gillespie),’’ Bartosh Said. “We were out there trying to help and their coaching staff was out there screaming obscenities.” Bartosh credited ASU’s staff for providing much more assistance in helping to control toe situation. “Coach Brock and his crew did a good job of helping to keep things under control,” Bartosh said. Along with toe suspensions, toe fate of a make-up game between toe two teams scheduled for Monday is also at stake. ASU has sent a package to toe Pac-10 Conference office consisting of tapes from Saturday’s gam e, police reports, as well as reports from Assistant Athletic Director Tom Collins and Director of Packard Stadium Management Kirt Klinger man, both of whom were in attendance. A decision is expected from toe conference within the next few days. Turn to Baseball, page 28. Womens tennis team trounces No. 15 San Diego, 8-1, at home By VICKI CULVER State Press For the ASU womens tennis team, Monday’s 8-1 win against 15th ranked San D iego provided som e above-average happiness. Not only did toe seventh-ranked Sun D ev ils dom inate the m atch d esp ite extremely high-powered winds, but they defeated a team that they have battled to close matches over the years. For toe past two seasons, a subtle rivalry has been building between toe two schools a s ASU has barely edged USD recently. Sun Devil Head Coach Sheila Mclnerney said she was surprised to win Monday by such a large margin. “That just happens som etim es,” she said. “We played very well and they probably did not play as well as they can. It could have been much closer . ” ASU jumped on USD early in the match, winning five of its six singles matches in two sets. Krista Amend, Jennifer Rojohn, Barbara Thompson, Karen Bergan and Luann Klimchock each posted wins for toe Sun Devils. In doubles action for ASU, the No. 1 team of Bergan/Rojohn won by default, while toe d u o s o f A m e n d /L a u r a G litz a n d Klimchock/Jill Hamilton defeated their opponents in two sets. “ I think everyone won pretty easily,” Glitz said. “ It seem ed like a pretty good day, and w e w ere ready for them.” Glitz said she was also surprised to win Monday’s match by such a large margin — especially under toe adverse wind. “In toe singles matches especially, our team handled the wind better,” She Said. “But I don’t know why because we never play in the wind and it’s not like we practice in it.” ‘ The wind for Klimchock actually served as an inspiration after she* began to take control of her singles match. “For m e personally, it felt good and it went in my favor because I was positive about it,” she said. Klimchock said USD had good athletes but felt that it was not playing nearly as com petitively a s Sun D evils. “We were really fired up to beat them because they are a good team ,” she Said. “On any given day, toe m atch could go either way, but our whole team played better and it went our way.” M clnerney said ASU’s three-gam e winning streak will come just in time for Nationals, which will be held in two weeks. She added that the Sun D evils are consistently playing the best they have all season. “We are playing well now, which is good because it is the end of the season,” she said. “Our goal now is to get better for Nationals. We want to be playing good tennis once Nationals rolls around.” ¡^¡P Last Friday, ASU defeated 13to-ranked Tennessee 6-3. Mclnerney said it was a good win for the Sun Devils, because Tennessee went on to defeat UofA the following day. toe WIN Pow«rs/St«te Press ASU No. 1 seed Krista Amend downed Abby Beayton of San Diego, 6-1, 7-9, Monday at Whiteman Tennis Center. Page 28 Tuesday, April 17,1990 S M tP lW I Malone grabs spotlight as Tolbert rests injury By DAN ZEIGER State Press For fans of the ASU track team, the outlook for Saturday's meet with UofA and NAU quickly went from one of promise to perplexity. With a hamstring injury to star sprinter Lynda Tolbert, a meet that the Sun Devils could have easily won turned into one of potential disaster. ASU fans hoped that someone could step in and fill the void. Enter Maicel Malone. Although the Sim Devils were defeated by both the Wildcats and Lumberjacks, the sophomore from Indianapolis, Ind., set stadium records in thè 200- and 400-meter hurdles as well as anchoring the womens 4x400-meter relay team to a first-place finish at Roy P. Drachman Stadium in Tucson. The details of Malone’s spectacular afternoon read like this: •Running in her first 200 meters of the year, Malone exploded to a school-record time of 22.97, almost two seconds in front of secondplace Brenda Johnson of NAU. Sun Devil Head Coach Tom Jones said that the effort was also the best in the nation so far this year. •In the 400, Malone won with a time of 52.60, enough to break the stadium record by .21 seconds. Junior Dana Jones placed second with a time of 54.93. •The Sun Devils’ 4x400-meter relay team of Toinette Holmes, Charmaine Williams, Jones and Malone won easily with an effort of 3:38.92, almost five seconds in front of runner-up NAU; Tolbert suffered the injury in practice last week. Jones said there was a possibility the senior could have competed, but the coaching Staff withdrew her after arriving in Tucson. “We decided not to run her when we got there,” Jones said. “She jogged around and said her hamstring was too tight, so we pulled her out. An injury like that is a weekby-week situation, so w e’re not going to rush her back.” With Tolbert out, heptathlete Gea Johnson filled in on ASU’s 4xl00-roeter relay team, which also included Jones, Charmaine Williams and Maicel Malone. Despite the personnel switch, the group had no trouble finishing first with a time of 45.32 seconds. Johnson also had a productive day in individual competition, where, filling in for Tolbert, she won the 100-meter hurdles with a time of 13.88 and placed in five other events. The junior finished second in the javelin and shot put, third in the 100 meters, fourth in the high jump and fifth in the 200 meters. “Gea did a good job winning the 100-meter hurdles and coming in on the relay,” Jones said. “We spread our heptathletes about as thin as you can get them.” The Sun Devil men also cam e out of Tucson with two losses but garnered many individual honors as well. ASU sophomore Shane Collins continued his winning ways in the shot put, finishing first with an effort of 64 feet. Collins, who placed second in the discus with a throw of 165 feet, 4 inches, defeated UofA’s Jack Trahan by five feet. “Trahan w as all pumped up to go, but Shane had some great warm-ups,” Jones said. “He hit his best on the Very first throw and the m eet was over after that.” Robert Rucker placed first in the 400-meter hurdles with a time of 51.04 seconds. The junior from Denver, who placed Sixth in the event at last year’s Pac-10 C ham pionships, fin ish ed 1.25 seconds in front of the Wildcats’ Yki Vallery. “Somehow Robert seem s to do his best in the hurdles as opposed to the high hurdles,” Jones said, “but he ran Very w ell.” Matt Zuber finished third in the long jump with a leap of 23 feet, 11V4 inches and fourth in the javelin with a tljrow of 162 feet, 9 inches. Also, with Brian Wenig, he tied for second in the pole vault with an effort of 15 feet, 1 inch. In the end, however, injuries, and the team ’s lack of depth proved to be the Sun D evils’ undoing. “You can’t replace people,” Jones said. “ We only have 95 scholarships. We did about the best we could do.” ASU returns to action for the Mt. Sac Relays this Saturday in Walnut, Calif. Scott Troyanos/State Press USC back-up catcher Dusty Raring sports a bloody face as ASU second baseman Fernando Vina is restrained after Saturday night's bench-clearing fight. Baseball Continued from page 27. I ’y e ever seen.” Austin, who was named the Six-Pac Player of the Week, has been awesome during the winning streak, hitting at a .438 pace while knocking out eight homers and raising his slugging percentage to .837. He has also stolen l l bases in 11 attempts. Perhaps more impressively, dining a string of seven at-bats against USC, Austin belted four home runs, a triple, a double while racking up six RBI. For the season, Austin is batting .360 with 13 homers and 17 stolen bases. But the Sun Devils will need to be on top of their offense as NMSU posts some big numbers of its own. The Aggies feature six regulars over the .300 mark and two batting over .400, before a Monday’s gam e with Grand Canyon University. Leading the way for NMSU are third baseman Joe Williams (.450,64 RBI, 20 HR) and designated hitter Chris Fanning (.408, 60, 12). “They definitely can score a lot of rims,” Brock said, “but they, also' can give up som e.” ToddDouma (10-1,3.03 ERA) is scheduled to start tonight’s gam e for ASU while the Aggies’ starter is unknown. •ASU’s Sean Rees has been named this week’s Six-Pac Pitcher of the Week. It was the fifth time that Rees has received the distinction breaking Alex Sanchez’s record of four in 1986. Sun Devil softball im pressive but disap p oin ted By DAN ZEIGER State Press As impressively as the ASU softball team had played in the last two days, Sun Devil pitcher Melinda Cook said she found it difficult to accept losing the way the team did. Texas-Arlington scored in the 10th inning to break a 3-3 tie and claim the championship of the Oklahoma State Cowgirl Hall of Fame Invitational Sunday in Stillwater, Okla. UTA came from behind three times in the title gam e and defeated the Sun Devils (36-26, 4-6 Pac-10) for the second time in the tournament. “It was a great gam e,” Cook said. “We had opportunities to close it out, be we didn’t.” With one out in the 10th inning, UTA shortstop Kim Fielding sacrificed home Kelly Harmon with a ground ball to third base. Harmon had led off the inning with a double and advanced to third on a wild pitch by ASU’s Terri Carnicelli. “ It seemed w e’d get ahead of them, but w e’d make an error or something and they would get back into it,” Cook said. The Sun Devils had the lead for most of the gam e but were unable to keep Texas-Arlington from coming back. ASU led 2-1 after the first inning, but UTA tied the score in three-run seventh inning in which the Sun Devils erased a 3-2 the fourth when Kiki Holland singled to left field and was deficit. : ASU posted a 2-1 record during Friday’s preliminary round advanced to third two batters later by B. G. Scruggs, who singled to right-center field. Holland eventually scored on an despite being limited to three hits in a 3-0 loss to UTA. The Sun D evils clobbered Northeast Louisiana, 17-0, by error by Ann Rowan, one of two m iscues the Sun D evils ripping a season-high 19 hits. After ASU scored eight runs in com m m itted in the inning. After the Sun Devils scored in the fifth inning to take a 3-2 the first inning, sixth in the third and three in the fourth, the advantage, ASU went into the seventh inning needing only contest was called after the fourth stanza due to the 10-run three outs to claim the championship. However, UTA scored rule. Carnicelli pitched a three-hitter to lead the Sun Devils to a to force the gam e into the extra inning that decided the game. The Sun Devils advanced to the championship gam e with a 1-0 victory over Texas A&M. In the fifth inning, pinch-hitter 12-0 semifinal victory over Stephen F. Austin. ASU acquired Michelle Madrid singled to score outfielder Jackie Amara for 17 hits and were led by sophomore Cook, who hit a double and the contest’s only run. a home run, and Dawn Wood, who threw a five-hit shutout. “Our defense has been a strong point when our offense has The gam e was called in the sixth inning due to the struggled,” Cook said. “In the first Arlington gam e, w e had a tournament’s 10-run rule. bad gam e but bounced back. We showed the type of gam e we “Scoring a lot of runs really w asn’t a surprise,” Cook said, ' can play and almost won it (the championship).” “the team s we scored a ll the runs against w ere weaker. They The Sun Devils return to action when they host eighthdidn’t have the type of pitching w e’re used to seein g.” In the first round, ASU scored a 5-3 victory over Sam ranked California at Sun Devil Club Stadium at 6 p.m. Houston State. Liz Phillips’ two-run single highlighted a Friday. Suns hold off Warriors to remain in tie with San Antonio By The Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — Dan Majerle scored a career-high 32 points, including a crucial 3-pointer with 2:30 remaining, as the Phoenix Suns held off the Golden State Warriors 141-129 Monday night and*stayed even with San Antonio in thé race for the Western Conference’s fourth playoff spot. The Suns’ club-record 22nd road victory and fifth straight at Oakland kept them in a tie with the Spurs at 53-26. Both teams are bidding for a first-round homecourt playoff advantage against the other, although San Antonio still has a chance to win the Midwest Division and earn the No. 2 seeding position. The loss ended Golden State’s slim m athem atical ch an ce of m aking the playoffs. Kevin Johnson added 29 points and 13 assists for Phoenix, while Tom Chambers scored 26 points and and now has 15,018 for his career. Rod Higgins scored a season-high 28 points and Chris Mullin had 35 to lead the Warriors, losers o f four straight at home and five overall. Phoenix broke a 76-76 halftime tie and outscored Golden State 28-13 to start the third period, opening up a 104-89 lead. But the Warriors cut it to 112-104 by the end of the period and hung tough throughout the fourth, getting as close as 126-123 on Higgins’ 3-point shot with 3:14 to play. But Jeff Hornacek’s two free throws and Majerle’s 3-pointer gave the Suns a 132-123 lead with 2:30 to go. Phoenix trailed 51-42 early in the second period, but Hornacek’s nine points during a 26-13 run helped the Suns go up ¿8-64 with 2:40 to play. But the Warriors stayed in the gam e by outrebounding the Suns 26-21 in the half The NBA’s top two offensive teams both shot over 60 percent in the first half. Golden State hit on 31 of 48 (.646) as both Higgins and Mullin scored 19, while Phoenix was 32 of 52 (.615) as five players, led by Chambers’ 16 points, had double figures. Hig g in s scored 17 first-quarter points as the Warriors grabbed a 44-38 lead, one point below their highest single-quarter output of the season. “You guys don’t know how tough it is on th e r o a d ,” P h o e n ix C oach C otton Fitzsimmons said. “To win 22 gam es is a big feat.” Majerle said the keys to the best night of his career were in the players around him. He led both team s with 11 rebounds. “When they double-team Tom and KJ,” Majerle said, “We look for the open man, and a lot of tim es it was me- I got a lot of easy baskets. There weren’t a lot of shot blockers in there.” Manute Bol, the Warriors’ leading shot blocker, sat out the whole game. Golden State Coach Don Nelson went with the small lineup and got a season best performance from Higgins, who guarded Chambers, who scored 56 points against the Warriors oil Feb. 18 in Oakland. But Majerle took over where Chambers left off. Only Boston’s Kevin McHale (34 points, Feb. 23) has come off the bench to score more points this season against the Warriors. “He has been a thorn in our side ever since they drafted him,” Nelson said. Majerle’s previous career high of 27 was set Nov. 3, 1989 against the Warriors in Phoenix. “I think they are a great team, they showed that last year,” Chambers said. “They may want to give up a couple of their sm all guys to get som e size next year, but I tell you what, this team can really roll.” Chambers became the 53rd player in NBA history to reach 15,000 points. His total of 15,018 puts him past Mike Mitchell (15,016) into 52nd place on the all-time list. Page 29 Tuesday, April 17,199Ò State Press UofA’s Johnson, Mason arrested By The Associated Press TUCSON — UofA police have cited two Wildcat basketball players in recent days an unrelated misdemeanor charges, authorities said Monday. Freshman N. Deron Johnson, 19, was taken into custody Friday night, handcuffed, cited on two misdemeanor counts of assault and released, after women students Tarhonda N. Richardson, 19, and Alicia C. Day, 20, told campus police Johnson allegedly struck them in the face in a dormitory room, Sgt. Brian Seastone said. Last Wednesday, campus officers cited and released Harvey Mason, 21, a senior this season, for allegedly threatening and intimidating a university parking and transportation officer over an exchange involving the ticketing and disabling of another Wildcat player’s car. Uof A basketball Coach Lute Olson, just returned from Indianapolis, where he attended Sunday’s McDonald’s AllAmerican high school gam e, said he could not comment immediately because he had not spoken with either player yet. “At that point I’ll determine whether there’s anything to comment on,” he said. Johnson told authorities he did not hit either woman but that he had argued with Richardson. The woman said Johnson told her to'“shut up” and pushed her backward into a chair after he began yelling at her. According to a police report, she said Johnson hit her in her face with a closed fist when she got up and pushed Johnson away. But Johnson told the Arizona D aily Wildcat, the campus newspaper, “ It really wasn’t as bad as everyone made it out to be. One of the young ladies told the police I hit them, which is not true!” He also said both women had been drinking, the newspaper said. Slate Press The police report said D ay told officers she cam e into the room, which w as not hers, Richardson’s or Johnson’s , to protect Richardson and that Johnson hit her in the face also. Police said the women refused medical treatment. Mason w as cited and released after a shouting incident with parking and transportation officer Marion Erwin. Other University em ployees along with Erwin w ere ticketing cars as he drove past a parking lot near McKale Center, he told police. Mason said the discussion becam e heated when Erwin and others w ere about to place a disabling “boot” on the auto of team m ate M att Othick. Classifieds LINER AD RATES: 15 words or less: $3.00 per day for 1-4 days ■ $2.75 per day for 5-0 days ‘$2.50 per day t o r 10 + days 15* each additional word The first 2 words are capitalized. No bold face or centering. Personals are only $1.401 HOW TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AQ: Erwin reportedly told Mason to “mind his own business,” with Mason allegedly responding that she should mind her own business and adding, “I’ll take care of m y friends, you do your job.” He told authorities he never approached the woman but that he w as aggressive in his statem ents and manner, the Wildcat reported. Mason is scheduled to appear on Friday and Johnson on Monday in Pim a County Justice Court. Upon conviction, their misdemeanor charges carry maximum penalties of up to six months in jail and $1,000 fines, Seastone said. Mason underwent arthroscopic knee surgery during the season, then reinjured his knee in a late-year comeback. Johnson redshirted. In Person: Cash, Chock (with guarantee card), VISA or MasterCard. W e're located in the tower level of Matthews Center, room 46H. Office hours are 8 a .m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. You can also place your ad at the North MU Information Desk (faN and spring sem esters only), between the hours of 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m .. Mon.-Fri. ; By Phono: 965-6731 Payment with VISA/MC only. $6 minimum on aN phone orders. By Mail: Send your a d (with payment) to: State P resa Classifieds Matthews Center, Rm 15 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 WHEN WILL YOUR AD RUN? Classified liner ads can begin 1 day after Last spring, several UofA football players were involved in a spate of on-campus incidents. Seastone said, “I don’t think there’s any specific pattern or anything. Unfortunately, anybody that is in the public view gets magnified a little bit more.” He said there are other alleged assaults oil campus that don’t gain similar attention. they are pieced (if placed before noon). Classified display ad s can begin 2 days after they are placed (if placed before 1Q a.m.). Ads may run tor any length of time. Canceled ads wiH b e credited to your account. Sorry, no refunds. Advertis ing Policy: The S tate P ress reserves the right to edit or reject any advertising copy submitted. Phoenix’s Super Bowl bid in question By The Associated Press PHOENIX — Although the NFL agreed March 13 to play Super Bowl XXVII at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, the 1993 gam e could always be moved, a league official said. Joe Browne, the NFL’s director of communications, wrote that the state’s inability to declare a paid holiday honoring the late Martin Luther King Jr. could jeopardize the first Super Bowl ever scheduled in Arizona. Browne was responding to an editorial in the March 16 Arizona Business G azette, which said the award of the site was not conditional. “Although NFL officials are not thrilled by Arizonans’ tardiness, they will play their championship gam e here, no matter,” the weekly newspaper said. “While the league did not condition its Super Bowl decision on Arizona having a properly observed King holiday, it is always open to the league to reconsider,” Browne said. He added that the NFL office would take the King issue into RUNDLE’S i l 324 W 11 University Oust east of Priest) MONTEREY VINEYARD Wh Zinfandel 750 ml........S3.99 MEISTER BRAU 12 Pack . . . . . . V v . V . . $3.99 VOLSKA VODKA 750 ml.......$5.49 Used Playboy Magazines..........944 Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers. 967-9079 error. State Prase Errors: Check your ad the FIRST day it runs. Call 965-6731 with any corrections before noon. The State P re ss is only responsible for the first day the ad runs incorrectly. Corrected ads wiH be extended one day. C hanges called in after the first day wW not qualify for a make-good. Claciified Advertising Matthews Center South Basement 965-6731 ANNOUNCEMENTS B.G.EINSTEIN’S Bar and Grill,..smart food fast! Upstairs, corner of 6th and College. HANG GLIDE! Gently sloping man-made hill. Safe and exciting. Group rates and gift ce rtifica te s available. W indsports, 897-7121. TERRACE ROAD A PAR TM EN TS $ 5 0 off one bedroom $ 7 5 off two bedroom. 0 oc SHORT AFFAIR? (I 1 2" tr 950 S. Terrace Road, Tem pe 966-8540 L ml 5th & Mill GIST NEW YORK PIZZA O f ITALIAN - GREEK RESTAURANT ft PIZZERIA 933 E. University, T em pe “Good pizza shouldn’t be a lot of d C h a n g in g H ands --- * Books on Cassette * j your books at Changing Hands. C n a r l W M « I l& d tlo o í 965-6881 For quality clothand paperbacks (no text­ books. please) we pay 30% o f our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorsy, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 12-5 414 Mill Avenue • Tempe • 966-0203 ONTttaET. — Gus BO O K STO RE Browse through our 3 floors of: * New & Used Books • * Calendars & Cards • Sell or Trade ' Corrections must be m ade before noon. Compensation will not be given for customer \ r i/ o n d S h o r t s All these and more are between the covers of THE SUN DEVIL SPARK yearbook. B Custom er Errors: T h a t’ s the tickets .*’T \ LIQUORS &MKT. m Uner ad s must be canceled before noon, 1 . day prior to publication. No refunds wiH be given. account before finalizing thé decision on where to play the game. Browne said in a telephone interview that he did not intend to threaten Arizonans but wanted to clear up the league’s position. Rep. Chris Herstam, R-Phoenix, acknowledged that the Super Bowl, a $200 million tourism bonanza, was important to the state but added that passage of a King holiday bill has little to do with football. Herstam said he hoped the Legislature would end the controversy this session by passing a bill honoring King and the civil rights movement. During a special session last fall, lawmakers created a King holiday at the expense of Columbus Day. The move backfired when those upset by the decision gathered enough signatures to qualify a referendum for the November ballot. The Legislature could remove the referendum from the ballot by restoring Columbus Day. StatePress Classifieds tra d itio n . stu d e n ts. sports. freshm en. clubs. sophom ores. new s. ju n io rs. history. seniors. academ ics. g ra d u a te s. tre n d s. people. nightlife. events. faculty. g rad u atio n . friends. m em ories... HOW TO CORRECT OR CANCEL YOUR AD: Free Delivery 11 a.m .-2 a m. 829-3995 . Large 16” Pizza i$5 .75 ■ 'Additional topping slightly more. 5 i1 • Die ■ STATE PRESS 20 FR EE ” Calzone ! PAR TY Buy two PIZZA Calzones | and get 'Additional topping one Free! slightly more. S i $7.99 ■ FOR YOUR MORNING NEWS! n a g est^ Tuesday, April 17,1990 ANNOUNCEMENTS WIN A Hawaiian vacation or big screen TV, plus raise up to $1,400 in just 10 days!!! Objective: Fundraiser, Commit­ ment: Minimal, Money: Raise $1,400, Cost: Zero investment. Campus organiza­ tions, clubs, frats, sororities, call OCMC: 1(800)932-0582/1(800)950-8472, ext. 10. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE LAW SCHOOL admission test preparation manual. Not used. Original cost: $100, sell for $60. COMPUTERS AUTOMOBILES 1963 MAXIMA, silver, 5-speed, sunroof; power steering, brakes arid windows; AM/FM cassette, 84,000 miles, clean. $4,200. 966-8512. 1984 MAZDA 626LX, 2-door, good condi­ tion, runs excellent, 70,000 miles. Call 844-3938, leave message. $3,800. 1985 MAZDA GLC, sunroof; hatchback, 5-speed, great on gas. $2,300. Tom, 784-0520 1987 SAMURAI— white convertible, bikini and soft top, air conditioning, Sony pullout CD player, Sparky plates. Fun car! Great condition! Only $5.400—must sell. 966-8780. CORVAIR 1964 Moriza. 4-door, factory air conditioning. With shop manuals and parts catalog, $2,200. Evenings, 967-9224 / GREAT COLLEGE car!! 1979 Grand Prix, air conditioning, AM/FM cassette. Good condition inside/Out, runs good. Call 967-0362. $1,500/offer. MUST SELL! 1986 Isuzu 1-Mark. Rebuilt engine, great condition. $4,300/offer. 784-8275, ask for Mike $$$ $ IN S T A N T C A S H PANASONIC (IBM clone) PC, 128k expandable, dual disk drive, printer and modèm. $500 967-6308. WORDPERFECT 5.0, only $135. Student/ faculty only. Pro Image computers. 921-1129 $100 DOWN for Springtree 2 bedroom condo with vaulted ceiling, Only $42,000 — save $20,000! Why rent next semester? Greg, Realty Executives, 941-7705. 2, BEDROOM , 1 bath townhouse, University/McClintock. $4,900 down, no qualify, $437 payment. Kevin, 893-2036. 2 HOMES, 1 mile east of ASU. ,3 bedroom, 1% bath. One is VA loan, $62,900, 10% down. Second: $69,900. 967-3658, Torn. ADORABLE 2 bedroom red brick cottage, located 1 mile east of ASU. $58,000. Frank, 268-9132. ASU— 1 block, why rent? $3,500 buys quiet, clean mobile home. Sell when done. 997-6421. CONDO, CLOSE to Campus, like new. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, 3 patios, pool, racketball and more. Call evenings, 968-7036 for your vehicles! $$$$ All makes & conditions. I'll com e to your location! LAKES TOWNHOME—1 Village Landing. Luxury 3 bedroom, 2% bath, double garage. Beautiful^ secure, enclave near ASU./ Club amenities plus! $139,000. 820-1979. Lisa, 484-7055 Vi MILE south of ASU, 4 bedroom, 2 bath home, fireplace. $7,900 down, $800 payments, no qualify. Kevin, 893-2036. $$ QUICK CASH $$ I'll b u y y o u r c a r o r tru ck , ru n n in g or not! F re e to w in g . C a ll n ow ... 2 5 6 -7 4 0 8 a.m. 3 8 1 -0142 p.m . MOTORCYCLES 1982 HONDA Rebels 450, $650. Must sell, leaving Arizona. Call Frank, 964-1633 or Alex, 831-7004. 1986 HONDA Elite 80, 400 miles, winds­ hield, helmet, red. $1,500. Call after 6pm. 899-9394. 1988 YAMAHA RIVA 50cc, runs great, great condition. $235 best offer. Rob, 839-5299. FOR SALE— 1985 Honda Elite 150. Runs great— $500, Call Steve, 829*71$. HONDA ELITE Deluxe 150cc, 1985. Windshield, trunk, new battery, and cover. Call 784-8158. KAWASAKI 1989 EX500, black, excellent condition, runs great. $2,8G0/offer.784-8638, anytime?“ BICYCLES CAMPUS CRUISER, girl's bicycle, blue Cyclpro mountain bike, rarely used. Call Tina now, 921-1177. $120, RED FUJI sports 10, $75. Men’s 21-inch, needs tubes. Great for student! 585-3719 after 5pm. TREK, 12-SPEED road bike, 64cm frame, Suntour, red with silver trim. Excellent condition. $175. Joel, 496*867. FURNITURE MUST SELL! Couch, tables, king-size bed, TV, stereo, desk, dresser, Venetian chair, etc... 829-1519. ANNOUNCEMENTS APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING HELP WANTED HELP WANTED 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath apartment, covered parking, modern appliances, laundry hook-ups. 949 South M cClintock. (between Apache / University). Jess Sotomayer, 897-0516. FEMALE ROOMMATE needed— share rent and utilities. Please call 829*060 after 4pm, or leave message. AIRLINES HIRING now! Immediate entry level positions available. Excellent sala­ ries and benefits, including travel passes. No previous airline experience required. Some college preferred. 303-441-2449. COMPUTER OPERATOR, $6 pgr hour, approximately 20 hours per week during school, —30 hours for summer. Hours flexible. Close to ASU. Must have car. Call Paul Whiting, 820*879, after noon. ALASKA CANNERY and fishing employ­ ment opportunities. Secure that summer job. Save time and effort. Complete directory. (206)771-3811. COUNSELORS- Prestigious' co-ed Berkshires, MA summer camp seeks skilled college juniors, seniors -and grads. WSI, tennis, sailling, waterski, canoe, athletics, archery, gymnastics, aerobics, golf, arts and crafts, photography, silver, jewelry, musical directors, piano accompanists, science, rocketryi camping, video, news­ paper. Have a rewarding and enjoyable summer! Salary plus room and board. Call Camp Taconic, 800-762-2820. FflCC RCNTRl SERVICE Apartm ent A n d ers Tempe/Mesa 894-1391 N.W. Phoenix REAL ESTATE Vi MILE to ASU. 3 bedroom, 2 bath luxury townhouse in Los Prados. $6,900 down, no qualify, $709 payment. Kevin, 893-2036. 841-5055 FACULTY, STAFF, graduate students: Receive Special discounts in newlyrenovated apartment complex. 894*468, STUDIO AND 1 bedroom $225-240:1339 S. Sunset Drive, Apt. no.9.1 block west of Rural, 1 block south of Apache. 967-3658. STUDIO FOR rent during summer. 2 blocks from ASU. Furnished, utilities, just $285. Discount available. Call 967-5681. STUDIOS $295. Small, quiet complex with pool. Close to ASU. Utilities included; Please call 966-8597 TIRED OF the noise? Tired of the dOrms? Free air conditioning. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $475/month. 910 East Lemon, 966-8704. RANCHO LAS PALMAS 8est deal around— Walk to ASU! Move in for first month's rent. Nodeposits/no fees! One month free with 13 month lease. One Bedroom/$355 month Two Bedroom/2 Bath $515 month Call now! 1249 E. Spence 829-9607 TOWNHOMES / CONDOS NICER 3 bedroom, 2 bath patio home. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, furnished, Rio Upgrades throughout. University Ranch. $7,900 down, no qualify, $791 payment. < Sal ado condo. Washer/dryer. $570/month. Contact Kelly Leid, (303)431-4772. . Kevin, 893-2036. TIRED OF renting? Invest.in 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. 9% FHA loan, $68,500. 345*583 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex, large fenced yard. Pets okay. Near ASU, Priest and 5th Street. $425/month. 921-0931', leave message. APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM condo, furnished, washer/ dryer, air-conditioned. Available June 1. Papago II (714)786-9575, (714)673-9376. ASU A R E A , 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $340/m onth p lu s e le ctricity . Air^ conditioning, jacuzzi, no pets, deposit. 967-4789 ASU AREA. Studios, 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments for rent $260 and up. 966*838. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bedrooms. Walk to ASU, pool, laundry room. 1 block south of University on 8th street. Cape Cod Apartments. 968-5238 for special. SUMMER DISCOUNTS! Reserve Now For Fall! W A L K TO A S U ! Only V i block from cam ­ pus. Beautifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ments. All bills paid. Cable TV. heated pool, and spacious laundry facilities. Friendly, co urteo u s ma na g e me n t . S t op by today! T errace Road A p a rtm e n ts 950 S. T errace 966-8540 ANNOUNCEMENTS 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath for rent. $580. Vi mile fron) ASU. Contact Dennis, 731-5156 or 996*823, message. $385. 2 bedroom condo, pool, tennis, walking distance to Fiesta Mall. 1432 West Emerald—Mesa. 966*308. FURNISHED CONDO, 3 bedroom/2 bath, washer, dryer, dishwasher, pool. Close to ASU. $600/rhonth. Available May 15, 838*294. LUXURY; CONDO, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, recreational courts, washer/dryer May 15. $450/month: 994-5488. RESORT-STYLE LUXURY townhouse, two master bedrooms, two baths, loft/ Terrific recreational facilities. $595. 461-1023. TWO BEDROOMS, two bath condo, near ASU, west of Mill. Quiet, excellent condi­ tion, covered parking, pool. $475. Also three bedroom condo available after June 1. 966-0962. HOMES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, spacious, big yard, 14 mile from ASU. Must see. 966-7912 3 BEDROOM, carport. 10 minutes walk/ ASU. Sublet May-August (negotiable). $400 monthly (negotiable). 731-9790. RENTAL SHARING 2 BEDROOM condo with loft, furnished. Loft, $225 plus utilities. Bedroom, $275 plus utilities. Washer/dryer. 829*892. Work, 947-7261, ext. 583. Male/female. 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted to share 3 bedroom condo, own room with bed. 1 mile west, ASU. $267/month. Los Prados townhomes, available immediately. Call Jay. evenings, 921-7059. « M K State Press DOG OKAY. Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom, 1Vfe bath condo in Scottsdale. Washer/dryer, cable, pool. $250 plus V* utilities. 947-1705, leave message. FALL SEMESTER, 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment, all amenities. Rural/Apache. $250 plus VS. 437-1057, Kelly. FEMALE ROOMMATE to share house— rent and utilities. Please call after 5j 839*408. FEMALE ROOMMATE, share 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, Washer/dryer, microwave, pool, covered parking, non-smoker. $188/month. 894-2636. F E M A L E R O O M M A TE to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. $200/month plus % utilities. Pool, jacuzzi. Phone: 827-1506. FEMALE TO share large furnished one bedroom apartment. $202/month, utilities included. Call 967-4962, Susan. FEMALE WANTED to share furnished 2 bedroom house in nice neighborhood, 1 block from campus. Amenities include fireplace,'microwave, washer/dryer, large yard, pool. Share with female profession­ al. $300/month plus Vi utilities. 838*837. FEMALE ROOMMATES to share room. 2 bédroom, 2 bath, 1 mile from ASU. Worthington Place. Pool, volleyball and clubhouse. Summer and/or 1990-91 school year. $200 per month: Tracy, 894-2848. ANIMAL HOSPITAL, Chandler area, needs clean-up/vet assistant. Afternoons, evenings, weekends. Call 963-2340. ANSWERING SERVICE, part-time, tele­ phone, typing experience required. Monday, Thursday, Friday: 1-7; Tuesday, Wednesday: 1*. Scottsdale. 947-7351. SU M M ER WORK $200-$400 Weekly Interviewing April 18-20 and April 23-27, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. A p p ly in person: CRUISE SHIPS, now hiring all positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For informa­ tion, call (615)779-5507, ext. H-178. EARN $500-700A/VEEK. Must be person­ able and stylish. 730-8314. Call Nick. Tempe/Mesa/Chahdler area. (on Apache, across from A S U ). EASY WORK! Excellent pay! Assemble products at home. Call for information. (504)641*003, ext. 7836. HOUSE, 2 bedroom/2 bath, garage, washer/dryer. Fully furnished. $250 plus •Vi utilities. 437-3837. APARTMENT MANAGER, part-time work. Prefer married couple. Apply: 1339 South Sunset Drive, no.9. 1 block south of Apache, 1 block west of Rural. EXPERIENCED CO UPLE to manage 36-unit apartment complex in Tempe. Excellent benefit package. Send resume with references to: 532 East Maryland, hO-F, Phoenix 85012. IN BOSTON for the summer? Share 2 bedroom/1 bath, fully-furnished apart­ ment. Next to B.C. and public transporta­ tion. 838-9661. APPLY NOW for 40 hour summer posi­ tions in distribution center. Part-time hélp also needed immediately. Apply at 3154 North 34th Drive, Phoenix, 272-7973. FULL-TIME, PART-TIME Child care posi­ tion a v a ila b le for sum m er work, $l75/week or $5/hour. Piece of M ind. referral service. 893-3869. LO S PRADOS, 2 male/female to share master bedroom. Available in May..$175 per person plus V i utilities. Washer/dryer. 921-9268, Brian. ASSEMBLY PROGRAMMERS, part-time. Rapidly growing company is looking for students with strong math aptitudes to write software for Real Time/Multi-user operating system applications for VAX and the 68020. To apply, call Ticketmaster at 279-2822 GRADUATING SENIOR needed to learn all aspects of medical office front and back. Must have excellent clerical skills and type 60 words per minute mihimum. Excellent salary. 941-3812. MALE/FEMALE, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, own room, pool, washer/dryer, atruim. $175, Va utilities. $250 deposit, includes last month's rent. 945-9092. MASTER BEDROOM in 3 bedroom townhome. Pool, fireplace, washer/dryer. Own bathroom. $220/month plus % utilities. 894-5432. Available M ay IM­ MATURE. FINANCIALLY secure, easy going, male/female, 21-30. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, Baseline/Priest. All amenities included. Vaulted ceilings, skylights, washer/dryer, etc., etc. Luxury/resort lifes­ tyle. Available immediately. $35Q/month including utilities. References required. Mitch, 820*363. NEED A place to live this summer? Rent a room in a beautiful home at Camelback Mountain! Must see. Low summer rates! Prefer mature, non-smoker, female. Available now! Call 952-2074. NON-SMOKER MALE/FEMALE to share 3 bedroom house. $225, là utilities. Close to ASU: 967*204. NON-SMOKING FEMALE needed for 2 bedroom/2 bath, 10 minutes from campus. $225. Available 5/1. 644-9498 RESO RT CONDO, terrific amenities, extras, spacious master bedroom, $225; loft, $175, plus utilités. 461-1023. ROOMMATE WANTED Tempe apart­ ment complex. Large room, private bath. Utilities paid. $300/month. Bill, 829-3532. ROOMMATE(S) WANTED: Share beauti­ ful condo, Scottsdale, 3 miles from ASU. Furnished, washer/dryèr. Call Brian, 481*096. ROOMMATES NEEDED 4 bedroom, pool, . spa. $300 or $325 (master), plus utilities. 834-5839, Doreen. ROOMMATE NEEDED— Own room, $237.35/month, % utilities, Vfe mile from ASU Call 829-9050. SHARE LARGE house, pool, washer/ dryer, dishwasher, etc. Rural and Apache. $170 plus utilities. 437-1048, Dana. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FINANCIAL FREEDOM Seminars, April 20 and 21 (Friday evening, Saturday, 9-5 and evening). 7 qualified instructors teach how to own lucrative business. Refundable fee: $25 single, $35 couple, including lunch and business binder. Registration; 838-4199, Century. MODELS ACTORS/ACTRESSES. For a free interview with a full-service talent network, call 967*019. The image Source. HELP WANTED ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for parttime summer jobs. $5.50/hour, 20plus hours/week. Don’t delay, call today! 968-4457. A CT NOW! TMI is now hiring for summer. Earn $5.50 per hour, guaranteed, up to $9 per hour. Set your own work schedule. Call established customers of Fortune 500 clients. No cold calling. TMI is located 4 minutes from campus at Broadway and Mill Ave. Call now for interview. Ask for Sarah Preston. 967*066, 9am to 9pm, Monday through Friday. Inquire about our $t00 signing bonus. EOE. Howard Johnson Hotel G O LD A R R O W CAM P ATTENDANT CARE Technician—Teach care and assist disabled individuals in / residential setting. Tempe locations, day­ time hours free plus 3-day weekend. $4.72 to $5.30 per hour plus room and board and benefits. Move in May 1. 894-2355. EOË. ATTENTION: MARKETING/BUSINESS majors. Dream job! Put your knowledge into practice, Financial services. Commis­ sion plus bonus. Looking for just 10 of the most dynamic and energetic students/ graduates. Our new, exciting, totally unrkvaled concept is the ultimate in time management/financial planning. Call 835-5673. T E LE M A R K E T E R S - $5-$8/hr. to s ta rt + co m m . N o s e llin g , ju s t s e ttin g a p p o in t­ m ents. N o e x p e rie n ce n e ce s ­ sary; J o b hours: M -F, 4-9 p.m. an d Sat., 9-2 p.m. W ork c lo s e to c a m p u s in R io S a la d o B ldg., 2121 S. M ill A v e ., Ste. 220, Tem pe, A Z 85282, at M ill & B ro a d w a y ; A p p ly after 2 p.m C a ll an ytim e. 470-1071. A V A ILA B LE IMMEDIATELY! Market research phone interviews. Starting $4.40 per hour. Evenings/weekends. Tempe location. Susan, 967-4441. BARTENDER, FUN Tempe neighborhood, Sports bar. 25-32 hours per week. $8 to $12 per hour. Apply 2pm-4pm. The Woodshed I, 19 West Baseline. Exper­ ienced only. BASEBALL FAN! Have a favorite pro team’s like to reminisce? Write me your favorite stories/trivia. Make $6/hour or $1/story. Call Rodney, 968*065. CLUB RIO is now accepting applications for doormen, bartenders and barbacks. No experience necessary. Must be 21 or older. Apply in person at 430 North Scottsale Road. On Huntington Lake in C alifornia’s High Sierra Hiring counselors & instruc­ tors. Pick up application at the Student Employment of­ fice. Schedule interview for April 17 or call camp office: 213- 545-3233 GYMNASTICS/DANCE TEACHER Very part-time. Must be enthusiastic. North­ west Phoenix and Peoria locations. Sunrise Preschools, 860-1611. HANDS ON volunteer experience in Guatemala this summer. Call 966-3877 LAND PLANNER/DESIGN Draftsman. Immediate opening for a creative and technically-qualified individual to help develop design concepts for recreational facilities, entry monuments, landscaping, water features, signs, graphics, logo’s and other residential amenities for a PAD project. Send resumes to: Homes by Dave Brown, 2164 East Broadway, Suite 300, Tempe, Arizona 85282, attention: Gary Morgan, Vice President. LECTURER/ADVISER: JOURNALISM lecturer to also advise award-winning student newspaper at Northern Arizona University. Master’s degree and profes­ sional newspaper experience. One-year appointment with possibility of renewal. Send letter of interest and resume to: Lumberjack Search Committee, School of Communication, Box 6001, NAU, Flag­ staff, Arizona 86011. Applications will be reviewed beginning April 13 and remain open until position is filled. Candidates with interest or experience in working With minority culture students and/or research interests ih minority cultures are especially encouraged to apply. Please send state­ ment and published clip of ad to: Sheri Cole, School of Communication, Northern Arizona University, Box 5619, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011: We Have a Job For You! Summer jobs ransing from clerical to light industrial. P e rfe c t fo r: •Students •Graduates •Staff CALL US TODAY! Never an applicant fee. aPPLSälM Permanent and Temporary Employment TEMPE 80 E. University 889-3718 PHOENIX MEDIO CENTER 3405 N. 7th Ave. 9801 N. 89th Ave. 880-1780 883-51*8 Tuesday. April 17,1990 Page 31 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED FREE LOST/FOUND PETS SERVICES ADOPTION H A B IT A T IO N TECHNICIAN to teach adults with disabilities life, social, recrea­ tion skills in community-based day prog­ ram Full-time, Tempe. 894-2355. EOE THE ROSE company is now hiring for rose sales in restaurants and nightclubs. Call for interview, 921-8855. FOUND: SOLDOTNA High School 1987 Starte ring, Tim Ridenaur. At the MU Lost and Found. THE- SOUTHWESTERN Company is how interviewing for full-time summer w o rk make $1,740 a month and college credit; Must be willing to relocate. Interviews: April 18 and 19, 1pm, 4pm or 7pm at the Howard Johnson’s—Frontier Conference Room (Please arrive 10 minutes prior to selected interview time). FOUND: THOMAS Jefferson class ring, 1986. Found at Cornerstone, 4/10. Call Greg, 968-1941. FREE TO a good home. I’m an adorable Cocker Spaniel that needs a loving home because my owners are terribly allergic to me. They love me a lot and tell me t’jm a good girl, but they juqt can’t take the stuffiness, sneezing and coughing. So, I’m up for adoption. I’m a great housedog, you know, housebroken and all that good stuff. I love kids and dirty socks. I don’t eat much. I’m easy to get along with and I even come with my own bed!! If you think I’d make your household complete, then call 835*5574 today YOUR FUTURE revealed by the Tarot cards. $5 reading with this ad. Call 894-1491 for appointm ent. Leave message. ADOPTION: WE are a warm, loving couple longing to share our lives and love with your newborn. Let's help each other. Call B eth o r N ick , c o lle c t, anytim e. (914)621-1361. LIVE-IN-— WORKING mom needs light housekeeping and childcare for two boys, ages 6 and 14 Room, board and salary, and other perks. Non-smoker, male/ female. Must have references. 839-7627 after 6pm. LOOKING FOR some exciting people to help me give away MCI long-distance service. Cash paid. For more information, call Tate at 821-1858, Monday-Friday. M A K E M O N E Y . E xpan din g home improvement company immediately needs student to work 4 hours per day. We train—- no selling: Paid weekly. Cali Ken, 951-4567; ★E X T R A MONEYS Is nice, but you can help people too: Earn $120+ a month Safer, taster plasma donation at ABI Centers due to automated procedure. $5 bonus to new ROSITA’S MEXICAN Restaurant is hiring personable, energetic and customeroriented food servers, bartenders, busers, cashiers and hostesses. All shifts avail­ able. Apply 10:30-11:30 or 1:30-3:30. 960 West University. Northeast corner, University/Hardy. SALES CLERKS for Phoenix and Mesa swim shop. Experience with women’s swimwear helpful. Part-time now, full-time 5^ 5 to 7/31. 264-7774. SALES MANAGER needed. New market­ ing. company, for travel and financial services: Expanding to Arizona. Call Tim, 784-4000. SUMMER JOBS outdoors. Over 5,000 openings! National parks, forests, fire crews. Send stamp for free details. 113 East Wyoming, Kalispell, MT. 59901. SUMMER JOBS! Full-time, $300 per week; part-time, $150 per weely Many openings in customer service and retail. 30 scholarships available. Located in Tempe. CaH 9am to 4pm, 838-2633. SUMMER WORK- Now interviewing for job in sales. Make $5,405 and excellent experience. Call 222-8106 TELEPHONE SURVEY, no sales Parttime, weekdays 3-9pm, weekends 10-6pm. Start $4.25/hour: Behavior Research Center, 1117 North 3rd Street, Phoenix. Call Patty or Kevin at 258-4554, after 5pm. TEM PE CENTER for the Handicapped job hotline. Teach, care and assist disabled adults and children, Group homes, day programs. Part-time/fuM-time, all shifts. Other positions open, also. Call 894-2704. EOE I SU M M ER JO B S ALL KA’S: What we need, is some Wood. KA Craig. ATTENTION RUSHEES, Pre-Rush event at Phi Kappa Psi house. Subs and then ASU baseball. Tuesday, 17th, 5:30. ATTENTION RUSHEES, Pre-Rush event at Phi Kappa Psi house: Subs and then ASU baseball. Tuesday, 17th, 5:30. DEAR A — Life sure is lonely without your touch. I miss all our goofy times and special talks. I love you— Thumper’s mom. DELTA CHI Pledges are getting Delta psyched to go Delta Active— the Spring 1990 Pledge Class. > DG BLONDES Alice l&ll— Your rhymes are boring, your brains are small, your hair is blonde, and your bodies... not at all. ATO's Fuzzhead and Bart. i GAMMA PHI Beta — Get psyched! Jacuzzi-a-thon 90. Today, 6:00. We can’t wait. Love, AEPi. GREEKS— GREEK/ Week is over but Rumor Has It that something is missing? The 1990 Greek Week Booklet is on the way, and it is awesome! Hardworking students, we’ve got the job for you! 9 6 8 -4 4 5 7 H A PPY BIRTHDAY Robert Bradley Taylor! You’re so old! Only one semester ?, left! Love you, Amy. KAPPA ALPHA Travis: Don’t forget about that beer you owe me —cause I won’t— KA Hammer. ! JEWELRY CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. KAPPA ALPHA Burt: Don't send a boy to do a man’s job. Euchre big or stay home —KA Adam and Phil!. FREE LOST/FOUND $100 REWARD for lost brown wallet at B.G. Einstein's, on 4/11. Call Dave at 964-1539. SIGMA NU Rush Dinner, Tuesday, 5:30pm. Any questions, call Brian or Jeff at 784-0017. FOUND: BLUE Jimmy Z keychain. Near Rural/Vista del Cerro. Tom, 829-6702. THINK HISTORY! T h e nation’s finest and largest telemarketing firm is now a ccepting application s for shifts in the: » Afternoons » Evenings We have telem arketing positions available in several departm ents including: •Publisher Services •B ook C lu b Program s •Non-profit program s O u r easy sch e d u le s and a professional staff all add up to an enjoyable and lucrative job. O u r T e m p e office is 5 m inutes from cam pus. O la la m e r lc a 894-0264 - $ 2.95 BANDERSNATCH ÌT X ... BREWPUB FREE HOT delivery to ASU area. Pizza Doug Out, 411 S. Mill, 921-4277. Gourmet Pizza! Try us for lunch! :. Save it fo r a R a iny Day Sell it in State Press Classifieds TUTORS MOVING TO Denver? I’ll take your stuff. You help with U-Haul costs. Nick, 731-9883. Happy birthday. TO MY Red Cloud Lover: Lake Havasu, Palm Springs, Newport, Rustler’s Rooste, Steamers, Garcias. Cookies -N- Cream, Weight Bench,- Poors Light, Club U.M., Tempe Mission Palms. All in seven months! It only gets better! Love always, your Red Cloud Lover. TR I-D ELT H O PS — You guys awesome! Keep up the great work!! are SERVICES E L E C T R O L Y S IS -P E R M A N E N T hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discount. Call for more informa­ tion, 969-6954. WHY HAUL it home? Store it! Your lock and your key. Student summer specials. Best Little Warehouse in Tempe, 1905 East Apache. 967-3900. STUDENTS W e ship your stuff home! 10 to 1,000 pounds— including furniture, computers and electronics. Packaging Store 990-2552 TRI-DELT SEN IO RS— Congrats on Omega Week!! Your sisters love you and will miss you tons!! Strong bonding made w ith fiberglass resins. Doesn’t yellow or turn brittle like acrylic. Will not damage natural nail. Full set $22 • Fills $18 PETS FOUND LARGE black male dog, Labrador mix, ASU campus, 4/1Q. Old, no collar. Please call 274-9062. FREE WROUGHT iron cage and food comes with Nikki: Baby Goffin cockatoo, hand fed, hand tamed, loves attentionready to talk. Moving, sadly must sell— $420/offer. 921-8732. ONE-WAY AIRLINE ticket to Minneapolis or Cedar Rapids, May 11. Female only. Call Melissa, 894-0399. Vfc PRICE International Youth Hostel membership with purchase of Eurail pass. Both issued on the spot! ISIC cards, student-fare flights, MEI travel packs, other travel items also available. Contact American Youth Hostels. 1026 North 9th Street. Phoenix, Arizona or call 254-9803 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.50 AAA Word Processing/Laser printer. years experience. Theses, dissertation, APA specialization. Marion 839-4269. 34 NEEDED: A tutor for Finite Math 119. Fourteen lessons and one test. 827-9591. Cactus N ail Company Scottsdale 423-5504 Monday thru Thursday 90% OFF All Hair & Nail Services •Cuts, Perms, Color •Manicure, Pedicure, Full Sets, etc. 31 E. 9th St TEMPE CENTER967-3799 TUTORiNC INFORMATION Call Gil Myers anytime. Accounting & Finance courses. Special rates for ACC 211 & 212 students. 497-3097 PHOTOGRAPHY JASON SILVER/KID-MAN Photoworks. Models’, actors’, and artists’, portfolios. Reasonable. 990-1818, 946-2475. SAM WONG Photography. Portraits, works of art, personalized calendars. Better than reasonable. 234-3892, leave message. Parents coming to town for graduation? Use this handy directory to get their lodging and transportation reservations made early! $1.50 PER page. Term papers, letters, resumes, etc. At Your Service Word Processing, Linda, 839-6167. $1.65 AND up. Professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Claudia, 964-6012. ACCENTS IN Typing. Spell-check, proof­ read, editing, all included. Quick turn­ around. Calf 894-6074. ACCURATE RESUMES composed and typed ($25); guaranteed. Call Carol, 924-8064. East Mesa. A RESUM E SPECIAL, $24.95. term paper discounts, fax service! Call Dr. Copy, 968-7771, 8am-8pm, for details. Thin and Natural Sculptured Nail YOU’VE HEARD all about NCTV and ASU’s week in review news program, Southwinds, now watch it! In Tempe, Fridays at 4:30 and again Mondays at 2:30 (Channel 34). Elsewhere in the Valley on Phoenix Cable Learn, Channel 34, Mondays at 4:30 and Wednesdays g!L 5pm. HAWAII, ROUND-TRIP, leaving 5/22, returning 8/16. $340.697-7088, anytime. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. TRI-DELT SENIORS— Happy Omega Week! Your sisters love you!! Congrats!! XXXGAMMA Phi Beta — Get psyched! Jacuzzi-a-thon 90! Today, 6:00. We can’t wait. Love, AEPi. FLY ANYTIME! Continental USA, $375 roundtrip. Leave today! Northwest USA. $275! Alaska-three weeks notice, $525. Other destinations available. We also buy transferable coupons! 968-7283. A KINKO’S paper makes the grade. Kinko’s typesets papers, resumes, fliers, etc... Self-serve Macintosh computers and Laserprinter too. 933 Ë. University, call 966-2035 96(L W University, call 921-0168. Open early, open late, open seven days! MARY, YO U ’R E the best! I love you very much. P.S. Free beer? Love, Tommy. PHI PSI 500— Purchase you All campus calendars, T-shirts, boxers and caps on Cady Mall, starting Monday, April 16. $8 to $10/hour We fully train $5.50 guaranteed/hour. TON ITE! ALL YO U CAN EAT S P A G H E T T I! MARCY NICHOLS: Here is your longawaited personal, must like your 21 st birthday! Happy 21, I hope you find this hungover and anxious for the good times and drinks to come. Welcome to legality! Sten. MIKE, I love you. —Shannon. HELP WANTED AAA DRIVEAWAY. Free cars to most major cities. Gas allowances available. 21 or older. Call 279-2000, then 4530. TRAVEL KONO VERTUCO (I think that’s how you spell it): I sit behind you, Dr. Poe’s finance class. Please turn around and say hi! You seem to be such a nice guy. CASH PAID, jewelry of all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave, Tempe Center. 968-6074, A FT ER C L A S S H O U R S Part-time •Early A .M . AGD JULIA H.— Your mom is psyched to introduce herself! Congratulations on pledging! Luv, Mom. jA r e you s ta y in g ! in A Z th is su m m er? $5.50 Per Hour Flexible Evening H ours W eekly Pay Cornerstone Mail Locations RESTAURANTS/ BARS TRANSPORTATION ADOPTION. OPEN arms, loving heart and home. I’m hoping to share my life with a child. Let’s help each other. Call Debbie anytime, collect, at (215)752-3604 or (802)235-2312. 500 FEVER — "Catch It." WAITER/WAITRESS PLUS prep cook needed for immediate part-time. Apply in person, Chopandaz, comer of Scottsdale Road and McKellips, Tuesday/Saturday. 894-2250 PERSON WHO knows campus area. Flexible hours, day and night. Great working atmosphere. Pizza Stop, in The Towers, 921-3611. "500 FEVER." All Greeks get ready for the Phi Psi 500 on April 21. ALL GREEKS Bash. Phi Psi 500, April 21. W O R K W H E N a n d w h e re you want.i.Staffbuilders Temporary Job Service. Short- and long-term assignments; part- and full-ime available! Varied positions. Apply: Moriday-Thursday, 8:30am-10:30am or 1pm-3pm. Never a fee. 64 East Broadway, Suite 175, Tempe. EOE. PEOPLE TO sell T-shirts. Pays $2/shirt. Sell in University Towers, etc. Call 921-0051. PERSONALS TYPIST— S500/WEEKLY, at home. Selfaddressed, stamped envelope: Strandjord Associates, 626 South Wilson, n0.9, Tempé 85281. donors on first donation with this ad. Ask about additional bonuses. (Monday-Saturday). University Plasma Center Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tempe PART-TIME DISHWASHER, night Tony’s New Yorker, 107 East Broadway. Apply in person after 2pm. C la s s ifie d s Wo r k for You! TRAVEL,. BE in the sun, see the world, have fun, and get paid! How? College students Cruise ship jobs: stewards, stewardesses, maintenance. $900/salary weekly. Guaranteed openings. Call us now fo r s u m m e r e m p lo y m e n t. 1-800-926-8447. ext.C-1279. WANTED: PART-TIME route sales people! You’ve seen the trucks—become part of the team. If you enjoy meeting people arid consider yourself a good salesperson, please fiH out an application this week, 2-5pm, 411 South Mill. Morning and evening routes available. NEED MOTHER'S helper for spring and Summer. Own transportation necessary. Near Paradise Valley Mall 992-2646. ■HAVE YOU lost something? Check the MU Lost and Found. State Press Classifieds 965-6731 ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. LETTER-QUALITY TYPING and graphs produced with excellent turnaround time. Satisfaction guaranteed. $1.50/page for typing, $2/page for graphs. 966-7809. ALL PAPERS, resumes, letters, transcrib­ ing, editing, ’ mailings. Grammar/spelling checks. College graduate using IBM computer. 964-0994. REMEMBER: FLYING Fingers gives your papers that "professional" look. Macin­ tosh and Laser print. Susan, 945-1551. RESUM E SALE! Student rates! No hidden extras! Near ASU. Call Professional Image, 921-1129. HOTELS/MOTELS ARIZONA BILTM ORE—The ‘Grande Dame’ of resorts and America’s longestrunning recipient of the Mobil 5-Star Award. (602)955-6600, ext; 2400. COMFORT INN-TEMPE. Special ASU graduation rate. From $29.95.5 miles from campus. (602)820-7500 EMBASSY SUITES—TEMPE/ASU Offers 2-room suite, free FULL breakfast and cocktails. 2 miles from ASU, 4400 South Rural Road. $49 up to 4 people. Call (692)897-7444, ask for graduation rate. EXPERIENCE SHERATON San Marcos, Arizona’s Original Golf Resort, only 25 minutes from campus... $79 single or double— May 4-14, 1990. (602)963-6655 FIESTA INN $55 Graduation Package! Have your friends and relatives stay with the best! Call 967-1441. GRADUATE SPECIAL: $39, single or double. Holiday Inn Airport East. Close to campus: (602)273*7778. HILTON PAVILLION special room rates: $69, through May 13; $49, May 14-September 13. (602)833-5555. HOSPITALITY SUITE Resort. Close to campus. May rates: $37 and $47/feght. in c lu d e s b r e a k f a s t , c o c k t a ils (602)949-5115. HOWARD JOHNSON Graduation Special: Single/Double. Directly across from A S U . M a k e r e s e r v a t io n s n o w l (602)967-9431. $39 INNSUITËS TEMPE welcomes incoming friends, family of graduating ASU students. Call 1-800-842-4242. Ask about our special graduation rates! WORD PROCESSING, reports, letters, forms and resumes. Mac with Laser printer. 969-1708, leave message. M A R R IO T T /C O U R T Y A R D . Phoenix Airport and Mesa, hotels, just minutes from A S U . $ 4 4 ( F r I d a y - S u n d a y ). 1-800-321-2211. WORD PROCESSING for your typing needs. Fast turnaround. Close to ASU. $1.25/up. Transcription available. Roxan­ ne, 966-2825. RAMADA HOTEL Airport East, 1600 South 52nd Street. (602)967-6600,3 miles from ASU. $39-plus tax. WORD PROCESSING — $1.50 per page. Resumes & editing available. Reliable. Call 921-3770 evenings & weekends. RAMADA INN-CHANDLER, I-10 and Chandler Boulevard. 12 miles from ASU S p e c ia l g r a d u a t io n ra te : $391 (602)961-4444. MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL RATE: Best Western Mezona, 250 West Main—Mesa. 5 miles/ASU. $40 a ll ro o m s. C a ll (6 0 2 )8 3 4 -9 2 3 3 , (800)528-8299. STUDENTS- ENTREPRENEURS: instant cash: grants, and loans. Government guaran teed! 1-800-926-8447, ext. GL-127-13. \ ADOPTION TRANSPORTATION ACE LIMOUSINE— Grand occassions deserve Grand celebrations. Let us make your evening exquisite! 894-6533, 397*2253. ADOPTION NETWORK, Inc. Please let us help you make that difficult decision. Adoption consultants. For information, call 1-8QO-88ADOPT. GREAT WHEELS, good deal! Near ASU. Airport transport. Cash or credit. Ace Auto Rental, (602)894-6533. LOVING, CARING couple looking to adopt newborn infant. Legal and confidential. Call Arlyn and Ron, collect, (215) 789-3325. GUARANTEED RESERVATIONS, unlim­ ited mileage. Airport location. Starting at $19.95/day. C ou rtesy Rent-A-Car, (602)273-7503.