frid a y F e b ru a ry 19, f| a ( p 1982 Arizona State University - Tempe, Arizona , ^ © Copyright, State Press, 1982 Armel Dyer plots the history of the English language for a class of senior citizens in the lecture hall at Sun City West. Dyer, a retired professor who lives in Sun City, was teaching the class Thursday as part of the A S U Sun City program. You can 't play golf forever, senior citizen says Retirees quench thirst for knowledge with A SU program By Michael Consol Start writer ASU’s “most motivated students” are not in the business or engineering colleges, are not in their 20s and are not working for their diplomas. _ Rather, they are about 650 retirees taking one course a semester 45 miles northwest of the Tempe campus. Residents.of Sun City who were not able to get a college education when they were young are being given a second chance with a program offered by ASU. The ASU Sun City program is offering senior citizens a broad menu of adult educa­ tion specifically geared to their interests. > The program ’s community coordinator, Herbert Rusalem, said it is probably the on­ ly one of its kind being offered by a universi­ ty and has been “wildly successful.” He said the program, which began in September 1961, is not set up for people look­ ing for a college degree, but for people who want to dabble in anything from astronomy to law for the elderly. umL t> ... l . k.. nn#i inmra nro “These are people who by and large are very hungry for education, because when they grew up they didn’t have the opportuni­ ty to go to college,” Rusalem said. But unlike the typical student who goes to college to prepare for a career or because of societal pressures, “they’re going because they want to go.” “They are the most motivated students in the world,’’ he added. “They are only there because they want to. be there. People come from campus and say there is nothing else like it on campus.” Rusalem said one of the program’s most successful courses is a dialogue series, a weekly class in which a different professor is invited from campus to lecture on a topic of his interest. “It js like a lecture series,” he said, “but instead of being all lecture, there is also a good deal of discussion.” Sun City West resident Shelia Harris said she does not want any kind of degree, but she finds the program “intellectually stimulating.” AnH Sun Cun PHv And City Woct West resident RipharH Richard Brenberger said, “We enjoy listening to pro­ fessors and every once in a while we like regressing back to our youth. ’’ To that senior citizen Ed Mills added, “It’s sort of a continuation of the programs I had in college. You can’t play golf every day.” Professor Armel Dyer, who teaches on the history of the English language, said he thinks the program will be a mainstay. “ I think they’re going to make a big thing out of this for two reasons,” Dyer said. “In the first place the ASU campus itself is too far for these people to drive. In the second place so many of them here are interested in this kind of thing.” Classes are taught with the assistance of 50 retired professors living in Sun City. Rusalem said the program is ideal for pro­ fessors who want to retire but keep a hand in teaching. “As ASU professors retire, we’re going to be approaching them and getting them in­ volved in this program,” he said. Engineering, business class television scheduled for fall By Kevin Rush Contributing writer . , , An estimated $1.2 million program to broadcast ASU engineering and business courses over four television chanleis to Phoenix industry strongholds is set to begin Aug. 23. “Pending the installatimi of equipment and being granted the broadcast licenses, we are going to broadcast selected ‘all classes,” the assistant director of audio visual services said. Scott Herrington said ASU will purchase equipment worth »bout $500,000. KAET-TV, which applied for the license, will supervise the acquisition, installation and broadcast. Thè Instructional Television Fixed Station OTFS) will broadcast 12 to 14 engineering and business courses with a high frequency, low-pòwer microwave transmission. “Local industries were interested in graduate courses out at their sites, but the faculties are limited,” an assistant dean af the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences said. Carl Bartel said ASU is contacting local industry spearheads such as Sperry, Motorola, Garrett Turbine and Honeywell to commit money for receiving equipment. He expects 10 to 15 companies to receive the broadcasts. Regular commercial television sets will not receive the transmission. . . _ ,. „ „ Bartel said two pilot programs, which began now being videotaped and sent to six participa g panies. The fall ITFS broadcast would originate from a classroom on the campus through KAET and would be live. Herrington said the programs will use one camera for die instructor’s written material, a medium close-up of the in­ structor, and a wide shot of the classroom. A phone hook-up in the classroom will enable the instructor to answer any questions. Bartel said ASU’s Metrocenter and Alhambra branches will have receiving equipment. John Maher, a media specialist at audio visual services, said this system is doing two things never done before. “We are training instructors on how to use broadcasting to teach,” he said. “Most instructors coming in from lecturetype classes don’t know what is going on. We’ll show then) how to make the best erf it.” He said teachers will be assisted in presenting their lessons, arranging the sequence of the material and giving appropriate examples. Bartel said although the engineering share of the broad­ casting is now about two-thirds, other colleges may use the system to broadcast courses as well. Herrington said, receiving sites will have permission to tape any broadcast on video, “but it will be with the understanding that they must be erased at the end of the semester.” Rucolom Rusalem caiH said thp the fall upmp«;tpr semester runs from October through Thanksgiving, and the spring semester February through April for the program’s non-credit courses. A one-day course costs $10, and a multisession course costs $15. Rusalem said there are long waiting lists for many of the courses being offered. “When we started out last fall we were told if we had 35 or 40 students we'd be lucky because that’s the way programs like these start out,” he said. “We started out with 440 people (in the fall) and this spring we have 650.” Rusalem said because he and the advisory committee members are residents of Sun City, they are able to “tune into” communi­ ty needs. “We really know what people want from what they tell us and our own observation.” The ASU Sun City program also offers credit courses for Sun City and surrounding communities.1 Rusalem said ..these are regular courses approved by ASU depart­ ments. U of A selects new president: Henry Koffler TUCSON (AP) - Univer­ sity of M assachusetts Chancellor Henry Koffler will be the new president of the University of Arizona, a University of Arizona spokesm an confirmed 'niursday. Koffler accepted the job Wednesday night, accord­ ing to U niversity of Arizona spokesman Grant Smith. In accordance with Arizona law, the state Board of Regents will meet in a public session at 2 p.m. Friday to officially select Kof|ler for the school presidency. B ut Sm ith ' said agreements have already been made and the meeting could merely serve as a formality. “The agreement should become formal tomor­ row," Smith said. Koffler will begin the Arizona job on July 1, he added. “ T hat m ay change depending oh what com­ mitments he has at the U niversity of M assa­ chusetts,” Smith said. Koffler’s annual salary will match or exceed the $82,500 being paid to cur­ rent President John P. Schaefer, Smith said. Kof­ fler, like Schaefer, also will be provided with use of a university-owned home and car, he said. Koffler, 59, a 1943 Arizona graduate, has been chancellor of the 25,000student Amherst campus for the last 2*2 years. Page 2 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 m Illegal driver giggles n a t io n / w o r ld Reagan says U.S. won’t send troops to El Salvador WASHINGTON (API — President Reagan declared Thursday that he has “no plans to send American combat troops into action” in El Salvador or anyplace else, but refused to flatly rule out that possibility in the future. Reagan also refused to say whether he has authorized covert action to undermine the leftist Sandinista government of Nicaragua. Meanwhile, Francisco Fiallos Navarro, the new Nicaragua ambassador to the United States, said his government is arm ­ ing because it fears U.S. military action in Central America. “We are worried about that,” he told his first Washington news conference. “It has led us to organize a defensive army. ’’ Labor chief refuses to soften criticism of Reagan BAL HARBOUR, Fla. (AP) — AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland, charging that the deepening recession is hurting people “by the millions,“ said Thursday he will not soften his criticism of President Reagan’s economic policies. Kirkland also assailed Reagan’s response to the imposition of martial law in Poland. He charged that the chief executive “has misread the character of the American peo­ ple” in failing to impose a total economic boycott against the Soviet Union. The AFL-CIO chief labeled Reagan’s policies “Jonestown economics” — a reference to the November 1978 mass murder-suicide by followers of a religious cult leader in Jonestown, Guyana. WEST LONG BRANCH, (N.J.) — A judge has sentenced a man to wash windows in the Borough H all here on Mondays and Thursdays for eight weeks for driving with a sus­ pended license. In addition to assigning th e wi ndow d e t a i l , Municipal Court Judge Fred Klatsky on Wednes­ day suspended a 60-day jail term for Ronald Moyal of Elberon, fined him $125 and put him on a year’s proba­ tion. Moyal, 24, who had pleaded guilty, could bare­ ly conceal his laughter when sentence was passed, and the judge asked if he’d rather go to jail. Moyal replied, “I’m sorry, I’ve just never washed wi dows.” _____ Church further attacked in Poland WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Communist Poland’s martial law regime stepped up its attack on the Roman Catholic clergy Thursday, and a West German newspaper quoted reliable sources in Warsaw as say­ ing a nationwide roundup of priests is planned. In its second broadside against the church in two days, Radio Warsaw said that some “lower Catholic clergy” were rekindling “old sources of conflict” such as placing of religious symbols (crosses) in public places, state institutions and schools. The broadcast accused one priest in northern Poland of appealing to parents to oppose efforts to remove crosses from schools “even if they were fired on in the process.” Williams’ father testifies P r e - G r a n d O p e n in g S a le •Apple •Xdrox • Data General •Others Steve Cunningham C A M P U S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E 5 2 4 W . Broadw ay 829-0888 ATLANTA (AP) - Wayne B. Williams’ father testified at his son’s murder trial Thursday that carpet squares used to link Williams to the slaying of a young black man were not purchased until after the vic­ tim ’s body was found. Homer Williams also said his son had lit­ tle privacy at home and gave up hunting as a boy because “he didn’t kill very much.” Earlier Thursday, a defense fiber expert had challenged the heart of the state’s case, testifying that the fibers used to link the defendant to the slayings of two young blacks matched fibers taken at random from a lawyer’s office and a fabric store. The younger Williams charged with murdering Nathaniel Cater, 27, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21. S ta te P ress A d v e rtisin g 965-7572 pteQi hHutl Phone 990-9428 4 iu t i W e deliver our delicious pan pizza, traditional thin pizza, sandwiches, pasta, soft beverages and six-paks of beer right to your door seven nights a week! Give us a call, we have unadvertised specials NIGHTLY! A few minutes from A S U W e're located at the corner of S cottsd ale Rd. & Curry Rd. Myouhaven't triedPanPizzafromPizzaHut You ought to try Pan Pizza W E DELIVER IN Y O U R A R E A McKellips Hardy lASUJ D ELIVER Y H O URS S u n .-T h u rs. 4 :3 0 p.m.~ 1 0 :3 0 p.m. McClintock F ri.-S a t. 4 :3 0 p .m .- 1 2 :3 0 a.m. Broadway I "Please ™ ™present ™ “ th is" p iZ Z P IHMutl “ ™ coupon. Good for two extra pizza toppings on large pizza only. N ot valid with other discounts or coupons. One coupon per pizza. ■ e s a Cash redemption value 1/20 cent. Expires 2-28-82. Please present this ooupon. Good for one six-pak beer for I 5 1 .0 0 with the purchase of large pizza. Not valid with ^ j^ ^ o t h e r discounts or coupons, i n |~ l One coupon per pizza. 1 I I ___ J jjM r Cash redemption value 1 /20 cent. • Expires 2-28-82. Must have proof of over 19 years of age. I P tQ ? Hflutl Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 3 Civil rights complaint filed by blind student after several appeals By PMIRoui Staff writer A blind ASU student who filed a complaint with the Office of Civil Rights for the U.S. Department of Education said she com­ plained to the Federal office only after ap­ pealing on several University levels.' Ana Gonzalez, a senior in special educa­ tion, said that when she realized that she had failed a class taken in 1960 (SPE 320 — participation with exceptional children) because of her blindness, her first recourse was to discuss the situation with the in­ structor, whom she would not name. “We couldn’t work anything out,” she said Wednesday. After speaking with the special education department chairman and getting no results, she wrote a letter explaining her problem to Lester Snyder, associate dean of the College of Education. She said Snyder offered no help, so she decided to appeal to the College of Educa­ tion Grievance Committee. Gonzalez said she told the OCR in November that she was going to appear before the education committee in December. “I wanted to alert them,” she said. She received negative results there, also. OCR investigators came to campus in March to interview people, examine documents, and review tapes of the hearing. Amy Gittler, assistant director of the Arizona Center for Law in the Public In­ terest, last month took the preliminary findings from the OCR over the phone but said they were not definite. “It’s a rough draft of a rough draft,” she said. “It was for discussion purposes.” An investigator for the OCR, Branch Chief Martha Tsutsui, visited ASU this week to work on the Gonzalez case. She denied the existence of preliminary findings and said because the case is currently an “open in­ vestigation,” she could not comment m i findings until a formal letter is sent to the University. Tsutsui said the letter will be issued in about 30 days. ' Gonzalez stressed that her motives in pur­ suing the case were not for personal reasons, but to help handicapped students have a fair chance. “It’s too bad it had to come this far to make people realize what’s happening,” she said. “The key thing is to make them (ASU) aware of the circumstances they’re&ealing with.” Gonzalez said the situation of handi­ capped people is not unique to ASU. Marc Breman, chief of the program review branch of the Office of Civil Rights, said the office may handle from 90 to 75 cases a year dealing with disabled discrimination on the post-secondary level. He said the OCR currently has approx­ imately 40 open complaints of discrimina­ tion against universities, and roughly 45 per­ cent of those deal with the handicapped. Breman was not familiar with the Gon­ zalez case, but said the usual procedure for handling such an investigation is to work out a “pre-determination settlement” at­ tempting to resolve the problems before a final letter is formulated. He said he thought Tsutsui may have been on campus for such a settlement. Breman said the OCR is trying to correct problems, not discipline institutions. “We’re not in the punishment business; we’re in the non-discriminaton business,” he said. Breman said most complaints from the handicapped examined by the OCR are not visual problems, but mobility problems. Universities would like to work on the situa­ tion, but lack the money, he said. The ultimate actiMi the OCR can take is to present the case before an administrative law judge who has the power to cut off federal funding from the institutiMi. A fa m e d R e s e a rc h T e a m o f S e n s it iv e P s y c h o lo g is t s P lu s C o m p u t e r T e c h n o lo g y C r e a t e th e A m a z in g N e w “ASTRAL SOUNDS 99 For the First Legal High Without a Hassle C assette Tape of Super Sound Waves Carry Your Mind and Body Into A W ild New Universe of Pure Pleasure! Many People Swear They’ve Been Cured of Stress and Diseases as W ell as Experiencing Som e Colorful and Exciting Visions, pleasurable Body Vibrations And Kaleidoscopic Imagery or Mild Hallucinations! W hat a Turn On! Already Being Used by Hundreds of Hospitals and Schools, It’s Now Been Approved for Home Use Introductory LowPrice... $1.00 postage & handling. Everybody’s Talking About the New "Astral Sounds’ Natural High! 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There’s plenty of room in' our large mirrored studio. Lots of games in our upstairs lounge. Serving teas and juices. You're welcome to bring your own bever­ age. Beauty Salon proudly welcdmes MARCIE ROTH PERM ANENT (complete) Reg. $35.00 25 O O HAIRCUT *700 With This A d ' 1460 N. Scottsdale Rd., 994-1801 Just $2 cover 9-1 a.m. 414 Mill Ave. Shops 894-8347 PEACE CO RPS P R A C T IC E S A P P L I E D S C IE N C E . It's b e e n a while, but n o w let's celebrate SPECIAL PARTY Feb. 20, Noon-1 a.m. 12-8 p.m. AZ Burger & Fries And Peace Corps volunteers with science backgrounds i o the applying Teaching biology to high school stu­ dents working on sanitation improvements or disease con irolT you h a ve science train,ng or aptitude and care to help others, apply- $1.50 4 p.m.-7 p.m. 2 Bit H a p p y H o u r 9 p.m.-11 p.m. 2 Bit H a p p y H o u r (again!) N O COVER . m/prtspas as v o u a d d to y o u r w ork e x p e rie n c e in DANCING ALL NIGHT LO N G C o m p lim en ta ry T a p w/ A S U - U A basketball ticket. a c ro s s fro m D a nforth C h a p e l. 9 a.m. to 3 p m. Page 4 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 mmz x£s& & !ix'|||11 — The art of taxation consists in so plucking the goose as to obtain the largest amount of feathers with the least possible amount of hissing. — J.B. Colbert .. -■................ ~d D eficit is to o big for a tax cut The following column was written by Jon Williams, anASU economics major. Many occurrences are difficult to try to predict. As an economist, 1 am very quick to expose my errors. However, what seems a sure bet is that the fiscal and monetary policies being pursued presently by the federal government are on a collision course that will keep interest rates high and the economy stagnant. I’ll try to leave the rhetoric ,to the policymakers and present a bit of analysis. My conclusions are that the personal in­ come tax cut should be repealed and all federal expenditure increases should be held to growth in GNP. Disagreeable perhaps, but realistic. As I drove from corner to corner of the state of Alabama last summer, the news out of Washington was refreshing. We heard of tax cuts and corresponding budget cuts. Many economists would have preferred only budget cuts, thinking a tax cut would only be inflationary. But I thought we were due for an experiment, and I therefore supported the measures and was elated, when they passed. The government’s seemingly firm commitment to budget cuts eased my skep­ tical mind. I saw budget outlays and taxes simultaneously being reduced, leading to a reduction in the ubiquitous role the federal government plays in all of our lives. The economic climate last summer was - r ; ", ' ' ripe for a tax cut. The Federal Reserve Board was expected to maintain a tight money1policy (which they have, and we should applaud); therefore, the inflation rate and interest rates were expected to fall. Consequently, the time was right to stimulate investment and individual in­ itiative through accelerated depreciation schedules, investment tax credits and a per­ sonal income tax reduction. No one then was looking at deficits. Even if we had, it would have made little dif­ ference given our expectations of lower in­ flation and lower interest rates coupled with a budget cut. The two modern economic villains — high inflation and high interest rates — were concerning Americans most. And classical economic theory teaches us that if we can reduce the former, the latter will follow. What happened? Who lost their nerve? The two parties involved are the fiscal and monetary authorities. I’ve already stated the Fed has done an adequate job on the monetary end. That leaves only the Con­ gress. It is just not possible to follow a loose fiscal policy and a tight monetary policy without having high interest rates. These high interest rates are going to choke off the much needed investment which could have sparked an economic recovery. Yes, politics has again muddied the water of a fairly straightforward proposition: •V "" '" * ■ .* Reducing federal burdens would stimulate the economy. The personal tax cut was really just to provide a lubricant so the more important business tax credits could slide us to a longrun recovery. I was shown very clearly by one of the sharp economics professors in our department hbw the personal income tax cut could not bring us to recovery; but in the long run, we could see advances in the drag­ ging aggregate supply because of the business tax reductions. But I thought, and still think, the greatest benefit of a personal income tax cut would have been the illusion that we were better off. But the cut was too little, too late. In fact, the taxes were not really cut, rather their rate of increase was reduced. Through the effects of bracket creep and inflation, low, medium and high income earners will not be better off in 1984. So, out the door goes any beneficial long run effect. Don’t blame supply-side economics, it was never really implemented. When we compound this insult with the in­ jury of actual budget increases which have been proposed, the casual observer can become outraged. Politicians are so fearful that if they vote yes to any social program reductions the result will be that you won’t re-elect them. This makes them prey for any special interest group that presents itself at their offices. The result is that we have not seen a reduction in budget outlays and we will not see reductions soon. The Congress is not brave enough to control, itself. Given my aversion to trillion dollar deficits, I am left witb no alternative but support a repeal of the “ tax-cut.” The recovery will never happen if interest rates don’t fall. And interest rates will not fall unless the Congress can trim the nearly $100 billion deficit in the coming fiscal-year budget. We need to save the tax cut until we can exercise it at a time when it will do some good. We need to stop believing that our prob­ lems are going to go away if the govern­ ment throws dollars at them. For 50 years the federal government has taken an ac­ tivist role in the economy. They have been successful at raising a great many poor peo­ ple out of the depths of poverty and putting them in the middle class. But the long run stability of the economy has not been im­ proved. We are witnessing the plague of the government as our forefathers did many years ago. The government has no incentive to improve beyond the next election. Politics is hopeless, it is the economics which con­ cern me. Let’s lay the foundations for a solid future by showing fiscal responsibility at all levels of budgeting. To start, a repeal of the “tax-cut” is in order. Y 'i& 4 : i f -\ ................ ■ Rough world justifies abortion Editor: Ms. Warner’s column regarding unborn children was very disturbing. Certainly, she put forth those grisly examples to shock, alarm and enlighten. As I understand it, the attempt was to point out the absurdity and hypocrisy of calling the same thing by two different names. We use “fetus” when we hope to lessen the brutal reality of our murderous tenden­ cies; we use “baby” when we decide to value human life at its earliest stages. I feel that Ms. Warner, by concentrating on the particular­ ly dramatic and hence journalistically attractive angle, obscures the isssue. Granted, the New York law absurdly hinders the judicial process in that hideous stabbing case. Call it what you will, a human life was taken, albeit before birth. Surely we should recognize human life when it, in fact, becomes recognizable as such. However, precisely when that occurs seems irrelevant when weighed against the overall problem of abortion. Turning to Ms. Warner’s classic device of the dramatic, let’s examine the classic, perpetually recurring case. A woman learns she’s carrying a child. However, in many cases the unwitting baby is not wanted. Perhaps the parents are not married, the father has disappeared, the mother is unemployed, she has no marketable skills and relies on unemployment or welfare. Realistically, in today’s world, what chance has that child got? Or the unwed mother, for that matter? We don’t realize that by holding to extreme positions on this issue we are forcing women to bear children who are doomed from die moment of birth to live in a world where they have little chance of survival and no chance of hap­ piness, well-being or success. Will such a child have any op­ portunity to live a decent life? Will the child receive adequate nutrition, education, or financial support from his “family?” More important, will such a child receive love, affection and care from people who have tremendous trouble caring for themselves? If we truly value human life why do we insist on forcing women to bring children into the world to live in sub­ human emotional and financial environments? Of course, no one forces these women to become pregnant but once they are carrying life must we punish them and their baby in this manner? Such children should not be forced, kicking and screaming, into a world that is neither prepared to welcome them nor inclined to nurture them. It is all too easy to sit hahinri a typewriter, armed with our personal view of morali­ ty, and dictate to the world. It is far more difficult to live in it. V .A . Calorose School of.Law A bortion is first sign of death cult Ed ito r: Vivian Warner’s editorial “Stabbing of a Fetus; Why Isn’t It Murder” is a telling indictment of the abortionists. Ob­ viously, she will be held up to ridicule by those whose main goal in life is death; that is, to make the world free for baby killers. But, unless the wisdom of Ms. Warner is put into action, the death cult will have “termination procedures” for most of us, moving from the unwanted unborn to the unhealthy newborn to the unproductive aging to, finally, the philosophically ob­ jectionable, since ultimately the greatest threat to “progress” are those reactionaries who oppose the high priests of the death cult Peter Wheeler Reiss Assistant Professor Business Administration STATE PRESS N VIVIAN WARNER Editor JE FF SELLERS Managing Editor City Editor ELLEN HAGGERTY Asst. City Editor ADRIANNE FLYNN Sporta Editor KEVIN WIDLIC Asst. Sports Editor PETE PRISCO News Editor JU U E MANN Arts Editor KARL BYRN Photo Editor BOB BEAMESOERFER Copy Chief KAREN BREBNER Opinion Page Editor JAY HEILER The State Press is published Tuesday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287. Newsroom: 865-2292. Advertis­ ing & Production: 966-7572. The State Press Is the only newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 5 Award honors student's memory the RHA Judicial Board and ASASU committees and worked for the escort service. Jimmy Tiberia, Palo Verde West hall council president, said anyone who lives in one of the eight residence halls is eligi­ ble for the scholarship and will be judged on outstanding service to the University community. He said the scholarship will be award­ ed by a five-member committee The applicant must be a full-time stu­ dent with at least a 3.0 grade point average! and live in a residence hall. The money for the scholarship will come from RHA funds and donations. By Jim Austin Staff writer ASU’s Residence Hall Association will award the first $250 biannual Robert Kalin Memorial scholarship this April, the association’s president said. Patty Berry said the scholarship is to honor Kalin’s outstanding service to ASU and promote similar service within other residents. Kalin,' a sophomore business major, died in January in a car accident near ASU while driving to the airport to pick upa friend. Berry said Kalin was a member of the Palo Verde West Half Council, served on rnmmm. I t’s a d re a m . 'i t ’s custom -blended ice cream . Cookies, candy and fru its w hipped w ith th e ice cream of your choice! Im agine chocolate ice cream w hipped w ith fresh b an an as, or b u tter pecan w ith a H eath b a r... Bark buffer William Pavlovic, an A S U grounds maintenance employee, applies a coat of paint to an orange tree ocated on Cady Malt. Pavlovic says that the paint protects the bark from the heat of the sun. PIANO RENTALS S p e c ia l R ate $ 2 5 .0 0 a m o n th ALLEN PIANO A ORGAN 242-4321 3409 W. Bethany » Phx. 833-2332 10W. Main • Mesa RAISE YOUR RANK IN CLASS Drink your beer from a glass Cor mus). Our liter gusto mug (with beer label): [WARE *8°° COM P A M ' 22151 CLARENDON ST. WOODLAND HILLS, C A 91367 Great glasses and mugs and handcrafted wooden mug racks. _ Suru-Thurs. OFF ANY PARADICE CREAM WHIP Expires 2/28/82 w it h t h is c o u p o n o n ly Hours: ■ 12*12 Fri. &Sat. Include self-addressed, stamped envelope. R one coupon . .. .per w hip 1 2 p.rn.-1 am . SEND FOR FREE RROCHURE TODAY! Lrniun A 1044 S. Terrace, Tenlpe Tmare The .Paradise Cream Whip is 3 scoops of ice cream plus your favorite candy. Reg. $ 1 .5 0 - — - - — C O U P O N * -— - - — So pay attention. Next time you plan a trip, do what our customers do. If you book your trip w ith Valley Travel or Sky Harbor Travel Service you can pull right into our FREE parking lot and we will chauffeur you right to your terminal. W hen you return to Phoenix w e'll pick you up and deliver you to your car. All this free of charge if you purchase your ticket from Valley Travel or Sky Habor Travel Service. IF YQU'RE PAYING FOR AIRPORT PARKING... YOU'RE NOT PAYING ATTENTION W. Al Pasley's College St. o it ASU Campus Bÿü r! ForesttDDr. VALLEY TRAVEL MOO E. Airline Dr. D ivisio n o f Vsltey Travel Phoenix. A285005 Phone:2 4 4 -1 8 6 8 707 S. FO R EST DR. 967-9403 LOCATED JUST Vi BLOCK NORTH OF ASU, VALLEY TRAVEL IS THE TRAVEL SERVICE FOR ASU STUDENTS! it Open Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. *4 p.m. \ALLEY TFWEL * O n -L in e ! « a EVERY ITEM ON 5 S * 6 SALE L I m . è Sex, health topic of class “Sexual Health Issues,” a short course about sexually transmitted diseases, birth control methods, infertility and sterilization, sponsored by Planned Parenthood of C entral and N orthern Arizona, will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Feb. 20 at ASU Alhambra Center, 4510 N. 37thAve. Cost is $30 with an addi­ tional $5 charge for those receiving continuing educa­ tion credit with Arizona Nurses Association or Arizona Medical Associa­ tion. For more information call 258-4299. *2 GAL16RV Memorial Union February 8 thru M arch 2, 1982 c la r e n c e H m o r g a n SALES FIN A L To Winner of Drawing. No purchase necessary to win. Drawing will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday. Feb. 21. G reenville, North C a ro lin a G a lle ry Lecture by the Artist Friday, February 19,11:40 -12:30 In c o o p e ra tio n with the B lack Student Union PINBALL WIZARD 120 E. UNIVERSITY, TEMPE UNDER THE ARCHES, ACROSS FROM ASU Open 10:30 ’till Midnight Sun.-Thurs. 10:30 ’till 2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. February 19 thru 26 — 8 Plays for $1.00 Friday, February 1 9 - P a c - M a n contest — high score between 6 & 11 Saturday, February 20 — Defender contest — high score between 6 & 11 Sunday, February 21 — Donkey Kong contest — high score between 6 & 11 Wins: First Place - PINBALL WIZARD T-SHIRT & 10 FREE TOKENS Second place — 5 FREE Game Plays We wish to thank all our customers for the past 8 years of fun. THANK YOU The People of Pinball Wizard Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 7 Educator calls marijuana harmful OF P r o f s t u d ie s d a n g e r s o f 'p o t ' By Mike Phillips Staff writer It was a secret shared mainly by musicians in the ’40s, a discovery that helped shape a generation in the ’60s, and a widely accepted pastime through most of the last decade. It is getting high—the smoking of m an juana. The vote is still out on the effects of this “recreational” drug, but the early returns are casting a frightening shadow on its use. Lee Croft, a professor of Russian at ASU, began studying marijuana five years ago. Besides his duties in the foreign languages department, Croft teaches an innovative class at ASU titled “Marijuana and Man.’.’ On Thursday he lectured to a gathering of students at the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity house on what he has learned about grass. “I became interested in pot through'the counseling of students,” Croft said; “Many of them had used marijuana and found that several employment opportunités were closed to them because of it. “ I thought to myself, ‘Why are these young people ruining their careers? Why isn’t marijuana legalized?’ So I looked in the library under M and started researching.” What Croft found was an expanding collection of informa­ tion that pointed toward the dangerous effects of this leisure drug. There are 420 separate chemicals in marijuana, including tetrahydrocannabinol. Since THC is fat-soluble, it stays in brain tissue for about seven days and can still be measured in the body after 20 days, he said. Memory is the main loser in this mingling of brain cells and THC. “For many people, their memories (while) on marijuana become non-existent, images become blurred and that period of time is never captured,” Croft said. “You can’t get back a memory you never had.” Marijuana’s effect on the reproductive cycle and on future generations is even more dangerous, according to Croft. “THC will reach a fetus within a half-hour of its mother smoking marijauna,” he said. “THC has been shown in several studies to damage the pituitary gland of the unborn child.” In mice and other animals, males that had their pituitary glands damaged in the womb became very unaggressive in their relations with the opposite sex. “Therefore they don’t breed and their genes don’t get passed on to the next generation. They become extinct,” Croft added. Croft said that legalizing marijuana would be legalizing abuse. “I find it incomprehensible that I get paid for telling people not to poison themselves,” he said. “But here I am .” Conference to focus on photography A panel of nationally recognized photojournalists will be at ASU March 6 to participate in an all-day photo communications con­ ference open to students, photographers and the public. The program for “Com­ municating ’82,” features demonstrations and discus­ sions of video lighting, news photography and picture editing. Among the in­ structors are Pulitzer Prize­ winning photojournalist Skeeter Hagler of the Dallas Tim es-H erald; Time m agazine photojournalist Steve Northrup; Sports II. lu strated photographer Peter Read Miller and two Arizona Newspaper Photographers of the Year, Peter Schwepker of the Arizona Republic and Tim Koors of the Phoenix Gazette. A Nikon FM with 50mm lens will be given away as a door prize, courtesy of Pro­ fessional Services, Nikon Inc. “Communicating ’82” is sponsored by Copperstate News P h o t o g r a p h e r s Association and the ASU department of journalism and telecommunication. The seminar begins at 8 a.m. in ASU’s Neeb Hall. The registration fee is $15 for students and Copperstate News P h o t o g r a p h e r s Association members; $20 for others. Additional information is available from the ASU department of journalism and telecommunication, 965SOU. TEMPE CENTER JE W E LE R S FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS Diamonds. Watches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing 966-7587 GRAND OPENING l Ä IMPORT AUTO CEN TER INC. 994-3222 AHaRoowo Aspan Aston Martin Audi Austin H ssly BMW Capri C bevette Citation Colt Couriar Crickst Datsun . Datomaso English Ford Farrar! Flat Hillm an Honda Horizon Jaguar Lamborghini Lancia Lotus Luv MG 3016 N. Scottsdais Rd. • Scottsdale, Arizona (Locatari In roar of Floors Unlimited) Just North of Thomas Complete Auto Repairs & Service A ll Makes & Models TUNE-UP SPECIAL Starting from $39.95 (plus tax) Includes new plugs, points, condenser (If needed), adust timing and carburetor, check compreaalon, adjust for em issions test, service air filter and PCV valve. Inspect wires, belts, hoses and cables. (Additional parts and labocextra If needed). Tune-ups Brakes Timing Beits & Chains Alternators Generators Starter & Solenoids Batteries Electronic Ignition AirConditioning Carburetors Electrical System Front Ends Lube, o il, filter Front Wheel Drive Transmission Service Engine Work Steering System Fuel Injections System Clutch & Flywheel Differentials Radiators Water & Fuel Pumps Shocks Heating & Cooling Mufflers Troubleshooting Normal Maintenance Em issions Test Gear Box Work Etc, etc. T o So u th A m erica , Eu rop e, A frica, the M ideast and O rient, and scattered lo catio ns aroun d the glo be where the petroleum industry d ep en d s on Dowell Schlurriberger’s tech n ica l support. W e’re an international corpo ratio n, providing vital wellsite services w hich in clu d e oilw ell stim ulation cem enting and testing. D ow ell S ch lu m b erg er (Dow-well Schlum -bur-jay) needs top notch eng in eers interested in the exciting career o p tio n s we have available. m O P P O R T U N IT Y THflTCflN TRICE Y O U AW RY C u rre n tly w orking in m ore than 50 countries outside of N orth A m erica , yo u co u ld be assign ed anyw here from A ustrailia to Zaire, preform ing welfsite operations in ch a lle n g in g environm ents. F o r all this Dow ell S ch lu m b e rg e r will reward yo u an exception al starting salary, co m prehen sive em ployee benefits and an u n p reced en ted opportunity to travel and live in foreign countries. T o find out m ore about o u r international opportunities co n ta ct y o u r placem ent office for presentation and interview dates and let Dow ell S ch lu m b e rg e r take you aw ay to the top! PRESENTATION: TIME: PLAC E: INTERVIEWING: Monday, February 22 7-9 p.m. Memorial Union Room 213 Tuesday, February 23 Dow ell International S ervices D ivision of Dow C h e m ic a l U .S .A . A gen t for / D O W ELL. \ \Schlumberger/ We A re An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F fX \ Maserati Mazda Mercedes Monza Mustang II Omni Opel Peugeot Pinto Porsche Renault R olls Royce Rover Saab Seville Slate Simca Starfire Subaru Sunblrd Toyota Triumph VW Vega Volvo Etc., etc. Page 8 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 H ard w ork called essentia! SPECIAL Official gives job finding tips By Emily Smith Staff writer The person who works hardest at job hunting is the person who gets the job. In fact, that may be just as important as one’s schooling, the assistant director of Career Services said Thursday. ‘‘Students need to make contacts, pound the streets for jobs and exhaust every possibility for a job opening,” Diane Regner said. Although more students are becoming aware of the need to brush up on their inter­ viewing skills, “ there are still students turn­ ing in paperwork (job applications and resumes) that are unbelievably sloppy,” she said. “They think that people will just accept them for their credentials and they don’t bother with the paperwork.” Students should always follow^dtrections when filling out a job applicatimi, because many applications are thrown in the trash if the applicant has not followed directions, Regner said. “You have to fill it out the Way the employer wahts it, not the way you want it,” ' she said. “If it says ‘no resume,’ then don’t send a resume.” Regner added that responding to applica­ tion questions with “see attached resume” frustrates employers, who then have to shuffle through papers for the information. She also advises students to keep a cur- rent job application filled out so important information is available when it is needed. “Most people don’t do this, but students should at least make a Xerox of applications that they send in to companies, and hang on to it,” Regner said. Students are becoming more aware of the need to sell themselves in interviews. .“Good interviewing techniques can be learned,” she said. “The key to interviewing is preparation.” Know something about your personal strengths, the company’s history and its financial status, Regner said. While being interviewed, students should not make the mistake of answering ques­ tions with the “cafeteria approach." In other words, students should tell employers exactly what job they want in­ stead of asking for whatever the employers have. In spite of the bad economy and com­ petitive job market, Regner said that for the most part, only students in more technical fields take advantage of Career Services: “ People in m ajors that a re not employment-specific are not coming to our workshops, and they are the ones who need it the most.” At a recent career workshop attended by approximately 60 students, only four of them were not enrolled in the Business or Engineering colleges. V o c a tio n a l o ffe r real w o rld d a y to e x p e rie n c e s Women in Communications is sponsoring “Day on the Job,” March 8-19. This is an opportunity to work with Phoenix area professionals for a day to experience the real world of work from the inside. Some of the- professions involved include broadcast and print media, film, advertising, public relations, photography, business communications and political communication. Applications and additional information can be picked up in the Telecommunications office, second floor, Stauffer Hall, or in the Business Administration office. This oppor­ tunity is available to both men and women. Registration fee is $5. Applications must be received by Feb. 22. B U F F E T D IN N E R ALL YOU CAN EAT! CHIMICHANGAS ARE NOW PART O F OUR B U F F E T !! FIRST PERSON WITH THIS COUPON SECOND PERSON 9 9 * I M EXICAN B U F F E T S - COUPON — L O S A R C O S M A L L — S C O T T S D A L E — F a c in g M c D o w e ll Rd. ■ 947-5491 I O P E N 11 A M T O 9 PM E V E R Y D A Y — E X P I R E S 2/25/82. “ 0 ” In te re st F in a n c in g O w n y o u r c o n d o fre e a n d c le a r in j u s t 5 y e a r s SK I SPR IN G BREAK • P A R K C IT Y , U T A H •5 D A Y S M a r c h 14-20 • L ifts » L o d g in g (in condos) « T r a n s p o r t a t io n 2 5 9 00 SNOW TOURS • 965-9104 Walk to ASU Rent • Lease • Buy A S p e c ia l O f f e r F r o m A S U Students... If y o u ’re over 18 you can rent a Toyota, P in to o r oth er fin e c a r at SPECIAL LOW W EEKEND RATES starting at * 1 9 .9 9 A DAY no m ile a g e [2 Day M in.] (Rates subject to change without notice) F o r Y o u r C ar, C a ll Y o u r A .S .U . R ep resentative 968-4072 O ffic e lo ca te d at Rural & U n ive rsity Now’s the time to beat the housing hassle. Rent, lease or buy, and enioy' on campus’ Cp.o n d o m i n i u m s living with off campus freedom r f O m $ 4 5 , 0 0 0 to beat the hassles. Facilities include: Recreation Room —fireplace, conversation pit, kitchen • Heated therapy pool • Heated swimming / pool • Hardwood cabinets • Individual washerl dryers in units • Private patios • Disposal • Private I entrances • Dishwasher • Covered parking I (assigned) • Generous guest parking • Individual !> utilities • Common water • Heavy landscaping ' • R-30 ceiling insulation • 6 " R-19 wall insulation • Contemporary Spanish architecture • Drapes • Refrigerators (frost-free) • Wall-to-wall carpeting • Well-lighted site. Walk over today and see the models before semester break. Talk it over. Then com e back to the A S U lifestyle you deserve. 2 miles ^ ^ * 0 * 0 / \ 9 Park Phoenu Zoo F: V 1mile s - * » * * # k tr \\ University \ Tempe V illas Apache Blvd/ \ s / ■ r)i . „ - 8 W Ä w ay I \ ■\ 1 X' > Southern ■ y y / / 7*I / . 1111 E. University 967-7477 (24 Hours) Models Open 10:30 - 5:30 Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 9 Trucks 'pasturized;' ASU vehicles retired after years of service By Kim Rash Contributing writer Twenty years ago, they cost ASU $150 each. Almost 300,000 miles later, they are finally being put out to pasture. So said Andy Mills, superintendent of the ASU motor pool, refering to the last ten 1956-57 pick-up trucks used for maintenance around campus. -A fter much use, the trucks are falling victim to rotting hinges, locks and door catches — parts that have become dif­ ficult to replace. “We can’t afford to have doors flying open and take the chance on someone getting hurt,” Mills said. He said the pick-ups, mostly Fords and Chevys, never go off campus as do some of the other 300 motor pool vehicles. That way, if the vehicles do break down, they were easy to tow back and service. Mills said the trucks still ran well enough for working around campus, but parts for the trucks started to become costly and rare within the last two years. “People like fixing and restoring old vehicles, so naturally the cost for parts goes up.” He said the shop usually got parts out of junk yards and salvage lots, but parts were getting harder and harder to find. He also said they couldn’t afford to pay the $20 or $30 per-part coat asked by some dealers. Mills remembers buying the trucks from the State surplus for around $150 a piece as used vehicles, All they needed were a few miner repairs before they were put to work. Now many of the trucks show more than 200,000 miles. Mills, 56, has worked for Urn motor pool for 32 years. He started as a mechanic and worked up to foreman and then superintendent. The former Mesa High School auto mechanics teacher said the trucks will be put in the ASU salvage yard for public sale. Now because of historical value, the trucks are worth $800 to $900, Mills said. F R E E FILM ßy ( x meeting. Alpha Kappa Psi will meet Feb. 21 at 7 p.m. in the MU, Room 217, for a g e n e ral b u s in e s s meeting. A g 6 l 8 p.m. MEMORIAL UNION BUILDING RO LLS! KDKB Plan to attend a general orientation/briefing meeting .Wednesday, February 24, 1982,8 p.m. in the Memorial Union Building to hear first hand the latest news of the growth and progress of the Kingdom and the part Saudi American Bank is playing in these fast-paced and accelerating activities. 9 6 8 -8 6 2 9 Be sure to attend! Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 13 wsmê I«mint> oo'»im Roller Skates Roller Skate Rentals Skateboards Blanks, Trucks, Wheels Safety Gear Skate & Surf Wear art centers in s must be met i the recipients. ,760 in state and irt projects. An lests could not be Ask for Sandle (602) 994 1017 7373 Scottsdale Mall Scottsdale, A Z 85231 SA cuts which >r extinguished A case in point is icson. Two years ed of five CETA we just don’t said Deborah structor at the he CETA fund r in. Because they itching ACA the company i dance studio) , Because they TA funds, they ACA funds, is bitter, int to subsidize i’t looking to get ids; they just iressing because continiadpage14 A tte n tio n : F o r e ig n C a r O w n e r s Í A V I U P TO 70% O N R ECYCLED FO R E IG N A U T O PARTS MG T R IU M P H HONDA D A T S U N TO TO T A VW a n d OTH ER S A ll M o d e ls F o r e ig n 3Q24 So, 4 0 * h '$ trc e * Ph*. 243-3291 (near 4 0 t h A U n iv e r s it y ) * M e n tio n this a d A g e t on a d d it io n a l S T o a ff! ♦ LAS VEGAS NIGHT ♦ ♦ $ WANTED! $ 100 STUDENTS! Y O U ' L L W R I T E H O M E A B O U T THIS JOB!! H e l p m a r k e t the h o t t e s t n e w p r o d u c t i n .town a n d o n campus. T h i s job l a s t s o n l y _ 4 w e e k s , b u t y o u ’ll love e v e r y m i n u t e of it! If y o u spend m o n e y l i k e w a t e r , b u t too lazy to g e t a R E A L job,... C a l l1 us ? PTT.T.TDNATRE 'S CO. 897-7^83 D a n ♦ ♦ B lack Ja c k ♦ ♦ ♦ C ra p s ♦ ♦ ♦ LOWEST AIRFARES AVAILABLE D rinks Saturday, February 20 at 8:45 p.m. ♦ ♦ ♦ C o n t in e n t a l V illa s E a s t 111; C lu b h o u s e ♦ CALL 9 6 7 -0 5 7 5 CALL $ 3 R e s e r v a t io n s R e q u e s t e d ♦ R id e s A v a ila b le L Plan your travel now & save GO TRAVELMORE FOR LESS C a ll 9 6 7 -75 6 3 ▼ Sponsored by The Jewish Student Center ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ 3225 S. H ardy Drive, Suite 107, T em pe a Sensational French Canadian Percussion Quartet Four highly talented musicians playing over 200 traditional a n d contem porary instruments. A dynam ic a n d entertaining show, LADIES NIGHT NO COVER for ladies until 10 p.m. SI .50 after 10 p.m. 25c champagne 11 -close especially choreographed by Brian M acd on ald . Part of the C a n a d a Festival. Wednesday» February 24th at 8 pm Tickets: $650 a n d $5.50 The C a n a d a festival Is m ade possible through Ihe support a f 1he C an ad ian Government and tie Scottsdale Arts Center Association (SACA) SATURDAY BUD LONGNECKS 75* til 10 p.m. TUESDAY % Tickets available a t the Center Box Office. CaH994.-A RTS , •■- ■ v N o refunds or e xch an ges on tickets Q The Scottsdale Center for Ihe Arts is ow ned a n d operated NEW MUSIC NIGHT Dress code enforced 968-2446 1216 E. Apache, Tempe ^ ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ! Page 14 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 M o re a b o u t Fed c u ts continued tn»n pug* 11 so much else is being cut, in the name of military defense.” She added, “When all the cuts are in effect, what sort of quality of life will we have that is worth defending?” Organizations such as the Phoenix Art Museum and the Phoenix Symphony have the luxury of local “ movers and shakers” in the corporate community to implement fund raising. From the ACA the museum received $10,000 and the Symphony $14,000 last year. If these amounts were cut, the community notables would probably be the only source of recouping the funds. Without the federal funding, the arts may just exist for the rich. Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, said,“My feeling for years is that the arts should get a minimal government funding and seek the bulk of funding from private organizations.” Rep. Jim Skelly, R-Scottsdale, said, “I don’t think that the arts should be funded by the government a t all. Before.we had government funding the arts flourished and they’ll continue to flourish.” But is this true? A report by the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies (NASAA), states “In 1965 when the arts agency (NEA) began . . . combined contributions to the arts by the American corporations is estimated to have been $20 million. In 16 years since the inception of the NEA, business contributions have grown to $436 million . . . it is the publics unprecedented demand which is arts’ prime supporter.” Hie arts organizations that will be hardest hit, in terms of government funding cute, are the small, often “experimental” types. Big businesses in most communities tend to suppport the larger and more solidly based groups. Jeanne Herberger, vice president of civic and government relations, said, “Arizona is at the crossroads in developing major arte organizations. We are giving 40 percent of our giving budget to organizations that have the potential of becoming major.” A major question that arises, then, is whether business will tend to dictate their own tastes and ethics in return for support. Recently the Arizona Designer Craftsmen (ADC) held a juried show at the Valley Bank Center. Two days aft«- the show was hung, the ADC received a call to remove a piece from the exhibit. Judd Marston, coordinator for ADC, was told by Vivian Case, coordinator for the Concourse area (where the show was hung), that the piece was objectionable to a member of the Concourse Committee’s taste and that it was “precariously” hung. “I was surprised at their request. It was so startling to me based on our dealings with VNB. It was a very arbitrary decision,” Marston said.” Case confirmed that “one person did object to it.” She added that the Concourse Committee had set guidelines as to what may be shown at the VBC and that organizations were made aware of these guidelines. But Marston said that she was not aware that these guidelines existed. The proposed budget cute still stand a tough fight in Congress. Both legislators sympathetic to the arte and artists themselves have testified before Congress. If Reagan has his way with the new budget, the arte will certainly have to reorganize in order to survive. Dancexercise Hathayoga Rebounding aerobics Stretching and flexibility Gymnastics for children jazz Tempe ventriloquist will perform on 'Fridays' Dan Horn, a Tempe ventriloquist, was selected to appear on tonight’s episode of “Fridays” as the winner of the Graham Central Station/KDKB Great Talent Search held Tuesday, Feb. 16 at Graham Central Station in Phoenix. Selected from among 16 comedy acts, Horn and a friend will perform a skit with a member of the “Fridays” cast and will intorduce Chubby Checker, tonight’s musical guest. Horn and his friend will receive $300 as paid extras. KDKB held the talent search after KDKB promotions director Casey Stewart a r ra y e d with ABC to provide a guest talent for the episode. ABC has worked similar arrangements in die past with a few other stations nationally, and chose to work with KDKB because of its local prominence. Modem dance Women’s self-defense Classic Swedish massage Music for imagining, dreaming meditation Pre-natal/post-parturn exercise Tap dance for adults &. children Dynamic combat method Sign language Aerobics Diet plus accent on change Creative movement for children« Movement fundamentals Good morning exercise and stretching Taichichuan . / Ballet for adults ^ c h ild r e n D O N T FALL BEHIND GMAT OAT Prepare Now for: March 20 June 23 April 17 Classes Starting: Jan. 26 April 27 A new session begins February 22 at THE CENTER FOR BODY AWARENESS Feb. 20. Classes now available for GRE, PSYCH, GRE* BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP, OCAT, C P A CALL TODAY U ucatiwut Cnt*r 4l4S.MiHAve. Tempe 894-8347 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 For information about othar contara in mora than SO major U.S. citiaa and abroad. CALL TOLL FREE «00-221-17«. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS C V.i® « 4 R O CELEBRATES ITS C K H A B I T GRAND OPENING! FREE WELL DRINKS TWO ROCK'N'ROLL BANDS & EXPLORER 910 N. HAYDEN RD., TEMPE AND BEER FROM 7-9 PM DON'T MISS IT! (JUST 1 MILE EAST OF CAMPUS) 966-4880 Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 15 ocals do hoir best 0 sound ike pros, ut don't NOW FEATURING HAPPY HOUR WITH ft PRICEWELLDRINKS ft PRICE MARGARITAPITCHERS AND HOT HORS D’OEUVRES ARE ON THE HOUSE By Jim DeFario Scenes writer When will local musicians learn that it’s not how many notes you can cram into a given space that counts, but where you leave them out? «a. ON.-FRI. D O N ’T M IS S O U R A S U D IN N E R S P E C IA L ! 1300 N. HAYDENRD., TEMPE • 968-1161 Most of the bands on Conditioned response: the standard rocker back-bend for the “KDKB’s Arizona Sounds zillion-notes-a-second heavyweight rock imitation. Vol. 5” do their pretentious best to sound just like all the “heavyweights” you hear blaring out of everyone and his brother’s car on a Friday night. They’ve got it down right, complete with those zillion-notes-a-second guitar solos. The few exceptions to that rule follow the anemic mellow/country/folk routé. Decent stuff, but performed with all the intimacy of old spaghetti. The one g re a t cut, however, is “Custom Cad­ die” by Dirty Pearl. Th}s jazz/rocker, enhanced by downright gutsy vocals by Janice Gunderson Boucher, really moves. Three of these cuts were represented by their respec­ tive artists last Sunday night at KDKB’s Arizona Sounds Party at Dooley’s . Doug Doehrman, formerly of Nitehawk Diner, played solo for most of his acoustic set, but was joined by a female vocalist for his last two numbers. Nervousness seemed to rob some of his country/folk tunes of their intimacy, especially the 1 Gram P arsons . classic “Return of the Grievous Angel.” ■ ' <; - if ■"* Freeze came oh next, wak­ ing the crowd which, by now, /as just starting; to fill the acant tables. Combining iriginals with covers such as :heap Trick’s “California flan” and the Cars’ “Shake t Up,” Freeze played a tight et, with just the right imount of showiness to augnent its special brand of Pair up with Lite Beer Celebrities in our special Ljtei Beer Backyard Gam e Set. A complete ■ock. assortment of backyard sports Superstars Competition and s e e a television taping of Local f a v o r i t e s the The Superstars program. Six days and five nights for two games. Includes badminton, Schoolboys ended the show volleyball, croquet and ■„ in Key Biscayne, Florida. horseshoe sets by Sportcraft. vith an exciting but •omewhat contrived set of SmtSTPRIZES 1000 THIRD PRIZES AM F Whitelv Electronic Exercise Machine. Measures ligh energy techno-rock. A Lite Beer Superstars tennis visor. body responses as you exercise. Features: pulse rate Proficiency doèsn’t seem to and work load monitors, timer and more. ie a problem with the Schoolboys, but originality T H E O r n C U U L B B R OF T W SUPERSTARS ioes. I’m just not sure that the world needs another band that looks and sounds a OFFICIAL RULES lot like Queen, nor are many NO PURCHASE REQUIRED audiences i m p r e s s e d HERE'S HOW TO ENTER: THE LITE BEER S U PE R ST A R S envelope to: Lite Beer Superstars, 1 On an official entry form or plain piece of stamped anymore by smoke bombs Sweepstakes Winners List. P 0 Box 6621. 1 3" x 5 " paper nano print your name and SW E E PST A K E S ENTRY FO R M Blair. NE 68009 I and explosions on stage. address 5: Each Qt the six ( 6 ) Grand Prize.trips for 2 I Most of the folks at the 2. Mail your entry in a hand-addressed en- to Key Biscayne. Florida includes round trip | (Please Hand Print) velope no larger than 4vs x9- r ( #^e nv e airfare to and from winner's nearest maior , show responded to " the lopeTto Lite Beer Super^rs Sweepstakes. airport 5 nights hotel accommodations and I theatrics, though, by getting PO Box 3038 Blair. NE 68009 meals Grand Prize travelers must agree to * Nameout on the floor and shakin’ from and return to their home on the | ' 3 . AU entries must be received by April 30 depart specified by the Miller Brewing Com- | A d d re s s it. But didn’t a guy named 1982 Enter as often as you wish. but each dates pany We estimate that thé 5-day trip win , entrv must be mailed separately Winners take place between December 1 1982 and I rnty _State_ Pavlov mice do something «rill l i determined in a random drawing |r0m April 30 1983 Grand Prize travelers will * like that with dogs? _Age_ attend a taping ot The Superstars Competi- I j e |eDb o n e l - JOIN US IN THE UTE BEER SUPERSTARS COMPETITION ENTER THE UTE BEER SUPERSTARS SWEEPSTAKES ......... K U H N ... " S s r jf f lw s t s s r s a 10-15% OFF Micro computer software/hardware Apple: TRS-80: C P /M Business packages, word processors, D.B. systems, games Call our produ ct bulletin board system with your system o r term inal 24 hr* @ 936-4506 (N . P h x .) 8:30-6 @ 897-1667 (Tempe) Micro system Services offer •: . 4. This sweepstakes is open to^es'dents of the United States who a r e o l e 9a |dnn kng age in their state at time ot entry The MU er Brewinq Co . 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Inc their o s tnhutors anilines, tribulors. affiliâtes »uusiuia,™». subsidiaries^ advejlisno and ipromotion agencies, retail alcoholic heveraae licensees and the employees and f a S s of each ARE N0T ELIGIBLE This sweeostakes is void in the states ot Mis?™.^p^ « and Viroma and wherever prp- ‘ it) Prize travelers must agree—to ,— pair | tion Granu up with Lite Beer Celebrities and compete in . light sportmg activities in Florida such as I tennis swimming, soccer and basketball ■ l state that I am of legal drinking skills a sprint run. a distance run. bowling^ I age in my state of residency and rowing, golf and an obstacle course Grand | hold no interest in an alcoholic Prize travelers must be 21 years ot age or ■ beverage license ■i __i>:-» A•*• muab THEY GAGED TH E» BODIES BUTNOTTHHRDESBES COLOR ■Y DILUXE SUNDAY SU PER S U N D A Y C H A M P A G N E BRUNCH 11 a.m.-3 p.m. All you can eat from our buffet featurins: baked ham, roast beef, P o ly n e sia n chicken, assorted breakfast items & nine different salads. 25< S t s * 1$5.50 children under 12 - $2.25 MONDAY IN F L A T IO N F IG H T E R N IG H T Buy one dinner at resular price and set second dinner of equal or lesser value for half price. TUESDAY S T U D E N T A P P R E C IA T IO N N IG H T 20% OFF all menu items by presentins a valid student I D. ■ m \ 222 S. Mill O'BRIEN'S mm n ■ In m mU H^ eri FiOur Mill. ■in Tempe Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 17 T he B o rd e r/ 'L o v e ' true to life ; 'Cannery R o w ' true to n o ve l By Mike Malone Films/Theatre THE BORDER “The Border,” starring Jack Nicholson, presents a grim but sadly accurate view, of the MexieanAmerican border and the corruption, tragedy and blighted hopes of thjdse who live on either side of it. Nicholson p o rtray s a border patrolman vexed by his wife’s expensive tastes and unwillingly drawn by the tax-free dollars of. his fellow patrolmen’s corrupt border practices. But the just man within him finally revolts, and he attempts to right the wrongs — or at least one of them — perpetrated by his comrades. Although “The Border” does honestly embrace a crucial and distasteful flaw in American foreign policy and in human nature itself— an unsavory and potentially didactic topic in any medium — it does not fail to provide exciting and engaging enter­ tainment. saucy broad that she is—bet­ casionally opts for informa­ ter than anyone thought tional integrity instead of dramatic content. possible. The audience toward Although Nolte does quite adequately fulfill his acting which the film is directed is duties as the secretive, in­ not primarily a gay one, just dustrious, philanthropic as “Guess Who’s Coming “Doc,” it is Winger who cap­ Dinner” was not intended tures the audience’s im­ exclusively for partners in agination and keeps it en­ interracial marriages. In­ thralled with her nuances of stead, “Making Love” is a expression and complete film designed to inform and physical ease with the enlighten those people whose lack of knowledge and medium of film. Perhaps characters like understanding frequently Doc, Suzy, Fauna and Hazel results in stereotypes and never existed anywhere , prejudice. besides Steinbeck’s extraor­ dinary imagination, but it’s HELP US nice — and reassuring — to sit in a dark theatre and pre­ STRIKEOUT tend that they did. BIRTH DEFECTS CANNERY ROW Even' John Steinbeck’s most ardent admirers might be willing to admit that MGM’s long-awaited “Can­ nery Row,” starring Nick Nolte and Debra Winger, faithfully renders Steinbeck’s poignant im­ ages, conspicuously droll language and vivid, idiosyn­ cratic characters. His admirers might even agree that Debra Wing«', in only her second m ajor screen role, p o rtray 8 Suzy—stubborn, honest and MAKING LOVE Arthur Hiller’s “Making Love” is not a film one can honestly debate on a purely cinematic level. It is, first and foremost, a social film, easily as precedent-setting for the topic of homosexuali­ ty as “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” was for inter­ racial marriage. “Making Love,” which stars Kate Jackson, Michael Ontkean and Harry Hamlin, depicts a young, married doctor (Ontkean) who, after a difficult period of selfdiscovery, finally admits and accepts his longsuppressed feelings of at­ traction for men. Being the first major film to d e a l o b j e ct i ve ly . , realistically and sensitively with the acceptance of homosexuality as a viable and healthy alternative, “Making Love” necessarily walks a narrow path, and oc­ This Week Special BICYCLE TUNE-UP Regular *12.95 ^ qw *7.95 P lu s Parts includes Complete Lubrication, Adjustment of Brakes, Gears, Cranks, Wheel Cones and Headset Minor Wheel Truing. COLLEGE CITY CYCLE MARCH OF DIMES 909 E . L e m o n 966-0842 “One of the year’s 10 best” •Time Magazine, Richard Corliss_ Fri.-Sat. Feb. 19-20 7:00' & 9:30 p m. jSWWl F rid a y & Saturday. Feb. 19-20 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. BUST LOO CUERVO & W \£ R e ¿ ¡¡iò s , a re M r ig n i with THE WHO! This Sunday fth . ?■ n o o a g a o p .m $1.50 with ASU l.P. • $2.00 w/Q BROUGHT TO YOU BY ASASU AìBMMtfrwIkrflP ^ EftVO ESPECIAL • TEQUILA 80 PROOF IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BTC 1981 HEUBLEIN. INC . HARTFORD. CONN -- P Page 18 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 Darkness on a Tuesday night By Karl Byrn Scenes editor Last Tuesday night was weird enough — seeing Doors imitators Strange Daze (see review, below) and a band that sounds like the Doors of the ’80s, The Gun Club, in the same night was at least a mild journey into the heart of darkness. But if Strange Daze was entertaining as a evocation of a spirit, The Gun Club was the spirit, not simply a limb but in fact the heart of the darkness itself. The Gun Club, a Los Angeles based band that gives punk energies to tradi­ tional blues forms, played at Merlin’s, a small, dark club with an eerieness of its own that gave the show the best possible atmosphere. ■Playing tunes from their debut album “Fire of Love,” The Gun Club had a cap­ tivating power — not just as entertainment, not just in the uniqueness of their sound, but in an intensity that was the center of the crowd, as packed a crowd as Merlin’s has ever seen, the center, even a step deeper, of the collective attitude of the punk/new wave scene. So often, new bands try to sound angry, alienated, or desperate. The Gun Club has passed that point, passed the walls of expected punk at­ titudes. Instead of slashing of a need to take a stand but the result of having found that place and understanding it for its hor­ rors. “When we started out we wanted a scary image,” Pierce said in a pre-show in­ terview. “We wanted to tell people to go die. And they loved it. We don’t want to say that all the time but we did then and sometimes now, still do.” As hard to swallow as that may be, it still cuts to the core of what much punk wants to say but fears to ad­ mit. The band simply avoid­ ed the punk mainstream, in part, as Pierce said, because “we saw the scene (in L.A.) and knew how much games and backstabbing was going on. We just stayed out.” Pierce said struggling punk bands in Los Angeles §hate bands that receive recognition. “They’re all completely alienated. Stay­ ing out was strictly a way of waking up.” Pierce said his newest songs are shifted in focus to other people, to the uncanny untouchable-world of “com­ munications without words,” Beyond punk’s Jeffrey Lee Pierce: Scary Monetare and Super Creepe. violence, Pierce seems to say, is an unknown silence. norms in self-assertion, gruesome, filled with The Gun Club is going there, Songwriter Jeffrey Lee references to death, hell, and even if it is the darkness on Pierce’s realm is honestly drugs that are not the result theedgeof. . . the darkness. JO HN ’S SHO E REPAIR j “ 7 1 8 M ill Avenue, Tempe 4 967-9101 Let Us Do Your Repairing d We Know How To Do It Right 4 •Resoling Tennis Shoes •Orthopedic Shoes •Any Kind of Footwear ^ j If The Shoe Fite Repair It at Jo h n ’sl 1 FREE W ASH With This Ad Limit 1 per customer. Expires 2/28 32. WASH ’N CLEAN WORLD Suede Leather Altérations D rop-off Laundry ? H/ORltf J D rapes s i Remodeled — Under New Management Corner of Lemon & Terrace 966-5311 Next to Shop-N-Go ,___________Tempe S ta rts TONIGHT! S O U T H TW IN I • 3 «o p er Parson Charles Bronson in “ D E A T H W ISH II” plus r “ B U R N IN G ” l S O U T H T W I N II ■3 «o p e r Person Strange Daze does it like the Doors, but the Doors do it better “ M iss N u d e A m e ric a ” A “Y o u n g P la y m a te s” ■ 'f itllS By Roy Schechter Staff writer Question: Are we not the Doors? Answer: We -ire Strange Daze. The music of Jim Morrison and the Doors was resur­ rected last Tuesday night at Dooley’s by Los Angeles bas­ ed clone band Strange Daze. Packed houses a t two shows wildly cheered the band’s ef­ forts to recreate the sound and intensity that made the Doors so memorable. Lead singer and Jim Mor­ rison clone Randy Baker , emulated Morrison’s man­ nerisms and intonations with com m endable accuracy, down to the obligitory use of p ro f a n i t y an d s ex u al gestures, to the delight of the ‘60s-starved crowd. What he lacked, however, was the rich texture and erie, sen­ sual tonality that made Mor­ rison’s voice so unique and haunting. The band played the music competently, but lacked the raw intensity that the Doors embodied in their live per­ formances. The band started cooking near the end of the first show during “Light My Fire” and, particularly “L.A. Woman,” where the band improvised a long jam, comlete with psychedelic light effects and (Stepnik) flailing his arms and leather-clad legs wildly. Strang Daze is one of three Doors imitation bands I’ve seen hitting the national club scene. Crystal Ship is a California based band that has been playing Doors material for several years. They seem to exceed Strange Daze in intensity and allow more room for im­ provisation. M idwestern clones Moonlight Drive have a more raw, garage-band sound and their lead singer Morrison-impersonator bet­ ter embodies the manic onthe-edge performing style that made Jim Morrison memorable. “ K in k y C o a ch e s A T h e P o m P o m G ir ls " a * FR EE TU B O F P O P C O R N * with th is ad U n d e r New M anagem ent SOUTH TWIN DRIVE-IN Elliot Rd., Ju st East of 1-10. Tempe • 8 93 -1 7 4 4 WITH MUAB AWARENESS WEEK, MARCH 22 - 26. T he Fine A its C om m ittee presents till H STUDENT SPECIAL invites you to enjoy one of our many fine dinners and receive the second dinner D E L R IO ' JUST IMAGINE: “ % PRICE M USH RO O M EN CHILADAS Two Cheese Enchiladas topped with Sauce and Fresh Mushrooms, served with Rice and Beans. M ACHACA Shredded Dry Beef, sauteed with Fresh Vegetables and Spices, served with Rice and Beans and a Flour Tortilla. H A P P Y H O U R 4 - 7 M o n .-F ri. w / /12 P r ic e M a r g a r ita P itc h e r s , i TUESDAY FEB. 2 3 tfORIAL UNION EAST LAWN 3:30 to 6 p.m . Featuring many of the finest fiddlers in the state of Arizona. C la p y o u r h a n d s a n d s to m p y o u r fe e t! FREE ■ 1300 N. HAYDEN — TEMPE • 968-1161 S (Coupon valid through M a rch a i Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Pape 19 Wulk, Snowden to play 'chess' for last time ByPetePrteco A ssistant sports editor Basketball coaching is sometimes said to be a chess game. If that’s the case, then ASU’s Ned Wulk and UA’s Fred Snowden have moved their pawns against each other many a time. But Saturday night, (me of the two will get checkmated for the final Itime by the other. Snowden has retired effective at the end of the season. Over the years, Wulk has an edge on his Tucson counterpart as his teams have won 16 of the 22 meetings, including a 65-54 victory earlier this season. In that contest, UA led, 2319, at halftime before the Devils rallied in the second half. Paul Williams paced ASU with 22 points, while Tom Kuyper chipped in with 10 points. Since that time, the Devils (9-13, 4-9) have won three and lost three, while UofA (715,2-11) has won two and lost four. “Arizona had a good road trip up in the state of Washington (two weeks ago), and its performance last weekend against UCLA (Bruins won, 88-75) and USC (Trojans won in OT,' 60-59) indicates UofA is a vastly improved team,” Wulk said. “They played very close, which is much more than we ean say. Arizona could have beaten both UCLA and Southern Cal. “We expect them to be greatly improved.” But the Devils are coming off their finest performance of the season — the 80-62 blowout of USC on Monday night. Wulk was very pleased to see the Devils resurrect their offense from the morgue. “How many years has it been since we scored 80 points?” he said. “People in Phoenix were beginning to think we were holding the ball on purpose. “We did things that we’ve been waiting a long time to do — score points,” Wulk said. “The last ten minutes of the USC game was the best we’ve played by far. I think I even smiled on the bench. “It will give us confidence offensively, something we sadly needed all year,” he added. “It also should heighten our tempo, which is something that I like and I know the kids like, too.” Another positive output from the USC game was the play of freshman Billy Jor-. dan, who finally mave have broken out of the embryo conllnuad pag* 22 Staff photo b» J»M Hank ASU forward Walt Stone (34) appears to be staring the ball Into the basket as teammate Tom >____ m i __ j . . . . . . . i . Mart, HrNamura (311 and Wes Howell (24) look on. The Devils host U of A Saturday at-7:30 p.m. / Women become the prey aftet Trojan upset Staff photo by Bob BoamsodaiMf , _ araifist w c A a stalwart Long Beach State. The women s livla Jones skies for a jumpball against w c a a aiaiwen u « isketball team plays U of A in the UAC Saturday at 5.30 p.m. working on that. “Buntin is very physical and very aggressive, but she is a fierce competitor.” The ’Cats also have 5-foot9 Leslie Martin, (me of the most versatile players in the conference. Martin averages 11.6 points, 5.2 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game. “We never know who to put on her because she can play forward, guard or center,” Miller said. “She has good height for a guard, good hands and she can penetrate very well. ” The Wildcats also sport 5foot-8 guard, Shana Robert­ son, daughter of NBA Hallof-Famer Oscar Robertson. The “Big 0 ” was noted for his tremendous outside shooting when he played for the Cincinnati Royals and the Milwaukee Bucks in the ’60’s a n d ’70’s. “She is very good offen: sively, although she is a little slow defensively,” Miller said. “But, growing up with Oscar, I’m sure she knows all the tricks of the trade.” The Sun Devils defeated UofA last month in Tucson, 78-68, but it did not come Fiesta Village 1110 S. Alma School Rd., Mesa Then ask for processing using Kodak Paper & Chemistry! (behind Big-OTire Store) Ask for your STUDENT DISCOUNT CARO. 12 developing & print $ 3 .3 1 $ 5 .7 2 $ 7 .9 6 20 slides... ......... , . . . . . . $ 1 . 7 0 36 slides.'....... .................$ 2 .6 0 24 developing & print 36 developing & print The V alley's New est Electronic Playground Enjoy 60 of the newest electronic video games. T’ The ONLY Full Servfoe Camera Store 3 2 tokens $ 5 , 0 0 Trade OK • In-Store Repair Credit Carde OK ASU-Tempe Nut to ct>uckeo> 715 S. Forest SS4-S337 —0 location* to serve you — Iso n and gets out-rebounded by an average of 15.6 boards. On paper, the 17th-ranked Sun Devils (19-5, 6-4 in the WCAA) figure to blow the Wildcats off the court and halfway back to Tucson. But, basketball is not played on paper. “UofA is hungry for a win,” said ASU assistant Coach Joy Miller, who ran the team’s practice yester­ day while head Coach J u l i e n e Simpson was recruiting in Texas. “Their anxious for a victory over anybody. They’ll be out for . blood because we’re their in tra-state rivals and because we just beat a topranked team.” The Wildcats are led by the “slightly big” Tonee Buntin (14.8 points and 10.3 rebounds per game), who stands 6-foot-2 and tips the scales at approximately 200 pounds. “She’s a real bruiser,” Miller said. “She’s a step slower than most players, but if she gets the ball inside, she’ll go right over you to score. She is a little overweight, but they are games* people play DO Y O U C A R E ABO UT THE PICTUR ES YO U TA K E ? y By Tony Alba Sports writer The ASU-UofA rivalry never needs any hype in any sport. All the necessary in­ centive its there for both schools just because ASU is ASU and UofA is UofA. But in this case, there is an added incentive for the Wildcats. After its emotional victory over previously unbeaten and second-ranked USC, the ASU womens’ basketball team finds itself in the v u ln e r a b le position of having everybody shooting for them. Saturday, UofA will be the gunners, and ASU will be the gun-ees as the two squads pair-off in a Western Col­ legiate Athletic Association game. The contest will begin a t 5 p.m. and will proceed the Devils-’Cats men’s tilt. UofA is struggling along at 9-17 and are. last in die WCAA with an 0-10 mark. They have lost nine straight games and 12 of their last 13. The ’Cats rank dead last in n e a r l y e v e r y WCAA statistical category. In con­ ference games, UofA loses by and average of 18.3 points 6 tokens $ 1 . 0 0 - bring in this ad and play any three games of your choice. free 835-6510— ____ 2 fo r 1 S a le e n d s tonight at 10:00. S u n Devil N a u tilu s-A e ro b ics • 968-9487. Page 20 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 Three wrestlers to hang it up after successful PAC careers By Jeff Fries Sports writer Although Shakespeare became famous for writing, “parting is such sweet sor­ row,’' he hasn’t been the only one to feel the statement’s meaning. While Shakespeare and wrestling don’t exactly go hand-in-hand, ASU wrestling Coach Bobby Douglas will once again shed his almostannual tears of graduation “partings.” But not literally. At 7:30 p.m. F riday against Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo (16-5), three of his grapplers will roll around on the P.E. West mats for the last time. Seniors Bobby Williams (134 pounds), Jackson Kistler (158) and Joe Koeth (167), all tri-captains of this year’s 10-6 squad, will take part in their last home meet as the favorites to win Pac-10 titles. “We’ll miss ’em,” Douglas said Thursday. “They made a great contribution to the program. All three played with injuries at one time or another, and I’m proud of them. “They are all well-liked among their peers,” the coach added, “and they are striving for excellence academically. They are all gentlemen.” The Devils are coming off a vicious thrashing at the hand s Of Cal StateBakersfield, 41-6. However, the Devils went to the meet shorthanded and were forced to forfeit three bouts. Douglas said the situation was nothing new. “We’ve been wrestling like that all year,” he said “But we don’t have control over our injury situation, so there’s nothing we can do about it. It’s also a reflection of how tough our schedule is.” On Jan. 8, the Devils'” dropped a one-point decision to the Mustangs, 16-15, in what has become a pretty in­ tense rivalry, according to Douglas. “They are a much im­ proved team than the last time,” he said. “They’ve really started to come around. I don’t know what their problem was, but they seem to be over it. “They’re one of the strongest teams we have fac­ ed this season,” Douglas added. “Outside of the two Oklahoma schools and the tw o I owa schools, Bakersfield and Cal Poly are the toughest. “They are legitimate con­ tenders for the fifth Or sixth ranking in the nation.” Despite going through hard t i m e s . this year, Douglas said the season was “rewarding” overall. “It’s taken a lot of hard work and coaching,” he said,' “but we won ten matches, and I think that speaks for itself. “The real problem, as I see it, is the scholarship limjt,” Douglas added. “If our number one man is in­ jured, we don’t have a backup of the same caliber to put in there. “Every program has an up part of the cycle and a down part,” said Douglas (98-361), the seventh-year coach who will have to wait.until next year to capture his 100th career victory. “We are on the down part now, but we’re building it (program) back up.” Shakespeare also said, “nothing is good or bad, but thinking makes it so. ” PEA C E C O R PS M EANS BUSINESS. Teach bookkeeping in Belize Help manage a handicraft shop in Tonga. Work with Filipino lending guidelines. In over 60 countries Peace Corps can use your business skills. Knowledge in areas like accounting, budgeting, personnel management, and marketing can help pro­ vide jobs and economic growth. Continue your education overseas as you add to your work experience in international agriculture, health, home economics, engineering, business, science or other careers. Talk to Peace Corps representatives'Feb. 22-24 across from Danforth Chapel, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. F I N A L L Y !! Papa Jay’s G am e Room has all NEW selection of Videos & Pinbails. 6 PLAYS (tokens) fo r $1°° (Videos & Pinbails only) N o Limit — N o Coupon Necessary Also pool tables & juke box for your pleasure 804 S. Ash 966-4292 P a p a Jay’s P izza (Univ. & Mill) STORE HOURS PAPA JAY’S S U N • 3-1 . 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Taka-Out o r Dina-In (Small C h e rg e J ^ D e lw e n r^ ___ j L I I I I I I I I You’re ready! For the biggest and the best that life has to offer. And for the college ring that will speak volumes about you— and your achievements— for years to come. What’s more— you can afford it! Because now, for a limited time you can order from the entire ArtCarved collection of. 14K gold college rings and save $25. Com e and see the exquisitely crafted styles— from the cla ssic to the contemporary., A n d chobse the ring and custom options that most eloquently express you. Now is your time to get what you deserve. And remember— homing else feels like real gold. CLASS RINGS,INC F e b ru a ry 2 2 th r u 2 6 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Deposit Required. MasterCard or Visa Accepted. 1982 ArtCarved Class Rings, Inc. Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 21 ASU freshmen ripen despite losing season ........... Last year, this basketball quartet combined for over 50 points a game while hauling in over 40 rebounds. This season, the same four men are averaging 12 4 points and roughly 10 re­ bounds. , And th a f S combined also. But the first group of statistics were accumulatedwhen Jim Deines, Phil McKinney, Shawn Holiday and Billy Jordan were in high school. Now as freshmen for Ned Wulk’s 0-13 Sun Devils, the foursome are learning — the hard way — what it’s like in major college competition. But they don’t regret a WEAR GLASSES? WANT TO FUT? flÜ ' - - Kevin WidUc WÊâ think we’ll be just like the guys last year in the NCAA tournament.” Like the guys last year. Ah, what a team that was. And the nucleus of that team began like this year’s crop has. Fat Lever started at guard in the 1979-80 season. That was the same year ByroiT Scott came to Tempe, and the same time Alton Lister and Sam Williams started playing regularly. Besides Deines, this year’s freshmen haven’t seen that much playing time. But they have been playing more and more lately as Wulk leans on the future. - “ I think they’re for­ tunate,” Wulk s ai d, “because they’re getting more playing time than an average freshman would. But it’s hard making any sweeping judgm ents because they still have so much time. “The other nigit against UCLA, we played a team that two years ago was in the (NCAA) Final Four and they had basically the same kids,” he added. “It was in­ teresting watching our thing. After all, they’re the future. “In a couple of years, we know that we’ll all be play­ ing together,’’ McKinney said. “And we talk about go­ ing'to the NCAAs, because we know we can.” ‘I n two, three years, we’ll be tough,” Deines said. “There’s no question,” Holiday exclaimed. “We Be p a rt of the Navy aviation team —a Naval Flight Officer. As a flight officer, you’ll be responsible for controlling complex, on-board weapons and navigation system s on sophisticated Navy aircraft. As a^ flight officer, you’ll be given advanced technical training. You’ll gain early responsibility. And you’ll have the chance for worldwide travel. QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum BA /BS degree (summer graduates may inquire). Applicants m u st be no more than 29 years old and have vision correctable to 20/20. Relocation required. A pplicants m ust pass aptitude and physical exam inations and qualify for security clearance. U.S. citizenship required. B EN EFITS: Excellent package includes 30 days’ earned annual vacation. M edical/dental/low cost life insurance coverage and other tax-free incentives. Dependents’ benefits available. Promotion program included. PROCEDURE: Send resume to, or call: Naval Management Programs. 2 5 6 -7 6 3 2 . NAVAL OFFICER PROGRAM S 317 N. CEN TRAL PHOENIX, AZ 85004 conWMMdpag*23 W hoarethase tourhoopstvrs?Quite postibly, the nucleus of futura Sun Dovll tournament towns. Jim Deines, Billy Jordan and Phil McKinney (all standing left-to-rlght) man the frontline while Shawn Holiday (kneeling) may be ASU’s next star playmaker. GET IN THE FINEST SHAPE FOR THE LOWEST RATE N Pleasant Surroundings I Good Equipment, Olympic Weights Professional Instruction Dressing Room Showers Y S im ** Workout $ 1 .5 0 w ith th is ad ** ASK ABOUT INTRODUCTORY OFFER OPEN 7 DAYS MEN AND WOMEN R IRONATHLETE Nike Lady's Señorita Cortez Lady Oceania Lody Roadrunner -! ^ e e t. Men's Men's Roadrunner Bruin Canvas Men's Meadow « •Ladies Night Tuesday 7ffc30 Unlimited f lay $1.00 •$5.00 All You (Can Play Wednesday 6-9 . • M e n ’s D a y • •F© 0dl pizza - Burritos, Hamburgers, Sandwiches, etc. • • A FTER HOURS FRIDAY-SATURDAY • O PEN TILL AT LEAST 3 A.M. • Iri Wilshire Plaza 4\ 941-2354 iU M Kid's Ollie Oceania Olivia Oceania Reg. Now 32.98 24.98 29.98 22.98 18.98 19.98 29.98 23.98 29.98 19.98 16.98 18.98 24.98 24.98 16.98 16.98 e ' S S A LE , H K R I lil • Tiger X-Caliber . Ultimate Tigress Machilj Reg. 49.98 65 98 46.98 29.98 Now 39.98 39.98 26.98 18.98 48.98 28.98 Etonic Roadw orker Brooks All models below cost Spalding All models below cost J Sunday 5-6 • Unlimited Play $100 • 2515 North Scottsdale Road V M I F TH E S T IR I. 1940 E University, Tempe • 968-2378 % « Adidas Sportswear BasketoaH JabbarLo JabbarHi Sian Smith Americana 39.98 42.98 41.98 29.98 29.98 32.96 31.98 16.98 Soccer Celtic 34.98 24.98 43.98 39.98 27.98 22.98 29.98 19.98 Puma Fast Rider King (Soccer) Super Court Hi All training suits 50% off Running shorts & lops 40% off T-shirts 50% off The M T O O C * Sm itty's Shopping Center i Southern & M ill All items lim ited to stock on hand. Page 22 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 More about Chess continued from page 19 stages into life. Jordan scored 10 points, grabbed eight rebounds, had two assists and blocked one shot in only 22 minutes of action. .“It definitely was my most satisfying game so far,” Jor­ dan said. “It’s the most I’ve felt. I think I can be a sparkplug now that I have my confidence.” The leading scorer for the Devils entering the contest is Paul Williams at 16.9, fol­ lowed by F at Lever at 16.1. The Wildcats are led by Frank “run around in the shower to get wet!’ Smith and Greg Cook, both of whom are averaging 14 points a game. Throw-in for the chess game, er, basketball game is 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Ac­ tivity Center. Take . stock in ^ m e ric a . Devils mau Shockers; men's golf year opens The ASU men’s golf team, the defending Pac-10 cham­ pions, open spring play this week hosting the annual Arizona Collegiate at Ahwatukee Country Club. The tournament began Thursday and wifi conclude today, with play beginning at 7:30 a.m. It consists of both a u n iv e rs ity and junior college division. Four-year schools playing include UofA, Grand Canyon and host ASU, while the JC division will include all the Valley’s two-year schools. “We’re anxious to get off to a good start,” Coach George Boutell said. “I just hope we play a little more consistent than we did in the f*li.” Defending champions, of the Arizona Collegiate are ASU in the university divi­ sion add Scottsdale Com­ munity College in the JV division. ASU’s Dennis LeDonne took m edalist honors. The Sun Devils will be represented by two squads this week. The “A” squad will consist of Jam ie Crow, Jim Entwisle, LeDonne, Tony Grimes, Dave Lee and Jim Carter. The “B” team will be comprised of Mark Armistead, Tom Brettfeller, Greg Bruckner, Harry Gard­ ner, Scott Harris and Barry Conser. Next Wednesday through Friday, ASU will be one of 20 teams that will compete in the Pacific -Coast Inter­ collegiate. The tournament will be played at Sierra LaVerne Country Club in La Verne, Calif. The men’s tennis team has a break in their dual-match Enhance Your Career Opportunities with an MBA FR O M U T A H S T A T E U N IVERSITY A representative of the M a s te r of B usiness A dm inistration program a t U tah S ta te U n iversity will be meeting with in terested stu d en ts on M onday morning, February 2 2 ,1 9 8 2 . Jun iors and seniors fro m all disciplines are invited to attend. For fu rth e r information and appointments, co n ta ct C a re e r Services, Academ ic S ervice s Bldg., room 109; 9 6 5 -7 1 7 3 . mOKlltt* litt L rifCDVTUiun u i i c t EVERYTHING MUST GO! Yes, We’re closing ourTem pe store! Don’t miss these fantastic savings! Don’t wait! Prices slashed! Hurry lor best selection! Hurry lor best s> z e j e l e ^ W HAT A W AY TO R ELA X AN D STILL H AVE A Q U IC K NUTRITIO US MEAL! EVERY FRIDAY, S A T U R D A Y A N D SU N D A Y WE O PEN AT 11:00 A M. JU S T FOR YOU. TRY U S FOR LU N CH . 968-5555 FAST, FREE DELIVERY a * » ® f « , a n d d a i|\Nilson 3 0 m in u t e g u a ra n te e footballs. Save m $3.00'off any pizza we do not deliver within 30 minutes One guarantee per pizza Good on any pizza delivarad between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. only. Expires 2/20/82 r n Fast, Free Delivery 903 S Rural Road Telephone: 968-5555 aH Entire stock of Anz you - can think o f A LL S A LE S ARE FINAL! NO EXCHANGE OR REFUND! TEM P E STORE ONLY - MISSEU RUSSELL COACHING SHORTS BASEBALL SLEEVES ONLY 17 95 R e ta il 11" ONLY 5 95 R e ta il SPORTING GOODS MAJOR CREDIT CAROS ACCEPTED IA I F“ Q59 U A ll SWEAT CLOTHING SAVE 3 0 % uni c a n RACKETBALL BAG 0 » , 1 1 55 15.95 R e ta il. 10” x24" IN T E M P E MILL & B RO A DW AY IN B R OADWAY PLAZA 967-5589 M -F 9:30-6. S A T .9-5. $75 Off any size pizza ! Good op any pizza delivered between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. only. One coupon per pizza Expires 2/20/82 Fast, F rss Delivery 903 S. Rural Road Telephone: 968-5555 Friday, February 19,1982 State Press Page 23 Mnre about CLASSIFIEDS FreshmèrK continued from page 21 freshmen play that squad.” Interesting because of the comparisons. Two years ago, the Bruins started two freshmen (Rod Foster and Mike Holton) while two others (Darren Daye and now-transferred Cliff Pruitt) played important roles in the squad’s.title drive. But this year’s group hasn't been as fortunate to start at* the top. That, however, doesn’t mean they lack the talent. Holiday started ’at guard at the outset of this season, while Deines has been among the starting Five most of the year. McKinney has started at center as of late. And Jordan has sparked the Devils lately with his play off the bench. All it takes is time. Time together, on the court and off. “We’ve used three of them together in several games and they’ve done all right,” Wulk said. “The four have played a considerable amount together in practice and in scrimmages, but I don’t think they’ve all played at one time in a game yet.” They’d like to, but with Paul Williams and Fat Lever — among others — someone has to score. “No one else has scored • a lot,” Wulk laughed. That has to change if this foursome is to become, well, fearsome. But can they shoot? Wulk thinks so, despite the Feeling discouraged, pressured, lonely? Need a frien d or ju st someone to talk to? The B ib le te lls u s that “G od Is Love” and G od’s Love w e all n eed and have. Ben Taylor Christian S cien ce Campus Counselor at Danforth Chapel FRIDAYS 10:00 to 11:00 am. or call at any hour 967-3716 Each M onday at 3=40 p.m . the Christian Science C ollege Organization has a T estim onial m eetin g at Danforth Chapel. All are m ost w elco m e to com e share w ith us. 3(1 miniscule scoring averages And McKinney? “He has a good-enough _ . Instruction jumper,” Wulk said. “We r Of »Ole plan on playing him a t the INTERIOR DECORATING, American NATIONAL MCAT Review Course home high post where be can pull study materials, classroom notes, and School of Interior Design, call for brochure, 991-1887. 10856 E. Parkview, the other centers outside. Mmole tests 279-2802 after 6 pm . “Our [dans for Shawn are POOL TABLE T %’’ slate cover, cues, Fountain H ills, A rizo n a .__________ ; at bailhandler, though his brush, black with red felt. C e ll Doug. YOGA, TAICHI, ballet jazz, dancarcise, massage, stretching, se ll defense, -________ outside shot has been getting 27b-1645. _______ prenatal postpartum exercise, sign better.” SKI BOOTS (Hanson slalom).. Men’s language, nutrition, aerobics, tap, gymAnd “better” is the key size 9-11, excellent. S12S firm. Skis, nestles end "creatuve movement for word. As in, these green Hexcelerator ll. 180cm. Tyrolls 260, children" New session begins now at the Center for Body Awareness. Walk­ good, »145 Hem. 830-0045._________ freshmen will get better. ing distance from ASU, 414 S. M ill Ave. SAILBOARDS. BEST prices in town. Or, better yet, they better. (next to Spaghetti Co.) Call. 894-8347 F eb ru a ry s p e c ia l, C ow aban ga Sailboard. 1849. Arizona Sailers«, Inc. 007-7056.________ ________________ CLASSIFIEDS START HERE TRAILER: TWO bedroom, two blocks from ASU, *6,000 1010 East Lemon. 0200640. __________________ The STATE PRESS disclaim s a ll respon­ sib ility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. ZONIN LAMBRUSCO $109. Rabat bock beer *199 Tequila *399. Haagen Dazs Ice Cream, adult magazines, imported beers. Ice, party supplies, groceries. Bundle’s. University end M ill. Temps. A nnounccm cnt» F urniture A T T O R N EY. P A U L S ch n e id e r. Resonable fees and credit terms available. 1000 E. Apache, Suita 101, Tempe. 9884326.__________________ ARIZONA SLEEP Shops: open Monday Friday. 9 am . to 9 pm . Saturday, 9 am . to 6 p.m. Sunday. 12 to 5 p.m. 4806 North 27th Avenue. Where it doesn’t cost lo compare: It pays!!___________ AUDITIONS FOR The Diary O f Ann Fnwik w ill be held Sunday. February 21, 7 p.m. at HUM, 1012 SMiM. For hiformation call, 867-7563,_______:__________ FREE MANICURE, free consultation In­ troductory offer. By appointment only with Tina, Monday. Tuesday. Thursday. 9688144.________________________ ISRAEL NEEDS you. Help with the 1982 Campus United Jew ish Appeal Cam paign. Call, 987-7583.______________ TOP PHOTOJOURNALISM sem inar pulitzer winner, "Time, Sports Il­ lustrated" speakers. Communicating '82, all-day March 6. Neeb Hall. Journalism/Telecommunication, 966SOIL______________________ ' A utom obile» 1973 OPEL GT. 44,000 original m iles, new carb, battery, etc. Asking *2750. 8388257 eves/wfcnda.______________ Is accepting applicants for volunteer positions: ► 3 ELECTION C O M M IS S IO N E R S >1 ELECTIO N S E C U R IT Y M A N A G E R ► M A N Y PR ECIN CT W O R K E R S 1071 TR8 BODY, mechanical all restored. Super-sharp car, drives great. First *3800 takas it. (5600 invested. Must sell. Paiked in music lot daily. 9854294 afternoons. 831-2800 evenings and weekends. __________________ \ B o o k s. b u y • SELL • TRADE your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our resale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our 2 floors of: •New & Used Books •Art Prints & Posters •Calendars 4 Cards •Handbound Journals M -F108 SAT 10« SUN 12« CHANGING HANDS BOOKSTORE 414 M ill Avenue SPECIAL THISWEEK $2.00 O F F DeeCee Corduroy Pants <«88 203 514 carni c o n in aunt HB MFNMWb « wksacIsCHS*IksCarterhr My toma 4M1IMht-Se*» m hat SMfcttital 894-6347 Sensitive loving care thru Arts A Crafts. Dance. Music. 6ames. 2/26 10% O F F Any Vest or Jacket in stock (N ot in clu ding sale items) f or Pent/L eq»e COND FOR rent with fireplace, three bedrooms, two baths, furnished. 894 2798.___________________________ TOWNHOUSE FOR rent with tireplace, three bedrooms, one bath- 894-2798. M A S H T-SH IRTS $3.99 WALK TO SCHOOL! 3 for $ 1 0 . 0 0 BaautMui bug# 1 ba*onw . 1 Mte*r S a le Ends Feb. 2*1. ^ TERRACE ROAD APART MENTS. 950 S. Tatrac- ° 1 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 MTW F 9:00 - 7:00 pm Thurs. 9:00 - 8:00 pm Sat. 9:00-6:00 pn. Sun. Noon - 5:00 pm SU R PLU S 514 f or Sole i960 MOPED BY Sachs, excellent con­ dition. 110 mpg. *490 or beet otter. 24» 2767 call evening».______ ________ _ PROFESSIONAL, REASONABLY priced resumes designed lo r college students end new graduates. Barbara; 835-6244, Maggie; 8354)529. ______________ TAUREAN TYPING service. Call Lori at, 832-5860. __________ _ _______ _ T fO V d l ■ CARS FREE 10 all major cities available now. Call AAACon Auto Transport, 264- 0201.__________________ LOWEST AIRFARES and tour packages available. ' Phone 987-0575. Go Trsvelmore tor Isas. 967-0675- ______ Dance Shop on premises._______ ■ SKI STEAMBOAT Colorado cheap! *33 per day, per person. Including lifts. Four, six, or eight guests. Call collect 003)879-6686-___________,________ _ I o«t/Found Friday FREE Lost and Found T y p in g FOUND ABW SECRETARIAL Services. Typing papers, resumes, etc. Accurate/* professional. E diting /corrections available. Resonable rates. 831-2285. WATCH FOUND Social Science cour­ tyard bench C all Chuck, 967-7167 nights. ALL PAPERS typed professional on IBM Seiectric Correcting Machine. Leah, 962-1059 attar 3:30 p.m.________ COM PLETE WATERBED: *199. In­ cludes free delivery and set up. (Heedboard, frame, pedtstal, mattress, liner,, heater, Hll kit.) Arizona Sleep Shop, 4805 North 27th Avenue. 246Q187- AN EXTRA Hand professional typing services. Make a good impression with your first paper of the term. B.A. English; editing. Andra Lawrence, 9676410 (Noon to 9 p.m.), Tempe.________ LOST CAT MALE, "Brew ski” orange and white, long heir, red collar. Dorsey and Bth. Tempe. 9688609.______________ A-1 PROFESSIONAL typing near cam­ pus. Dissertations, term papers, theses, resumes, etc. IBM Electronic. Linda, i 967-4906 . _________ _______ Courtesy of: (XXIBLE DRESSER wfthtmirror, *90. matching nightstands; $27, 5 drawer chest; *39.95. Arizona Sleep Shop. 4805 North 27th Avenue. 2488187.________ 7 DRAWER DESKS: *75. 4 drawer desks; *55. Available in oak, walnut, pecan finishes Arizona Sleep Shop, 4806 North 27th Avenue. 2488187, MATTRESS/BOXSPRING sett; twine SS9, lu lls *89. Arizona Sleep Shop, 4805 North 27th Avenue. Sheets available. 2488187. . _______ ____________ SOFA AND chair, heavy herculon cover. 8175. 3way table tamps. *10. Arizona Sleep Shop. 4805 North 27th Avenue. 2468187._____________ |___________ AAA SERVICE: Llnda-962-8075. Term papers, dissertation, thesis, resume, etc. IBM Seiectric II. _______ __ ACCOUNTING AND Secretarial Ser­ vices, quality typing, fast and accurate, 20 years experience, near Scottsdale/M cKellips Roads. Dana, 941-5111- m otorcycle» 1979 BMW R65,5,000 m iles, sports lair­ ing, européen handlebars. Perfect condition. *3,000totter. 994-4106. _______ 1981 KAW ASAKI 440 LTD, great transportation around campus and the valley. Must sell. 968-3570._____ ______ AEROBIC. JAZZERCISE. or exercise in­ structors needed to conduct classes at SMn Setsu Oriental Arts. C all, 004 0606 or «678417._______ ;________ ' MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE too high? Best rales for preferred and high risk. Can Slave. 244-1184, Lundell Insurance Agency. ______________ '_________ DISABLED GRADUATE student looking for weekend attendant. Some medical background useful. wfH train. Applicant must be in good health, dependable. 273-7775. __________________ P erso n a l EARN W HILE learning, special event promotions. Oeys or evenings. Expatttncsd or wHI train. C ell, 9989355. EASY PART-TIME work, good pay! *3.35 per hour lo start plus bonuses. C all 9 a.m-8 p.m. Monday through Friday. G rsgM atc, 2436271______ _________ ENTERTAINEERS O F a ll kinds needed lo r March Festival. C a ll 965-MUAB, Scottv. MU Activity Center. HELP WANTED part-time. *3.75; lu lltime, *4. Guaranteed salary if you love the outdoors and have flexible hours. G el a hold o l us, Green-Go. 8968862- PIZZA DRIVER, must have own cor. nights. Apply In person after 4 p.m., 804 South Ash (University and MiH)-_______ PART-TIME CASHIERS, flexible hours lo r students, matinee, evening and weekend sh ifts available. Apply Los Arcos Cinema, Thursday and Friday, 2« p.m.______ _ _ ____________ _.____ PART-TIME SALESM AN lo r Western Sculpture. For inform ation send photo a id resume to Largo O riginals. 5725 Sadler Circle. Dallas. TX 75235._______ PERSON NEEDED, part-time public relations position w ith S co lio sis Foun­ dation. C all 931-9104. for appointment and interview -_______________ _____ SHIN SETSU Oriental A rts is seeking Japanese instructors for Budo, Cha-do. Shodo. Ikebanna. Origami. Sumi-E of m y other traditional arts. C all. 004 0606 o r967-0417. ________ ' 19th AVENUE & OSBORN. Professional typing seven days per week pn IBM Correctlng Seiectric. 284-9113. S A V IN G S U clp W o nted OVERSEAS JO BS — Summerfyear round. Europe, South A m erica, Australia, Asia. A ll fields. *500-51200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free informa­ tion. W rite U C Box 52-AZ 3, Corona Dei Mar. CA 92625. ____ | ) a v C a re S ervices . ACADEMIC BEST. Shortflong papers. Tables. EdUing. B.A. English. Lowest rales. Close to campus. 9888566._____ BO, W ill you be mine. W ill you be mine. Blondie.__________ __ ____________ THE MASE ties no friends. Please help her. Don’t cell but secretly yell. From Marty. The Snake.______ ' P o o l Estate ALL PAPERS carefully and accurately typed. IBM Seiectric. Near ASU. Reasonable. Mr». Oakley. 967-0802. ACAOEM IC TYPING. Near ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Seven years experience. 967-4443. _________ ___ ACADEMIC ACCURACY and precise typing combined with reliable eervl.ee. that’s Precision Typing. 838-1327,180- > 880 p.m. _______________ _____ ATTENTION: SCOTTSDALE ’ area students. Professionally typed papers and manuscripts done quickly. IBM Electronic. 948-3aa8/Jeennlque.______ ONE BEDROOM co op apartment, *8500 total price! Plus *135 a month maintenance tee. Call.,994-8486.______ CUSTOM TYPING. Correcting SeleStrlc. Barbara, near College Ave. between Broadway and Southern. 9668961.____ p o o m m a tc MANUSCRIPTS, TERM papers, disser­ tations. IBM Seiectric. Experienced. *1 page. Janet. 8348893; Sharon, 833^ 5687; Pam. 968-9649; Rose, 271 «562. wanted FEM ALE OWN bedroom, *185/month including u tilities. May occupancy. C ali Joanne. 967-4686 day, 9678146 eve. F U R N IS H E D , B E A U T IF U L tw o bedroom. Desert Palm Apartment. *200 plus 14 u tilities. Joel. 8298329 till midnlqhl. ___________. ___________ ' r o o m s FOR rdnt: two rooms available in closest residential home to ASU cam­ pus. Three minute walk to campus. Pool, patio, dishwasher, carpeting. No more parking hassles! *185 per month plus utilities. C all John at 8298852 or stop by 1315 South College._________ SEVERAL ROOMMATES needed for beautifully furnished h o u se « in Tempe. Reasonable rales. Days 9673673. evenings 897-7030.________ S ervice» BALLOON WORLD, helium balloon bouquets for any occasion student d is­ count, cell today. 984-4897 or 96S-2/70. ENHANCE YOUR beauty. Have un­ wanted facial or body hair removed per­ manently by electrolysis. Student dis­ counts. C all for your personal, com­ plimentary consultation today. 8391885. Desert Electrolysis Center._____ TELECTRONICS IS seeking a part-time aarvica technician. Work around your Mhedule. Call. B290077 or 9678417. GOOD STUDENTS quality and save 25% on auto insurance; non-smokers 18%. C all Steve, 8318121. Farmers Insurance ASU Representative Instruction GRADUATING? USE Career Systems to hook up with major corporations. Send name, address, and number'to: 1740 East Alam eda Tempe, AZ 85282, or call grw-ixzvfinoo ask tor department 41325. GROUND SCHOOLS; quality private and advanced training. Ottered by Skyhawfc Flying Club. C all. 9986566. 998-1294________________________ "AAA - ABUNDANT, academic, aid. Pro­ mpt. efficient, quality typing services. Correcting Seiectric. Keyes Executive Secretarial. 941-8898._______ _______ PROFESSIONAL TYPING Guaranteed. I type resumes, letters, term papers, books, etc. Reasonable rates. For fast service call 831-5245._____________ t t y PING-COPY sta tistica l graph». Delivery and pickup, Monday, Wednesdav, Friday. Call Judy. 8398401.______ TYPING: SPECIAL student rates, fast, accurate, all phases of typing. 275-2356. X-CELLENT TYPING; -TO years ex­ perience. Handwritten or cassette tape. Theses, dissertations, etc. Call Jane 969-2664. _ _ ___________ :_______ U U q n tC O CASH FOR gold, diamonds, watches, old jewelry and silver. 414 South M ill *103.968-5967._________________ DRUMMER NEEDS band. 968-3391, ask for Don. ______ _______ __________ NEED TO interview native of Nantucket Island for Class. Please help. Call Karen. 268-2086 alter 7:30 p.m. ______ WANT TO buy Western Airline coupon pass for Hawaii. W illing to pay lair price Call. 9658020 or 947-9247. NEED CASH ? I’L L P A Y H IG H E S T P R IC E S FO R YO U R G O LD & S IL V E R C O IN S O R JE W E L R Y C A L L MARK, 966-1886. 2 /i9 Page 24 State Press Friday, February 19,1982 More about 2 FOR 1 Prey without a maximum effort. “They were playing for state pride,” Miller said. “They were really fired up and thrilled at the Chance to beat us. They played us close right down to the wire, and there was no point in the game where we could say we had the game won so we could substitute freely. “They have made a 100 percent turnaround from last year. We used to beatthem by 30 points every time,” Miller added. “Now, we can’t afford to take them lightly.” Taking the ’Cats lightly may be a problem for ASU, especially after the big win over USC. “The intensity is still there, and I think we are ready mentally,” Miller said. “But we’re still drained from the (USC) victory. Physically, our bodies just ne'ed time to catch up and recover from that game.” And since it is an ASUUofA game, it’s a good bet both teams will be ready in every way. Special Buy your sweetheart a membership and receive the same membership free! MEMBERSHIP RATES 15 VISITS $ 12.00 80< EA C H 30 VISITS $ 20.00 66« EACH 50 VISITS $30.00 60* EA C H 4 MONTHS $50.00 > 40* EA C H More about Devils schedule this week as they are in San Diego for the prestigious San Diego Tourney. The tournament, which will conclude Saturday, will be a mini-preview of the Pac-lO’s Southern Division as USC, UCLA, Stanford, California, UofA and ASU are in attendance. Also com­ peting are West coast powers Pepperdine and San­ ta Barbara. Lastly, the ASU baseball team took the first game of a three-game series against Wichita State Friday, .win­ ning 7-1. Lefthander Randy Newman threw seven strong innings, allowing but three hits and one run in running his season record to 2-0. The seven innings thrown by Newman represent the longest stint by any ASU starter all year. ASU (14-2) handed the eighth-rated Shockers their first loss — in their season opener. Catcher Buddy Pryor and outfielder Mike Pagel led the Sun Devil explosion, Pryor with a two-run homer and Pagel with a three-for-three outburst at the plate. Pagel also stole three bases to match his three RBI. There’s only one thing worse than finding out you nave cancer. Not finding o u t American Cancer Society f SPACf ^ONtSl0UTfD THf PuBuSHtV J am i V't' ST 2 Free Visits $6.00 VALUE BRING IN YOUR SWEETHEART AND YOU BOTH TAN FOR FREE GOLDEN-GLO PH O EN IX TEM PE 6522 N. ,16th St. 43 E. Broadway (corner Broadway & Mill) (corner Maryland & 16th) 9 6 6 -21 5 0 274-4553 Open 10-8,6 days a week; 12-5 Sunday NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Expires March 31, 1982.