Lighting project to begin soon W ednesday IV'"'- S e p t e m b e r 8 ,1982 stale press Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University V o l. 65 N o, 10 © Copyright, State Pres», 1962 provement is expected to begin after the completion of phase By Chris Cappola one. Staff writer “Phase two entails all fixtures not covered in phase one” in An ASU project «tmignw says the completion of the first the area south of University Drive, he said. “We will just take a rempua lighting project will increase ASU lighting existing (light) poles and install new fixtures.” by 100 percent. The estimated cost of phase two is $96,316. Sonny Alvarado sa ito h e estimated $306,406 lighting im­ The third phase of the project will consist of improving provement project is expected to begin as soen'as fixtures ar­ lighting fixtures north of University Drive, a t an estimated rive. Parking Lot 17, south of Apache Boulevard and west of cost of $14,664, Alvarado said. Wanda Jones, Associated Students campus affairs vice OcotiUo Hall, will be the first area to receive new lighting, at president, said she is pleased with the progress the planning an estimated cost of $31,066. Alvarado said the arrival of new fixtures for the lot are department has made in improving campus lighting. “due any day,” and work will begin upon their arrival. she said student safety was the main concern expressed He said the lighting of Lot 17 is part of the first phase of im­ last «pring by an ASASU committee formed to examine provements in campus lighting, which also will include in­ potential lighting problems on campus. stallation of fixtures in die most traveled areas of campus, “I think it’s important to bear in mind that lighting is not such as the main malls. In addition, lights will be installed in going tn he a cure-all,'’ she said. “But it will help to lessen the areas between buildings, small parking lots and driveways occurance (of criminal acts).” during the first phase. Jones said money originally available for the first part of Alvarado said completion of phase one, which covers most the lighting project exceeded the amount necessary for the of the campus area south of University Drive, would depend areas of primary concern to the ASASU committee. on funding details that still need to be finalized. Jones said phase one addresses problem areas the commit­ The total cost of phase one will be close to $200,000. tee identified as its first priority. Alvarado said a second and third phase at the lighting im­ M cCain, Dunn lead primaries; Méchant loses one more time With 32 percent of the returns In, Republican John McCain was leading In the First District U.S. Representative primary race with 35 percent of the votes followed by Jim Mack holding 26 percent, Donna Carlson-West with 23 percent and Ray R ussell having 17 percent. Favored state Rep. Pete Dunn won Ariz­ ona’s Republican prim ary nomination Tuesday over fellow conservative and pol­ itical neophyte Dean Sellers for the right to challenge incumbent Democrat Dennis DeConcint for the U.S. Senate in November. With 353 the state’s 1,350 precincts, or 26 percent reporting, Dunn had 56 percent of the vote to 43 percent for Sellers. In the Democratic primary,-DeConclni, 45, was. renominated to run for his second term, which he said would be his last in that office. With363 precincts, or 26 percent, reporting, DeConcinl had 83 percent of the vote to 16 percent for perennial office-seeker Caroline Killden. Republican Senate President Leo Corbet, 45, swept to an easy .victory Tuesday night over Glendale auto dealer in the GOP guber­ natorial primary. Corbet was leading Evan Mecham by a vote of 43,510 to 25,610, with 40 percent of the votes tallied. Incumbent Bruce Babbitt captured 46,367 votes in the Democratic primary. Voter turnout was estimated at 25 percent of total registered voters. 0 tj ï c ‘B u b b le ’ D a n c e rs R e se rv e Q B h e lp s so lv e tr y o u t le a d s D evils k id s ’ p ro b le m s fo r le g e n d to first w in Page 8 Page 12 Page 17 S u n ptioto by Andy A m u - T / l/ h ir i'o f h e r o w n Ruth Hawley-Fedder, a member ol the At Houris Dance Co. twirls a silvery scarf around herself during a bally dance routine. Hawley-Fedder along with Debi Johnson, who rune the dance company, performed the Eastern art for onlookers In the Memorial Union last weak. Bally dancing is Just one of the several non-credit courses offered In the Leisure Learning Program. Khomeini sympathizers infiltrate campuses College Press Service DALLAS, Tx. - The increasing frequency ind M rslsfing violence of confrontations »etween Iranian students on American camNises m ay be due to a band of pro-Khomeini ‘maurauders” instructed to harass antiChomeini students, police sources now lelieve. In the latest incident, about 75 pro(homeini demonstrators disrupted an anti(homeini meeting a t Southern Methodist Jnivereity. The anti-Khomeini students vere stabbed, and a third beaten. Investigations into the incident, which «suited in the arrest of 33 people, have con­ vinced some officials that the disruption at ¡MU and similar dashes a t Oklahoma, Mdahoma State, Houston, Kansas a n d a talf dozen other schools were coordinated >y supporters of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khoneini’s fundamentalist Moslem govemnent in Iran. For example, there were no SMU students imong the 33 pro-Khomeini demonstrators in ested in Dallas, says campus police § spokesman Stayton Jones. Similarly, only two of the six proKhomeini demonstrators charged with rioting a t the University of Oklahoma in March were students there. Two of the eight arrested a t the University of Arizona a t the m m * time were not registered tim e. The other six were registered for only one course. The pattern stretches back to September, 1681, when only two of the nine Iranians ar­ rested at a Tennessee State University clash fftiy rfgirfwwil JISII students. Police found many of the 33 arrested in Dallas, lived in Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana. “That is a trend,” says Oklahoma State University officer Dan Martin. “Most of the demonstrations that get oat of hand involve either students from other institutions or non-students. “ We usually see something like four ffhytenfc picking an one, with both fists and weapons. “The intelligence that we’ve gotten is that w Iran has sent instructions to infiltrate and disrupt anti-Khomeini student groups.” Iranian government spokesmen have repeatedly denied such charges. In August, 1981, anti-Khomeini students here said they had a letter from Iran’s secretary of cultural affairs asking govern­ ment supporters to gather names of dissidents in this country. “My sense is that it (the existence of a coordinated band of roving pro-Khomeini demonstrators) is true,” says P at Biddinger, Iranian Student Concerns coor­ dinator for the National Association of Foreign Student Advisors (NAFSA). “ It sounds like a national movement of mm* kind - outsiders moving onto campus to intimidate.” There are troublemakers who travel from campus to campus,” flatly asserts Universi­ ty of Houston officer Jerry Warner. He says arrests at the UH campus have turned up students registered a t schools in Missouri, Oklahoma and Louisiana, where class. they may be registered in just one class “My common sense tells me that when you have wholesale lots of people at a pro­ test, none of whom are carrying any i d., then there’s bound to be some kind of collu­ sion on the part of all of them,” adds Capt. Eugene C. Randall of the Dallas Intelligence Division. But Randall says the charges that the at­ tacks on anti-Khomeini meetings are coor­ dinated and committed by the same people are difficult to prove. “We can’t follow these people around just because they have political beliefs, or because they’re Iranians,” Randall ex­ plains. All concerned emphasize the investiga­ tions are continuing. NAFSA official John Reichard isn’t sure they’ll help. The confrontations and violence, he says, are “a natural outgrowth of an extraordinarily complex political puz­ zle. There is a great deal of tension, and things do break out sporadically.” Page 2 State Press Wednesday, September 8,1982 I -ILFORD ILFORD ILFORD ILFORD ILFORD- j NEW YORK (AP) - Police captured one man after a car chase and searched for two others Tuesday in the ritual murder of a Florida nutrition professor. Authorities said they had issued “numerous” warrants and considered the case “solved”. A man tentatively identified as Gary McNichol, 21, was arrested with the stolen car and credit cards of Professor Howard Appledorf, who was murdered over the weekend in his condominium near the U niversity of F lorida cam pus a t Gainesville. McNichol is believed to be one of three men Florida authorities have been seeking in the slaying, according to Detective Capt. Jam es Power. IRS employees face # layoff BERN, Switzerland (AP) - Terrorists threatening to blow up the Polish Embassy, their hostages and themselves have ex­ tended by 48 hours their deadline for Poland to end martial law and free all political prisoners, the Swiss government reported. The government’s special crisis team said the gunmen occupying the embassy also agreed to release a fourth hostage; Earlier, police gained the release of three women hostages and opened face-to-face negotiations with the armed raiders. WASHINGTON (AP) Thousands of Internal Revenue Service employees reported to work today for what could be their last day on the job until Congress and the Reagan administration settle a fight over a money bill. An estimated 19,000 of the 88,000 IRS workers were told they would be furloughed in­ definitely after work today. The layoffs are occurring because President Reagan vetoed a $14.2-billion bill that included $260 million in payroll funds for the IRS. Congress reconvenes Wednesday, but leaders of both parties have said they see little likelihood the veto can be overridden. Market ends three-week rally Seven people died in Arizona traffic ac­ cidents during the three-day Labor Day holi­ day - one less than during the 1981 Labor Day weekend. However, there were no fatalities on state roads or interstate highways during the period, said the Department of Public Safe­ ty. . DPS officials said the absence of fatal ac­ cidents on state roads was partly due to roadblocks set up to seek out drunk drivers, speeders and people suffering from fatigue. NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market retreated today, halting a huge three-week rally as trading resumed after a holiday weekend interruption. Most of the selling was attributed to in­ vestors seeking to take advantage of the re­ cent steep increase in stock prices. The m arket’s late-summer rally was trig­ gered by sharp declines in interrat rates and picked up strength before the Labor Day weekend recess because of buying by in­ vestors concerned with financial instability abroad. But the outlook for further declines in in­ terest rates has been clouded by renewed upward spurts in the nation’s money supply. Reagan, Republicans losing women's vote Buffalo newspaper may halt publication Roadblocks decrease Labor Day death toll $5.00 OFF Incl. shampoo, conditioning treatment, precision haircut, blow dry & styling. Valid with Ricardo by appL only. MSI it Broadway/Broadway Plaza Tempe, 968-8144 Hrs.: Mon-Sat 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Tues., Wed., Thurs. eves till 8 p.m. TH E OPEN 9-8 Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 12-6 Sun. 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(AP) - The Buffalo WASHINGTON (API - Ronald Reagan Courier-Express will cease publication in often jokes that he never “got the girl” at less than two weeks unless a buyer can be the end of all those Westerns that used to be found for the morning newspaper, Publisher his speciality. Roger Parkinson said Tuesday. Now that his speciality is the Oval Office The shutdown would leave the city with and national politics, women are a big one newspaper, the Buffalo Evening News. problem for him and the Republican Party. The Courier, which publishes a morning Women don’t think much of Reagan or his and Sunday edition, has been locked in a cir­ policies, a negative attitude' that started culation war with the Buffalo Evening News almost with his nomination in July 1980. for several years. The Evening News prints They consistently give Reagan lower afternoon editions Mondays through ratings on his work than men, with a “gender gap” that averages seven to 10 . Fridays and morning papers on Saturday andSundays. points. Parkinson said a shutdown of the paper This gender gap is also afflicting GOP would mean the loss Of 850 to 860 full-time politicians at the state level, a problem that could be critical in this fall’s voting. jobs. Complete Haircut 414 5. M ill #208 Tempe> AZ 85281 829-1286: Polish terrorists threaten to blow up embassy Florida police "solve" murdered professor case 0 5 TUE5R4Y Well located, modern, clean, patios, laundry, dishwashers & pool! <1 B ED R O O M S From J u s t S2 45 ° J u n g le 'n J o c o i x i * P a r t y ( Bring ¿vim wear) àEPTôthî Let the good timeò WEPNE6PI4Y roll * Party Furnished or Unfurriished COME SEE! PA P A G O VIEW A P A R T M E N T S 3710 e . M c D o w e l l 2 4 4 -1 5 9 0 P A R T IE S STA R T AT 6 P M . 905 S. Mill Tempe Center 829-1743 O ur A fter 5 P.M . S p ecia ls W ed n esd a y MONDAY The Com bo B Enchilada, Taco, Tostada, Soup or Salad, Coffee or Tea. SH O P I* SHIRT Not valid with any other discounts. EXPIRES 9/30/82. *°*pW S«iS' *66-0852 For 18 years serving only the B est M exican D ishes. T h u rsd ay ALL DAY 4 3 .2 5 f G ian t G o ld e n M argaritas TUESDAY D inner 13 Burro of your choice, Taco, Rice & Beans. ¿ fo ri off < * IZCD & Ia i i i i i i i i i $ 1.00 OFF Any Chimichanga Offer good through 12-7-82 V! Vi TA R • KIWI • KALT • GITZO • TENBA • PREMIER • AGFA t § G A R Y 'S P H O T O SUPPLY Wednesday, September 8,1982 State Press Page 3 Consumer group fears attack CAMDEN, N.J. (CPS) — “The case is not settled/' Evelyn Liebman stressed. Liebman, head of the Rutgers-Camden campus Public Interest Research Group (PIRG), strenuously refuses to concede defeat in what she sees as an organized, na­ tional conservative attack on PIRGs, the Ralph Nader-founded network of collegebased “consumer advocate groups.” But Liebman and the PIRGs lost the latest battle in August when a federal’appeals court said PIRG’s fund-raising methods — Rutgers students automatically gave $2.50 of their fees to the PIRG unless they specifically asked for a refund — raised serious constitutional questions, and asked a lower court to re-try the case. A decision against the “check off system” of fund raising would “ have real significance for PIRGs around the coun­ try,” predicted Ed Lloyd, executive director of New Jersey PIRG. Rutgers attorney Gregory .Reilly agreed “other schools woidd want to be guided by the court’s decision” as it goes against the checkoff system. Joseph MarshaU, staff attorney for the Mid-Atlantic Legal Foundation, part of a na­ tionwide network of conservative legal groups that frequently challenge liberal causes in court, speculates Rutgers could have to refund as much as $1.5 million to current and past students if it loses. “I imagine that administrators out in Wisconsin or elsewhere would have to look a t that,” Marshall noted. “I’d think that would stop a lot of PIRG organizing.” Such talk convinces Liebman that his is part of an organized conservative assault on PIRGs. “We fe d (the lawsuit) was more than just the three students who sued,” Liebman said. T hree R utgers students sued in September 1979, soon after the Camden chapter refused to fund one of the students’ proposed “pro-life study.” They charged the university made contributing to PIRG a vir­ tual requirement for registration even though the group was prim arily “ideological,” not educational. A lower court ruled against the students last summer, but the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in August said the lower court failed to establish the facts in the case before the ruling. A new trial will be scheduled soon. Marshall denied any conservative plot against PIRGs in general. While no admirer of the groups, Marshall contended “ the fund-raising mechanism would be just as improper if it were going to a conservative group.” Mid-Atlantic was too small to lead a na­ tionwide attack when the case was tiled in 1979, he said. “If Joe Coors (beer brewer and funder of right-wing causes) would have wanted to do it, he probably would have hired a couple of the brightest people around and told them to go crazy .” Marshall also questioned whether the time is right for an assault on PIRGs. “I wonder if 1982 in America is the best climate for a sudden re-examination of PIRG.” Directed or not, it is happening. Many PIRG chapters have been suffering from apathy and losses of their check off funding systems over the last four years. In just the last year, the University of Massachusetts, Mankato State University and Washington University in St. Louis have all eliminated “negative check off” systems sim ilar to Rutgers’. In those cases, the universities wanted PIRGs to switch to “positive check off” systems, in which students must specifical­ ly check a box on their registration forms in order to contribute to PIRG. All three PIRG chapters refused. Two folded soon thereafter. The Universi­ ty of Massachusetts PIRG is now suing to have its negative check off system restored. YOU CAN LOSE 10 POUNDS IN JUST 2 WEEKS! 17-25 LBS. IN JUST 6 WEEKS! A f Í 7 » I S i k1 \ Y 7--- DOCTORS APPROVE OF THIS SENSIBLE WEIGHT-LOSS PROGRAM NO SHOTS • NO DRUGS • NO CONTRACTS NO STRENUOUS EXERCISE NO PREPACKAGED FOODS D IE T C E N T E R ® 31 E T ' 1 (.C E N T E R - n __ ^ r 3 r "The N atural W ay to Lose Weight!" University Medical Center 2525 S. Rural Rd.. Suite 6-N TEM PE — 967-1371 REAL WHEEL DEALS N ew and Used Bicycles at C learan ce Prices p Many 1981 model 10-speeds at our cost. Stop by and we will help fit you the right bike at the right price. ASU 10% DISCOUNT on all your parts and equipment. Rutgers remains willing to collect fees for PIRG, Reilly says, if enough students want it to and if the court agrees PIRG is primari­ ly an educational group, not a political group. (except sale items) Tempe Bicycle Shop The o ld gas station on the corn e r o f 6th & M ill 966-6896 B U D L IG H T B EE R announces IN T R A M U R A L M E N 'S a id W O M E N 'S SOFTBALL TO U RN A M EN T SEPTEMBER HOWTO ENTER: 1 Entry forms are available at the Intramural Sports Office, P.E. West Lobby. 2. Entry deadline is Thursday, September 9, no later than 4 p.m. 3. A $10 entry fee must accompany each entry. 17-19 24-26 TOURNAMENT INFORMATION: 1. Double elimination format. 2. Each team member must be a full-time (7 hours) undergraduate or graduate student at ASU and meet the Intramural eligibility requirements. 3. Prizes will be awarded to first through fourth place teams by Bud Light! INTRAMURAL OFFICE PHYSICAL EDUCATION WEST LOBBY 965-5638 lO O O O O O O O O Q Q Q Q Q Q f l i i M d INTRAMURALS, CLU B SPO RTS & RECREATION is a p rogram o f A S S O C IA T E P M S T U D E N T S OF - A R ï Z O Ñ A • ST A T E •U N ï V ER S I T Y Page 4 State Press Wednesday, September 8,1982 This is even-handed justice. — William Shakespeare o p in io n Caged Judge's decision sends heavyweight to slammer Sands Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City four times in April and May. On none of those occasions did Giorgianni have the oxygen tanks, medication, crutches or other items he claims he needs to survive. Another woman saw Jo Jo at the Sands for a June 23 boxing Scott Gibson match. Although the temperature escalated to 95 degrees O p in io n E d ito r because of the television lights, Jo Jo braved the heat for 2 % hours without medical assistance. A videotape showed Giorgianni waving his Panama hat and lighting either # After a month out of prison, Joseph “Jo Jo” Giorgianni is cigar or cigarette at the fight. Perhaps the clinching blow came when an allergistAnally back behind b a rs.. Giorgianni, who weighs 565 pounds, was convicted in 1980 immunologist testified that 'Jo Jo did not exhibit the symp­ of raping a 14-year-old girl. On Aug. 6 authorities released toms of a person suffering an asthma attack. In other words, Jo Jo was faking it. him aft« ' he testified that he needs air conditioning and con­ With all the evidence stacked against him, one has to stant medical attention for his respiratory problems. Jo Jo ’s case was reconsidered Aug. 31. A doctor testified wonder bow the courts could free Giorgianni in the first that Giorgianni’s breathing problems are mainly due to (dace. Once again, the courts showed more concern about the obesity and that his life was not in peril in prison. Other witnesses testified that Jo Jo’s health problems “rights” of the criminal than the legitimate rights of the vic­ hadn’t hindered him before. One woman saw him at the tim and society in general*If the public had not balked at his release, the Trenton, N.J., steakhouse owner would still be roaming the streets. Our society has taken to the sick idea that we have a duty to criminals. While very few would argue that criminals have no human rights, it has become the custom to assure prisoners that they will not have to undergo any “hardships.” ---------- --------- *--------- • 'In other words, JoJowasfaking it.' America is the only place where thè rights of the accused are more carefully safeguarded than the rights of the victim. Granted, life in prison isn’t pleasant. Neither is the crime that sent the offender behind bars. Allowing the prisoner to escape the penalty he deserves is a travesty. Fortunately, of­ ficiate finally decided that Jo Jo belonged behind bars. Often it takes someone like Jo Jo Giorgianni to remind us why prisons were instituted in the first place. le t t e r s H e lle r n e e d s t o s u p p o r t h is e x p e r ie n c e s ! Editor: I feel forced to respond to Mr. Heiler’s recent editorial “Sex wasn’t meant for public discussimi.” He writes that the educational component of the new sexual freedom has been a “facade.” He offers no support for such a conclusion. However, from reading his editorial one might wonder if his education has not been a facade. He writes well, but he presents his opinions as if they were facts based on empirical evidence. Granted, editorials are intended to be argumen­ tative, but most writers support their opinions with some data even if its only correlational survey findings. For exam­ ple, Mr. Heilèr wrote “there is no doubt at all that the publicizing of sex has created more anxiety about the area than it has eliminated.” This is a very strong statement, where is the evidence? But there is absolutely no support given for this view. I would guess that he is basing this view on his own feelings and reactions to public discussions of sex. The editorial then continues, “ It (publicizing of sex) has dramatized (e.g. the State Press giving front page coverage served to fill the heads of the young with all sorts of half- to the Playboy surveys but that does not mean that sex baked notions and confounded conclusions.” Again, there is education is worthless or immoral. no evidence given to support this statement. Perhaps this I hope that in future editorials Mr. Heiler will offer some statement is a reflection of his knowledge concerning human evidence to support his feelings and personal experiences. It sexuality. ° is easy to assume that one’s own experiences and feelings are Finally, he concludes the editorial with “we’ve either got an accurate representation of how other people perceive and the old morality, or we don’t have any at all. ” This statement experience the world. However, this is a dangerous and often is so indefensible and illogical that it’s virtually ridiculous. fallocious (sic) assumption, particularly for a “journalist.” Morality is not an “either or” situation with only two One would hope that one of the benefits of a college education possibilities. History and philosophy strongly suggest that is a recognition of the need to gather evidence, consider alter­ morality is relative and something that varies across native positions with an open mind and then weigh the cultures and times. The fact that sex is now more openly evidence before assuming one knows it all. And puts it in discussed does not mean that morality is gone. Morality still print. exists, it’s just slightly different. I might agree that sex has David Hindin at times been overpublicized, exploited and inappropriately Graduate student m o re le t t e r s Let G ib s o n e x e c u te c o n s _T B à i, STATE: PSewQ*- Editor: Scott Gibson in his opinion column (State Press, Sept, l) suggested rapid deployment of Arizona’s death penalty against capital offenders. What I would suggest is this: included along with voter registration there should be a check-off on whether the registrant sup­ ports or opposes the death penalty. All who register, or are currently registered, would be required to check their preference. Then, when an execution is to be Carried out, thè names of those who checked affirmatively would be put into a lottery drum and a “win­ ner” chosen. The person so selected would E d it o r ia l o n then be required, under penalty of law, to “flip the switch,” as it were. Selectees could be excused for just cause, but any others who then refused their duty to the state would be given a mandatory prison sentence of not more and not less than six months at Florence. Given a model “execution enactment” statute of this sort, persons such as Mr. Gib­ son could directly exercise their en­ thusiasms of ridding society of “animals. ” Jay D. June Graduate student p o lit ic a l la b e ls d is p la y s 'h y p o c r is t y , p o o r t a s t e ' O N & Y E A R . FRO M T o O A f... Editor: Editor Heiler’s recent editorial on political labels dem onstrated both hypocrisy and poor taste. After denouncing political labels as simplistic, misleading and dangerous, he proceeded to flagrantly commit the very sin he was condemning. Bouncing off his own wall, he labeled House Speak«* Tip O’Neill and Senator Ted Ken­ nedy as “paraders of Socialism” who, “stink up the Capitol Building. ” I would remind Mr. Heiler that he is the Editor of a university newspaper, and that a prime goal of any university is the pursuit and discernment of truth. * The essence of Socialism, of course, is state ownership of the means of production — something which, to my knowledge, Tip O’Neill and Ted Kennedy have never even come close to advocating. In calling them socialists, Mr. Heiler stands on a very shaky soapbox. He is, in fact, dead wrong. In contrast to Mr. Heiler’s flawed editorial, Father Burmeister’s excellent let­ ter regarding the nuclear freeze issue was an outstanding example of a scholarly, wellreasoned argument. ■» Dan Shaffer Graduate student Business administration \ Wednesday, Septem bers, 1982 State Press Page 5 Apathy halts service to south shuttle runs By Maria Khan Staff writer . Due to a lack of riders, afternoon tram service to south campus has been discon­ tinued. Ed Hickcox, ASU director of parking and transit, said the afternoon ridership to south campus has averaged approximately 10 passengers per run since service began in August. Hickcox said the same tram could have been filled to its 60-passenger capacity if it was destined for Lot 59 located near Sun Devil Stadium. Representatives from Sahuaro and OcotUk) halls met with Hickcox Friday in response to a recommendation from the Resident Hall Association. The three de­ cided to terminate the afternoon tram ser­ vice which transported passengers from Orange Circle to Sahuaro Hall. “After reviewing ridership, it was deter­ mined that the tram s can render better ser­ vice by deploying afternoon tram service to Lot 59,” Hickcox said. Jim Holmes, Resident Hall Association vice pi^sident, said by voluntarily forfeiting the littlé-used afternoon tram service, the chances of retaining the morning service was greater. Holmes said the time expen­ diture of tram service to south campus is more beneficial in the morning. Service helps ¡ The morning tram service, which makes stops at Sahuaro Hall at 8:20 a.m. and 10:20 a.m., will continue, Hickcox said. He said the additional service to Lot 59 is essential because die average weekly rider­ ship has increased from approximately 16,000 passengers last year to approximate­ ly 28,000 this year. Hickcox said he is pleased with the in­ creased ridership which he attributes to the additional tram and extended hours. He said safety problems remain in the loading and unloading process, but added that this new tram has solved more prob­ lems than it has created. In an effort to alleviate the safety prob­ lem, plans for official tram stops currently are on the drawing board, Hickcox said. The planned tram stops are designed with an elevated platform and mechanical devices which would organize waiting passengers, according to Hickcox. Hie construction date of the first tram stop has not yet been determined, but Hickcox said its location will likely be Orange Circle. In addition, he said a committee is being formed to review recommendations made by the Ad Hoc Parking Committee ap­ pointed by President J.. Russell Nelson last year. factory career insight j Most people who lose their jobs might have avoided do­ ing so if they had better understood themselves, ASU director of counseling ser­ vices said. Lawrence Cummings said as many as 95 percent of those who losejtheir positions for reasons other than economic, did not have an adequate assessm ent of their own needs in relation to their job. “ In a sense, they’ve misplaced themselves,” he said. “They don’t have any insight on the impact they have on others.” Cummings said stiff job competition combined with the current economic situa­ tion often leads to college grad u ates settling for whatever job they can get once they enter the job market. “A lot of young people will take anything they can,” he said. “What they really want is a job with meaning. It’s important for a person to see that they are multi-talented, and not just limited to the areas of their college ma­ jor.” BAG EL M ELT. O u r skyscraper D eli sandw ich topped w ith m elted cheese, served w ith p ick le and ch o ice o f potato salad, macaroni salad o r co le slaw. ANY MEAT AND CHEESE COM BO YOUR CHOICE: Reg. SAVE $1.00 SPECIAL $4.25 * 3 2 5 . w/coupon Si student l.l) Expires 9 / IW82. TEMPE-MESA FiOila Square I («60 Vi'. SHithixn Avc. I f ) t o r. m jn tra ia i. f r o m A SIT Mon. 8-4 p.m! Tucs-Sat. 1M> p.m. Sun. 8-4 p.m. BACK TO SCHOOL A* v / l t i , r w U L i t t l e S is t e r I n v i t a t i o n s This is an imitation tojoin in on all thefestiiities. W ednesday, Septem ber 8 at 7:30 “WINE & CHEESE PARTY” Friday, Septem ber 10 at 8 :30 “A NEW YEAR’S CELEBRATION” $ 1 0 0 J Good on Dot., Toko-Out, or Eot-ln. Not Valid With Any Otter Coupon. I 967-«9 9 0 5 ^ N A T IO N A L C AREER C ENTER O FF WITH PURCHASE OF ANY SMALL. MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA. Good on Dot., Tako-Out, or Eot-ln. Not »odd WUh Any Othor Coupon. E X P IR E S 9-30-82. j •BEER SPECIAL! 60-oz. Pitcher Draft Beer *1.50 •EVERY D A Y G A M E R O O M SPECIAL — 6 TO K EN S FO R *1 Donkey Kong, Ms. Pac-Man, Deluxe Asteroids, Frogger, Pac-Man, also Pool Tables STORE HOURS Sun 3-1 Mon.-Thurs. 4-1 Fri. & Sat. 4-2 Delivery ends V4 hour before closing AAJ ■ A ll A o ffl 966-1003 966-4292 (University & Mill) 967-9689 | | 4 • J TECHNICAL INSTRUCTORS WANTED. Let your career pay off while still in college: Earn over $900 a month dur­ ing your junior and senior years. Special Navy program guarantees you a teaching position after graduation. After graduation you get orientation in one of the most successful and sophisticated engineering programs in the country; plus opportunity for advancement. Then, teach college and graduate level math, physics, chemistry and engineering. If you are a junior or senior majoring in math, engineering or physical sciences, find out more today. And let your career pay off while still in college. For more information, call the Naval Management Programs Office at: 256-7632. N A V A L O F F IC E R P R O G R A M S 317 N O R T H C E N T R A L • P H O E N IX , A R IZ O N A 85004 FAST FOOD RESTAURANT S u p e r L o w P r ic e s F a s t S e r v ic e G ood Food B e a u t if u l D in in g R o o m Hamburgers & Hot Dogs r Fries • Drinks Ice Cream • Shakes OPEN: h v it e s all c a r e e r m in d ed in d iv id u a ls se e k in g a n a lte rn a tiv e to h ig h p riced em p lo y m en t a g e n c ie s a n d in e ffic ie n t p la c e m e n t d e p a rtm e n ts . a re a lic e n s e d p e rs o n n e l m a rk e tin g service. Mon.-Thurs. Friday Saturday Sunday 7:30 a.m.- 7 p.m. 7:30 a.m.- 9 p.m. 9 a.m.- 7 p.m. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. We are not a n e m p lo y m e n t a g e n c y n o r a re w e h e a d h u n te rs . We V O rd e r th rc r o g h y o u r p ro f e e e o rs w h o u s e tlie a e p u b lic a tio n s i n c la s s . House DO R M S, APTS., VANS A LL SIZES U SED ROOM SIZES *10 S UP NEW CARPET TOO! Attention: Foreign Car Owners SAVE UP TO 70% O N RECYCLED fO R U C N AUT^> PASTS M G TRIUMPH HONDA OATSUN TOYOTA .V W ond OTHERS A ll Models Foreign 243.329t 3094 So. 40*h Strce* 1516 E. Van Buren Phoenix * Mention this od A M U S IC Ph«. (««or 4 0 1h A University) 90* on odditi^nol 3%o##f L O V E R S !! B E A T THE HIGH COST OF RECORDS WITH THE NEW CONCEPT. UNLISTED? The 1982-83 A SU Cam pus Directory will b e pu blish ed soon — Rent-A-Record from National Record Rental Club. Now voucan rentvour favorite albums for as title as $1 .00. You enjoy a huge selection of Billboards top 200, country western, jazz, classical, show tunes & old favorites when you join the club. Membership is only 5 \ Take your favorite alb^ b°r™-; play them, enjoy them, bring them back and pick up some more. No limit on the number of times you use the service. Come in today and start beating the high cost o f records! Open Noon to 8 p.m. Closed Sunday National Record Rental THOMAS & HAYDEN RDS. In d ia n R iver P laza SCOTTSDALE, AZ If you don't want to be listed, obtain a "withhold publication of name, address and phone number form" at the Records Window, Moeur Administration Building, fill it out and return by Thursday, September 9. The form must be filled out and submitted to. comply with a withhold name request. R E G I S T R A R ’S O F F I C E | I ! j | I ■ j Page 14 State Press Wednesday, Septem bers, 1982 TV ^ University galleries offer variety with photography, professor's art By T. Welter Scenes writer The Northlight and the Harry Woods galleries have opened their new seasons featuring regional artists in many different mediums. The Northlight Gallery displays the photography of two artists — Todd Walker and Terry Huseby. Walker’s pieces reflect the new technical process he has been w o rk in g on, culm inating in photo­ lithography. He uses the environment of rocks crevasses and for­ mations to paint an erotic collection of forms. Huseby has created a series of photos exploring the concept of illusionism between the eye of the camera and the viewer of the picture. Together, the photography is enough to capture the at­ tention of all of the spec­ tators. You owe it to yourself to check out this exhibition at the N orthlight Gallery located on the bottom floor of the Fine Arts Annex. The Harry Woods Gallery opens its new schedule with a exhibition of the artists of HEART, an organization of regional community college teachers. The display is a collage of different mediums, tech­ niques, and styles collected ____ HAPPY NEW YEAR ROSH HASHANAH For security reasons and to assure adequate seating for the campus commmunity, entrance to High Holiday Services w ill be by admission card only. p T ' U Saturday, September 18 9:30 a.m. Arizona Room Friday, September 17 8 p.m. Arizona Room, MU Sunday, September 19 9:30 a.m. Alumni Lounge HILLEL-JEWISH STUDENT CENTER 1012 S. Mill “Scare Crows,” a painting by Mass Community Collage’s Darlene Swaim, currently decorates the Harry Woods Gallery on campus. COMPLETE EYE EXAMINATION * 1 8 oo A dm ission cards are available a t H illel ************************1 under the auspices of form­ ing a unique interpretation of art by the teachers. The artists themselves come from different regions within the state, and their work reflects it.. The gallery staff has been able to install and display the show in a good light, no mean feat considering the many different directions of the art. This exhibition is a good one; it gives the viewer a total of these teachers’ art and him/her decide whether it is any good or not. The exhibitions at both the Harry Woods and Northlight galleries will continue through the week of Sept. 710. F O R STU DENTS & F A C U L T Y OF A SU 967-7563* D A Y S A LE s a v e $90 Wednesday, Thursday & Friday ONLY $59 1 year Nautilus and aerobics membership W ork out F R E E at hom e over C hristm as and Su m m er at any of our 2,000 I.P.F.A. affiliates. 3116 INDIAN S C H O O L RD. CONTACTS EYEGLASSES “ B ig D eal Just bring in this coupon and find out how big a deal this really is. You'll get the biggest size of the best-tasting pizza in town—generously topped with just-picked vegetables, fine natural cheese and the leanest meats, baked on a fresh-rolled pizza crust. Pick any of our 17yarieties. or think even bigger and make up your own. SUN DEVIL NAUTILUS ¡■ ■ M l 24 HOUR NAUTILUS CALL DR. SMITH AT 957-9056 Kachina Shopping Center jr ; .; 1 semester membership when you join with a friend PLUS “T h e S eco n d C h a n c e D eal” if y o u n o w re a liz e h o w fa r a w a y 2 4 -H o u r N a u tilu s is fro m c a m p u s o r y o u fe e l it is o v e rc ro w d e d , w e ’ll a d d , y o u r re m a in in g tim e to y o u r S u n D e v il N a u tilu s a n d A e r o b ic s m e m b e rs h ip — FR E E !!!! A S U S tu d e n t I D. re q u ire d fo r s p e c ia ls LO CATED STEPS ... N O T M ILE S FR O M C A M P U S NO YE$ & O P E N 7 D A Y S PER W EEK NO YES F O U R A B ILIT Y L E V E L S O F A E R O B IC S NO YES F R E E H B O A N D BIG S C R E E N M O V IES NO YES C LU B O VERSO LD AND O V 9E R C R O W D E D -v.;P R IC E FO R M E M B E R S H IP transferable ?.. YOU DECIDE NO NOT AVAILABLE $49 N A T IO N W ID E C a ll for a free trial N autilus or a e ro b ic workout and receive a F R E E $4 giant cartoon poster of S u n Devil C o u n try fo r y o u r dorm room wall (as su p p lie s last). SUN DEVIL NAUTILUS AND AEROBICS, INC. “A workout, not a wait!” Ain J 1«>|>|iing Ltrm pi//a. add f I fi « »• huiia mvIc One coupon per pizza, please. Expires 9/22/82. (UtOnOM YAT I m y N S c o ttM Jak ltd The aspirant may choose'' to enter programs available at universities, but in lieu of this, he can also enter a pro­ fessional acting school. At a professional school, a student will study acting in a c o n c e n tra te d m a n n e r, Mike Lancy - director Centerstage bypassing classes he may deem superfluous to his need. As with universities, pro­ fessional schools can offer no guarantee of jobs in the act­ ing field. Centerstage is one such professional acting school in Phoenix. Founded in 1968 by former ASU student Mike Lancy, Centerstage considers itself an “alternative training and performing outlet for high school and college theater students.” D iv is io n s in c lu d e Television/film acting, stage acting, commercial acting and public speaking. These are subdivided into classes dealing with film acting technique, recreational classes for ages 5 years and up, m u sical com edy workshops and many more. “Our whole stage cur­ riculum costs $300, as op­ posed to some agencies charging over $1000,” said Chuck Lakin, Centerstage public relations director. “Our instruction is not drag­ ged out. It’s the latest infor­ mation in the field. “Mike Lancy has such a positive attitude toward his students. He works for himself and he loves to teach,” Lakin said. Mike Lancy has been in the business for 10 years. He has worked professionally as a stage director in post­ production for commercials, in TV production and on Em­ my award-winning pro­ grams for KAET-TV Chan­ nels. Centerstage is billed as an instructional facility, not a casting agency. Students, however, are prepared to audition for professional work. Centerstage does send its students on auditions for professional work when word is received of available acting jobs. But its main thrust is quality preparation for the acting field at the most reasonable price in Phoenix. Recently, C enterstage moved its facilities to 4638 E. Shea Bhrd. Prior to that, it was housed in the Phoenix Jewish Community Center. “We now have two soundinsulated studios and much more specialized space that was not possible at the Jewish Community Center,” Lakin said. Centerstage will still have some of its recreational classes at the community center, but the professional division will now be housed at the new facility. Classes are scheduled for evenings and weekends, including Sundays. Informa­ tion on curriculum and class schedules can be>obtained by contacting Lakin or Lancy at 996-2980. Behind the scene*. . . Mike Lancy informs a student about the finer points of cinematography. Schools such as Centerstage provide students with an alternative theater education. Do Your Computer Work At Home! S a v e T im e a n d E ffo rt CRT with coupler or Printer with coupler *50°=£ Business Resource Service 3002 E. M c D o w e ll • 275-6305 Rentals / Service / Sales IT CONTESTING YOUR NON-RESIDENT TUITION STATUS? % If you have been denied resident tuition status by the University Fee S tatus Office and plan to appeal that decision, we can help. Our office has advised and represented many ASU students during recent years and we have developed a thorough and posi­ tive approach to presenting your appeal. You can meet with an experienced attorney, at no obligation or cost to you, who will evaluate your chances for obtaining residency status through the appeal process. Depending on your case and wishes, our fees may be charged on a contingent basis (a fixed percent­ age of the difference between resident and non­ resident fees payable only if you are granted resi­ dent status), a flat fee, or on an hourly rate. Boyd W. Dunn, Attorney at Law Yarbrough, Gilcrease, Sippet & Dunn 6601 S. Rural Rd. T e m p e , A Z • T e le p h o n e 897-0990 D E A D L IN E : O ct. 1 for filin g you r n otice for A S S O C IA T E D STU D EN TS . . . more than student governm ent G R AD U ATE STUD EN T ASSOCIATION M U 208R 965-1248 SAFETY ESCORT SERVICE 965-1515 TENANTS BIKE CO-OP ASSO CIATIO N EN VIRO N M EN TALM U209F LAB 965-6246 1 0 2 -A 965-1242 965-4748 965-6005 W O M EN ’S SER VIC ES M U 208R1 965-1253 AMOCiabon G raphes a n d Advertamg MINORITY A F F A IR S BOARD M U 208R1 965-1191 CO NCERT LECTU RE SERIES M U208J 965-3161 LE G A L SERVICES M U 208X 965-6307 FILM SERIES A T N EEB H A L L M U 208J 965-5658 'Get happy' means discounts at local bars and restaurants By Ann Bobinis Scenes writer Wondering about visiting a bar tonight? This afternoon? Besides exercising some imbibing con­ straint, here are a few suggestions for hit­ ting a “happy hour” : Barclay’s • Wednesday — oyster and shrimp bar • Thursday — flavored margaritas — 17oz.—$1.95 • Saturday —kamikaze—$1.05 Backstage • Monday thru Friday — 4:30 p.m. — 6:30 p.m. — 2 for 1 drinks — “ munchie bar” — entertainment nightly • Friday — 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 75 cent well drinks, $1.50 pitchers of beer — complimen­ tary nachos and pizza Donny O’Brien’s • Monday thru Friday — 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. reduced drink prices Hooter’s • Monday thru Friday — 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. 3 fra: 1 * • Monday—nightly drink specials • Tuesday—see Monday • Wednesday—beer and selected shots, $1 • Thursday — 7 p.m. to close — 75 cent kamikazes and chug contest • Saturday — 7 p;m. to 10 p.m. 2 fra* 1 well drinks V V Pizza \N C *+v 14” C h e e s e with this ad only. Not valid with any other offer. U niversity & Hours: M -T h 11-1 a.m. F & S 11-2 a.m. Sun. 4-1 a.m. M ill Also Subs A D inners 829-1722 Expires 9-10-82. STUDENT AID. It takes m ore than brains to go to college. It takes m oney. For tuition, room and board, and books. , , T h e A rm y College F u n d is designed to h elp you get that m oney tor college w hile serving your country. t . . , If you qualify, you can jo in the A rm y C ollege F u n d w hen you jo in th A rm ty. y. rFor every lla puts in-----------five; O ,r more. or e v e r y ao uuu mr you yuu p i «u ti in ...., U n d e ~Sam ~ ~ t— ~ ~ So, after just two years in the A rm y, you can have u p to $ n ,Z U U tor $20,100. ,, ,, , ,,, college. A fte r three years, u p to $20,1UU. . your free ' -*-ii— . pFun u n d booklet. It could be C a .ll. for copy o f the A•rm y /College the m ost im portant book you’ve ever read. C a ll 967--1611. ARNI , ' BEALLYOUCANBE. You Can Afford an A ttorney. Butterfield’s • Sunday thru Thursday — 4 p.m. — 7 p.m. — 2 for 1 drinks — $1.65 to $1.95 — com­ plimentary food Cowboys • Monday—2 for 1 well drinks until 9 p.m. — 50 cent draft beer all night • Tuesday — “Ladies Night” .6 p.m. to9p.m. —35 cent well drinks, wine and draft beer— male dance review • Thursday — 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. — 25 cent well drinks, wine and draft beer Cracker’s Dining Camp • Monday thru Friday — 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. — $1 well drinks, $1.50 call drinks, 75 cent beer or wine—complimentary food Devil House • Tuesday — $2 pitchers of beer and $1 well drinks all night • Wednesday—see Tuesday • Thursday — 75 cent well drinks and $3 pitchers of Long Island iced tea Timothy O’Tooles • Monday thru Sunday 4 p.m. to 6 p.m, 75 cent bottled beer, 50 cent well drinks and tap beer, and $1 call drinks .• Monday — 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. $1.75 pitchers of beer, wine or well drinks • Tuesday—8 p.m. to 11 p.m. 2 for 1 • Wednesday — 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. open bar admission is $3 for women and $4 for men. • Thursday — 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. 75 cent longneck beer, wine and kamikaze Willy A Guillermo’s • Monday thru Friday 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. reduced drink prices, 60 cent beer, 85 cent well drinks, $1.25 specialty drinks, and $3.75 pitchers of specialty drinks Sun Devil Haircutters 130 E. University Tempe Arches Plaza 966-5462 s 4 oo o f f STYLE CUT Co-LIVING o r PRK-M PIT AI. AGREEMENT R o f f lE K NAME C HANGE MISDEMEANOR * DISPOSITION LANDLORD TENANT DIVORCE ( u n c o n te s tc d ) FEE S T A T I S / ADMINISTRAIT VE HEARING REPRESENTATION C om plete R a n n e o f L egal S e r t ices a l A ffo r d a b le P rices P H O E N IX M ESA Law Center o f Frederick M. Jones 3225 N, Central, Suite 1010 Law Center o f Harold E. Campbell 20 E. Main, Suite 825 264-6908 8 3 5 -1 1 1 2 08Ö • 20% OFF Non-member price for 1 hill week ; • Bring this coupon to membership desk Expires September 30, 1982 FAMILY HAIR CENTER Fees from Fees from 20% 20% 4 0 E . 5 th S t. T em p e, AZ P h o n e 9 6 8 -4 8 3 1 A M em ber O w n ed - N o t F or P r o fit C om m u n ity C o -o p e r a tiv e S to r e H ou rs M on. - S a t. 9 Sun. 1 0 - 6 Serving A S U since 1964 M-F 9-6 SAT, 9-5 CENTER GENTLE STRENGTH CO-OP* 1 NATURAL FOODS Pride of the Sun Devils EXPIRES O C TO BER 31,1982 THE LAW • Sunday — “Ladies Night” all drinks half price Lant Avenue • Monday thru Friday 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. reduced ¿ in k prices—reverse happy hour • Sunday thru Thursday 10 p.m. to 1 a.nfl ?.• The Law Center has no hourly rates nor hidden charges for legal services o f a routine nature. All clients are en titled w ithout obligation to a specific estim ate o f the fee likely to be charged. The fee may vary depending upon your case. 20% 9 20% T E A S »'HERBS « VITAM IN S G R A IN S «D A I B Y « O I L 8 » C Q 8 M B n C 8 » J m C 8 8 « P R ( iP U c E « S N A c K • B R E A D m (/ « ÿ j b ,0 f § 'm i Wednesday, September 8,1982 State Press Pape 17 Win? Sun Devils' victory marred by injury to Osiecki By Kevin WkUic Sports editor For is:29 Saturday afternoon, ASU quarterback Sandy Osiecki saw three years of work pay off for him. He moved the ball for the Devils, completed 6-of-12 passes and, most importantly, looked confident in doing it. That was before Oregon defensive lineman Mike Walter name barrelling into him after his last pass completion of 1982. “He just rolled into my knee,” Osiecki sai<|. “I knew right then something was wrong.” However, that was one of the few things that went wrong during ASU’s 34-3 Pacific 10 Conference romp over Oregon at Eugene on Saturday. “I was very disappointed,” Osiecki said. “It really brought me down to reality.” So with Osiecki out and the score tied 3-3, Todd Hons came in and did his best. When he left early in the final quarter, ASU led 34-3. “My m a i n goal was not to throw any interceptions,” Hons said. “Everything we do (on offense) is high-percentage, so I just followed the game plan. “I was satisfied with how I did. I wasn’t trying to prove anything.” , ASU Coach Darryl Rogers was also satisfied with his “new” quarterback, a man who is presently expected to direct the offense the rest of this season. Osiecki underwent successful knee surgery for torn ligaments Sunday. He is out for the year. “Todd Hons is our quarterback,” Rogers said. “The loss of Sandy is a major disruption to our offense without a doubt. It’s a tremendous change. But it’s no different than losing an Alvin Moore or a Jim Hawn. “It’s a sad thing to lose Sandy,” Rogers added. “But I don’t want to think that we’re destitute at quarterback. “Don’t forget, Hons was the junior college Player-of-theYear in California two years ago. He’s not some rum-dum.” Hons, a junior from Torrance, Calif., completed 12-of-18 who was tackled for a two-yard loss. His touchdown pass, a 15-yarder to receiver Doug Allen in the lourth quarter, was (Hi a play he changed to at the line of scrimmage. “I saw a blitz possibility coming, so I checked off and the play went perfectly,” Hons said. The ASU defense played to near-perfection, but Oregon’s offense made things a lot easier. “I was surprises they didn’t pass more,” Rogers said. Oregon threw six times in the first half, completing only one. For the game, the Ducks completed but 6-of-15 tosses and gained only 199 yards in total offense. As far as turning points go, Oregon Coach Rich Brooks claimed two third-quarter fumbles did his team in. After driving to ASU’s 23 in the third quarter, Duck runner Ladaria Johnson coughed up the ball after a sprint to the Devil eight-yard line. Freshman linebacker Greg Battle pounced on it for ASU. Then, on Oregon’s next possession, quarterback Kevin Todd Hons (left) led ASU to its win after replacing starter San­ dy Osiecki. passes for 98 yards and one touchdown Saturday. In fact, his first pass attempt was a completion—to himself. That pass was batted by an Oregon defender back to Hons, w m m m iii Swarming defense shoots down Ducks _____v '_______ u ____ _ 1 . __ »» “They (Oregon) weren’t easy to stop,” Maxwell said following the game. But statistics show otherwise. Oregon gained but 199 total yards offensively, compared to ASU’s 397. The Ducks also turned the ball over four times, which led to 14 Sun Devil points. “We were looking for Oregon to get something estab­ lished,” Maxwell said, “but they never really did.” Oregon used three quarterbacks in the contest, which limited any continuity its offense may have hoped to gain, and passed for only 63 yards. Maxwell said their lack of a passing attack helped thé defense considerably. m *m m *rrn# By Kevin WidUc Sports editor ASU linebacker Vernon Maxwell can be a fairly good guy at times. Most of those times come after successful search-anddestroy missions. And Maxwell had several of those in Satur­ day’s 34-3 Sun Devil win over Oregon at Eugene. After causing a fumble early in the game by pressuring Duck quarterback Kevin Lusk into making a poor oitchout. Maxwell also sacked Lusk on a key third-down play in the second quarter. , In other words, it was an excellent beginning for both the Sun Devils and their All-American linebacker. FU TO N S LOOK ME OVER! The 100% Natural Cotton Mattress G u y s & G a ls S p o rts w e a r OFFSHORE P.C.H. LIGHTNING BOLT G&S and more OP •For Maximum Health & Com fort •C an also be m ade into % sofa ; «Pull-up Bed fram es & A c ce sso ries ^ -s Huntington Square across from Smitty’s inTbinó f C A SU AL ^ SPORTSWEAR Buy Factory Direct & Save! 25%STUDENT DISCOUNT (N.E. Corner Southern and Mill) Showroom: 24th Ave. & Peoria (in R&B Corp. Park #1142) Mori.-Sat. 9-6 3121 S. M ILL, TEMPE SHO P AT HOME S E R V IC E & INFO 943-6734 968-5840 M -F 10-7 S A T 10-6 BRING THIS AD FOR GIFT CERTIFI­ CATE DRAWING. EXPIRES. 10/22/82. Go Back ToSchoolhi°Style!. ¿ _____ _____ _______________ _____ J ¡ fr is o L BODY TALK it's the language GOLDEN understands... GLO IN STA N T INCHES OFF cE H R H A R D T S SC H W IN N STUDENT DISCOUNTS on BICYCLES ; * 2 0 SA V E - *50 10% ON SELECTED BIKES any lock or backpack O F F USED SALES MILL j « AVt “ I f 1" " FAST TAN T O O Buy 2 Wraps, 2 FREE VISITS GET 1 FREE I Limit one co u p o n per person. I Everybody w ill be talking about yours! GOLDEN G LO Expires 9/15/82 NEW & B O D Y W RAP SPECIAL & SERVICE 7 1 6 M ill A v e . • 9 6 7 -2 1 3 7 43 E. B r o a d w a y (Broadway & Mill) 9 6 6 -2 1 5 0 ' Hours 9 a.m .-8 p .m . * MS« ESI n i ARIZONA'S LEADING FUTON MANUFACTURER Page 16 State Press Wednesday, September 8,1982 'Get happy' means discounts at local bars and restaurants By Ann Bobinis Scenes writer Wondering about visiting a bar tonight? This afternoon? Besides exercising some imbibing con­ straint, here are a few suggestions for hit­ ting a “happy hour” : Barclay’s • Wednesday—oyster and shrimp bar • Thursday — flavored margaritas — 17«.—$1.95 • Saturday —kamikaze—$1.05 Backstage • M nnriay thru Friday — 4:30 p.m. — 6:30 p.m. — 2 for 1 drinks — “ munchie bar” — entertainment nightly « Friday — 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 75 cent well drinks, $1.50 pitchers of beer — complimen­ tary nachos and pizza Donny O’Brien’s • Monday thru Friday — 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. reduced drink prices Hooter’s • Monday thru Friday — 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. 3 fori • Monday—nightly drink specials • Tuesday—see Monday • Wednesday—beer and selected shots, $1 • Thursday — 7 p.m. to close —- 75 cent kamikazes and chug contest • Saturday — 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. 2 for l well drinks Z ' 4Ü & V V s ? * Pizza \N e 'i N cy 14” C h e e s e with this ad only. Not valid with any other offer.- U niversity & Hours: M-Th 11-1 a.m. F & S 11-2 a.m. Sun. 4-1 a.m. Mill Subs 829-1722 Also & Dinners Expires 9-10-82. STUDENT AID. It takes more than brains to go to college. It takes money. For tuition, room and board, and books. The Army College Fund is designed to help you get that money tor So, after just two years in the Army, you can have up to $15,200 for college. After three years, up to $20,100. ' ... Call for your free copy of the Army College Fund booklet. It could be nost important book you’ve ever read. Call 967-1611. the mosti ARMI . BEALLYOU CAN BE. You Can Afford an A ttorney. Butterfield’s • Sunday thru Thursday — 4 p.m. — 7 p.m. — 2 for 1 drinks — $1.65 to $1.95 — com­ plimentary food Cowboys • Monday—2 for 1 well drinks until 9 p.m. — 50 cent draft beer all night • Tuesday — “Ladies Night” 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. — 35 cent well drinks, wine and draft beer — male dance review • Thursday — 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. — 25 cent well drinks, wine and draft beer Cracker’s Dining Camp • Monday thru Friday — 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. — $1 well drinks, $1.50 call drinks, 75 cent beer or wine—complimentary food Devil House • Tuesday — $2 pitchers of beer and $1 well drinks all night • Wednesday—see Tuesday • Thursday — 75 cent well drinks and $3 pitchers of Long Island iced tea Lunt Avenue • Monday thru Friday 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. reduced drink prices — reverse happy hour • Sunday thru Thursday 10 p.m . to 1 a.m . $ 4 ° ° PHOENIX MESA Willy À Guillermo’s • Monday thru Friday 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. reduced drink prices, 60 cent beer, 85 cent well drinks, $1.25 specialty drinks, and $3.75 pitchers of specialty drinks Law Center o f Frederick M. Jones 3225 N, Central, Suite 1010 Law Center o f Harold E. Campbell 20 E. Main, Suite 825 264-6908 835-1112 o p p STYLE CUT ■ Ü 20% GENTLE STRENGTH CO-OP* 1 NATURAL FOODS * 20% OFF Non-member price for 1 full week* Bring this coupon to membership desk Expires September 30,1982 20% R O Ífu R FAMILY HAIR CENTER 20 % 4 0 E. 5 th S t. T em p e, AZ P h o n e 9 6 8 -4 8 3 1 A M em ber O w n ed - N o t F o r P r o fit C om m u n ity C o -o p e r a tiv e S to r e H o u rs M on. - S a t. 9 - 9 Sun. 1 0 - 6 Serving A S U sin ce 1964 M-F 9-6 SAT, 9-5 NAME CHANGE MISDEMEANOR * DISPOSITION LANDLORD TENANT DIVORCE ( u n c o n te s te d ) $99 FEE STATI S/ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING REPRESENTATION C om plete R a n g e o f Legal Services a t A ffo r d a b le P rices Co LIVING o r P R I M PUAI AGREEMENT Pride of the Sun Devils EXPIRES O C TO BER 31,1982 Fees fr om Timothy O’Tooles • Monday thru Sunday 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. 75 cent bottled beer, 50 cent well drinks and tap beer, and $1 call drinks • Monday — 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. $1.75 pitchers of beer, wine or well drinks • Tuesday — 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. 2 for l • Wednesday — 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. open bar admission is $3 for women and $4 for men. • Thursday — 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. 75 cent longneck beer, wine and kamikaze Sun Deuil Haireutters 130 E. University Tempe Arches Plaza 966-5462 ' THE LAW CENTER • Sunday — “Ladies Night” all drinks half price The Law Center has no hourly rates nor hidden charges for legal services o f a routine nature. All clients are entitled w ithout obligation to a specific estim ate o f the fee likely to he charged. The fee may vary depending upon your case. 20% TEAS «'HERBS «VITAMINS GRAINS« DAIRY «OlLS«COSMETICS «JU ICES« PRODUCE «SNACK «BREAD Wednesday, September 8,1982 State Press Page 17 Win? Sun Devils' victory marred by injury to Osiecki - By Kevin Widlic Sports editor For 15:29 Saturday afternoon, ASU quarterback Sandy Osiecki saw three years of work pay off for him. He moved the ball for the Devils, completed 6-of-12 passes and, most importantly, looked confident in doing it. That was before Oregon defensive lineman Mike Walter came barrelling into him after his last pass completion of 1982. ’ “He just rolled into my knee,” Osiecki said. “I knew right then something was wrong. ” However, that was one of the few things that went wrong Hiring ASU’s 34-3 Pacific 10 Conference romp over Oregon at Eugene on Saturday. “I was very disappointed,” Osiecki said. “It really brought me down to reality.” So with Osiecki out and the score tied 3-3, Todd Hons came in and did his best. When he left early in the final quarter, ASU led 34-3. “My main goal was not to throw any interceptions,” Hons said. “ E v e ry th in g we do (on offense) is highpercentage, so I just followed the game plan. “I was satisfied with how I did. I wasn’t trying to prove anything.” , ASU Coach Darryl Rogers was also satisfied with his “new” quarterback, a man who is presently expected to direct the offense the rest of this season. Osiecki underwent successful knee surgery for torn ligaments Sunday. He is out for the year. “Todd Hons is our quarterback,” Rogers said. “The loss of Sandy is a m ajor disruption to our offense without a doubt. It’s a tremendous change. But it’s no different than losing an Alvin Moore o r a Jim Hawn. “It’s a sad thing to Use Sandy,” Rogers added. “But I don’t want to think that we’re destitute at quarterback. “Don’t forget, Hons was the junior college Player-of-theYear in California two years ago. He’s not some rum-dum. Hons, a junior from Torrance, Calif., completed 12-of-18 «III.I J ■ n , «!,'U JHU* a Todd Hons deft) led ASU to its win after replacing starter San­ dy Osiecki. passes for 96 yards and one touchdown Saturday. In fact, his first pass attempt was a completion—to himself. That pass was batted by an Oregon defender back to Hons, A. a * — 4. . . . . . . x l who was tackled for a two-yard loss. His touchdown pass, a 15-yarder to receiver Doug Allen in the lourth quarter, was on a play he changed to at the line of scrimmage. “I saw a blitz possibility coming, so I checked off and the play went perfectly,” Hons said. The ASU defense played to near-perfection, but Oregon’s offense made things a lot easier. “I was surprised they didn’t pass more,” Rogers said. Oregon threw six times in the first half, completing only one. For the game, the Ducks completed but 6-of-15 tosses and gained only 199 yards in total offense. As far as turning points go, Oregon Coach Rich Brooks claimed two third-quarter fumbles did his team in. After driving to ASU’s 23 in the third quarter, Duck runner Ladaria Johnson coughed up the ball after a sprint to the Devil eight-yard line. Freshman linebacker Greg Battle pounced mi it for ASU. Then, on Oregon’s next possession, quarterback Kevin ton lh u d m i U Swarming defense shoots down Ducks ____ ___ u ___ _ Ai. . i o 9* me«.»...«*!! said “They (Oregon)x weren’t easy to stop,” Maxwell following the game. But statistics show otherwise. Oregon gained but 199 total yards offensively, compared to ASU’s 397. The Ducks also turned the ball over four times, which led to 14 Sun Devil points. “We were looking for Oregon to get something estab­ lished,” Maxwell said, “but they never really did.” Oregon used three quarterbacks in the contest, which limited any continuity its offense may have hoped to gain, and passed for only 63 yards. Maxwell said their lack of a passing attack helped the defense considerably. coming p * .,. By Kevin Widlic Sports editor ASU linebacker Vernon Maxwell can be a fairly good guy at times. Most of those times come after successful search-anddestroy missions. And Maxwell had several of those in Satur­ day’s 34-3 Sun Devil win over Oregon at Eugene. After causing a fumble early in the game by pressuring Duck quarterback Kevin Lusk into making a poor Ditchout. Maxwell also sacked Lusk on a key third-down play in the second quarter. , ’ . ... ... In otter words, it was an excellent beginning for both the Sun Devils and their All-American linebacker. FU TO N S LOOK ME OVER! The 100% Natural Cotton Mattress G u y s & G a ls S p o rts w e a r P.C.H. LIGHTNING BOLT OP OFFSHORE C&S '■'V " A sofa i •Pull-up Bed frames & A ccessories ---V■ and more Huntington Square across from Smitty's inTbinô f C A SU A L ^ SPORTSWEAR Buy Factory Direct & Save! 25%STUDENT DISCOUNT (N.E. C o rn e r Southern a n d ‘Mill) Show room : 24th Ave. & P e oria (In R& B C a rp . Park #1142) M on.-Sat. 9-6 * 3121 S. 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B r o a d w a y (Broadway & Mill) 966-2150 ‘ Hours 9 a.m.-8 p.m . | E IOSA ARIZONA'S LEADING FUTON MANUFACTURER Page 18 State Press Wednesday, September s, 1982 Injured quarterback remains optimistic about future plans By Jeff Fries Assistant sports editor On S a tu rd a y , they thought it was just a sprain. ‘T i l be OK,” ' ASU quarterback Sandy Osiecki said after he injured his knee during the first period of the Devils-Ducks foot­ ball clash at Oregon. “There’s no way I’m stay­ ing out the whole year. ” On Sunday, Osiecki underwent knee surgery for torn ligaments he in­ curred. His season was over. ‘T m d isa p p o in te d because I put in a lot of hard work, and I have nothing to show for it,” Osiecki said Tuesday. “I’ll just have to learn from th is. experience. “I still have one more year (of eligibility).” The 22-year-old Ansonia, Conn., native is not putting his head down. But after being redshirted last year (because Mike Pagel .was the No. 1 quarterback), Osiecki will have to spend another season preparing for the next. “ I’ll finish school out and start on my réhabilitation program after I get my cast off (in six weeks),” said Osiecki, who will leave St. Joseph’s Hospital to­ day. “The operation went very well, and the doctors didn’t see any reason why I couldn’t play next year.” Meantime, the Devils will have to rely on Todd Hons, a 6-foot-l, 183-pound junior from Torrance, Calif., to handle the signal calling. Hons was in­ strumental in the Devils’ 34-3 win Saturday after relieving Osiecki. “I think the team will be in good shape,” Osiecki said. “They moved the ball well and scored behind him. I think he’ll do well.” But while Hons will have to work harder than ever learning the ropes, Osiecki may be running “the play” over and over in his mind. He explained how he was injured. “I dropped back and went to throw, and I saw Willie Gittens catch the pass,” the »-foot-5, 209pound Osiecki said. “I had my weight shifted to my front foot, and one of the Oregon defenders that was rushing fell down. “He started crawling on the ground, but he didn’t see me and he plowed into my knee. “The pain shot up me right off the bat,” he add­ ed. “I felt the knee give way like it came out of the socket. I knew right then it might be pretty bad.” After the game, the knee was iced and Osiecki was given a set of crutches to walk on. The knee was “very loose,” Osiecki said, and “the doctors knew right away what it was. ” The shame of it is, Osiecki was having a pret- M ore about Victory. HRIR& SKIN CARE. *S¡ r a s » ' * continuad from pag* 17 Lusk — one of three used in the game — fumbled the ball deep in Duck territory. Devil noseguard MitchCallahan dove on the ball in the end zone for a touchdown, giving ASU a 20-3 lead. “That first fumble killed our momentum,’ Brooks said. “But after the second one, we just couldn’t come back.” ASU fullback Dwaine “Tex” Wright and back-up Darryl Clack each paced the Sun Devils with 70 yards on the ground. Wright also scored ASU’s first touchdown, a 1-yard plunge in the second quarter. Even junior fullback Tony Lombanii got into the act, scor­ ing ASU’s last points with a 7-yard run. But Saturday was basically a day of the green. ASU’s defense dominated the green-clad Duck offense in tree-green Oregon, and the Devils’ green quarterbacks did the rest. W 9 L A R G E (24 oz.) 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Speakers&Spaces Come blow your mind and exercise your eardrums with a 20-minute multimedia presentation that could change the entire way you think about stereo. A question and answer period led by a qualified stereo specialist follows the presentation. DATE: THURSDAY, SEPT. 9,1982 TIME: 10a.m.-3p.m. PLACE: Memorial Union Mohave Room Sponsored by — ASASU and THE PROFESSIONALS AUDIO/VIDEO M O N D AY, SEPTEM BER 13 4 p.m. M U 213 SANTA CRUZ (Orientation of new officers) For more inform ation call: Jan Rostal, 9 6 5 -9 9 4 3 * 1 1 ° ° 6 W est 7th St. contlmMdpaga1» NEWA Women *20-*25 Reg. $16.00 OLYMPIC HAORCUTTERi I Reg. $2.05 I Your Choice of I Flavors N€$US SPECIALISTS TEMPE Southern & McClintock (Bashas Plaza) 838-3611 PHOENIX 333 E. Camelback 264-9911 UNIVERSITY 7thSTREET u ■ < -i .i Jr 3 5thSTREET Wednesday, Septembers, 1982 State Press Page 19 M ore about More about Defense__ . Future ft continued from pagf 17 conllixiad i rara page 1» ty good first quarter before the mishap. He hit on 6-of12for 100 yards, including a 51-yard bomb to flanker Ron Brown. “I felt really good out there,” be said. ‘Things were clicking, I was reading the defense, and I was really having fun. “I was on an emotional high. I really wanted to do well. It’s (the injury) just a big letdown.” ASU head Coach Darryl Rogers, who was admitted­ ly “scared” about Osiedti after the game, was equal­ ly disappointed to lose him. “It’s a sad thing to lose Sandy,” Rogers said Tues­ day. “Losing your quarter­ back is a severe disruption to any offense.” No m atter how sad things have gotten, Osiecki said his family has stood by him. ‘‘They’ve been real positive,” he said. “It’s just the way things go sometimes. Life goes on. Nothing stops. “I just look toward my family. T hey’ve been through the hard times with me. They wanted to see me play this year. It was a big shock to all my fartiily and friends. “I’m going to stay pretty much into it,” he said. “ I’ll go to the meetings still. There’s still a lot of things I have to learn, so I’ll stay in the swing of things. ” And until the cast is removed, Osiecki said there are “a lot of little ex­ ercises you have to do to keep the knee in shape.” “It’s kind of hard,” he said, “to move around.” It’s too early to toll whether the Sun Devil of­ fense will have, the same difficulty. _____ _ ^11^® C BICYCLE BARGAINS We Meet or Beef Any Comparable Deal Around “I thought they’d come back,” the senior said. “We were prepared for their passing (attack), but they never got anything going. We stopped them pretty well. ” Personally, Maxwell got credit for four unassisted tackles along with getting the Devils’ only sack. He also didn’t flinch when the Devils lost inside linebacker Willie Green to a sprained knee early in the third quarter. Green made a key interception in the first half and returned it to the Oregon 19 to set upa score. His loss forced ASU to go to untested freshman Greg Bat­ tle. However, Battle performed quite well and even recovered a fumble on ASU’s eight-yard line — a play Oregon Coach Rich Brooks termed a “major turning paint.” “We were .satisfied with Battle,” ASU Coach Darryl Rogers said. Rogers didn’t know if Green would be ready to ¡day in this Saturday’s home opener againstUtah. ASU’s other defensive All-American, safety Mike Richard­ son, also turned in a fine opening-game effort with seven combined (unassisted/assisted) tackles. “Really I don’t think their change of quarterbacks hurt them,” Richardson said. “I just think it was a matter of us getting fired up. T didn’t really pay much attention to who their quarterback was.” Neither, really, did the entire defense. They, like Maxwell, just captured whoever was there. It 's p u rch a sed at list price. 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SCOTTSDALE RD. glirry OUTLET SAT 9-4 ass« » » » » « » 60% |60% OFF OFF P ul Down k% » 2 1L 84 " wide • 5 colors Fix it Up W hite IN T ER N A T IO N A LLY F A M O U S P O C K E T BILLIARD & T R IC K S H O T ARTIST FR ID A Y — Sept. 10,1982 In the M U Arizona Room Two FREE Shows 11 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. u p h o l s t e r y f a b r ic S A V I 80% TO 78% AUTO 1000‘a of Smettono in aiocA SAVE — SAVE — SAVE UPHOLSTERY TOOLS A SUPPLIES INSULATED BACK 48" WOE L A M E SELECTION * 3 “ - Wa oarry man. in stock POLY FOAM Seid Foam MATTRESSES Twin s i» ............. 2 9 .0 5 Doubla atoa..........3 9 .9 5 Kinsa ‘ «w*72 5 4 .9 5 2 1 ...................S 3x24x72...................• f " 4 12 W. Broadway • T em pe • 9 6 7-4 811 4x24x72 MO“ 0x24x72................. » 1 » " Bel ken handed reins to men's tennis team By Michael Graham Sports writer Lou Belken, formerly the head tennis professional at The Scottsdale Racquet Club, has been named the new ASU mens’ tennis coach. The head coaching vacancy was created when former coach Myron McNamara (1979-82) resigned this summer after having accummulated a mere three Pacific 10 Con­ ference victories during his three-year stint. McNamara will assume a position as a teaching instructor, one which he held previous to his stay in Tempe, at the John Wayne Tennis Club in Newport Beach, Calif. Belken, who also possesses excellent teaching credentials and a fine reputation for coaching several promiiient young Southwest junior players, brings with him nine years of teaching experience Belken said he believes that there may be some initial ad­ justment to working in a collegiate coaching capacity, but he doesn’t expect any drastic changes to occur in his approach. “During the past years I have worked with numerous players around the college-age level,” said Belken, who has served as the head coach of the Phoenix Junior Davis Cup team on four occasions (1974, ’76, ’81 and ’82), winning the Southwest title three times. “ I don’t really expect having to make a big adjustment.” Perhaps the biggest rap against McNamara was that while he was a knowledgable teacher and coach, his administrative skills were lacking. Despite coming to ASU with a club-teaching background — much like McNamara — Belken does not believe that he will have any problem keeping up with the twofold task that his predecessor fell victim to. “While I don’t have the direct experience of a college level coach and administrator,” Belken said, “ I’m aware of those particular admininstrative tasks and will do my best toward budgeting time.” In addition to coaching the Phoenix Davis Cup team, Belken has coached Tracy Becker, who was this summer’s National Sports Festival singles and doubles champion. Other local Belken pupils include Gary Donnelly, ASU’s No. 1 player the past two seasons, and Jimmy Grabb, who was the Southwest champion in the boys’ 18-and-under divi­ sion. As a result of coaching and occasionally traveling from tournament to tournament with these nationally-ranked junior players, Belken has received valuable exposure to BUBBLES OF JOY eanUmiMlpaS*2S pQ |G £ Balloon Bouquets ONE In c lu d e s L e n s e s a n d y o u r c h o ic e o f A N Y fram e in s to c k k WE CARRY HARD A N D SO FT CONTA C T L E N SE S SAY IT S IN G L E VISIO N WITH $4500 BALLOONS Includes Frame, Lenses. Gfass or Plastic. Tint or Photogrey for all occasions N o C h arg e fo r O v e rsize B IF O C A L S •Eye Examination can be arranged •We honor your company and union vision plans •We fill all doctors prescriptions $7400 I Includes Frame, Lenses. Glass or Plastic. Tint or Photogrey Executive Bifocals $15 Extra . Invisible Bifocals $35 Extra FAMILY OPTICI AIMS 831-6840 AMERICAN EXPRESS Lou Belken many college- age players who could become potential recruiting projects. ■' “The last couple of summers I’ve had the chance to meet a lot of excellent tennis players from various parts of the coun­ try,” Belken said. “I would have to say that those ex­ periences might help in my attempt to put a team together. With the top three players from last year’s squad swatting hnMchnnHs in almost every part of the country except Tempe, putting that team together might just be a little tougher than the first-year coach might have first expected. The Devils lost Paul Bernstein to graduation and Todd Nelson said good-bye to ASU for a shot at the professional McDowell Square The Arches 5134 W. M CD O W ELL RD. 120 E. 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UNIVERSITY tf tv Wednesday, Septembers, 1982 State Press Page21 Sun Devil secondary paced by Richardson By Michael Graham Sports writer Editor’s note: This is the last in the series highlighting and grading the various areas of the ASU football team. If the various members of this year’s ASU defensive secondary can just learn how to play follow the leader, then opposing quarterbacks and receivers will have plenty of nightmares when it cranes time to face the Devils. This season’s “leader” will be known to ASU fans and professional football scouts as Mike Richardson. Richardson, who has been a two-year con­ sensus All-American and is a sure-fire firstround draft pick in next year’s pro draft, needs only rate more interception to over­ take Mike Haynes, now an All-Pro with the NFL’s New England Patriots, as the Devils’ all-time interception leader. Despite all of the notches that Richards cm has on his belt, defensive secondary coach Willie Shaw does not believe that this exor­ bitant amount of attention will adversely af­ fect his play this campaign. “Mike is a m ature young man and I don’t who at 5-foot-ll, 178 pounds, possesses the speed and agility to keep up with the fleetest of wide receivers. Montgomery was hit fra* a passinterference call in the second quarter of the Oregon game, but played well overall. Returning starter Duane Galloway, who kept the talented Ronnie Brown on the bench last season, will start at the other cor­ ner. The first reserve that could enter the game to spell either Montgomery or Galloway at the corners is senior Scott Kegans, who will also see duty on spécial teams and should return punts. Playing beside the All-American Richard­ son in the opposite safety slot will be the 6foot-2,179-pound Dale Walton. Walton will battle former prep teammate Nate King for the spot. King didn’t play much Saturday, but he did crack the starting lineup last season. Additional depth will be added to the Devil secondary with Paul Moyer, who was an early-season starter in 1981 and could challenge to regain that spot. Comerback Duane Galloway returns his eawy to the ASU secondary. " |don't think there's any doubt that the experience we have is our biggest strong point." —Willie Shaw see any reason why die exposure should bother him,” said Shaw. “In fact, in our opener against Oregon (won by ASU, 34-3) I thought he played exceptionally well.” In that game, the senior had three unassisted tackles and broke up one pass play near the Sun Devil end zone. However, for Richardson and the entire Devil defense to shine, his mates in the pass­ ing lanes will have to perform well. “We thought our secondary played fairly well Saturday,” head Coach Darryl Rogers said. “But Oregon didn’t pass much.” At one comerback spot ASU will start con­ verted wide receiver Mario Montgomery, ROOM M ATE PLACERS We’ll help find you a place to live that will meet all of your needs. It’s quick, easy and COMPUTERIZED. Call: 9 6 8 - 4 4 1 4 r ■ I I I ■ “ Against Oregon I thought out secondary played pretty good,” Shaw said. “Although we are surely not as sharp as we hope to be as the season progresses. “I don’t think there is any doubt that the experience we have is our biggest strong point,” Shaw explained. “But I think our whole defensive unit has good experience and we will all be able to help each other out in different ways. ” Trying to find any voids in this year’s Devil defense is like trying to get a preppie to kill his alligator, and that analogy should surely hold true for the boys chasing down the receivers. STATE PRESS SUN DEVIL GRADE: B M M — — 1 1 C L I P THIS COUPO N ■ ■ ■ ONE FREE WASH ■n THE ELU. RECREATION CENTER PRESENTS FALL SEMESTER BOWLING LEAGUES O PEN T O A L L STU D EN TS , FA C U LT Y , S T A F F AN D ALUMNI LE A G U E S FO R A L L SKILL LEV ELS FR O M BEG IN N ER S T O A D V A N C ED • IF Y O U H A V E N T EXPER IEN CED T H E FUN O F LE A G U E BOW LING NOW IS T H E TIM E T O STAR T W IT H EV ER Y $7.50 D R Y C L E A N IN G O R D E R ALL LEAGUES WILL START IN SEPTEMBER IAUNDROLAND Mon.-Fri. 9-5 ■ I Sat. 8-12 968-8933 1028 E. Lemon Corner o f Lem on & Terrace INDIVIDUALS WELCOMED! TEAMS ADORED! FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: C O M E T O TH E M.U. RECREATION C EN TER OR C A L L 965-3642 a ir an d Fashion M od els W anted for the 30th Annual A rizo n a Cosm etologist Association Beauty & Trade Fair —Full P h o to g ra p h ic C o v e ra g e — For information call. e MEMORIAL UNION ARIZONA STAT6 ÜNW€RSITV ASU diamond recruits lost to major leagues By Ken Sain Sports writer Everybody has their favorite fish story, but ASU baseball Coach Jim Brock has at least five of “the big ones that got away” to choose from. Brock lost four players this year that were firstround draft picks in the treeagent draft, ones that had previously signed letters of intent to enroll at ASU. He also lost a third-round pick, who according to Brock, signed for the mo6t amount of money that a thirdrounder has ever signed for. Two of the five were a double-loss to Sun Devil athletics as Dale Sveum and Edward Allen were also ex­ pected to help the ASU foot­ ball team. Sveum was one of the most contfeHMd pag»23 Looking For Living Quarters, But O n ly H ave Pennies To Spend? Become a plasma donor! $10 Is paid per donation and you can donate twice weekly (but please wait 72 bourn between donations). That’s up to $95 a month! And that s enough to turn your dream place into a reality! New donors, bring in this, ad tor a $2 bonus for your first donation. C a ll now for an appointm ent. 968-6139 . University Plasma Center 1015 S. Rural Rd. Open Monday-Saturday 8:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Federally Hew n—if SU B S T O P S U B S P E C IA L IS T S O F A R IZO N A Staff photo by H. Dm ! Baseball Coach Jim Brock may bo cafHng on mom young players this year. Sponsors Catering o f KM CR 6 Foot Subs jazz Party Trays PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT 91.5 F M W h o le W heat National Public Radio Sub Buns The MUAB Pop-Up Committee will b e holding open auditions for musical groups and solos, NEW BREAKFAST SPECIAL dancers, magicians, jugglers, comedians and other performers interested in being part of the Pop-Up series on Septem ber 14-15. Sign up in the MU Activities Center, 14-MU, 965-6822, — FRESH F R U IT — M e lo n s 60$ Blueberries 30c Yogurt — all natural 65c 222 E. UNIVERSITY, TEM PE Sept. 7 and reserve your audition time. 967-7744 ^ 3 6 !/£ >; ^ y j .^ r r K * * i; $2 O F F any 8x10 paper When you pick up your student discount card (Offer expires 9-30-82.) •New larger location •Student Discount Cards w/I.D. •Largest selection of darkroom supplies in Tempe •One-day photofinishing w/Kodak paper and chemicals •Complete repair and rental service •Used equipment purchased and sold •Nikon, Pentax, Canon, Fuji, Minolta, Olympus plus more •Largest selection of telescopes and binoculars in Tempe We have Oriental Paper! all grades and surfaces.. d i ilson ! A S U -T e m p e Store sMCsms TWO GUN Expert Service & Repair Credit Cards O K 202-A East University 894-8337 “Behind the Chuck box" — SPECIAL COFFEES — C a p p u ccin o Esspresso Fresh g ro un d — Special blend OPEN 7:30 A.M. TO 2:00 A.M. NIGHTLY Wednesday, Septem bers, 1982 State Press Page 23 M ore about Lost_ oonUnuad hom pag* 22 highly-recruited q u arte r­ backs in the country, and had also planned to play shortstop or third base for Brock. He was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in the first round and signed for around $125,000, according to Brock. Allen was drafted in the third round by the Kansas City Royals. He originally planned on attending school, but the Royals made the “of­ fer he couldn’t refuse.’* He signed for about $95,000 which, according to Brock, is unheard of for a third-round pick. “He really wanted to go to sc h o o l,” B rock sa id . “Education meant a lot to him and his mother.” Allen was expected to play a lot as a defensive back this season for the football team. Sam Khalifa was one of the m ost h ig h ly -re c ru ite d , players in the history of Arizona. Khalifa, a 1982 prep graduate, played shortstop in Tucson. “In a couple of years,” Brock said, “he probably would have been a shoo-in at All-American. “It was a difficult decision for him, because he is an academically-oriented kid.” Khalifa also signed a sixfigure contract, reportedly for more than $100,000 with the P ittsb u rg h P ira te s organization. Robert Parkins is another who signed a letter of intent to attend ASU as a righthanded pitcher, but he later signed a contract with the Boston Red Sox. But since beginning his professional career, things have not gone as planned. “He hasn’t thrown a pitch yet, and he had to have arm surgery,” Brock said. Duane Ward was the ninth pick in the first-round by the Atlanta Braves. Ward, froih Farmington, N.M., is also a pitcher. According to Brock, only 14 picks in the first round of the free-agent draft came from the high school ranks. Four of them signed letters of intent with ASU, and subsequently signed profes­ sional contracts. “I try to concentrate on who we did get, and not on who got away,” Brock said. The Devils will open their M l season on Oct. 5. Brock Admitted tin t playing fall ball is vary important to helping the team in the spring. “The fall program gives another season to prepare for the upcoming season,” Brock said. Since the m ajor leagues signed many of the top freshmen chosen in the freeagent draft — along with some of last season’s top junior players — Brock will use the fall season to develop the young, but talented squad he has. And Brock will need the time, since the m ajo r leagues also raided many of the stars of his 1982 squad. NEWBORN the advantage March off Dimes Brock succumbs to computer age By Ken Sain Sports writer Baseball Coach Jim Brock has given in to the age of automation. That’s right. Brock is currently using computers to piece together his 1983 squad. According to Brock, the computer has helped to eliminate some of the walkons in less time than it used to take him. “Usually I’m dealing with all these cards with the data, and I had them laying all over the house,” Brock said. “I must have eliminated 30 guys in the first 30 minutes with the compute«’.” The baseball team held walk-on tryouts during the last two weeks of August. Brock’s son, Jim Jr., developed the program. The younger Brock had never taken any classes, so he relied on the manual that came with the cornput«:. Over the summer he developed a way to show the percentile and predic­ tor of each (gayer on the basis of nine tests that Coach Brock administdk-s at the start of the fall semester. Brock has called the switch a great success, but thinks he might have some problems explaining to an athlete why he was cut by a computer. “They’ll (athletes being cut) probably say, how can you pick a baseball team with a computer?” Brock said. C L A SSIF IE D S The STATE PRESS disclaim s all respon­ sib ility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. Bel ken cantfcNMd hom pag* 20 tour. Nelson is presently in Europe, - And when asked where one might find Donnelly, who is not currently enrolled in school after having academic problems last spring, Belken replied, “He’s probably sitting on my liv­ ing room couch watching television.” GIBSON RIPPER base, excellent sound and condition. Caff Steve, 838-3380. ATTORNEY AT law, Paul Sctmaidar. Reasonable faaa. 1000 E. Apacha, Suite 101. Tampa. 00M32«. MOBILE HOME two blocks ASU. 8x35. New plumbing, cooler. Excellent elec­ trical, roof, interior. Awning. Shed. Economy space. $3500. 967*5639, 8949570. ATTORNEY, GENERAL practica. Phone estim ates welcome. Richard Dyer, 123 North Sirrtne, Suite 222, Mesa. 8334001. FRIENDS WORSHIP (Quaker). Dantorth Chapel'— Sundays 9:30 M l. Silent worahlp welcome! __________ ' Automobiles 1971 240-Z PRISTINE condition.,If no answer call after 6:00 p.m. 831-5109. Bicycles_______ LOW FALL RATES 1 and 2 bedrooms available LA CRESENTA APTS. 1050 S. Stanley, Tempe STUDENT DISCOUNTS! Studios, one and two bedroom furnished adult units featuring nine distinctive floorplans, five pools, tropical gardens, laundry facilities, security plus all u tilitie s in­ cluded. Mediterranean V illa Apart­ ment». 265-8376. _____________ _ TWO MATURE female roommates to share rent and utilities. Three bedroom house, Mesa. Call Gloria, 898-8781,2484803. ___________ ______ 967-8203 Classes Include: Creative Movement for Children • Ballet • Jazz • Modern Dance • T a ic h i • K a ra te • Y o g a • Massage • Special Exercise • Hypnosis • Stretching & Flexi­ bility • Prenatal/Post Partum Exercise • Art & The Subcon­ scio u s • Beg. Guitar • Beg. Conga Drums — D A N C EW EA R F O R SA LE — 15% OFF w/ad 894-8347 414 M ilj Ave. “Walking Distance from ASU" ACCOUNTANT ADVERTISING agency seeks accounting major. $4 per hour (to start) to do billing, receivables, payables. 15 — 30 flexible hours per week. Send letter and/or resume to Box 16450, Phoenix, 85011,_____________ _ NEEDED, PEOPLE who are motivated to make money. Unique multi-level marketing program concerning local professionals. Tremendous part-time opportunity. If you have the motivation needed, pjease write; Lanchael Invest­ ment Mgt., Attn: Mldftael Wolfe, 6991 East Camelback .Road, Suite C103, Scottsdale, A Z 85261. PHONE SALES evenings, immediate openings, very close to campus. Call now, avoid the rush. 968*4853. _____ STUDENT JO BS advertising help $7.50 to start, hours flexible. Call 968-9476, 12:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m. Ask for Ann, Instruction TUTORING: SPANISH/French. Save your grade and credit. M ile from ASU. 968-2913.,____________ ___________ M iscellaneous USED CARPET in good shape. Various sizes,, prices between „$10 — 40. Call Steve evenings, 965*8844.___________ E X T E N D E D W EAR S O F T C O N T A C T S (A N D FO R A S T IG M A T IS M ) for C o n ta ct Le n se s EYE EXAM $2900 for Eyeglasses $2200 NEW LOCATION DR. W.G. AMES OPTOM ETRIST 7548 E. Mm St., ScittUak (Just West ol Miller fíd.) 941-5228 M -S T ravel_______ _ DRIVE CARS free to m ost points of the United States, over 21. Scheall Driveway, 991*5533. , TRAVEL MART, the lowest fares and the beet service, walking distance from campus. Let us handle the hassle. 8298181. ________ •> V- T yping ACCOUNTING AND secretarial ser­ vices. Quality typing, fast, accurate. IBM Electronic. 20 Years experience. Dana 941-5111._______ _______■■■ ACADEM IC TYPING. Near ASU* Research papers, theses, dissertations., English degree. Editing. Seven years experience. 966*1030.____________ • ACADEMIC ACCURACY! Word Pro­ cessing equipment! Dissertations, theses, research papers, resumes, repetitive letters. Outstanding quality. Work guaranteed. Call Precision Typ* ing,838-1327._______ ACADEMIC TYPING. IBM Correcting. Selectric; accurate/prompt; near E llio t and Alma School Road. Joyce 838*1480. ACAD EM IC TYPING Service d-. Dissertations (excellent Graduate Col­ lege references), research papers, resumes, repetitive cover letters. A ll work guaranteed. Cyndy, noon-10 p.m.,~ 968-3627. _______________ ; ACADEMIC, BUSINESS typing; editing; IBM Electronic; no extra charge for rushes; near Southem/Dobson. Bar­ bara, 989-1441. HARLEY SPORTSTER I960, rrtags, ex­ tras, black, 9400 m iles. Absolutely sharp! $2500. C all 8204X113 evenings. PABST BOCK Beer $2.38, Em ilio Te­ quila $4.99, Zonin Lambrusco $2.38, Haagen Dazs Ice Cream, Rundle’s Li­ quors and Market, University and M ill Avenues. 9670079. 1980 KAWASAKI 250 LTD, 4600 miles, under warranty.' Showroom condition. Many extras. $850.831-7376.____ - A-1 PROFESSIONAL typing near cam­ pus. Dissertations, term papers, theses, resumes, etc. IBM Electronic. Linda, 967-4908. _______ ■ MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE too expen­ sive? Preferred and high risk. Lundell Agency, Rural and Baseline, Tempe. 244-1184,831*0121. _______' BUTLER’S. DRIVE a little, save a tot!! IBM* Selectric, 95 wpm, 20 years ex­ perience. Apa format special $6.50/hour or $1/page. 877-2024._____________ _ MOPED MOTOBECANE Traveler 1980 was $500 new, w ill sell for $250. Gets 100 mile» per gallon. 8200919_______ EXPERIENCED TYPISTS — IBM Selectrics, Sharon 833-5687, Pam 968-9649, Janet 834-0893, Rose 839-5873, $1.25 per page. __________ _______ . P ersonal______ _ FAST, ACCURATE typing, $1.10/page. C all Teresa at 962-0079 or Linda at 9695775. _______ _________ ;_______ PEAVEY AM P 120 watts, like new. Call Steve. 838-3380. ________ __ PORTFOLIO CASE 16"x20", $55 new win sell for $40. Call 263-7931.________ ROADRUNNER BATTERIES, $22.95. Two year guarantee, with exchange. 1527 East Van Buren, or M ikes Auto Supply, 4836 North 35th Avenue. 2562484. __________ _ ROSSIGNOL-SM 175cm skis w ith Look N77 bindings ($250), N ordics Zepher boots ladles/OVY ($80). In excellent condltlon. 944-3822 s lie r 5 p.m. ______ USED ROOM size rugs $10 and up. New carpet specials for dorms, apartments, cars, vans. Carpet House, 1516 East Van Buren, Phoenix.________________ BIFOCAL SO FT C O N T A C T LEN SES __ PRIVATE MAIL boxes for rant. $6.50 per month, 3 month minimum. Located in; Trailways Bus Depot and Western Union Agency 822A South M ill, Tempe. Vi block South of University Avenue, behind Pete’s Fish A Chip». 966*1759. ADC 12 BAND equalizer and Sansul A ll217 30 watt amp. $270 or best offer. Call 90BQ375 «Iter 6:00 p.m. ______ STEREO NEW never used In original In­ dividual cartons am/fm receiver, cassette deck, turntable, speakers, guaranteed cost $400 sacrifice $105. 954-9541 private home.______ _______ NEW S ervices ____ _ IMPROVE YOUR grades! Research catalog, 306 pages, 10,278 topics. Rush $1. Box 2S097C Los Angeies, 90025. (213)477*8228.___________ ' For Sale _____ _ M otorcycles CENTER FOR BODY AWARENESS SHARE TWO bedroom house, quiet area, pets o.k. $150, Vi utilities. Price/Baseline. Rick 83*5441. __________ Help Wonted GO-GO DANCERS wanted afternoon, evenings. Broken Arrow Club, 4747 East Baseline, Phoenix, AZ ___________ RESERVE YOUR room or house for Fall today. Several completely furnished homes available Vi to 4 m iles from ASU. Many have pools, washer dryers and more. Call Campus Roommate Service, 897-7030. ______ ROOM FOR rent — female education major wanted. Private room with bath. Fam ily environment (w ill trade tutor time torrent). 967-2302,982-2422. GOOD STUDENTS sato 25% on auto In­ surance. Non-smoker save 18%. C all Stave LundelJ 831*0121, Farmers In­ surance, ASU representative.______ _ D o v Core_____ STUDENTS CHILD Care Center has fuMtime openings for children 2-5 years. Located two blocks south of ASU. 8949370. . .. w«mni LOOKING OR renting, Roommates Pro­ fessionally, , Howard A Faltz and A ssociates. 968-4333, 1000 East Apache.____________________ ■ COUCH AND loveseat: off-white/tan matching set, perfect condition $90/$60 or $130 set. Three large ceram ic lamps with shades $20 each. Men’s 10-speed. Good campus transportion, $50. 8972082. CLASSIQ U E FASH IO N Jewelry distributors wanted. Earn $300 — $400 monthly or more in your spare time. Classique has a college development program — scholorship fund available. Sm all Investment required. 968*8715. HOUSE Vk MILE from campus. Female share with same. $150 plus Vi utilities. Gretchen 829-8849.______' _____ _ 1 coupon per apartment. Limited offer. F urniture SPE C IA L C LE A R ANCiE sa le on bicycles. Student discount. Quality repairs at reasonable prices. Bicycle Harbor, Rural Road and Baseline. 8394580. _______ ’~ For Rent/Leose *50°° OFF FIRST M O N T H 'S RENT FISHER BELT drive turntable. Semi Automatic. New $119, must sell, $60 with cartridge. Tony 829-1514.________ A nnouncements BICYCLES — NEW, used, and econom ical repairs. See us for. bargains. College City. Cycle, Rural Road and Lemon, across from ASU. 968-0842. ______ ____________ M ore about For Sale_____ _ P oommate USED FURNITURE: good condition sofa with ottoman, swivel chair, corner table and floor lamp! Also dish set. AM earthtones. Call 991-6579 to see. CATHOLIC SINGLES! A ll races. Free in­ formation. Write: Harmony Interna­ tional. P.O. Box 385, Evanston, IL. 60264. _________COLLEEN FROM K.C.; met on my b-day at "Fredies". Would like to see you again. This Thursday; Fredies? Kevin thanx!__________ .______ __ FINANCIAL AID!! We guarantee to find scholarships, grants you're eligible to receive. Send for free information. Financial Aid Finder, Box 1053-AH, Fairfield, IA 52S56. ____________ JEANNIQUE SECRETARIAL, IBM elec­ tronic tape transcriptions, books, manuscripts, apa format, term papers. Scottsdale, 948-8635/948*3888. MAKE A great first im pression with pro­ fessionally typed research paper. Specializing in business administra­ tion, engineering manuscripts. B.A. English. An Extra Hand Typing Ser­ vices, Andra Lawrence. Noon to 9 p.m. 967*6410. Tempe. ______________ TRANSCRIBIN G FROM standard cassette. Dictate your papers, inter­ GETTING MARRIED — why not use the Campus Chapel? Inquire at Danforth > views, research for typing rough draft or final copy. Dana 941-5111._________ __ 9.30-1:30, Monday — Friday. 965*3570. P oommatc vmnm) WORD PROCESSING, legal briefs, manuscripts by legal secretary, vicinity 56th Street-1 nd¡an School, Phoenix. 952-0511. __ »V \ FEMALE ROOMMATE: own bedroom/bath, washer, dryer in apartment. Ten­ nis, pools, Los Racimos, $225 month plus Vi utilities. Diana 835*5658.______ W anted_______ FEMALE NON-SMOKER wanted to share two bedroom/two bath apartment very close to ASU. Dishwasher, fireplace, spacious kitchen. $165/month plus Vie utilities. Call Jean 829- CLAIROL IS interviewing for attractive models for up coming shows in the fall. Apply in person. September 11, 10:00 a.m. _ 4 p.m. Phoenix Hilton, Phoenix, 9636134.______ ' - 1126. NEED MONEY? Paying top dollar tor gold jewelry, diamonds, class rings, pocket watches,. Indian jewelry and silver coins. Free in home estimates. CaH anytime, Joe 968-8637. _____ - GIRL ROOMMATE wanted to share house with pool. 20 — 26 years old. $175 plus utilities. Karen 965-9825 or 991-1954. .... .. ~ Just stop b y our d u b and show us your student ID. an d receive a FREE D E SIG N E R T - SHIRT N o o b lig a tio n . roerrt>e* i/ià**0. Price ■NO, Open24hrs. — Sun D evil N a u ru s r o o m NO NO NO NO R O O M r o o m $49 R O O M _ \ntown- YES1YES mmm SPAS health ■ * ^ " TEMPE Rural South of Fwy. 831-8081 TER ADC Hi ir^l C r SCOTTSDALE 7750 E M cD ow ell 941-8296 N.W. PHOENIX 35th Ave & Bell Rd. 843-3247 MESA Country C lub & Southern 834-7283 MARW ALE 51st Ave & Indian School 246-1170