th u rs d a y October 8, 1981 state prob Voi. 64 No. 27 Arizona State University S ta ff photo by Boto Beem eederter Som e o f the record 550 balloons taka o ft from the Cutter Launch S ite during the secon d m ass a scen sio n of the 10th annual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta. Last Sunday 468 balloo ns took o ff during the early m orning ascension . The fiesta Is the largest gathering o f b alloo n ists in th e U nited S tates, drawing entries from 36 states and 11 foreign countries, in­ eluding A S Ü m arketing m ajor W ill Cutter, Grandma's birthday balloon sent kin flying B y B ob B e am esd erfe r S ta ff p h o to g ra p h e r If the company that hires Will Cutter, an ASU junior m arketing m ajor, does not have a . hot a ir balloon, it probably won’t be long until it does. Hot a ir balloons are a tradition for the Cutter fami­ ly. Will’s father, Bill, and his uncle, Sid, m ade their first flight in a modern hot a ir balloon in Albuquerqqe 11 years ago.* “They bought the balloon for my grandm other’s birth­ day,” WUl said. “She’s sort of like file grandm other of ballooning. “The next day my father and u n d e said ‘Hey let’s fly this tlnng,’ ” he said. “They had nearer seen one before, so they struggled through in­ flating it and getting it in the a ir.” “I can’t believe we didn’t kill ourselves,” said Joe Jackson, general m anager for (Bill) Cutter Aviation in Phoenix find assistant on the first flig h t “We really didn’t know what we were doing.” Sid Cutter, owner of World Balloons in Albuquerque, N.M., organized the first hot a ir balloon race west of the M ississippi in Albuquerque 10 years ago. That first race grew into the annual Albuquerque In­ ternational Balloon Fiesta, which runs this year from Oct. M l. The organizers for this y ear’s fiesta said there are nearly 550 balloons and more than 600 pilots registered, in­ cluding balloonists from as fa r as Tokyo and London. Last weekend Will Cutter, flies in the Kotfi P ro Balloon a t age 21, piloted his balloon Tour sponsored by Kool during the 10th fiesta, his cigarettes. In 1978 Will fin­ sixth as a solo pilot. ished 19th a t the national W ill an d th e o th e r balloon races in Indianola, balloonists launched their Iowa. balloons , from the Cutter His 19-year-old bright Launch Site, nam ed for his green balloon, the Jalapeno, uncle, Sid, a form er national was the prototype for most champion balloon racer. balloons now in use. Will also races balloons Because a hot a ir balloon and is one of a handful of in­ drifts with the wind, the only dependent balloonists who oquHmim!piQO• 1983 price would include 8 percent fuel tax G as tax increase com batted by petitioners Münlgfr By John Donovan Staff w riter The ASU Campus D em ocrats are scram bling for signatures on petitions to bring to Arizona voters the state’s largest proposed gas tax increase ever. The Arizona Transportation Bill will become law ¡Oct. 24 if the drive to put thfi referendum on the November 1962 ballot fails. To g et the referendum on the ballot, 26,928 signatures are needed. T erry Goddard, die chairm an of Arizona Transportation Action Coalition (ATAC),. will speak on the proposed tax in the Yuma room of file MU tonight a t 7. If it becomes law, the b ill will raise the tax on a gallon of gas by 1.6 cents in January 1982. In January 1963,' the tax then will in­ crease to 8 percent of the cost of a gallon of gas. The current state-gas tax is 8 cents per gallon. ATAC is sponsoring the Gas Referendum Petition throughout the state of Arizona. The group has distributed m ore than 10,000 petitions. T rid a Johnson, coordinator of the petition for ATAC, said the group is confident the petition chive will result in putting the bill on the ballots. “ Our goaj is to force the Legislature in the next session to look a t the transportation bill and re-evaluate it,” Johnson said. “ATAC hiss problems with the entire bill. ” The sections concerning the state gas tax will be the only ones addressed by ATAC in the petitions, she added. The transportation bill, signed by Gov. Babbitt on July 31, split the state Legislature along party lines. Republicans backed th e h ill w hile D em ocrats u n a n im o u s ly opposed i t Johnson said. According to legislative figures, if the bill becomes law, Arizonans will pay 12.6 cents tax on each gallon of gas in 1963 should the price of gas rise to $1.57 per gallon. Legislators predict that Arizonans will be paying $2.92 per gallon in 1968, with 23.4 cents of the price going towards the gas tax, under the bill. “O ur contention is that the tax is unfair because when your gas price goes up, the tax goes up,” Johnson said. “It could poten­ tially b ea very high tax per gallon.” But S tate Sen. Jim Mack, R-Tempe, said if the referendum passes, the people of Arizona will be the eventual losers. “I don’t believe it’s a good idea to scrap a plan tin t passed the Legislature,” Mack said. “It’s certainly not going to help the state.” : Mack said the tax on gasoline is the only legitim ate, m ajor m eans of financing road and highway maintenance. . “We looked a t every avenue there w as,” he said. “We need to put in some freeways, expand som e roads and keep up on the m aintenance. The roads are in deplorable shape.” But Mack said the referendum , if it reaches the ballot, has a good chance of passing, thus elim inating the Legislative work. “But if that referendum nulls and voids the state Legislature’s action, we will never be able to pass another vote to improve the state’s transportation system ,” he said. Arizona Sen. R ichard Kimball, DPhoenix, said many Dem ocrats and some Republicans support the referendum drive as a m eans of “opening up” the transportation bill to examine it m ore close­ ly. The Legislature can then look a t other ways to provide revenues to finance transportation in the state, he said. Page 2 State Pres» Thursday, October 8 ,1961 I n a t io n / w o r ld Isolated group killed S^dat, E gyp t sa y s CAIRO, Egypt (AP) —Egypt said Wednesday that an “iso­ lated” group of four soldiers Including a Moslem fanatic assassinated President Anwar Sadat, and the government quickly scheduled a referen­ dum next week to approve Vice President Hosni Mubarak as Sadat’s successor. Parliam ent held an em er­ gency session to overwhelm­ ingly endorse the nomination that Egypt’s ruling party gave M ubarak w ithin hours of Sadat’s assassination Tues­ day. D efense M inister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala told re­ porters during a break in the parliam entary session that Sadat’s assassins were not part of a coup plot but were "an individual group and they are not even related to any group or country." H aig w arns L ib ya WASHINGTON (A P) — Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig J r. served notice to Libya and other radical Arab nations Wednesday that the United States “would view with great concern” any at­ tem pt to seize upon the assassination of Egypt’s Anwar Sadat to fan instability in the Mideast. Haig said also that America remains a full partner in the peace process initiated by Sadat, “this gigantic person­ ality,” and is committed to "pursue Ms work" toward a comprehensive Middle East settlem ent. He 'pledged full support to Hie Egyptian gov­ ernment now beaded by Hosni Mubarak, Sadat’s hand-picked heir. Babbitt w ill propose raishig drinking age $87.4 billion b ill lik ely w ill be vetoed if to n PHOENIX (AP) — Gov. Bruce Babbitt Wednesday pro­ posed resto rin g th e leg al drinking age to 21 and elim i­ nating bail for convicted felons as part of crime-curbing pack­ age he will hand lawmakers in January. His call for an all-out w ar against crim e. Including con­ fiscation of vehicles for repeat drunken drivers, was delivered in a noon luncheon speech to Phoenix Ktwanians. Citing statistics which show a doubling of the crim e rate in the past decade, the governor also said he will appoint a crim e commission later this month to recommend touch approaches to the problem. WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan’s aides sent an unmistakable signal to Congress Wednesday- that be in­ tends to veto an $87.4 billion, House-passed appropriations bill, and Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill concededRepubiicans have the votes to make it stick. "This appears to be the kind of bill be was talking about” when Reagan threatened last week to veto budget-busting legislation. WhiteHousespokesmaa Larry Speakes said. He said the spending m easure, for the departm ents of Labor, Education, and Health and Human Services, is $4 billion over the lim its Congress set earlier this year. Reagan has yet to veto a bill. G entlem en o f ASU TAU KAPPA EPSILON ASU s Newest Fraternity, is extending to you the opportunity of experiencing the brotherhood of TKE. I I LARGE 16” CHEESE PIZZA ONLY $3 . 4 8 EA. ADD. ITEM $1.00 WITH COUPON. (P lease m en tio n a d w h en ordering.) We Deliver Noon I 3 p.m ,, 5 p.m . - 1 a.m. LONG ISLAND PIZZA Pizza, Subs, Dinners I I - (Smalt charge for delivery.) 724 S. M ill A ve., T em pe (Comer of Mill & University) 829-1722 Exp. 11/2/81. ■ WOMEN'S I1/66I ¿ ¡ ¡ c JE A N S V I Q fro m It BOOTS - HATS - JEANS 20% to 30% OFF Selected Styles 801 S. 52nd St. (comer 52nd & University) _ Unlveralty Daily 10-6 • Sat. 10-4 S 968-1036 214 in the M . U. today o r room 2 0 9 on F rid a y Y ern 8 2 9 -8 7 1 3 S E E I N G IS B E L I E V I N G . m e Law rence U verm ore N ational la b o ra to ry w tt b e o n cam pus to show you w h a t th e Lab has to o ffe r y o u r career. While many o f our protects are devoted to the developm ent o f futuristic technologies fo r pollution-free energy and national defense, we haven’t lost touch w ith the present needs o f the people w ho have chosen to work w ith us. SBE OUR M> M IM S PAPER NEXT THURSDAY, OCT. 15TH, FOR ADDITIONAL «FORMATION U N L Is an equal opportunity em ployer, m /f/h U niversity o f C alifornia 11[■ Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory P.0. Box 80S, o e p t jcr , Livermore, CA 94550. a a H IIÆC :Z 1 H F o r m ore in fo rm a tio n c o n ic to room IT you’re graduating w ith a basic o r advanced degree In the physical sciences, engineering, math o r a com putational discipline, we’d like to m eet you. And If you’d like to put your talents to w ork In an environm ent that encourages Initiative, Innovation, responsibility and exploration, ask your Placem ent Office fo r details on our upcom ing Campus visit, or ■ J GET THE LOOK!—FOR $10.00 We’re going straight to the head of the class with our special student discount! Shampoo, Performance CutsM and blow dry, regularly $16, now $10 with this coupon and your student I.D. card. O T O * GO O D a t a l l p h o e n i x a r e a COM MAND PERFO RM ANCE SH OPS, MONDAY TH RO UGH FRIDAY e i'in » tT ^ !L y m 7** St- * M iaaouri 28«-4914 f*h Av9 * M issouri 249-2793 NO RTHWEST P LA Z A 35th Ave. & C actus 978-S6S6 TEM PE Southern & M cC lintock 831-5035 Special a tta r good through Oct. 11, 1901. Thursday, Octobers, 1981 State Press Page 3 Iranians ask for charge reduction By Jim Austin Staff w riter Two form er ASU Iranian students have filed in Maricopa County Superior Court concerning their misdemeanor con­ victions for allegedly assaulting a photographer during a proIranian dem onstration a t ASU in September 1980. Azarang Mirkhah and William Wadad Galt were found guilty M arch 23 in Tempe Justice Court of assaulting form er State P ress photographer Lars Jones. They were both fined $112 and placed on six months probation. Defense attorney Victor Aronow said the brief, filed on Oct, although it is too prem ature to comment on the appeal, he plans on “taking the full 20 days to prepare a response” after he researches the evidence presented to the court. Schoepf said after the state’s 20-day period to examine the evidence, the presiding judge will have 30 days in which to either uphold or overturn the conviction. Wayne Stew art, Maricopa County district attorney, said he thinks the conviction should be upheld. Stewart said a Class l assault is “intentionally, knowingly and recklessly” inflicting physical injury. 1, contends his clients should have been charged with a Class 3 assault instead of a Class 1 assault. Aronow said Class l assaults involve physical injury while Class 3 is unconsented touching. Aronow filed the appeal on the Iranians’ behalf April 14 and the case was transferred from the Tempe Justice Court to the Maricopa County Superior Court. Lars Jones said the assault occurred while taking pictures of Iranian dem onstrators being detained in the P.E . E ast Building. Joe Schoepf, state attorney in charge of the appeal, said DO NT FALL BEHIND C lasses now available for GRE, PSYCH, GRE-BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP, OCAT, CPA. Azarang M irkhah and W illiam G alt, form er A S U stu den ts, hsve filed sn appeal in M aricopa County Superior Court on an a ssau lt con victio n last M arch. The assault allegedly happened during TOD AY an -Ira n ia n dem onstration last year in w hich Lars Jon es, a form er State P ress photographer, w as struck. 967-2967 F o r inform ation about oth or cantora in m oro than 80 m ajor U.S. citia a and abroad, C A L L TO LL FR E E 800-223-1782 W h e n d id y o u la st h a ve a P a p sm ear? If you’ve been putting off good health care for the most important person in your life, consider it how. Our nurse clinicians offer some basic health ser­ vices in an atmosphere that is supportive and non-threatening and at a price you can afford. Call us for more information. 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Bankroll your social life—w ith a good-paying, flexible, p a rt-tim e job a t R ound th e C o rn er R e s ta u ra n t. A pply in p erson a t a R ound th e C o rn e r n e a r you. A n e q u a l o p p o rtu n ity em ployer. Food & Spirits A very unique dining expe RESTAURANTS 1130 S. A lm a School Road / M esa Lunch 1130 - 2:30 M o n d a y Frid ay Dinner 5:00-11:00 M onday-Saturday 5 3 0-10:00 Sunday Happy H our 4:00-7:00 Sunday-Friday 1112 East A pache. Tem pe 966-4344_________________ Page 4 State Press Thursday, October 8,1981 ASASU cramps its own style o p in io n To change your language you must change your life. —Derek Walcott The delicate task of finding a sex verb Jeff Seilers Managing Editor, That people talk candidly about sex these days has revealed an outrageous gap in the English language, nam ely, that we have no conversational verb for coitus. Here we are sm ack in die middle of the Sexual Enlightenm ent, really free and sophisticated (and m ore sexually uptight than ever, according to polls), and no one has come tq> with a sex verb th at we can say without lowering our voice. H us missing verb, henceforth referred to as “SexVerb,” needs to be invented before any of the derogatory slang words come to common use and, sa• m ™ * * * « * ? * * * * . ‘ ‘» a w » - . . '? » ’ Page 8 State Press Thursday, October 8,1981 ASU MARKETING CLUB Presents THE CLOSE-UP WINNING SMILES CONTEST W e are looking fo r couples at ASU in an e ffo rt to find "A PAIR OF WINNING SMILES.'' C ouples are invited to register fo r an Interview at th e registration table located OUTSIDE ON THE MALL ON THE NORTH SIDE O F THE MEMORIAL UNION R egistration will begin Tuesday, O cto b er 6th; Interviews will begin M onday, O cto b er 12th. The w inning co u p le will receive o n e Sony V ideo Cassette R e co rd er— EACH! The 3 Runner-up couples will receive Sony Walkman— EACH! And the 20 Finalist Couples will receive Roll-Bag Luggage— EACH! W inners will be an noun ced by th e ASU M arketing Club at THE ARIZONA ROOM. MEMORIAL UNION MONDAY, OCTOBER 19TH, NOON Thursday, October 8,1981 State Press Page 9 G rad exhibits bring out best and w orst in a rt students Northlight steering commit­ By ‘Aracy Fletcher tee, m ade up of a class of art Entertainm ent w riter V. The once white, bare walls students. a re n 't so bare anym ore. “You have to talk about T hey’re covered w ith your work when you show it photographs and p a in t i n g s to the class,’’ she said. “You w ith your signature in the have to be able to explain com er. your work.” The gallery doesn’t seem When students exhibit in SO u n f a m i l i a r it’s m ore like the Northlight Gallery, they you’re in a room in your have to set up the entire ex­ house than in a campus hibit themselves. They have building. to repaint the walls, hang the But you’re scared, a bit ap­ works and when their twoprehensive, seeing a p art of week showing is over, they yourself hanging in a gallery have to take down their a rt on display for the all of ASU and respackle the walls for to see. die next exhibitor. F or ASU a rt student B ar­ “(hie m inute it can be b ara Gordon, seeing te r frustrating not knowing how photographs for the first : die exhibit will look. It’s tim e on the walls of die scary,” Gordon said. “B it North R o an of the N orth-- when your w o k is on the light G allery left h er scared, tealls and it looks good, it’s a and insecure, not sure of bote tremendous relief.’’ h er work wouM be received. ‘iThe showing has en­ The entire process of sub­ m itting w o k , having it couraged me to do more judged, and finally seeing it w o k ,” Gordon said. "This is unfold on the walls of a . one step along the way. g allery can be nerved There’s always another idea, w ra ck in g fo r. a n y always another way to pre­ sent aw ork.” i ' undergraduate a rt stu d en t R obert L azuka, who When Gordon applied for the Northlight exhibition last recently exhibited his prints April, she subm itted som e of in the H arry Wood Gallery her photographs to the on the first floor of the Art sw itch es sid e s o f the cam era to p o se with h er w ork in N orth lig ht G allery. Building, said, his show left him with a feeling of ac­ c o m p lis h m e n t y e t i n ­ completeness. ‘"Hie show inspires you to do more shows. Exhibiting your own w o k elevates it. Every piece is dressed iqi. and fram ed for a show. It’s not like handing in an assign­ m ent fora class,” he said. “ (But) you realize there’s so much m ore you want todo and so much m ore you can accomplish,” he said. Faculty advisor for the N orthlight G allery, B ill Jenkins said a public show­ ing work is an integral p art of any serious a rt student’s education. . “ T here’s a difference betw een assem bling a coherent group of a rt for ah exhibit and assem bling a p o rtfo lio of class assignm ents,” he said. “Ex­ hibitors have to hang and publicize their own shows. The exhibit gives them a Only 17 u n d erg rad u ate students out of approxim ate­ ly 1,200 m ajors in the a rt departm ent w ill show their w o k in solo exhibits this sem ester. According to the a rt d ep a rtm en t d irec to r Leonard Lehrer, “There is not a university in the coun­ try th at gives am ple space for undergraduate students to show their work. ASU has as good, if not better, outlets for undergraduate students. ’’We’re always looking a t the possibility of expanding exhibition space,” he said. “Expansion is an on-going process th at develops as students show the need for the space. Right now, we are looking a t the possibility of creating off-campus exhibi­ tion space for undergraduate students.” ‘It’s not like handing in an assignment for a class. You realize there’s so much more you want todo.’ m otivation, a push, to pull a good showing together.1’ But ASU m ay not have enough space to give every undergraduate a rt student the chance to exhibit his art. From a place you never heard of... a story you’ll never forget “Maybe it’s never oc­ curred to students that it’s possible to get m ore space by asking for it,” Jenkins said . “ N orthlight w as developed in 1972 when the students told the facility th at they wanted m o o space and a space popped up in the Fine A rts Annex.” “All students have to do is subm it a stru ctu re for developing the space and it will, in most cases, be given to them ,” he said. U n d e rg rad u a te art students can show their w o k in solo exhibits a t the Northlight Gallery and the Northlight Downstairs. The H arry Wood Gallery exhibits graduate student th esis p ro jec ts, but schedules u n d erg rad u ate showings if the spaces aren ’t filled with graduate work. The all-new CHUYS IS R E A D Y T O B L O W ! Join u s lor our Grand Opening Sunny a W V tilk l u in o ssoo nn Trading sets 9p.m. to 1a.m. Friday, O ct. 9 • Saturday, O ct. 10 no cover $4.00 cover CHUVS designed by m uslclana for m usicians 396 S. M ill Ave., Tempe MANN’SCHRISTOWM 1025 E. 249-2843 967-7457 Pape 10 State Press Thursday, October 8,1981 F a s h io n ta k e s fro n t B o h e m ia b rin g s ¿ate By Jim Austin Staff w riter In the bade alley b ars of Soho, England where punk rock has become a religion, faith has been dwindling. It seems the leather skinned, safety-pinned Johnny Rotten look a likes are being replaced by the followers of a new vogue known as Blitz m usic. Blitz has been described as m ore of a romantic revolution that is conceivably being pioneered by post-punk patriots who have grown out of the hate-pain Sex Pistol era. On first glance, Blitz appears to be in the same phylum as punk. However, after close observation it can be defined as a newngenus with a variety of species. The practioners are snappy dressers. Women have been witnessed to dress in world-wide attire, ranging from a Japanese Giesha girl to a fruit-toting chiquita banana girl from South America. However, they have also been seen dressed as formal as a Southern bell attending a plantation ball with hoops skirts and bonnets. , Men have also been known to accentuate the Blitz culture with ornate fashions. Three piece, tailed tuxedos are not irregular but neither is a detailed gypsy outfit trimmed with all the traditional ornam entations. This new culture, which has been brought to Phoenix by an organization called Bohemia, is a reaction against punk. Lynne Fischer, a m em ber of Bohemia and ASU business m ajor, said Blitz is exploding in Am erica and has a definite potential in the Phoenix m arket. “People are crying for an alternative to disco and country western-m usic,” she said. “New ideas are usually me me P wtx 20tl F sec Sur whi t sec em a rt “ the loni pec (Be ha[ F Blil par par — ( ' P u n k n o t d e a d ; b a s s is t s p e a k s o u t fr o m th e in s id e By Vince Monroe Entertainm ent w riter Punk rock is not dead. That’s what ASU business graduate Michael Cornelius will tell you. H ie 22-year-old bass player for the punk band J.F.A . (Jodie F oster’s Army) was lamenting public misconception of w hat punk rock and rockers are about and the tendency of the press to downgrade both. Cornelius said when most people think “punk rock,” the first image that enters their minds is one of a group of four or five lower-than-lowlifers bouncing around a stage hurling garbled lyrics with grating melodies to an audience of doped-up, off-the-deep-end types who dance with all the grace and rhythm of frenzied, disjointed zombies. “ Punk doesn’t have to be nasty or dirty,” Cornelius said, adding that although J.F.A . is a “loud and fast band” whose goal is to provide “aggressive e n t e r t a i n m e n t , ” they’re “singing songs about things people like u s are into,” such as skateboarding. “We’re just regular guys” and so are m em bers of m ast of the punk bands around town. Like m ost of those bands,J.F.A. does not hold or promote an anarchist philosophy. To those bands th at do, Cornelius says, “Hey, try to deal with reality in real term s. Don’t give any of fins hnllstwt about anarchy.” Cornelius m ay not like anarchist bands, but neither does he like bands th at have “wimped out,” and gone the mellow way of middle-of-the-road Top 40 m usic in order to attract m ainstream fans. “Mellow rem inds me of dead fruit,” he said. He said when a punk band sells out to escape its underground status, it “fails to expand musically and artistically,” in the end losing its Credibility among punk enthusiasts.” Rather, what all punk rockers want when they stage a concert (and the only place they are allowed to play is Madison Square Gardens, a run-down wrestling ring cm 38th SL and Van Buren; no erne else wants them) is an open-minded attitude and hearty participation from the audience. “If someone jum ps up and grabs the microphone, I think that’s terrific,” said Cornelius. A d e clin e is not a pretty thing to se e . . . B y K a r l B y rn ■ ! 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Jogger Sport Shoe Mountain 1 Blues Brothers Sunglasses ai at Introductory Flight $20 a P I LEARN TO FLY $399 Except Sale Items 1DeeCee bitter music and only a tem pting hint of its real potential, the naked and aw are interview s with musicians and fans. In its overuse of perform ances, the film is barely viewable; the music becomes too scary and too numbing. But it is easify worth two; three, or four sittings to see the revealing sequence near the film ’s end when punk fans are candidly interviewed in a dim ly-lit studio. In this sequence, surprise and sym pathy áre perm anently separated. The most searing view comes from the fan Eugene, a true Holden Caulfield figure who, through editing, is appropriately chosen to m i the sequence (after such statem ents as “I don’t know where my parents are”) with the blunt, disturbed declaration “f...” Is this uncomfortable? Is this threatening? Well, as director Penelope Spheeris said, “It takes a lot of audacity to decide to say something about these people.” Entertainm ent editor The people in this film are wasted. Among other things, th at’s why it’s called “The Decline (of W estern Civilization).” More than ju st a look a t raw musical performances, this film finds the truths of the endangered lives that create the music. It’s a profile of Los Angeles punk bands circa winter 1978-80, and it lets the movement speak for itself. Caustically. Much in the style of The Who’s semi-documentary “The Kids are A lright,” “The Decline” mixes music with interviews. Here, though, the interviews are the bottom line; and the m usic, nowhere near die joy heard in “The Kids,” is rath er a world of pain. In that sense, the film falters, including an overdose of 15% OFF All Sleeping Bags iK c e s u r « ^ If punk music, real punk m usic, not the whitewashed stuff of Blondie, is so alive, then why can’t we find it on our dials? Cornelius said the local radio station programmers don’t want it on the a ir because either they don’t like it or they think if they did put it on the a ir no one would listen. And without listeners, ratings would crash and the station would lose money. Punk bands ju st keep plugging along in spite of it all, Cornelius said. So what can the public expect from punk music in the future? “It’s not going to become p rettier,” Cornelius said. $1745 vatu# for only $1399 *20 hours dual flight instruction *15 hours solo flight *10 hours ground instruction choipe of 36 hour classroom ground school or Beta-Max audio-visual ground school program. ‘all books and supplies 'choice of Cessna 152 or Piper Tomohawk. < Private Pilot Ground School Only *36 hours of classroom instruction Multi-Engine Course . $393 *Sen5nole<,U*1 ins,ruc,ion in our ,ullV equipped Piper 'Price includes one hour tor multi-engine check-ride. V E N TU R E AVIATION IS L O C A T E D A T SKV B LV D IM 1116 * a j e n AIR BUILDING. FO R M 3 4 2 1 3 C A L L K A TH Y A T 275*0502 or SA N D Y A T iEE P riz e s a! e v e ry s h o w ! e ts a $1 0 0 D is c o u n t C a rd lo r NG STO N E S RECORDS H A P P Y T R A IL S s to re s ' e v e ry F r id a y a n d S a tu rd a y Thursday, October 8,1981 State Press Page 11 fro n t s e a t in B litz ; is la te s t to P h o e n ix xink rock nny were of a post-punk Pistol ne l it can be sve been rom a lana girl sn seen plantation itz culture are not nmed oenix by inst punk. 1 business a definite nd 2 usually ashed i it on our ere don't or they an. And :ion would it all, in the lid. itential, id fans. y imbing. see the fans are equence, 1. ine, a is ich ;” ) with as . audacity met with a lot of resistance, but this one hasn’t. We have met nothing but enthusiasm ,” she added. Phoenix’s first initiation to Blitz cam e Septem ber 17, when Bohemia sponsored a Blitz party a t the Jockey Chib, 20th street and Camelback. Fischer said 350 people representing “quite a cross section of people” attended the event. “We were very surprised how dressed up people were. Some people knew what Blitz was all about.” Unlike punk’s riot inciting pop tunes, the music cranes second in im portance in the Blitz movement, with emphasis on ornate fashions and an appreciation for the arts. “The people are definitely the sta rs,” said Fisher, “It is the first tim e fashion has been associated with music in a long time. It’s à return to dressing up and I think the people of Phoenix are looking for something like this. We (Bohemia) a re ju st trying to provide a place fra* it to happen,” she said. Fischer said Bohemia has tentatively planned another Blitz party for mid October due to the success of the first party. “It (the success) was enough to w arrant another party,” she said. P u n k calen d ar not sold befo re its tim e By Jodi Summers Dorland Entertainm ent w riter F irst there was the “pin-up” girls. Then cam e the “Men” and the “Women,” and now, there is “The Punks of ASU.” The newest calendar is the pet project of K.C. Green and his company, Punk Masson Productions. He said he thought about putting out “The Custodians of ASU” or “H ie Cafeteria Ladies of ASU” but he finally decided on the punk idea. The calendar is full of witty photographs, many of which were shot on campus. One month shows a girl standing on a tractor asking her m anager, “How come last y ear’s model got a F erarri?” An insert which was done as a “last m inute thing” looks like the cover of the 1982 “Men of ASU’’ calendar with a m an in the .water lifting off Ins swimming goggles, but in addition to the original idea, there is a fem ale’s hand holding his nose. Green feels his calendar is m ore entertaining than the others, which have sexual overtones. “You can get a playboy calendar for half the price and all the girls are naked,” he said. The price of the calendar is $4.94, just 6 cents less than the other calendars. Green chose the price “to undercut the competition.” / Green is a form er Pike (from P i Kappa Alpha, the f fraternity that prints the Girls of ASU calendar) and is between sem esters a t ASU. Green said he was not in competition with the other calendars and would not have done it if the others had not received so much publicity. Punk Masson Productions has put on two parties to promote the calendar (one a t Dooley’s), but Green said he doesn’t “want to get into a lot of advertising until the. end of the year.” . Progressive Series hosts Freeman By Jodi Summers D o r land Entertainm ent w riter ASASU’s P ro g ressiv e Music Series will present its first event, a perform ance by jazz reed m usician Chico Freem an, Friday at 8:00 p.m. Sharon Glicksman, head of the P ro g ressiv e M usic Series and form er head of the Neeb Hall Film Series, said the concert is an evolu­ tion of the Jazz Series. “The function of the series, which will present two concerts this sem ester, is to provide other form s of music in addition to the e s o te ric j a z z , ” ' Said Glicksman. “W ew anttoprovide forms of music not usually available to the stu­ dent body.” ‘I t ’s an im portant pro­ gram. A university is a place to learn and develop new ideas; that’s what this series is for,” Glicksman said. According to Glicksman the series is designed to lose money because the perform ­ ances “won’t please m ost students.” But the series has its benefits. “It’s an oppor­ Northwestern University. tunity to bring nationally While in college. Freem an known jazz artists, who formed two bands, Thunderwould not normally come, to funk Symphony and Streetfile Valley.” Reed instrum ent virtuoso dancer, a progressive elec­ Chico Freem an established tric jazz band. He also him self on New York’s played with the Four Tops Greenwich Village jazz cir­ and the Dells. He had cuit playing with his band previously played w ith which included Jay Hog- inner-city bluesm en like gard, Cecil McBee and Reg­ Memphis Slim and Junior Wells. gie Workman. A native of Chicago, Tickets fra* Freem an’s Freem an studied bass, per­ concert a t the K err Cultural cussion, alto saxophone and Center, 8610 N. Scottsdale trumpet on a scholarship at Road, are $5 for students. • V-" ‘ ç Outstanding vocalists propel LOT'S 'Penzance' By Vivian W arner Opinion Page Editor Com municating G ilbert and Sullivan’s sa tiric a l English w it to m odern American audiences is no easy task. But ASU’s Lyric Opera Theatre gave it a good shot in their current produc­ tion of “The P irates of Pen­ zance.” The 1879 comic operetta, directed by Sylvia Debenport, centers on the pirate apprentice Frederic, whose sense of duty is so extrem e it is absurd. Ken Goodenberger’s fine voice and theatrics m ake Frederic’s approach to his circum stances seem alm ost reasonable and his sincerity appear alm ost adm irable. Yet he succeeds a t making both look just plain silly. Frederic’s nurse, Ruth, was played very well by Diane Timmerman. Timmerm an’s clear and bold singing and acting were especially appreciated when she told of a m ishap in “When Frederic Was a Little Lad.” Another strong perform ­ ance was given by Michael Sokol as M ajor-G eneral Stanley, in his solo “I Am the Model of a Modern M ajorGeneral. The piece takes jabs at the English navy, a liberal education, and the E n g lis h n otion o f a gentleman. The most im pressive sing­ ing, however, was done by Rebecca Kwart as Mabel, Frederic’s sw eetheart and one of the M ajor-General’s daughters. Her solo “Poor W andering O ne” w as marvelous. The overacting of the c h o r u s e s —S t a n l e y ’s daughters, the pirates and th e Penzance policemen—brought a lot of life and humor to the set. The spunk of the choruses was also necessary in attracting attention to some of Gilbert’s humorous lines that other­ wise may have gone un­ noticed. There isn’t a convention or value left unlaughed at by the tim e G ilbert and Sullivan are through. One of their odd twists is an unexpected mo­ ment when pirates and gen­ try hail poetry together. Of course, the end of the story has m ore twists than a pretzel. 'Heat' keeps murderous intrique steaming By Rory Hardesty Entertainm ent w riter Ned Racine may be going to hell. Or he’s already there. He’s living in a vat of heat and fire, passion, sweat and desperation. He’s the m urdering lawyer of “Body Heat,” sucked into a sm art lady’s web of deception. W illiam Hurt is the lawyer; crafty, resourceful, but too susceptible. Kathleen Turner is the wife of rich man Richard Crenna. She is beautiful, lonely, and not a t all dumb. They m eet, he falls in love with her, and they plot the m urder of her hus­ band. Like “The Postm an Always R ings T w ice” e a rlie r th is y e a r and “American Gigolo” a year and a half ago, money and sex, in that order, remove conscience and m oral, and m urderous thoughts a re : parlayed into action. As the plot weaves in and out of the range of possibili­ ty, raie realizes this could never happen in real life; the p e rp e tra to r, T urner, assum es too much of other people. The m ovie, with its visuals, mood, music, {riot and characters, has nothing to lose. It’s heated with raw talent, a classy m ystery that’s not too slick. No one will be discouraged by the {dot being so webbed and complex; it’s the getting there, to the picture’s end, that leaves the audience en­ thralled. 'Continental D ivide' is ju s t too cute By K arl Byrn Entertainm ent editor A lot is being said about Lawrence Kasdan’s shining talent as a screen w riter, after the success of the Kasdan-scripted “The Em pire Strikes Back,” “R aiders of the Lost Ark,” and now “Body Heat” and “Continental Divide.” Kasdan does have an im pressive skill for one-liners and character in­ terplay, but in “Continental Divide” he is dragged down by an idea that is just too cute for consideration. Kasdan manages to establish a strong tie between reporter E rnie Souchak (John Belushi) and mountain-woman Nell (B lair Brown), but the prem ise of the affair, that the two fall in love when Souchak is sent to do a feature on the tough wildlife researcher and that the opposing backgrounds of the two are inevitable but bearable, asks the audience to think in a rom antic fram e of mind that is for one, m ore than Belushi can support, and worse, sim ply comes off as a joke. DOUBLE DELIGHT w ith coupon Levi's Jeans Bargain Priced ! P e ca n $10.fi9> $10-$12-$13 $10.99 $7.99 C ream y Butterscotch Wm $&oo C ontem porary M exican Dining Additional 10% off ^ with this ad. (u se o u r lay-away) DRAWERS GALORE O ffe r good o n ly at 9S0 So. MILL 423 W. Main SW Comer Main &Country Club Dairy Queen Across from Gam mage Coupon expires 12-18-81. ,■-;j (Next to W lncheil'a) Hours: M o n .-S a t.0 to S 969-6283 HAPPY HOUR M on.-Fri. 3:00-6:00 FREE H O RS D’OEUVRES, CHIPS AN D S A LS A Open daily for lunch and dinner. Luncheon Specials M on.-Sat. 11-2 Happy Hour M on.-Fri. 3-6 p.m. 2700 S. MILL AVENUE • 908-7759 Mill Ave. betw een Broadway & S outhern Page 12 State Press Thursday, October 8,1961 Little Theatre now full house thanks to support from Mesa By Tracy Fletcher Entertainm ent w riter The Mesa Little Theatre makes the Gaslight Theatre literally burst a t thé seam s when they perform any of their four productions during a season. Their ticket sales and memberships tripled during the 1960-41 season, and are expected to double again during the 1961-82 season. “We are organizing a movement to get a new per­ forming a rts center in the Mesa area,” said Christine Brim er, ex-president of the Mesa Little Theatre. “But until then, we’re building good, strong theater to put into a new building.” The Mesa little Theatre presents four plays during a season. This season, they will present “The Crucible” from Oct. l to 11, the first serious dram a the theater has produced in the four short years the theatre has been in the Gaslight Theatre, located at 155 N. Center in the Mesa Activity Center. “The Crucible,” set in 17th century colonial America, explores the persecution and terror of the Salem witch hunt trials. From Dec. 3 to 13, the Mesa little Theatre will pre­ sent “The Sunshine Boys,” a comedy by Neil Simon. Open auditions tor the play will be held from 7 p m. to 10 p.m. on Oct. 12 a t the Gaslight Theatre. “We hold community-wide auditions for every produc­ tion,” Brim er said. “This gives people in the area who are interested in the theatre the chance to gain ex­ perience. Not lust acting ex­ perience, but technical ex­ perience with lights, sound, make-up and the like.” “We gave, three cash scholarships to high school students in I960 to further their education in theatre,” Brim er said. “This year we’re increasing that to four scholarships.” “We are a total communi­ ty theatre,” she said.” And the entertainm ent the Mesa Little Theatre gives to Mesa m ight be repaying a debt it owes to toe city. The Mesa Little Theatre, which began in 1936, is one of the oldest com m unity theaters in Arizona. They performed in a sm all theatre donated by the city of Mesa until the 1960s. DAISY SPECIAL When toe old theatre was demolished because of its age, the Mesa Little Theatre was a theater without a home, performing in trailer parks and schools until the city of Mesa donated the Gaslight Theatre to them in 1976. A cooperative venture between the city and the M esa L ittle T h e a t r e renovated toe G aslight Theatre, which the city still donates to toe theatre. The Mesa Little T heàtre Hours: Mon.-Frl. 8-6 Saturday 9-5 w Be watching for the Mr. Graham Central Station Body Btälder's Contest. With my very ow n Super Fantastic Hoagies, Steaks, Italian Sausage, and M eatballs. 55 Varieties w ith m y own Special Italian seasonings. iGreasy Tony’s is giving you such a deal you cannot afford MOT to try i t Once you try us you w ill becom e addicted to our food!!! Customer. SKINNY HAVEN RESTAURANT 5024 S. Price Rd. Times of each perform ­ ance and additional informa­ tion about the Mesa Little Theatre is available by call­ ing 834-9600. {Low C ost Plaza) C om er of Price & B aseline Rd. Tem pe • 839-6006 atom Hours: 11 a m. iolOp.m. Mon.-Sat. 12 p. m. to 10p.m. Sunday 6 -9 M eet new friends Friday & Saturday Party Nights ONE WEEK ONLY __ If I can put up a name such as G reasy T ony's and becom e famous, the product has to b*f great!!! I am not Crazy or Greasy, so check it out and; take it from there. D igit. 921 E. U niversity a t R u ral 10a.m.-3a.m.Fri.-Sat. ■• ' m " v,' ', US (N o Charge For E xtra G rease) par customer. 1per 25* D ra ft B e e r f o r th e m e n 6 - 9 BE TH ERE! F am ous Throughout th e East and N ow th e W est $1.00 off on Any 16" Roll 50* off on Anv 8" Torpedo RoH Limit 1 Limit: B e e r & W e ll W in e Formerty The Flower Children Flower and Plant Shops "COUPON" Coupon good for one Free 8undae with purchase at all Skinny Hawn Restaurants. Offer good thru Ô ct 3ft 1961. to tlw calories of regular Ice cream. Made from Original Skinny Delicious Ice Milk formula. More then 41 rotating flevors. WOWI THEY’RE SKINNY « ¡ ¡ i f DELICIOUS I L A D IE S N IG H T % ROSEBUD FLORIST 15 W. 6th Street • 968-0781 Season tickets for the Mesa little Theatre’s four perform ances cost $10. Each evening perform ance costs $4 and m atinee perform­ ances cost $3. WITH AN Y LU N CH or DINNER PU R CH ASE T H U R S D A Y IS mmmw f »V(£/ v'ÿ' will perform “The Curious Savage,” by John Patrick, from Jan. 28 to Feb. 7,1962. Auditions for the comedy will be held on Dec. 71 Free Sundae A riz o n a 's L a rg e st N ig h tclu b s n d E n te rtain m en t C a n ts r ‘Everything’s coming up Daisies’ Only »200 a bunch r i I m m im Private Parties for your group rf or organization. C a ll Larry M ancuso 279-2936 GRAHAM CENTRAL STATION (33rd Aye. & Intoan School) * N Camelback 33rd A ■■ V, 1 E 7 Indian School Rd. 0 [4029 N. 33rd Ave. •Indian School and 33rd Ave (One mile West of Black Canyon Freeway in Hayden Shopping Center) 2799800 ■ i r G rah am C en tral Station I 1 1L M0 “ ASU«^ TO 1 Thursday, October 8,1961 State Press Page 13 Markov, will be presented a t 6 p.m. KAET-TV FILMS The series “T hat’s Hollywood” will present “The Fox The Union Cinema will show “Stir Crazy” (Oct. 8 to 11) and Sunday, Oct. ll “Cosmos” will feature “Blues for a Red-Planet,” a review Tots” a t 7:30 p.m. 1rhe episode stars such child greats as “Divine M adness” (Oct. 13 to 14) in the lower level of the MU Jackie Cooper, Elizabeth Taylor and Judy G arland. at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Admission is $1.50 with student I.D. , of scientific thought about M ars, a t 7 p.m. “Lucy and the F irst Fam ily,” a segm ent of the series Monday,. Oct. 12 and $2 without. “Odyssey,” will be shown atj9 p.m. The segm ent discusses “No M ore Mountains: The Story of Hmong,” a world The Neeb Hall Film Series will offer “Popeye” Oct. 9 to ll at 7 p.m . and 9 p.m. and “Monty Python and the Holy G rail” special about the Hmong people during the Vietnam War, the discovery of 14 skeletonsin Ethoipia which are believed to be nearly 3.5 million years old. Oct. 9 and 10 a t 11 p.m. Admission is $1.50 with student I.D will be shown a t 6 p.m. The new season of “The Shakespeare P lays” , with Anthony Wednesday, Oct. 14 and $2 without. “Sweden: Waiting for Spring,” a world special about the Hopkins, will prem iere with a presentation of “Othello” a t THEATRE people of Sweden, will be shown a t 6 p.m. 8:30 p.m. The Student Experim ental Theatre will perform the play The Academy Award-Winning dram a “Board and C are,” “Women Behind B ars” in the Payne Lab School Alternative Tuesday, Oct. 13 depicting the relationship of . two m entally handicapped “Who Killed Georgi Markov?” a world special about the Space through Oct. 11 a t 8 p.m. The performances are free. plot that ended in the m urder of Bulgarian poet Georgi young people, will be shown at 9:30 p.m. MUSIC COUPONM " ! ^ g r M ^ The sixth annual “Octubafest,” staged by School of Music faculty m em ber Raymond Nutaitis and featuring ASU tuba students, will run through Oct. 27. Free performances will A tte n tio n : play in the R ecital Hall of ASU’s music building on Oct. 11 WITH A DELICIOUS and 12 a t 7:30 p.m. ITALIAN ICE Fo reig n C a r O w n ers > The Arizona State University Chamber O rchestra will per­ FROM S A V E U P TO 70% 'O N REC YC LED F O R E I G N A U T p PAR TS form its first concert of the 1981-82 season in Gammage M G T R IU M P H H O N D A D A T S U N TO Y O T A .V W a n d O TH ER S Center tonight a t 7:30 p.m. The perform ance is free. A Jazz Combo, featuring students of the ASU Jazz Studies A l l M odels F o re ig n 243.3291 program , will give a free concert in the ASU Music Theatre FOR A LIMITED TIME ' 3 0 2 4 So. 4 0 th S tre e t Phx. (near 4 0 t h A U n iv e r s it y ) on Oct. 12at7:30p.m . 2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1 English cellist Robert Cohen will give a recital at the ASU 968-4202 WITH THIS COUPON. * M e n tio n this a d A g e t a n a d d it io n a l 5% o f f ! Music R ecital Hall on Oct. 13 at7:30 p.m. The recital is free. 1037 S. R U R A LI _ OFFER EXPIRES 10-1441. 1___ ____ — — — COUPON GALLERIES The University Art Collections in Matthew’s Center is hosting three exhibits that will run through Oct. 18: Jose Luis Serrano’s experim ent in a new method of printm aking en­ titled “Silicografia,” a collection of powder boxes, perfume bottles, and purses entitled “Containers: Boudoir Fantasies 1920-1940,” and prints and etchings by the renowned American landscape artist George Elbert B urr. “Other Spaces/O ther Places,” an exhibition of mixed media con­ A U n ise x H airstyling S tu d io struction by Lois Coren and Maureen O’Hara Ure, can be seen in the Memorial Union Gallery through Oct. 30. Gallery hours are9a.m . to 5 p.m. weekdays. Reg. $12.00 Northlight G allery will display the works of photographers B arbara DeGenevieve and Jack Fulton through Oct. 22. Gallery hours are 10:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, or by appointment. Student exhibitions a t Northlight Gallery will display the works of B arbara Gordon in the north room through today. The photographs of John Harvey and Scot Spencer will be ex­ hibited Oct. 11 to 22 also in the north room. The exhibitions * 2 2 . 0 0 Reg. $45.00 can be viewed during regular gallery hours and by appoint­ Long Hair Extra ment. Hair Cut Not Included The H arry Wood Art Gallery will present the Anne Schutte M.F.A. Thesis Exhibition Oct. 11 to 15. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 11 a.m . to 4 w ith p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. COOL OFF! SN O W HAIRCUTS *8.00 Perm anent W ave & Body W ave Special Kathy, Leslie, Jenny o r Karen (Valid with coupon only. Expires 10/17/81.) L a m b d a C h i A lp h a W ild W ild West 967-2360 1041 E. LEMON LITTLE SISTER RUSH PARTY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9-8:30 p.m. 414 Adetphi Drive For information and rides, call 965-6128 AT T SAINTS CATHOLIC NEWMAN CENTER College Ave. & University • 967-7823 OPEN FORUM SUPER SAVERS "W hat you wanted to know about the Bible, but were afraid to ask.” from Rm m hliible Pizza Restaurants 1036 S. Rural •968-4606 $4.99 Large Pizza * Up to 3 item s Expires 11/7/81. One coupon per person. Not valid on takeout. Moderators: Sr. Rosemary Rader, Assistant Professor, Religious Studies, at A S U Ms. Sue Lumb, Graduate Student in Religious Studies at A S U Fr. John Cullinan, Pastor of St. Joseph’s Parish in Phoenix N EW C O U N T R Y STY LE PIZZA $3.00 OFF A BIG ONE $2.00 OFF A LITTLE ONE Country Style P iz z a Expires 11/7/81. One coupon per person. Not valid on fakeout. M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 2 — 7 :3 0 p .m . E V E R Y O N E W E L C O M E !' N E X T O P E N F O R U M : " Religious Cults Today” MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16 — 7:30 p.m. Page 14 State Press Thursday, Octobers, 1981 ASU freshman safety thrown to the wolves By Tony Alba Sports w riter It was a classic example of being thrown to the wolves, or even more appropriate, to the dogs. Nate King, a strong safety, got his first start in a m ajor college football game last Saturday against the University of Washington Huskies. A freshm an was at the mercy of the 12th-ranked team in the country. “I tried not to be nervous,” King said. “I just tried to concentrate on what I was supposed to do. I knew if I could do that, everything would turn out okay. “We played great team defense. The linebackers had a great game and that helped me because I didn’t have to get in on too many of their tackles,” added King. King said he had a pretty good idea at Camp Tohtozona that he would get a fair amount of playing time. “We had a scrim m age at cam p and I ranked pretty good in the scrim m age,” he said. “As the weeks went by, I knew I was right on (Paul) Moyer’s tail (starting strong Need New W heels? Become a plasm a donor! 310 is paid per donation and you can donate twice weekly (but please w ait 72 hours between donations.) That’s up to $ 1 0 0 a month! find that can help pay your car payments! New donors bring this ad for your first donation receive an extra 3 2 .0 0 Call now for an appointment. 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 University Plasm a Center 1 0 1 5 So. Rural Rd. N ate King continued page 16 O p e n M o n d a y-S a tu rd a y 9 :0 0 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. lTIigCoed C a rp e t Formerly located at 715 S. Forest has a new address • 3116 E. Camelback at the Biltmore Plaza, Phoenix H o u se DORMS, APTS., VANS ALL SIZES NEW & * (USED o fe d e ra lly licensed 10% DISCOUNT to ASU STUDENTS W e still carry your favorite brands. »Wrangler *03081110 •Esprit •St. Michel •Andre Biol * UP 1516 E . V a n B u re n P h o e n ix 955-7930 Hrs.: Mon.-Sat. 9-6 l: tfltV Hurry! Hurry! 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University Tempe 968-9487 Thursday, October 8,1981 State Press Page 15 It's time coaches get priorities straight r 1 When professional football players blunder, they get fin­ ed. When college players do the sam e, they get slapped. When high school gridders commit ghastly crim es — like sipping a beer — they get beat up. What happens to those Lit­ tle Leaguers when they decide to spend a night out on the town with the boys? It seem s that som e coaches have decided to take thigs into their own hands. Literally. The three examples given are simply th a t— examples. They’re exceptions, not the rule. But the case of the high school player who did get pummeled is pushing the limit a bit too far. It happened in Aurora, Colo., a t four-year old O verland High School. Teenage nose guard Ben W arrington,'' a senior, de­ cided to have a beer party at his home. So what? W arrington supposedly knew team rules prohibited any such gathering, but had it anyway. He took a risk, but quite possibly — to him — mingling on the gridiron wasn’t as im portant as fraternizing socially. Is that wrong? To his head Coach Ken Milano, it was. If he broke a rule he’ll have to pay the consequences. W arrington did. Only he probably didn’t think his penalty would be in the form of a bruised and battered body. Maybe a benching or a suspension, but not an abided piece of flesh. Milano told his team to “get W arrington.” They did. They also didn’t forget to “get” the other players in­ volved in the party. What Milano’s team did was kick, punch, and altogether punish the players with a ‘gauntlet. ’ This gauntlet was effec­ tive. W arrington was forced to run the course while other players pounded him down to size. Milano apparently felt they didn’t do a good HILLEL enough job, so Warrington ran the course a second time. Milano also shoved and smacked Warrington. Milano should be con­ gratulated for doing such a complete and thorough job. However, Milano is not a hit man — he’s a high school football coach. A leader by example; a m an to respect. I wonder if he could look in ■ the m irror and respect what ■ 20% OFF ALL SERVICES Applies to min. $15.00 service he sees. 50% OFF SCULTPURED NAILS Oh, Milano’s paying for it. Re{|. $50 Now $25 He received an indefinite MANICURES, Reg. $10 Now $5 suspension—with pay. Expires 5-5-82. Valid only with this coupon. ■ Now Milano’s even filing ■ suit against his being fired because of the incident. i What runs through this Mill & Broadway - Broadway Plaza Tempo • 968-8144 In * / k ! Hrs: Mon. - Sat. 8 a .m . - 6 p.m . main’s mind? Does he really think he did the right thing? I /ulnm Inivw T u es., W ed., Thurs. eves by appointm ent Ju st two years ago, a sim ilar item occurred on the i r^U O N 'S DEN HAIRCUTTERS c o n t in t M d p ig o ll ATHLETIC SH O E FACTORY INVITES YOU f O COM E AND CELEBRATE a t h le t ic OUR 3RD ANNIVERSARY SALE WITH SHOE« FACTORY BIG SAVINGS A N N IV E R S A F T Y ^ G R E A T V A L U E S FO R T H E EN TIR E F A M IL Y ! It's adidas” SUKKAH TIME! Help build and decorate our Sukkah. ORION 1 9 " M ENS & BO YS SIZES: 4-12% W OMEN’S SIZES IN WHITE SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11 10:30 a.m. REG. *30.00 SAVE Refreshm ents 1012 S. Mill Ave. M A N Y IN -STO R E S P E C I A L S ... C H E C K T O D A Y ! W O M E N ’S i m e HMR3N COURTSHOES THE FA M O U S T I T A N “ ED M esh upper, th e perfect sh o e for ALL court sports. CHINESE BUFFET R e g . 19.99 Hurry for Best Selection! VALUES TO 15.00 FEATUMNOTHELARGEST VARETY' » AUTHENTIC CANTONEK ENTREEIAVAUKC TO CHOOSE FROM1-10SELEC­ TIONS EVERY DAY IN­ CLUDES 8ALA0 EAR. A ¿30PM pm $375 1110W. 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I knew if he had a bad game, I would get my chance.” Moyer’s bad gam e came in ASU’s 24-21 loss to the Washington State Cougars and King got the break he was looking for. “Coach (Willie Shaw, ASU defensive backfield coach) said we should grade out at about ninety percent in each gam e, which is about one m istake per gam e,” King said. “He said that eightyfive percent was the stan­ dard for playing and that if we fell below that, we would not play. He (Moyer) fell belo w th at ag a in st Washington State.” King said he approves of Shaw’s system. "You don’t autom atically come out if you fall below eighty-five percent,” he said. “Somebody behind you has to be playing well. I think it’s a good system because defensive backs can’t afford to make any mistakes or it will cost the team .” King said he realizes that the starting job is his for now, but he isn’t letting up. “Paul’s a good player and he’s still practicing very r Harkins Theatres hard,” he said. “ If I mess up, we both know he’ll be right back in there.” King cam e to ASU after lettering three years in basketball and two years in football a t O ceanside (Calif.) High School. Until his senior year, King felt he would play college basket­ ball rath er than college foot­ ball. “I always thought I would play basketball,” he said, “but I didn’t play basketball my senior year because my coaches had a misunderstanding. I was recruited by Oregon and some sm all colleges for basketball, but I really didn’t know I could get a football scholarship until my senior year. ‘T he sum m er before my senior year I started getting some football publicity. I really put a lot into it as a senior and it paid off,” he said. King was recruited for football by USC and the University of Nevada-Las Vegas in addition to ASU. “I liked the hot weather, but I also wanted to get out of Southern California and see what other parts of the world were like,” he said. “It was hard to bum USC down and I will be fun to see him now. ” King will get his second start of his career this Satur­ day as ASU takes on the Oregon Ducks. King said he expects Oregon to give him more trouble than any other team this year. “Oregon will be tough because they have a variety package,” King said. “They run the option, power sweeps, and they pass well. It’ll probably be the toughest test all year for me, because I haven’t gone against teams like that very much. They use the whole field, so I’U have to be alert.” Now, discipline ,is what it’s all about. You' have to be where you are supposed to be.” King said there are two. games he is looking forward to this year more than the others. “I want to go to California to play Stanford and UCLA, because I have lots of friends and relatives there,” he said. “I also have a friend who is a defensive back a t Stanford. He kept telling me that he would start a t Stan­ ford and that I would never play at ASU. Now, I’m play­ ing and he’s not. I think it still don’t know why I did. aspect of the gam e is the big­ They have an excellent pro­ gest difference of the game gram, but at the time, I between high school and col­ thought ASU was the best lege. “You have to read certain place for me.” At 6-foot-4 and 190 pounds, keys,” he said. “You can’t King might be considered to just look a t the quarterback. be a little slender to be a You have to read certain defensive back. But he says blocks and notice a lot of lit­ tle things.” his size is not a factor. King also said his assign­ “I like to hit, so I ju st put my whole body into my ment is different a t ASU tackles,” he said. “It’s only than it was in high school. “This is the first year that my first year and I think I’ll probably put on about pass coverage has been my another ten pounds before I main objective,” he said. graduate, but for now, it’s “In high school, I played more like a linebacker and I not a big factor.” King said the m ental roamed where I wanted to. W EEKDAYS 9:00 to 9:00 SATURDAY 9.-00 to 7:00 SUNDAY 10:00 to 5:00 f O O 'W l i A * ' S S e c tA tg IH SÄ SlJSSfeiU .-Ä C A M E LV IE W CALIFORNIA 7 STRAIGHT FASHION JEANS FOR LADIES 9 4 5 -6 1 7 8 * ENGROSSING AND TENDER. 9 —Judith Crist moving List 27.95 It’s a W estern classic — with authentic metal buttons, two front pockets and a durable cotton denim fabric. C hoose from w ashed or unw ashed styles. The best-fitting fashion je a n s you’ll find anyw here! “C alifornia S tra ig h ts” are m ade from a pre­ shrunk heavyw eight c o tto n denim fabric — an d tailored fo r th e trim m est fit p o ssib le. W ith f a m o u s five p o c k e t d e s ig n in 8izes3-13. country MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS List 9.95 6 “ A great variety of handsom e plaids — all of warm, comfortable pure cotton fabric. Ideal for school, hunting and casual wear. CANVAS HIKMG BOOTS FOR MEN AND BOYS ¿ le a n t to- ¿ le a n t "POWDER PULLOVER OR P0WDBTZIP" JACKETS A film by ß aieo t*lU o m aA Cesrdry Product “ T E S S ” star N e w S h o u iin * ! N A STA SSJA K IN SK I in YOUR CHOICE Reg. 18.95 “tauntingly N O W S H O W IN G ! v w R § ________ r STAMTÍ _ LOS A R C O S 9 4 9 -8 8 5 1 TOMORROW![ Scottsdale R d .& M c Dowell I ceduta! STARRING a « Q l IT'S RACK* IT'S BIGGER* IT »BETTER* Ahd rfs. COMM'ATYA! II S h o w fw t Tuesday is KDKB Dollar Day at all Harkins Theatres! They’re g re a t for hiking, fishing, h u n tin g o r school! F eatu rin g ru g g ed c a n v a s u p p e rs a n d high-traction lug so le s. In m en ’s a n d b o y s’ sizes. 680C.681C. SS| MARCELLO r iT Y o f W O M F N MASTROIANNH C Reg. to 37.95 ^ SPORT CENTERS In a w id e a rra y o f c o lo r com binations, you’ll choose from pullover style with front pocket and Vi-zlppen or jacket style with full zipper and two pockets. Both have knit cuffs and collar, plus poly­ cotton shell. #9911,9913. 921 E. Southern, Tempe 3518 W. Northern Ave., Phoenix 3107 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix 4623 E. Cactus Rd., Phoenix i T hursday, O ctober 8,1981 S tate P ress Page 17 SU volleyball hosts Aztecs y Michael Graham ports w riter T he ASU w o m e n ’s olleyball team is going to ve to get set to play giant *er again tonight, as the to. 1-ranked San Diego State tecs invade Tempe. Coach Dale Flickinger’s vils returned to town from West Coast this weekend th a split from their alifornia foes. ASU -feated Long Beach State n four games and then were ounced by a USC squad ho F lickinger claim s, “played as well as any team e’ve faced this year.” The split on the coast left Devils with a 5-6 record nd a hold on the No. 11 spot n the rankings. F lickinger expressed ixed emotions concerning !s team ’s play in California. “We played fairly well against Long Beach,” the Sun Devil m entor said. ‘Against USC it was a com­ bination of our team playing very poor(ly) and them play­ ing exceptional(ly).” While ASU experienced a mediocre showing over the weekend, the San Diego State Aztecs perform ed nothing short of a m iracle in defeating the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country in suc­ cessive outings. Coach Rudy Suwara’s Aztecs defeated the top-ranked UCLA Bruins at Pauley Pavilion on Friday and, for ah encoré, disposed of second-ranked University of Santa B arbara to comtheir assault on the country’s leather Mapping elite. San Diego brings to town somewhat of a one-woman show with the sta r fading 5foot-6 Laurel Brassey, a 27- 715 So. Hayden Tempe, AZ year old “junior” , who was a m em ber of the i960 U.S. Olympic team and has been a m ember of Am erica’s na­ timiai squad for the past nine years. Brassey is currently the WCAA leader hi hitting percentage (.571) and ser­ vice aces (3.5 per gam e). Coach Flickinger believes in the theory that so goes Brassey, so go the Aztecs. “I would say that the main team strength of San Diego S ta t e is sim ply h e r (B rassey),” Flickinger said. “We defeated them last year with a team that consists of v irtu ally the sam e in­ dividuals which surround her now.” While last season’s upset of the Aztecs came a t the hands of their Brassey-less team , the Sun Devils are go­ ing to have to put together some of their best volleyball to re p eat as w inners. However, Flickinger said he feels his team is beginning to play on a m ore consistent level as the season pro­ gresses. - “Considering that we have <»ly three starters returning from last year’s team , we are playing pretty well,” added Flickinger. “We’re still pretty erratic a t times but, for our experience level, w e ll be okay against San Diego State.” Playing in the WCAA, which consists of m ore than its share of Top-10 ranking team s, doesn’t give Flick­ in g er m any b reak s to develop the young talent of U s squad, but be feels the hands- on experience they receive during competition is invaluable. ‘T think playing with the top team s in the country is C-. H eather Forbes IMPORT AUTO definitely an advantage to us,” Flickinger said. “These girls are quickly learning that every tin » they make a m istake they have to pay for it in term s of points.” th e Sun Devils faring a 1-2 WCAA conference record in­ to the gam e with San Diego State, and wiU be without the s e rv ic e s of d efe n siv e specialist Sue Corea who is out with a knee injury. H ie m atch begins at 7:90 tonight in the P.E . E ast gym. A SU 's own Montreal Expos win first-ever playoff game MONTREAL (AP) — Tim Wailach and Chris Speier combined for the go-ahead run in the second itkdng off Steve Carlton as the Mon­ tre a l Expos b e a t the Philadelphia P hillies 3-1 Wednesday in the first gam e of their best-of-5 series far the National League E ast championship. The Expos, winners of the second half, and the Phillies, first-half champs in m ajor league baseball’s first split season, m eet brine Thursday night in the second gam e. Lm i n d e r b i n d e r s The Expos took the lead 24 in the second when Wailach, a .296 hitter in the regular season, led off with a double to center and raced home on a single by Speier, who hit .225 during the season. Steve Rogers, who posted a 12-8 season record, w as the winner. The only run of the Expos’ right-hander was a leadoff home run in the se­ cond inning by catcher Keith Moreland. Moreland’s drive an a 2-2 pitch ju st eluded a desperate one-handed effort by center fielder Andre Dawson to m ake the catch near the .400 footm ark. M ontreal, hi its first postseason gam e in the d u b 's 13year history, took a 1-0 lead in the firs t W arren Cromartie, who h it .415 after being inserted into the leadoff spot S ept 16, opened the inning with a single to le ft C rom artie was forced a t second by Jerry White and Dawson struck o u t but Gary C arter drove a double off the left field wall, scoring White, who had stolen second. 204 W est 7th Street, Tempe $39.00 to 049.00Labor • Parts included. DEPENDING ON MODEL (Call fo r estim ate.) a* f t P E C I A L — Includes •T une-up •V alve a d ju stm e n t •O il c h an g e •L u b e •S afety in sp ectio n O N I GettinglburDegree? T (gotaom ew heretogo?) CareerPlacementRegistry1CPR) CmShowthefWty .¡yo u ’re a senior, you’ll be job hunting soon—and everyone knows how much fun that is. 300 resumes.. , saving forever for stamps. .. that letter to Dream Corp. you’ve written 12 times. You’re beginning to wonder if yo tftt ever attract anyone’s attention. Why not let Dream Corp. come to you? CPR could be the answer. We’re an information service that will give over 10,000 employers in 44 countries access to your complete records. (Any idea how much stamps for 10,000 letters would cost?) ■ Here’s How it works: You fill out a short form, listing your career and geographic preferences, your special skiUs, your GPA. This information is fed into the D1A LOG Information Retrieval Service—a system used by businesses large m d small, by research firms, accounting and insurance companies, publishers, advertising agencies, international and multinational corporations, most of the Fortune 1,000. Employers search through computer terminals for a combination of factors, such as your degree, your languages, your extracurricular background, and so on. If you have what they want, you won’t have to get their attention. They’ll come to you. Instant access, instant searching, instant results. AU for S8. Contact your Placement Office for details and student entry Mondays 5 p.m . - 10 p.m . With T h is Ad and Student or Faculty 1.0. ■ Good till 11)2181. Dear CPU: P ltaae »end m e a student io ta entry farm. Happy Hour Weekdays 3-6P-nt TE M P E Fres C hips â Salsa TEMPE ______ — — ..................................... — — University.------------------------------■ S i » ' >» :* . Current Mailing Address-Street- .S ta u . .Z ip . CAREERPLACEMENT REGISTRY Mon.-Thui*. 11-11 * F iL-S aL 11-1 • Opon SwKtay* M O (Comorof 14th ft Prtoot) 1 City____________________ 24-HOUR SATELLITE T.V 1402 S. PRIEST V IM 1 CHIMICHANGAS M E X IC A N FOOD 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Brfngthis coupon-. I M aS tw C lttrg e 967-8068 302 Sw ann A venue, A lexandria, Virginia 22301 " ■— P age 18 S tate P ress Thursday, O ctober 8,1981 M ore about World co ntin u ed from p ig « 15 cam pus of a western univer­ sity. The player wasn’t filled with alcohol, but he wasn’t dripping w ith potential, either. And what potential he did have apparently didn’t show itself. So the coach reportedly sm acked him. Big deal. No one was hurt. College kids can handle a lit­ tle love tap. A tut for a free education doesn’t seem like too bad a deal. And in fact, those college kids may be able to accept it b etter if they continue to get practice in high school as punching bags. Shoot, some coaches may even try to get an advantage and discipline that boy phenom in the ranks of Little League. Sure, throw him around if he misses practice. Or put him through the gauntlet if he dogs it in the team ’s wind sprints. Hey, the name of the game is winning. Win a t all costs. Win a t any cost. I don’t disagree with that. How can you? Coaches have jobs to keep ju st like everyone else. Construction workers put up houses, nurses help mend and com­ fort patients, and coaches build — and m ust keep — winning program s. If they don’t, they’re fired. If a construction crew com­ pletes a replica of the ‘Lean­ ing Tower’, they’ll be reprimanded but will still keep their jobs. I’m not sympathizing with coaches. If they do a good job — within their own limits — they should be given a slap on the back. If they lose, drive ’em out of town. And coaches such as Rod Dedeaux, Dean Smith and Joe Paterno are the models. They win within the limits. Coaches like Ken Milano should not be seen behind any bench or whistle, in any sport. Yet alone a high school sport. But they’ll continue to pop up. You can bank on that. You see, Coach Milano receiv ed su p p o rt from several of the players’ parents. And you can be sure their kids won’t be holding any big bashes. C ut Y our S tu d y T im e B y% ! I BET YOU DIDN’T KNOW By Larry Dragiewlcz, CLU Here’s an amazing fact . . . No football player In history w h o 's won the H elsm an Trophy has ever m ade It to pro football’s Hall of Fame . . . You’d think in all th ese years that some college stars who won the Heisman would have gone on to make the pro Hall of Fame but — surprisingly — none ever has. Even though Notre Dame Is one of the m ost famous football team s in America, many fans aren't sure what Notre Dame's official school colors are . . . The reason Is th at some years Notre Dame w ears green & gold and som e years they wear blue & gold . . . Despite wearing green the last few years, Notre Dame's official colors are blue & gold, and they returned to wearing blue this season. H ere's a tough football question .... One of the bestknown coaches today Is Bear Bryant of Alabama — but the question Is: Can you nam e the man who w as the Alabama head coach BEFORE Bryant? . . . You have to be a pretty good fan to remember t h is . . . Answer is J.B. Whitworth, who coached Alabama from 1955 through 1957 . . . Bryant took over In 1958. I bet you didn't know . . . th at we are adding several people to our staff. Male or female, we have excellent c a re e r o p p o rtu n ities. You have the option to live in the Phoenix a rea or- relocate elsew here In th e country, W e have a placem ent date at Career Services. It is on November 2nd. Sign up now at Career Services. Werll show you how...freeWould you lik e to: □ Raise your grade average without long hours over texts. □ End all-night cramming sessions. □ Breeze through all your studying in as little as 1/3 the time. □ Have more free time to enjoy yourself. □ Read 3 to 10 times faster, with better con­ centration, understanding, and recall. Larry Dragiewlcz, CLU DRAGIEWICZ & ASSOCIATES 1730 S. Jen Tilly Lane Suite A Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-4837 It only takes an hour, and it’s free. Don’t miss it. You'll in cre a se y o u r re a d in g sp eed up t o 100% on t h e sp o t! 2 oMs LOCATION... SCHEDULE O F FREE LESSONS TEMPI — Howard Johnson's Or Call Evelyn Wood works — over 1 million people, including students, executives, senators, and even presidents have proven it. A free 1 hour demon­ stration will show you-how to save hundreds of hours of drudgery this year (as well as how to increase your speed immediately with some simple new reading techniques). 225 E. Apache Blvd. Today, OCt. s Friday, Oct. 9 Presented by: international Motivational Services, inc. • 4710 N. 16th. St., #121 Phoenix, Arizona 85016 • Bonded • Licensed by Arizona State Board ol Private Technical and Business Schools. 265*1339 • 3:50, 5:30 & 7.30 p.m. • 3:30, &30 &7:30 p.m. C hoose the day and time most convenient for you. Lim ited seating — Attend an early lesson. I Register for ive lyn wood Reading Dynamics Scholarship Drawing to be held Friday, O ct 9 — 8:45 p.m. You need not be present to win. rä EVELYN W OOD READING DYNAMICS © 1978 Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics inc Thursday, October 8,1981 State Press Page 19 Gassifieds P ic k 'em Entries m ust be turned in to the State Press by 3 p.m. Friday in the Matthews Center basem ent. On­ ly one entry per person. The top three entries will be listed in Tuesday’s paper.. The ASU-Oregon game will be used a s the tie breaker, so Just predict the score. Place an “X” in both boxes to predict a tie In any game with the point spread taken into consideration. The team s on the left are the favorites, and the points shown will be subtracted from their final score. Predict the score. _vs. Oregon ASU _ Home team in caps: Favorite Underdog COLLEGE. □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Oklahoma NOTRE DAME UCLA Ohio State SOUTHERN CAL Washington St. Washington FLORIDA PURDUE Pittsburgh □ □ □ □ □ PITTSBURGH ATLANTA DENVER Philadelphia Dallas even □ TEXAS 4 □ Florida State 7 □ STANFORD □ WISCONSIN 10 21 □ Arizona □ OREGON ST. 11 □ CALIFORNIA 6 □ Maryland 10 7 □ Illinois □ WEST VIRGINIA 9 PRO □ Cleveland 6 □ Los Angeles 3 7 □ Detroit □ NEW ORLEANS 8 □ SAN FRAN. 4 First prize will be acomplimentary dinner for two (excluding drinks) at Donny O’Brien's or Butch O’Leary’s. Second prize is two tickets to any con­ cert at Dooley’s (within 30 days of winning). Third prize is a large pizza with three toppings and a pitcher of beverage from Bound Table Pizza. Name. Phone, Double-header slated for national champions There is a cure for th e split-season blues. The defending national champion ASU baseball team opens its 1981 fall season with a double-header against Grand Canyon Col­ lege, the NA1A national champ. Games begin a t 4 p.m. F ri­ day in Packard Stadium , and the Devils and Antelopes will Continue their act a t noon on Saturday (another twin bill). “It (fall season) is im por­ tant in two w ays,’’ Devil head Coach Jim Brock said. “F irst, it is im portant for the players, especially the new (mes, to show what they a re capable of. And, second, i t affords the coaching staff to evaluate the talent. “There is m ore tim e for this kind of individual evaluation in the fall th a n in the spring when you have to w orry about the team m ore.” .The Devils, who finished w ith a 55-13 record last Spring, will play a full d ate of d o u b le -h e a d e rs a ll through October. Admission is free. CLASSIFIEDS A nnouncements Furniture P oommate ATTORNEY AT Law, Richard A. Oyer. neaaonable tear. 123 N. Stirine, Suite 226L, Ma««. AZ-8334801.___________ SEVEN-PIECE BEDROOM special: sixdrawer dresser, fr. m inor, two-drawer nltestand, panelled headboard, full-size mattrseaibox spring and adjustable frame. 1225. Jlm fe “Bargain Shop,” 4806 N. 27th Avw.. 2460167.________ _ M ALE ROOMMATE to share sm all Tampa apartment. C all Stave, 967-6106 HANG QUDEI This waahand o ff a 40’ M il |uet aaat of Tempo. Sato and axciting. Instruction phia five flights, 335. Completai C all the Phoenix Flyera! 9498292. CaH eyenl nga 5 3 pjn.__________ SENATOR DENNIS OeConcInl la cur­ rently accepting applications for Intemahlpa In hia Phoenix ottica lo r the aprIng 1982 aameeter. Interested students may obtain an application th is weak at the ASASU office In the Memorial Union. A utomobiles 1979 DAT8UN 310 OX, must soil. Ex­ cellent condition inside and out. $4998/offar. 9468227-____________ ■ . TWIN/FULL SIZE: mattrees/box springs. Twins 966, fu lls 966 Jim 's “ Bargain Shoo." 4806 N. 27th Avt., 2460187. THREE-WAY TABLE lamps: Every lam p _ In store, many, ateaefahapaa, 312. Jim ’s “Bargain Shop,“ 4806 N. 27th Ave., 2460187. ’_____________________ LOW MILEAGE, 1973 Oodgo Sport. 11,200. C all 830-1306offer 5 p.m. Instruction 1974 MGS, LOOKS good, runs great, low mileage, much mors. Bast offer. 967-3211. ___________________ DANCERCISE, YOGA, ballet, modem Jazz, stretching, Tal-Chl, sign language, ballydanclno, counlrysw lng. Prenatal PostPM am e x e rcise , m editation, message healing and hatbology and moral at the Canter for Body Awarenes s. 414 MUI Avenue. W alking distance from campus. Danasra watch o u t waSra add­ ed I beautiful oak floor In Studio A. 8643 3 4 7 . ___________ Bicycles TUNE-UP SPECIAL, 1696 phM parts with ad. Regularly 316 Collega City Cydary, 909 E Lem o n.____________ Business O p p . ___ CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITY In nutrition-rotated field fo r dynamic, bualnaaa minded Individuala or oouploa who Hk» working with people. 997-2618, leave mss aaoe. FOREIGN STUDENTS. Improve your English with private, certified teacher. Speak, mad batter. Understand mors. LEARN TO fly. F lig h t Instruction, 32660 par hour. Private thru advanced ralinga. Allan WoU,838-1099. _____________ F or Rent/lease M iscellaneous BRAND NEW one end tw o bedroom apartm ents unfum tabad, storage, covered parking, % nril» from campus. CaH9962436987-2467, CA8H FOR gotdj diamonds, watches, ow lewewy boo LARGE STUDIO with fireplace, patio, private yard. 9226ftnonth. Very d oes to ASU. B ill,9862787._________ ■ IN MILE ASU. Four bedroom house, newly carpeted, new cooler, newly painted, fenced yard. 8328/montti. 2543626 ,__________ . ■ .. . STU O EN TS W E LC O M E . T hree bedroom. 515 W. Riviera, Tam p« $476 Three bedroom. 642 W. Pampa, Mass; 3606 pool. O'Nain Property Manage­ ment-No fee.9900200._____________ WALK TO SCHOOL! Beautiful huge 1 bedroom, 1 baili; 2 bodroom, 2 bath apart­ ments. Big pool, laundry. TER­ RACE ROAD APARTMENTS, 950 S. Tanaca Road. 966-8540 S T A R T HERE 12« SOLEX MOPED. ExoaHsnt condition, pariaot around eeheeL M uat s a ill *136 CaH «arty or lata ofci9$S»749. 1M0 SUZUKI GS780ET, 1,600 mites. Mint condH ioa $2,000. 2960227, Tucaon. - • .■ ■ ________ VESPA 2DÖCC m o to rsco o ti, runs vary wall, 66 mpg, SB mph, axcaHant campus araa transportation. $1,100 or beat otter. CaH 946-1026 ________ Personal ATTENTION, A M Y McDowell and Ann Fludeo — psyched to m eat yal Your Slom aChIBIoSla. _______ GOOD 8TU0ENT8 qualify and save 26% on auto Inauranos. Non-smokara 18%. A sk Stave LundalL Farm ers ASU BapwaanteUra, 6 3 1 2 1 2 1 .________ For Sòie P ets CHEMSHIELD HELPS protect you from attackers. (Arm y's rio t control chemicalJ PocJrat slzss, w ritten warran_______________ tY. 967-6082. FREE KITTENS. Star weeks OM. Slack o r Morris lookallkes. C all 264 9809 from 8 am . to neon weekd ay«, anytim e Satur________ d«yor8unday. Announcem ents 1(61 G.E. COLOR TV. Paid $470 new, asking beat offer. Dave, 2763916 FREEH R EN TA L Hating aarvlca; hpuaaa. apartments, roommates. Pick op your Hat o r Hat your rental at Tampa True VMua Hardware, 83 Eaat Broadway Road. (No phone lnouMee.pleaeeJ HART SKIS, Connect to Computer from Home CRT/courusn *60°°Monthly P R I N T E R / c OUPLER * 5 0 ° ° M o n th !y B U S IN E S S R E S O U R C E SER V ICE 3002 E. McDowell R d.,Phoenlx* 275-6305 S A LE S /S E R V IC E/R EN TÂ L S 176cm with Solomon 444 bindings, 6106 Nordics pro bools, $76 both or separate. Excellent condition. Rev.9861196 ___________ ■ MICROSCOPE — BAU8CH/LOM6, BlNox, vary eerty modal. Can b s dlaplayad or used dally. 3206 9967828. STEREO — COMPACT Panasonic: AMfFM, phono, cassette, thrusters, apeakara, 3276 Sony mlorophonoa (2), 826 Sannhatear headphone«. *36 936 8836 _______ . STEREO, brand new, never been used, In orlg. carton, AM/FM stereo receiver, BSR rec o rd c h a n g e r ,, c a s s e tte player & recorder, full fidelity speakers, full orlg. guar. Cost $400. Must sac. $165. Call anytime 954-9541. Pvt. home. 6/4 AND PHYSIQUE Lose Inches Without Exercise MO IN TR O D U C TO R Y OFFER 3742 E. INDIAN SCHOOL 956-6337 Burniture NINE-PIECE LIVING room: sofa, love seat, chair, ottoman, three placa coftaafand table aaL and any tw o lampa In tb s atoro. 33«- JM Ya "Bargain Shoo.” 4306 N. 27th Av«_2460187. SOFA ANO chten Hareufon fabric, many oolom to choose from. $175. JM iV “Bargain 'Shop,“ 4306. k 2I1h A vS-3460187. . NON-SMOKING FEM A LE own room In throe bedroom, two bath condo. Waaharidryer In apartment, dishwasher, patio, storage, pool, air condition. $ 146/month plus 14 utilities. C all Merten, 937-1614._____________ __ ROOMMATE NEEDED to share room In a townhouss. Pool, patio, fumishad. Casitaa East. tNeaharfdiyar. C all Ray or Wayne,9861196__________________ Services ESP C LA 88.9676812 after 4p.m. HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by alactrolyate. Free consultation. Located In Tampa. C all Sharon at Dseert Electrolysis Center.83618668tud«nt dtecounta. IMPROVE YOUR gradeel Research catalog, 306 papa«, 10.278 topic«. Ruah t t . Box 26097C, Loa Angeles 90026 (213)4772226 ________________ Doom mate mbsu FEMALE ROOMMATE. Own bedroom, swamp coder, pats, lanced yard. $125 phia v> utlWIaa. D otJaanna,9660186 FEMALE TO share three bedroom townhoma. Furnished. Non-smoker. Naat and raaponalbfa. Sarioua xtodant. Laundry, pool. 3160 phia % «Metric. Southern and Hardy. 997-2064. FEMALE RO OM M ATE Own room M id bathroom. $136 Includes u tilitie s, covarad parking. Com pletely tumlahed. $361697. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share furnished apartment, u tilitie s Included. SIHfm onth. One mHa to A8U . C all $2 6 «427/ ’’ . . , _______ FEMALE NSEOED to «hare beautiful house on Tampa Pootladaia bordar. Hava your own room . Congenial roonh matas I $139 p lus W u tilitie s. OougfHoHy, 9M 92M FEM ALE ROOMMATE! nice three bedroom house. Ctoea to ASU. $146/month. % uHlIttea. 9163897 before 1« | »jn. or after 6 p jn - ; LIVE M luxury! Prívala fiam a, otea. Close to campus, pool, air, dtahwweher, waahatfdryer, microwave. $175, H utHHto». 9412434. ’ '■ 3175IMONTH, MALE/FEM ALE, one bedroom In throe bedroom houaa. 16 minute« from ASU. Seo»,3368166 MALE OH témate, private room in large house near Priest and University. 3160/month. 6260937. . . ; MALE/FEMALE RO O M M ATE Sham Moa three bedroom two bath houaa three mltea from ASU . Large yard. S$«- A PAST and aocurate typist with ftva years experience. $1/paga. Spelling correctad. Uaa,831-7932.______________ ACADEMIC EXPERTISE utilizing word prooaeeingl F irst draft to final form. Dlsaertatlons; tbases; professional reports; legal briefs,, memoranda, pleadings; research papers. Resume» lt d repetitive lettera. Revisions are teal, accurate. Quality typing, protaeslonal aarvlca. Mary, Praclslon Typing, 8361327.______________________ BETTES TYPING, Business degree. Four year! experience, IBM Correcting Satectric. McCIMtock and B atalina location. 8302026_______ _ CUSTOM TYPING. Corroding Satectric. Barbara, 340 E Balboa, o ft Collaga batwaan Brtiadway and Southern. 9860061. Westakte residents, call 289-7720 a lte rs.______________________ _ SAVE THIS ad! IBM typing. Editing. Fast, helpful aarvlca. Low rates. Cloae to campua. 9660896. ______ TYPING — GOOD, test, reasonable. CaH Owen, $92-1346 _______ MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE rates too high? CompetHIva rates lo r high risk, bast rates p ro fite d. CaH Stew , 8310121. LundaH Aosncy. TYPING. TERM papers professionally dorta. IBM Satectric. PIck-up/delivery. Why Worry Sacrstarlal Service, 9433662.9463149.___________________ , PRIVATE TENNIS Masons, 33 an hour, C all Andrea batwaan 7-20-8:30 a.m. or 1611 pm . 119 0311- W anted RESUM ES: QUICK, aftlcte n t, IndMduaHzsd aarvlca. $26 and up. Mag­ gie. 8360623; Barbara, 8360244; ASU offlba. L L 8 6 1 6 ____________ ■ NEED MONEY? Paying top dollar for gold Jewelry, cla ss rings, starting stivar and stivar co in s. Free ln-hom a «U n iate«. CaH anytime, Jo a,9868637. T ravel Help Wanted EUROPEJSRAEL, ow/ri student IHgfite. TEE 511 N. La Ctenaga 9216 LA.. CA 90046(2131$640637. HAWAII, EURO PE Aste, Mexico: Go Traveknora for toss. C all Travetmora, 9870676 ' ' ' • ISRAEL «770, LONDON «486 Tokyo $736Paru $k00. T E E 611 N .U Ctenaga »216, LA ., CA 90046 (213)8542637. M otorcycles TIM STATE PRESS disclaim s a ll respon­ sib ility for quality and pricaa of gooda and aervlcaa offered in both classified and display advertlalng by Ita advertiaers. R EN T C O M P U T E R T E R M IN A L With Thia Coupon SERIOUSLY. . . A R E you funay? W ould you lik e to see som e of your material published? W ould you Ilka to do a com­ ic atrip or an artId a — once or every month? FOr more Information, call 966 9144 between 7-8 p.m. Monday or Wednesday.______________________ warned Typing T y p in g ACADEM IC TYPING. N ear ASU . Raaaareh papa*«, the«««, dlaaartatlon«. English degree. Editing. 8avsn yean «spartano«. 967-4443. A LL YOUR typing — quick and ac­ curate. New ISM Oateotrtc. Cloae to ASU.Lte«.«2$O$06 ACCURATE TYPING. IBM SetaPtric, or SAVIN word prooaaacr. C a ll Gwen's Otflo a 8«tvloa.8390246 _______ ALISO N'S SECRETARIAL Service, test, professional results on an IBM Correc­ ting Satectric. Alteon, 041-1278 during iteytlm«. A-1 PROFESSIONAL typing near cam­ pus. Dlaaartatlon». tarm papara, , ale. Navy IBM Electronic. Unite. >67.4008 AN EXTRA hand Professional Typing B a rric a s. B .A ./Engllsh; e d itin g avaflabl«. Andra Lawrence, 9972416 Tampa. ___________________ ■ A R E YO U the type? H n o t, caU LuAnn. IB M 8atoctric.A H w orkou aran taad.g8 6 4106___________'' A LL PAPERS carefully and accurately typed. IBM Satectric. ttaar ASU. naaannahl« Mr». Oaktey.9670802. AARDVARKS C A N T type, but le a n — tettare, raaaareh papers, thaaae, d ia a itatlona. Excellent work. Linda, 8310346________ ■ ACADEMIC TYPING aarvlcea:naaaaroh papers, a ll subjects, including araNtaotu r« bualnaaa, law, physical and biological setenóte. Reference« format­ ted. Thirteen type stylae. IBM Etectromc-Cyndy, 9863627._________ • A-1 PREPARATION and professional services at the Word Proceoelng Ser­ vice Center. Wa type, print and adH term papara, thaaai, dissertations, manuscripts, reports and manuals, fteaumaa atoo preparad. n aaaonD Ia rat««, n a i ASU. 963 0968, Help Wanted A .E C . IS looking far 18 quMNtod I ottented women for a direct marketing aervtoe. $4/ht. guaranteed- W ill train. ..S44-13H6 ■■ ' ATTENTION; R4MEDIATE’ - openings, evenings, flexible aeffadute; phone sates. Earn money ter tha holidays. CaH 966 4663. ' ADVEHTI8ING/SALES HELP. $7JOhour. Twafva positions ramalnlng. 986 9476122 only. ________ AMBITIOUS PEO PLE good earning potential using spars Mma.fo r Informa­ tion caU 9463206 after« pm ._________ COED8: WE n— d highly motivated paopte who enjoy talking to people. You oan aam up to $80 lo r Just two hours of your Uma. For more Information, caU Donna Ward, 9412600 Monday-Frtday. H AVE FIVE openings. Part-*‘"te or fuHtime. Evanlnqs "" * »7.46 to $ 8JP iir t W W* d Hoa to campus on O etc v V o n ly, a t 1600,1^ 06 600 or 4316 _______ “ _______ LIQUOR STORE etarfc. Flexible how s. N .E Phoenix. O rar 21 plea«« Cash raglateraxpattenca hatpful.9662301. NEED AN EigH sh tutor for a Saudi A n blan atudant C a ll A ziz,894-1866 OVERSEAS JO B S — Summer/yaar round. Europe, SJkmar., Australia, Asia. AH R aids. $50021,200 m onthly. Olghtaaalng. Free Info. W rite DC, Box 52-AZ2, Corona Daf Mar, C A 92626 RESIDENT MANAGER wanted for sm all apartment building naqr downtown Soottadate. Compensation depend» on qualifications, ftaaponalbl«. applicants contact Dante DuBoaa at 9469072, or temramaaaaoa.________ ■ THINK YOU'RE funny? W all give you a chance to prove it Sunday batwaan 11 a.m .2 p.m. Chucklas w ill Jw turning orar the stag* to any and aH. Younb and aspiring eomadlana looking fo ra shot at fame and fortune. Chuckles, next to the Holiday Inn on Apacha. TEACHER FOR private aolw ol. Elec­ trical anglnaar o r physic» background n salted to taech alaotronlca a id com ­ puter. «lust bs waH groomed, pan sonabla with good grades. «Slhour. CaH 9462003,69p-m._________ W E ARE looking for antertalnment fo r/ tha 12th Annual Htextan’s Ferry A rts and Crafts Festival. I am M arasted In fam ily type entertainment. CaH WUIte WHIIaroaand leave massano, 967-4877 PART-TIME National Marketing Company h«a opanlngs for aalaa-mlndad paople interested h i part-time employment Openings are awtlabla on the evening shifts, 5 to 9:30 p.m. Our aaleapeople wodt in «modern, comfortable business environment contacting cuatomare on long distance WATS Itnaa. Earnings which Include salary and feonua average $4-0026.00par hour, paid weekly. ' tt you have a good, clear speaking voice, proper grooming for « business office, enthusiasm and competitive spirit, our experienced management team wHI train you to aaH our nationalty recognized products (white being paid of course). Our Tampa Office Is located one block off Mill and University. P IM M ca ll DIALAM ERIC A for dotalls. 894-1139 10/9 Page 20 State Press Thursday, OctoberB, 1961 NEIGHBORS IN BUSINESS SALE MAKE YOUR SHOPPING WORTHWHILE OPEN 10-8 Mon.-Fri. 10« Sat. 12-6 Sun. OPEN T u r 10-6 Mon.-Sat. I M t 10-8Tues. &Thurs. SHOP INC. «H I C f sSHOP C a m p u s W e a r • IZOD*^ • A th le tic W e a r QUALITY MEN'S FASHIONS JACKETS 16.88 19.88 Now 16.88 1 V iln J Sedgefield Jeans Alpha Jeans * \\ Girls Jeans & O.P. Cords Velour & Cut Velvet Short & Long Sleeve Shirts From SWEATERS 19.88 >. Robert Bruce & Botany 500 From ljS.88 SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS As low as 12.88 SUITS 32.95 Lined Baseball Jacket 34.95 Pile Lined Jacket 39.95 NOW 9.99 14.99 SWEATERS Shetlander by Crazy Horse 29.95 Velour Sweater 19.95 14.99 7.99 JERSEYS 9.95 Pro-Style Baseball 16.95 Rugby 28.95 2.99 4.99 9.99 ARIZONA DESIGNS Dimitri, Eagle & Haggar 85.88 SPORTS COATS From 55.88 A LL SLACKS 14.88 to 27.88 FREE DRAWING for Casual & Dress ASU Lined Jacket V-Neck Jersey Jockey, Robert Bruce, Arrow & Emro O rig . From Baseball Jersey 10.95 Heavy Weight T s 8.95 T-Shirts 7.95 Ladies T's from 12.95 Children's T's from 5.95 4.99 3.99 2.99 2.99 1.99 FREE DRAWING $ 100 Gift Certificate ■ Plus over 50 other prizes. Phone N o .. Name Name . Phone No. A d d re ss. A d d rees. Zip City & State ____________ No purchase neceseary. Need not be present to win. Drawing held Nov. 21,1981, Hom ecom ing Day. _.— ^ City & Stale __ ________________________ _ .Z ip No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win. Drawing held Nov. 21,1961, Homecoming Day. THE a T \ - SP SHOP TEMPE SHOPPING CENTER Mill & University 907 MILL AVE. 905 MILL AVE.