th u rsd a y 1W V n ll . fwi f i IN N lU n . i 1/ V U Arizona State University sta te p re ss ™ i T em ps, Arizona © Copyright, State Press, 1983 Parking fees changed after hearings protest By Chris Coppola Staff w riter Opposition from faculty, staff and students a t’ ASU has resulted in fee in­ fer 1983-84 parking decals that are lower than those originally proposed by the Parking Services Committee, according to the associate vice president for Business Af­ fairs. Bill Phelps, committee chairm an, said a series of public hearings held in late April to discuss the proposal, which included a pro­ vision for a parking fee of $90 per year for controlled access lots close-in, and $60 per year in open lots, prompted the com m ittee to reconsider the plan. “It (the revision) was a reaction to the public hearings, and other comments the committee m em bers heard,” Phelps said. “I think it was prim arily complaints from staff.” Among the m ajor revisions in the policy, approved last month by the Vice Presidents Council, was a reduction of the $90 per year parking in a controlled access lot to $60, and a reduction of the $60 open lot fee to $40. In addition, faculty, staff and student disabled parking fess w ere established a t $90 per year for all three groups. Under the o rightslpifa, faculty and staff thsabledfees were set at$90. — •* Faculty wore given first opportunity to purchase controlled-access decals under the original plan, followed by staff on June IS and students as of August 1, but no provision was made to allocate any amount for the two latter groups. The (dan was revised to allocate a minimum of iff perçoit of the total decals sold for those lots to students, and a minimum of 35 p erçoit allocation of controlled-lot decals for staff. A minimum of 25 percent of the total open parking decals are allocated for students. Ed Hickcox, director of parking and tran­ sit services, said about 900 faculty members had applied for parking decals as of late last week, with the m ajority opting for controll­ ed access, interior lots. However, several disgruntled faculty members, who asked to rem ain uniden­ tified, contacted the State Press last week complaining that decal order forms sent to faculty do not mention that a “B” parking decal is available to specified ad­ m inistrators for $120 per year. The “B” decal allows a commuter to park in any space other than disabled, residence h alls. or reserved spots, and has been available to high ranking employees of the University, according to Hickcox. “The price went up for that as well,” he said. “I think that’s one of the good things about the new system — it’s been made m oreequitable.” “The (faculty form s) w ere prepared to go to faculty only. . . since the B decal was not an option for them ,” he said. “That informa­ tion did not go to them. ” B a b b it t t a r g e t s A S U f o r h o s p it a l By Michael Phillips Editor In ttie world of hospital ownership, ASU may have lost the county but gained the state. In April, m em bers of the Maricopa Coun­ ty Board of Supervisors expressed an in­ terest in selling M aricopa County Hospital to the University. Although th at idea was scrubbed because of financial considerations, there now ap­ pears to be a possiblUity the Arizona Childrens Hospital, located a t 200 N. Curry Rd. in Teiope, will be transferred to the University within a y e a r.. “It is Governor Bnice B abbitt’s desire to see the facility transfered to ASU,” Jim West, the Governor’s {»ess secretary said. “There are no firm plans yet, but I believe the Governor has spoken to University of­ ficials about it.” Frank Sackton, ASU’s vice president for business affairs, said he understood there to be a “ strong commitment” on the p art of Babbitt to m ake the transfer. “B at the only tiling we have a t this tim e is the Governor’s intent,” Sackton said. “We haven't received any m aterial or details on the transfer.” According to Sackton, because both the University and the children’s hospital are state-owned facilities, the hospital would not have to be “bought. ” “All that would be required,” Sackton said, “would be a transfer erf the property from one state agency to another. ” Although no m onetary transaction would be m ade, there would be some restrictionsplaced on the property’s use once it was transferred to ASU. “The Governor would like to see ASU utilize the property as a focus on high technology, perhaps in the fields of science or m athem atics,” West said. “It could even be used as a high technology museum. ” W hatever the eventual use of the facility, West said the University would have a voice in the derision-making process. “ASU will eventually be in control of the property,” he said. “So I imagine it is only fitting officials of the Univeristy will have input concerning its use.” Currently under the jurisdiction of Arizona’s Department of Health Services, the three-story Children’s Hospital is licensed for 162 beds, but only provides care for approxim ately 40 in-patients. “T hat’s all we a re set up to handle a t the M erit pay policy faces opposition despite progress present tim e,” Janice Davis, an adm inistraitve secretary a t the hospital said. “We have been slowly cutting back on that aspect of our care. By July 1, we will have transferred all of our in-patients to Saint Joseph's Hospital in Phoenix.” . Although all in-patient care will be transferred to St. Joseph’s, the Children’s Hospital will still provide care for approx­ im ately 150 out-patients daily. Built in 1963 as a tuberculosis sanitarium , the 110,000 sq . foot facility became the Arizona Children's Hospital in 1973. well as Robert Huff and Betsey Bayless of the Board of By Michael Phillips Regents central staff. Editor With the recent passage of Senate B ill 1191 by the Arizona The task force will not only attem pt to form ulate a m erit Legislature, the issue of m erit pay m ay finally be resolved. pay policy, it wiH be reviewing the whole spectrum of univerHowever, it is unlikely aH University faculty m em bers will sity employee compensation. welcome the solution. “We will include m erit, but also other types of pay — cost It is also passible that the m erit pay issue m ay spread to of living, m arket adjustm ents and benefits,” said Bayless, other University occupations. The Senate Bill directs the Arizona Board of Regents to the Regents’ assistant director for p—*««"««» “We had come up with a comprehensive plan for m erit pay compensa­ presented a m erit plan to the regents, but when we pr esented it, the regents said we needed m ore — a whole comprehen­ tion by December 31. Jr®. sive policy far compensation.” In first step toward accomplishing this legislative Not only was the compensation plan broadened, but also m andate, the Regents selected on May 25 a tri-university task force to review and recommend a state-wide m erit pay those who would be compensated. “This comprehensive {dan w ill indude adm inistrators, policy. The task force consists of 11 individuals selected from the faculty, professionals, and classified staff,” Bayless said. eoftNnMdpifM faculty and adm inistration of the A ree state universities as Page S Press Thursday, June 9, 1983 c a m p u s c l i p slate s p ie a o o lla g o i n e w s f r o m a r o u n d t h s c o u n t r y Proof of measles vaccination may be required College to examine child-care needs for students, employees TV show wants students to share their dreams Immunization for m easles may become a requirem ent for attending college. The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta is advising colleges to require proof of m easles immuniza­ tion, after a series of measles outbreaks on campuses this year. Louisiana State U. is the most recent school to battle the disease. The American College Health Association is stu­ dying a hew immunization policy that will encourage col­ leges to require proof of vaccination against measles, rubella, mumps and polio. Colleges have traditionally re­ quired diptheria and tetanus shots, says the ACHA. Child-care for employees and students is one of the great unmet needs on the U. of Wisconsin-Madison campus, accor­ ding to a chancellor’s committee. Although UW students and employees have over 9,300 children age 10 or ygpnger, there are only 300 places in on-campus full-time child care centers. As a result, m ost university children stay with private baby­ sitters, many of whom are unlicensed. Among the comm itie’s recommendations: a full-scale university look a t the needs of children of campus parents; creation of a private fund to subsidize child care; and establishm ent of a “dropin” center on campus to provide a back-up for parents. NBC’s Fantasy television show wants to get college students away from their soap operas. The afternoon show, which fulfills unusual requests from audience m em bers and letter-w riters, gets 50,000 letters a week, but few of those are from students, says Researcher Dennis Sullivan. He’s trying to change that, by contacting student newspapers in the Midwest and Southeast. College students are a creative bun­ ch, says Sullivan, and should have som e good fantasies. (CONTACT: If you don’t mind sharing your dream s with m illions, write Dennis Sullivan at NBC Fantasy Show, 2401 West Alameda Ave., Burbank, CA 91523.) Students value quiet, protest video games Video games have been removed from a campus recrea­ tional area a t Duke U., after students claimed they disturbed conversation and activity in the area. Protests against the gam es included the clipping of electrical power to the area, petitions, and a demonstration. More than 200 students, pro­ fessors and staff members signed petitions against the games. A little help from students gives employees extra days Financial aid recipients lose jobs due to overspent budget The student government a t Fairm ont State College in West Virginia turned over $50,000 of its student fee budget to help the adm inistration deal with a state budget cut. That amount was p art of the $735,000 FSC had to return to state coffers, says President Wendell C. Harway. Without the student con­ tributions, employees would have faced an extra two days of enforced furlough. Work-study students at Columbia U. got pink slips recent­ ly, after a new computer system revealed they had used all of their alloted funding. The sudden job term inations angered many students and some university employers. But financial aid officials say that knowingly allowing students to continue to earn money beyond allotted lim its would jeopardize future federal funding. THE WAREHOUSE DELI Estab. 1973 PAPA JAY’S PIZZA "Good Food and Drink" S U M M E R S C H O O L S P E C IA L Special No. 2 1^— --- COUPON----- -1 r--- --- COUPON---- -- “ T ■ AN Y LA R G E PIZZA up to 2 toppinga $5.99 (plus tax) 0 $3.50 (plus tax) Reg. $5.25 Each additional topping 754. DINE-fN ONLY Not valid with any othar coupon. Expires 8-15-83. 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 Good on delivery, taka-out o r dine-in. (Small charge lor da livery.) N6t valid with any othar coupon. 1 1 1 i 1 I i 1 Expires 8-15-63. .1 1. N ew York Pizza and Gam e Room • O pen lu n ch & d in n e r Every Day Special — 10 tokens for $1 25 games to choose from! •Baby Pac Man STO R E HOURS Mon.-Thurg. 11 a.m.«i a.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Sunday 1 p.m.-1 a.m. Delivery starts at If a.m. except Sunday. •M s. Pac Man Delivery e n d s Vi hour before closing. OPac Man Plus 804 S. ASH (University & Mill) $12" •Joust the original butterfly chair $16-$19 Valu»» ava ila b le in 19 co lo rs $39.95 O ne week only futons / air beds / sack chairs / sleep sofas / stereo and entertainment cen ters/m u g s/h oo ks/ director's chairs / reversible top tables / lightins .. A ll styles and c o lo rs W aist size s 22-38 SPORTSW EAR RACKET »15 S. M ill Ave. Tempe Center 894-1045 Mon.-Sat. 10-6 • Sun. 12-5 t C u p 0 N Ì 1 966-1003 966-4292 I 967-9609 ■ MAKE BACK-TO-SCHOOL BRIGHTER WITH CONTEMPORARY FURNITURE, HOUSEWARES, TABLE SETTINGS AN D ACCESSORIES. Guys Op Shorts I Special No. 1 LAR G E CH EESE PIZZA I i N O F O O L IN ’! 1 o lt d 522 s. mill ave., old town tempe • 966-0736 Park research completed; designs planned for July SUMMER SUNTAN - NO SWEAT! ★ B u y 3 b o d y w ra p s a n d g e t o n e FREE v is it o n th e ta n n in g b e d ($7 value). By Chris Coppola Staff w riter When the M icroelectronics and Computer Technology Corp. recently bypassed the planned 320-acre ASU research park a t Price and E lliott Roads as a site to establish its research consortium , the park director, Reginald Owens, said he did not consider the decision a setback. That was in April, after officials for the firm , who eventually opted for Austin, Tex­ as, indicated th at Tempe would not be feasi­ ble. At th at tim e the ASU facility was only in die planning stage with nothing to show but an em pty parcel of land. Since then, Owens has been shuffling across die nation, studying the m erits—and pitfalls — of various “parks” that conform to the projected workings of ASU’s park. “I cam e away with the feeling that we have the greatest chance of doing well with the park,” he said. “A lot of other areas have been hit very hard by the recession. This was pitifully ev id en t” Owens visited som e of the m ore wellknown university research parks in the United States. Those included: University of Michigan, Purdue, and the University of Kansas. He has had extensive contact with Stan­ ford and Iensselaer Polytech in New York. “They were picked either because of pro­ ven successes. . . or they are thinking about having a park, or, for a large number of them, they a re problem parks or failures,” he said. Owens said based on what was observed, high design standards m ust be maintained. “There has to be a tremendous amount of green space, area for recreation, golf courses, and an abundance of natural land­ scaping, he said. “The whole success of a park is that it has to be able to compete with all the other lux­ ury settings in the country,” He said the design process will begin in July, after closely scrutinizing several local planning firm s. The Arizona Board of Regents will receive a detailed report on recommendations con­ cerning the park a t its July meeting. Owens cited several additional advan­ tages the ASU park will have over others, in­ cluding a close proxim ity to an airport, housing and shopping and access to a freeway. But he said the greatest advantage is a method erf financing that allows the issuance of revenue bonds for the park. The state Legislature gave the Board of Regents authority to issue revenue bonds for a university-affilliated research park in April, but prohibited the use of university tuition and fees as a pledge for those bonds. Owens said the universities he observed financed their parks either through en­ dowments or state or local governments. “We are one of the few universities in the country that will have a research park to­ tally as a university entity. . . a lot of other parks are nothing more than joint ventures between the private sector and a university, where the university has very little con­ trol,” he said. But Owens said various economic incen­ tives that are provided by the surrounding community could be critical in determining ASU’s success in luring firpis to the park. When the Microelectronics firm decided on Austin, it was treated to a host of such in­ centives, according to Owens, including a low guaranteed fixed mortgage rate for potential home buyers associated with the firm . “When they cam e here, they felt nobody was ready to house a consortium like th at,” he said. “We (the state) offered little or no economic incentives. We can’t do that anymore. We had a piece of dirt out there, nothing else. “When it cam e right down to it, Austin bought the company,” he said. “The fact that they never located here doesn’t bother me because they are going to be a great burden on the state of Texas until they start paying them back on their investm ent.” Owens said a flow of private investment money to potential tenants would weigh heavily in a decision for a company to settle here and that plans are being made to establish a fund that will loan working capital money to ‘‘proven” firm s. But Owens said ASU is not actively cour­ ting specific companies until the design is completed. He said the design, scheduled to be implemented in early 1964, will entail utilities, roads, basic landscaping and the first building, which is expected to house a firm . ' He said initial construction will cover about 60 acres of the parcel. At least 60-70 percent of the research con­ ducted at the park is expected to be related to high-tech fields, according to Owens. But all colleges a t ASU will have access to the facilities to conduct “paper research,” he said, thus enabling the University to establish a reputation as a “thinktank.” T h e ta n n in g b e d ta n s s a fe r th a n th e s u n . . . w ith o u t b u r n in g ! 1st time customers. Must bring coupon. Limit one coupon per person. G O L D E N G L O 43 E. B ro a d w a y (Broadway & M ill) Hours 9 a.m.-8 pm 966*2150 Courtesy discount to students, faculty, staff. D R .S .K . STEWART WHANG, General Dentistry •Exam, full mouth X-ray, consultant — $11. •Initial teeth clean and hygiene advice — $20. •Reasonable fees on all phases of quality dentistry! •Evening appointments available. •TMJ joint and fecial pain. University Medical Center 2525 S. Rural Rd., Suite 2-N Tempe, A Z 85282 829-9050 •u e Ik s . Spiral Mentionthis ad M R E V I L $ 2 0 0 CarWash ^Automatic (exterior only) •Fully atten d ed 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. •W e w ash vans & trucks too! •Courtesy towel drying ★ Do-It-Yourself •O p e n 24 hours •Foam ing brush A engine d eg reaser •S p e c , equipped Rec-V bay 50$ $2® o A P A C H E A M eCLIN TO CK (Across from Psp Boys) 968-4922 GRAND OPENING o May 30-June 11 IM P E R IA L C A R D E N MANDARIN & SZECHUAN CUISINE DINE IN O U R W ARM A N D E L E G A N T A T M O S P H E R E W HILE E N JO Y IN G T H E A U T H E N T IC T A S T E O F C H IN A WITH C O M P L IM E N T A R Y C H A M P A G N E . 6440 S. McClintock Dr. In Tempe Square Shopping Center Corner o f M cC lin tock & G uadalupe 897-0889 H O U R S: 11-2:30 4:30- 9 Fri.-Sat. 11-2:30 4:30-10 CLOSED SUNDAY M on.-T hurs. Page 4 Thursday, June g, 1963 “ Each person has an ideal, a hope, a dream of some sort which represents his soul." —Colby Dorr Dam o p in io n High hopes of festival turned to nightmares It was early Saturday morning, before the music started and the heat became unbearable and the magic of THE EVENT began to fade. Anticipation hung in the air like the m ist drifting lazily over the rolling hills of Devore, Calif., home of the 1983 08 Festival. People were still arriving to the concert area in droves, hoping to get close enough to the stage for a glimpse of the perform ers. And there was Steve Wozniak, the youthful computer ty­ coon and driving force behind the US festivals, sitting beneath a tree, talking heatedly about his dream s. Wozniak had put his considerable wealth and talents into making this three-day weekend a t Glen Helen Regional Park a reality. Now, as the crowd built in the great grass am phitheatre of the park, Wozniak talked of what he hoped to accomplish. “It’s im portant for people to get together like this and share," be said. “That’s what the US festival is all about. It’s not enough to worry about ourselves in this world anymore. It’s not about you and m e; it’s about us.” As Wozniak talked in anim ated rushes to a reporter, his body guards informed turn it was time to begin preparing for the live Soviet hook-up. In addition to three days of rock music, this joint SovietAmerica n talk show was a featured event of US ’83. A panel of Americans and Russians would exchange views on several topics, while the audiences could question the panels or their counterparts across the globe. I managed to attend the talk show by sneaking in behind the grandstands. When I tried to enter by the door, I was told this special link-up of nations was by invitation only. I( was the first hint that the “us” in US festival was going to mean something quite different from the exhuberant idealism displayed by Wozniak this bright, sunny morning. In fact, by Sunday night his idealism had all but vanished. F irst cam e the public announcement that a satellite hook­ up would allow a Russian band to appear on the big screens dotting the US Festival concert area. The news was greeted by a chorus of boos by the audience. A person could alm ost feel Wozniak cringe. Then cam e a disagreem ent with the English rock band The Clash. The Clash, an intensely political group, insisted that a percentage of each band’s earnings from the festival be donated to charity. It was an impossible demand and The Clash finally drop­ ped it, but not before the band’s publicist criticized the more hedonistic perform ers a t the festival. This set off a round of name-calling incidents by several bands that was worthy of a schoolyard brawl. The ugly mood ¡created by these antics becam e a crescendo Sunday night, when the rode group Van Halen brought to an end “Heavy Metal Day” a t the festival. Van Halen, which makes no secret of its hedonism — the band demands all brown M&Ms be removed from back stage candy dishes because members don’t like the color — was in top form. Visibly drunk and disorganized, the band took verbal jabs a t The Clash and lauded the crowd for its rowdy behavior. After the day’s activities had ended, a good portion of the 300,000 people in attendance engaged in a rock throwing con­ frontation with security forces and police. While the police and crowds were battling, Van Halen was holding an extravagant private bash in a p art of the park dubbed “Woz Land” . On Monday, Wozniak conceded during a press conference that perhaps it was a m istake to allow heavy m etal bands to participate in the festival. During the conference he was also questioned about the lack of black entertainm ent at the festival. Wozniak said he had tried in vain to get black artists to appear. Then the Sheriff of San Bernardino County told the reporters that the residents of Devore w ere gathering peti­ tions in an attem pt to ban future US festivals from the area. The Sheriif told the newsmen that many fam ilies of the city were captives in their own homes, fearful to venture out of their yards because they were afraid of violence. Suddenly, the confidence and hopes for a truly meaningful event had vanished. Wozniak’s dream s were slipping away. If there is a lesson to be learned from th e 1983 US Festival it is likely this: the problems that separate nations on this planet stem from the weaknesses of all mankind And nowhere were those weaknesses m ore evident over the weekend than a t the US festival. Future candidate has visions of presidential bliss Larry Holden is an unusual sort. He has declared himself as a candidate for the presidency of the United States for the year 2000. But Holden isn’t planning to vie for the Democratic or Republican nomination, rather, he is presently a ttempting to establish what he sees as a potentially serious alternative — The Human Party. By the name alone, you probably can guess what sort of platform Holden advocates. As he jxits it, “I am basically concerned with a change in the consciousness of the human population.” He goes on to shy that this entails such issues as economic injustice, a d ean environment, preserving natural resources, addressing the threat of nuclear w ar by stopping the arm s race, and working to overcome the influx of the nastier side of human nature into the political and govern­ m ental arena (i.e. greed, dishonesty, etc.) Holden says he started his “grass roots” undertaking in Asheville, N.C., about one year ago, and has since been com­ bing the country in Ids motor home, trying to gain support, “financial and otherwise,” by his own contention. “It’s visionary, and realistic, it’s not really idealistic,” Holden said, during a recent whistle stop in Phoenix. “I feel there are a bunch of sub-groups out there . . . that are disen­ chanted with the current system . ” Holden’s proposals include changing the name of the Departm ent of Defense to the Departm ent of Conflict Resolu­ tion. He says a realistic goal is to have members of the Human P arty holding Congressional seats between 1986 and 1988. His background is as an educator, having obtained his PhD in Human Behavior from U.S. International University in San Diego. He also did some sum m er study at ASU’s Col­ lege erf Education in 1967. Talking to Holden, the tendency is to wonder how he is motivated, how he has been received during his travels, and most of all, how be expects to be take» seriously. Holden him self talks as if he knows most people do not take him seriously, a t this stage anyway, saying that is why he has resigned him self to an “18-year presidential campaign *• A P at Paulsen he is not. One would suspect that few, if any, would be willing to LETTER POLICY place a hefty wager on Holden’s chances for the year 2000 at this point. But what he is attem pting to do, in one sense, should be taken seriously. That is, caressing an ideal, seek­ ing support, and working to take that ideal to the forefront of a free democratic system of government. It isn’t necessarily Holden’s ideals that seem funny — in fact, most citizens probably agree, in principle—it’s the fact that he is hoping to shape those ideals, and those ideals alone, into a political party and then try to place them in the White House and then face the real world. And it isn’t hard to see why such a plan seem s worthless, considering today’s political process. But Larry Holden the educator does have an important lesson to demonstrate. He sees that there is an opportunity to try to convert ideas into practice in the United States. He sees that a certain set of ideals, though perhaps different, are what motivate a government’s actions in the first place. He sees that politically speaking, there is still a degree of strength in numbers in this country, and is attem pting to take advantage of that, perhaps by intuitively forming a lobby ef­ fort. In a way, Holden is no different than those who founded this country in the first place. ‘ When you consider all things, it becomes hard to laugh at people like him. VüCßULD m ff The State Press encourages letters on any topic. To ensure the best chance for timely publication, let­ ters should be typed, double spaced, with margins set on 60 characters per line. Include your full name, class standing, m ajor and phone number. If for some reason a letter m ust be published anonymously, state why and your request will be honored. Letters are subject to rejection or style revision at the discretion of the opinion page editor. Address letters to: Letters, State Press, Matthews Center, ASU, Tempe, AZ 85287. SUMMER STATE PRESS MIKE PHILLIPS Editor S TA FF W R ITER S......................................................................Chris Coppola Deana Higgs S T A F F P H O TO G R A P H ER ............................................................ Andy Arenz / EN TER TAN M EN T W R ITE R .............................................................. KariBym The Stats Prase Is the o n ly newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated on the ASU cam pus The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU adm inlstAtion. faculty, staff o r student body. b is i m m ; i . _j h Codage Press Service « » i f ir s t s te p k lÄ ^ T PAI&TMN TOtnRPA SUMUSWpt 6WKTMÄS... ■ SPO R TS W RITER............................................................................... Kan Sain Tha Sum m er State Press la published Thursdays during summer sessions at Matthews Cantar, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tam pa, A Z 86287, Newsroom: 985-2292. Advertising 8 Production 985-7572. « £j s * Summer Stott N w J J ju n d ^ J u n e tl^ M Page 5 M ore about Merit conUnMd tram pags 1 I have a great deal of respect for Professor Grossman,” “We will be looking a t the ways in which all these people are she said “But m erit pay is controversial in a num ber of com pensated.” ways.” . There was another reason for rejecting the original m erit One of the concerns of Wilson is that m erit pay standards plan besides broadening its comprehensiveness. vary from departm ent to departm ent on the University cam­ “They (the Regents) wore criticized by same faculty pus. members for creating die policy in a vacuum,” Bayless said. “Hopefully the Regents’ actions will alleviate that pro“The. Regents wanted m ore inpug on the issue, so they Mem,” she said. “And this is one area Were I believe the created the tri-university task fo rt. The ASU representatives on the task force are Executive faculty association will want to work closely with the for­ Vice President Paige Mulhollan and Louis Grossman, pro­ mulation of the Regents’policy.” As for Jacob’s Concern that the faculty will not be ade­ fessor of managem ent. The appointm ent of Grossman by University President J. quately represented on the task force, Wilson said she could Russell Nelson evoked protest from form er ASU faculty not comment. president R ichard J . Jacob, professor of physics. “ I have not talked with Professa* Jacob,” she said. “Nor In a letter to Nelson, Jacob said he felt the faculty was in­ have I had a chance to meet with the Faculty Association adequately represented on the task-force. Board of Directors to discuss m erit pay and the task force. He also said thé requirem ent that the University’s faculty “So I feel it would be unfair to say anything. I don’t know m ember bring with him or her expertise in salary manage­ what the opinions of the board members are.” m ent narrowed seriously the population from which a The Faculty Association’s Board of Directors m eet June 8. representative could be chosen. “I understand Jacob’s concern,” Grossman said. “But I feel I’m qualified for the position. My m ajor field is manag­ I ing and m arketing and I have dealt with personnel. I think I bring a balanced view in those regards to the committee and Look w hat’s currently playing I I the issue of compensation. ” at Baskin-Robbins Grossman is also chair-elect of the Faculty Senate. I “There has been a tremendous amount of work the Faculty I Senate has done on tins issue,” Grossman said. “I am satisfied there will be adequate representation on the task I force. We will be taking into account everyone’s point of i view. Anyone who wishes to provide input will be welcome to I do so.” I 3 1 < O F F w it h coupon, today only According to Bayless, faculty interests are wellI on any fountain treat represented on the task force. I “We have two faculty m em bers, as many as any other seg­ 809 S. M ill Ave. ment of the university community,” she said. (Next to campus) I At press tim e Jacob was unavailable for comment, but Houn: Mon.-Thun. 9 un.-11:30 pjn. I BISKDfflOBBmS, Friday 9 a m -lt p m Gloria Wilson, professor of adm inistrative services and ICECREAMSTORE 8 Sat .-Sun. 11 •jn.-IS pjn. présidait of the faculty association said she felt members still had some reservations about the task force. €> Window Tinting UTTElfc Y o u r C a m p u s Hair C a r e C e n t e r 709 S. Fo rest A v e ., Tem pe N orth of University • Behind th e Chuck Box e In O xford Square 968-5946 $300 OFF With This Ad Expires A ugust 20, 1983. R E G U L A R PRICES • Sham poo • Precision Cut »C ondition «Blow Dry M E N $12 • W O M E N $14 LET O U R TALEN TS G O TO Y O U R H EA D ” A S p e c ia l O f f e r F r o m J copies * copies • copies * copies • copies ■copies.' copies • copies * ct |pies • copies • copise • copies * copies • copies • copies * copies * copie copies • copies • copies • copies ■copies • copies • copies ■copies • a b ie s * cooles • copies • copies • copies ' copies • copies • copies • copi« p e s "C< copies! s* copie Dies-cc pies • ex copies! 8 * COpif |)ies'C( pies «ce copies I • copie Dies ■cc pies • cc copies 3 "copie Dies * cc pies «cc copies 5 «copie Dies • a pies * cc $ 2 3 .7 5 copies' »«copie Dies ■a (white, 20 lb., 8V4x11, sam e original) pies • cc copies s • copie Dies • cc pies • cc copies s «copie Dies • cc pies • cc copies1 »•copie Dies • cc 1840 W. Southern Mon.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. (in College Plaza-Mesa) pies «ce copies' Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 969-3326 •copie Dies * cc copies« copies • coptes • copies • copies • copies • copies • cqpies • cc )ies « copies • copies • copies « copies • copies • copies • copies • copie onpi««. copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • cc Dies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copi« copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • copies • cc kinko's copies fr o m ¡ l a b '0 M »' *69.95 r . e s s ° ri A U *0 A °c $39.95 ItonoDomoged UNflDfHELDf (ü ftM R G U M 5245SKYRENE*11 897-6025 p p copy one a thousand times A S U S tu d e n ts. . . If y o u ’re o ve r 18 you can rent an E sco rt o r o th e r fin e c a r at S P EC IA L LOW W EEK EN D R A TES Kinko’s Copies starting at 1000+... Think of Us! »4 Q Q C a day - I 9 a w w no mileage (2 Day Min.) (R ates su b ject to ch a n g e w ithout notice) For Your Car, C all Your A SU Representative H 968-4072 O ffice located at Rural & University Saturday, June 11th A t 7K)Op.m., Sun Devil Stadium AWRANGLERSEXTRAVAGANZA! Catch dre with the Wranglers In their la st home game as they Impeach the Washington Fédérais. A t 4 3 0 p .m ., b e fo r e t h e g a m e — Pro Football’s greatest! tailgate party ever! just north of the stadium on the Devil House Club grounds. (Park In normal Stadium parking and walk or take shuttle to Devil House.) • T o n s of f o o d , beer* drink! • Big name live entertainment on two stages featuring Dennis Yost&the Classics IV, David Dodt&the Hi FI’s,LynneJI Mitchell Shew, the Wranglers Marching All-Stars Band, Gringo-the Wranglers band In die stands, and the Wranglers Cheerleaders & G ym nastsl^ jjjtsofcgntgstsandjirtte^ S P E C IA L A S U STU D EN T T IC K E T O F F E R ! IbHgate party admission $3.00 donation at Dwtt House vote with any Juno U tfi game ttriwt Game III lists $ 80 0+ 6S< hsndWnf f— h>wof ond Purcb— Mcfcoto ot Qsmmog s C u t f n d Stadium Mckot olWco noth cuiront coSogo studu t I.P. (only 1 tlcfcot p a IJ).). \^~x~ W ranglers Ticket O ffic e -2 2 0 0 N. Central, M-F: 9-6, Sat: 10-4 or c a ll 2 54-646 4. E g I U W . A HOT NEW BRAND OF PRO FOOTBALL. Follow all w ranglers g a m e s on * 1 X 5 5 Page 6 J h u n e k K J b K ^ lt^ *7de 3 1 1 6E .C a m e lb a c k IN MEETING OTHER JEW ISH % SINGLES? G A LL 2844489 Pizza Slices Biltmore Plaza, Phoenix 85016 iS P R I T Largest selection of: Summer Special for College Students under 25 / 2 for i (¡fa W^rqler X D anskin Authentic Homemade Italian Pizza & Subs Now introducing BOLIDE of Montreal and M ER O N A SPORT. No Obligation Consultation EXPIRES 6-8-83. W e have junior, preteen and girls sizes. Hours: M onday-Saturday 9-6 Sunday 12-5 Telephone 955-7930 CONTACTS &t CONNECTIONS. INC. Interview Available on Cam pus D EVILS’ F O O D P IZ Z A 216 E. UNIVERSITY it FREE F ast Mounting it FREE Tire Rotation FKE POOL 11 am 4jua. Saa.-Fri. Every 5000 M iles 9 0 DAYS it (Singlo FREE Flat Repair piecerimonly) B—r - B o o n - Pool - Food ■Oam— 3129 S. Mill 967-6761 Tempe n u r t a t iM a SAM E AS CASH ★ FREE Coffee & Com­ fortable W aiting Lounge e o n F ire s to n e re v o lv in g c h a r g e LIFETIME GUARANTEED *yp»» "•> 4sdoiieo *• «• M lm yaw lira, m y 6000 •M inim um m onthly p ay m en t required. • AU finance charges refunded when paid-as agreed. sra s xH d M nwoughout in* M* <**w Mra. ( th e jo y n t T g L a rg e g n P iz z a n | 16" U P o ? 60 DAYSSA t ASCASH• l*m• Awe e* • 6n m iM 4 6*ra«X|»4MI4«iA •Mm •« 2>6 •S m M »Puli . m i *«M ■>„ * *52» h. 1X4Ml NO W «34.95 36.95 165/80013 193/73014 47.95 705/73014 45.95 713/73013 49.95 773/73013 50.95 733/73013 52.95 Plinti 6310S3961 ( I Norrorto-mnood«d 19 S/7 0 R-13 •06X12 678X13 J C76XI4 076x14 E76x14 F7BX14 27.95 394 S 31.95 3US 34.96 G 78X14 560X15 800X16«. 078X15 H78XI5 736770S-14 726/TOR-16 3546 30.95 32.95 35.96 37.95 4-WHEEL DRIVE S6646 7046 00 SERIES 246/60H.14 746/600-16 766/900-16 776/600*16 L79X16 3946 «74.06 62.06 04.66 0646 Compare these special prices on service work: Lube, oil &filter, FIRESTONE VALUABLE COUPON & MRGONDITIMINGSERVICE COINOP LAUNDROMAT 0 'D r y C le a n in g O 'O n e D ay S ervice [¡^ Finished S h irts S 'D ro p -O ff La u n d ry S 'A lte ra tio n s S 'S u e d e & Leather ^ P illo w R en ovatio n S 'N ig h t C lo th e s C h u te *3195 765/60017 I6S80O13 324.66 A78X13 24.65 CAMPUS CLEANERS Peirarl 156/60.17 P 967-7926 CO UPO N , Steel Belt Radial 6 0 -7 0 S E R I E S R Á D IA L S U o 606 S. M ill Ave. i L» HIGH PERFORMANCE DELUXE CHAMPION* Polyester cord § WITH COUPON Expires 8-18-83. ■M i l X b n .h ix •HtrauydlMiri««!.... BIAS PLY !. t $3.95 wmomnoc WAMUNTV1 ■« n iM iraix ■Meek* -a p All Fresh Dough— All Real Cheese (Next to Chuck Box) M cClintock &A pache F irestone 1805 E. A pache Y ir e s t o n e r 9 6 7 -8 6 3 6 NltiLT, leei n an C» FbsS4.7SF.LL sxllOS” • 6 1 check your oyc» ra. m m tor pracauro and laaka and add up to ona pound o1*» Nm SUSF.lt . Major credit cards: VISA, Master Charge, and American Express are accepted. M 1 195 Most American cart and light trucks, plus Dataun, Toyota, VW and Honda. t M asterC are F lu sh & F ill S ervice *1995 M asterC are radiator service helps to p ro tect y o u r c a r's cooling system for year 'ro u n d driving. We reverse flush th e sy stem an d refill including u p to 2 gallo n s of new co o lan t/ antifreeze. W liM d ln n v n d M w q M l*40t «tpM idMaprnt. —t IMNUK.UM haUcryandrtK-irkaliqM m .ud w rln^w vt Briar. dfcrributnrrap, TO' «*»'. sentían taMrvandMr fille r . 827 $. RURAL movERsnr i omul 967-9650 OPEN 7 a.m .-10:30 p.m. 7 Days A Week 966-7206 F W .7 :0 6A M -8 :0 0P M •S A T .7 A M -4 F M Offer expires June 30,1983 $ 3 4 9 5 • cyf. $44.99 8 cyl. $54.9i flggei Thursday, June 2.1983 In gear Women prime for high-tech By Deem M. Higgs Staff w riter For years women have been stepping out of the kitchen into male-dominated fields, and today, engineering is no exception. Dispelling the m yth th at women cannot be engineers is a goal th at M ary R. Anderson, associate professor of engineering a t ASU, is trying to accomplish. And one form er student, Gena Trimble, is a step toward that goal. Last year Anderson directed the Women in Engineering C areer Facilitation Pro­ gram a t ASU, a 15-month re-entry program for adults returning to school to earn a m asters degree in industrial engineering. The program has expanded to 19 months beginning this month. Trim ble, form ally a m ath teacher a t Chaparral High School in Scottsdale, com­ pleted the program and has been offered a job as an engineer for the Salt River Pro­ ject. “The m yth that women can’t do engineer­ ing is not true,” Anderson said. “Because of an aw areness (hat we need m ore scientific expertise in the country, women are en­ couraged.” Anderson said th at in 1972, undergraduate and graduate women in the engineering departm ent a t ASU com prised two percent of the overall enrollm ent. In 1982 it was 17.9 percent.. The growth, she said, is a result of women being m ade m a c aw are of what is available to th an . Anderson said the program is also open to men, but added she does not expect many to apply. “Most men w o e aw are of opportunities for them ,” she said. “If they had wanted to be engineers, they are by now. ” Trim ble said she decided to apply for the program after reading about it in an engineering journal. “I decided I needed new horizons,” said Trimble, who taught calculus, computer program m ing and transform ational geometry for 10 years. “My salary and everything was pretty much locked in. There was no place for me to go. ” Trimble said she would not have passed up her 10 years of teaching because the background has helped her in engineering. The program, which begins in the sum­ m er or fall semester, is not easy, Anderson said. Applicants must have held a bachelors degree for a t least two years, have com­ pleted calculus up to MAT 271, and be adm it­ ted to graduate school a t ASU, Anderson said. To date, more than 500 people have in­ quired about the program. Twenty will be accepted. Once in the program, students will aim for a m aster of science degree in engineering with a m ajor in industrial engineering and a concentration in one of eight areas, in­ cluding computer information systems, engineering management and operations research. As director, Anderson organizes a profes­ sional development sem inar that gives students an opportunity to listen to speakers address topics such as resume writing, in­ terviewing techniques and job placement. The most important benefit the program offers, Anderson said, is peer support. “Returning to school as an adult can be a lonely experience,” she said. “This is a group coming in together. They can share common problems, cry on each others shoulders. My students have told m e this has meant a lo t” Trimble, who interned a t Salt River Pro­ ject from September to May, said die pro­ gram was demanding but worth i t “It’s a fast, concentrated and difficult program ,” she said. “The experience was. tremendous for me, though.” “C U T TH IS O U T A N D C H E R IS H IT* DO IT FASTER AT THE DATABUGI Let the D A T A B U G help you make the most of your time in the short summer sessions: G E T T H O S E T E R M P A P ER S AN D R E P O R T S T Y P E D Q U IC K L Y The DATABUG has typists! Now you can simply bring your paper over to our location which is three blocks away from campus and get the best possible service. Don't drive for miles! Don't spend tim e on the phone! N E E D A C O M P U T E R TERM IN AL? WHY WAIT? The DATABUG has term inals and modems for communicating into A SU com puters. W e are a short walk from campus. Use our private w orkstations to get that project done more efficiently. W A N T T O L E A R N T O D O W ORD PRO CESSIN G , H O W T O U S E D A T A B A S E M A N A G E M E N T OR “E L E C T R O N I C S P R E A D S H E E T S ” FOR B U S IN E S S C L A S S E S ? The DATABUG has more classes in micro-computers than any one else in the valley. Learn word processing once and use it for term papers, resumes and reports thereafter. Learn business applications. A two-hour, hands-on class at the DATABUG is only $25. C A L L T O D A Y OR S T O P BY THE DATABUG 968-6149 LO C ATED A T THE CO RNER OF 5th AND MILL IN DOWNTOWN TEM PE UPSTAIRS ABOVE UNIVERSAL TRA VEL PITCHER NIGHT Pitchers of beer, Wine and Well Drinks. 8 pm till 12pm Only $175 2 for 1 TUESDAYS The Best of everything Timothy has to offer is 2 for the price of 1! (Except pitchers and imports) 8 pm till 11 pm WILD WEDNESDAYS The Biggest, The Best The Original! Open Bar on our Weil Drinks, Wine and Draft Beerl Ladies only $3.00 Men only $3.50 MONSTER M U G NIGHT $1.95 buys you a personalized 14 oz. Timothy OTooles Mug filled with Ice Cold Draft Beer, and you even get to keep the mug... Valley Modems Unite! Timothy brings you Modern Thursday with the guaranteed Newest Music in the Valley! 8 pm till 12 pm HAPPY HOUR AT THE MOVIES A Different Full-Length Classic Shown Each Week! 4 pm til 6 pm...25C Old Style Drafts. 6 pm till 8 pm...500 Old Style Drafts and 500 Well Drinks. SATURDAY AT THE CINEM A A Different Full-Length Classic Shown Each Week! 4 pm till 6 pm...250 Old Style Drafts. 6 pm till 8 pm...50C Old Style Drafts and 500 Well Drinks. 1123 South Rural Road Tempo, Arizona • 968-0243 n u A ^ m l^ tW PRICES GOOD ONLY AT... A DRUG STORE.. A FOOD MART... 3201 S. Mill Ave. Tempe, AZ PLUS A WHOLE LOT MORE! 894-6747 OSCILLATING FAN $1.09 PEPSI S C H O L L ’S E X E R C IS E SA N D A LS 12” PEPSI SIX -PA CK \ 42-qt. FOAM CH EST TOWELS^ $2.99 \ ■ $24.88 $15.88 HI-DRI PA PER TO W ELS BELM O N T LAWN CH A IR 49$ $7.99 C O N C E IV E D BY NATURE SU PER X PHO TO FRA M ES HA V O L INE 10-40 O IL 5x7, 8x10 SH AM PO O & CONDITIONER 16-oz. 770 $1.99 79$ 3-PACK 60 MIN. TA PES SM O KER G R IL L A LL PO CKET BOOKS $ 1 .0 0 $36.88 359 RAV0U* #8039 (papérbacks) 20% O F F P LU S : TH ESE S P E C IA L D E P A R T M E N T S BEER, WINE & FOOD SNACK PHARMACY LIQUOR CENTER " \/5 CENTER •PREPARED FOODS «FRUITS ________ •VEGETABLES M •COLO BEER *0011« ft DESSERT WINES •VODKA »WHISKEY •SCOTCH «AND MORE BAR •HOT 8 COLD DRINKS »SANDWICHES •MICROWAVE OVEN TO USE p ii l OMKmMANUmTSOFfBt IYOU MANY IME3AVM6 AND MONEY-SAVING SERVICES. •PHONE-AHEAD REFILL SERVICE] •QUAjinr PRESCRIPTIONS •EVBIYDAY LOW PRICES Pharmacy Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-9 p.m, Sunday 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 894-6747 IÜ AA E G G S 690 dozen BUMBLE TUNA 890 6.5-O Z. HEALTHFOODCENTER JA C K DANIELS W HISKEY 75 ml. $7.59 Small ice cream cone 254 Small soft drink 12-PK . R E G . O R L IG H T $3.99 254 Hansen’s Natural Soda 10-oz. 390 Flavor Tree Snacks 4V4 OZ. All flavor* 690 scenes > ■ Thujdg^Jw¡«£2983ii_<_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____________________ i________________ e n t e r t a in m e n t mi state press EL t h e a r fe s LOT'S 'Jacques Brel'shines com poser's lighter side Grmrtng oM gracefully; Harvey Truitt, Stephen Ooodfrlend and Ernie Cleric rav-lt-up In the “The Older We Get the Lena We Regret,” horn LO Te fliat summer production. By Bonnie Peplow ASU News Bureau Jacques Brel, the late Belgian singercomposer who became one of the m ost popular chansonniers of Europe in the 1960s, was a poet of the popular song. Brel will be celebrated by the Lyric Opera Theatre in the first production erf their sum­ m er series, “Jacques Brel in Revue,” The revue will be staged June 3 to 5 and 8 to 11 in the Music Theatre at 8 p.nv each evening except Sunday, June S, when showtime will be3p.m . This orignal production, compiled by LOT’S Kenneth Seipp and Brian Hall, features about two dozen songs, each one a complete m iniature m usical theatre work, said stage director Seipp. “To know Brel’s work is as im portant as to know Stephen Sondhiem’s, M ozart’s or Puccini’s,” Seipp said, “because a great deal of what happens in any good revue has been and continues to be influenced by B rel.” “Like Piaf in the 1950s and Aznavour to­ day, Brel had a dedicated following among the international set, university students and oilier fans «dm ‘discovered’ him even before his 1966 American debut a t Carnegie H all,” said m usical director/pianist Hall. “By combining tenderness with irony, Brel creates a bittersw eet duality made vivid through words and m usic, through im­ agery mid sensuality,’’ Hall said. “ Even when he ridicules or is ferociously critical, he does it with compassion.” Seipp said that the bitter side of B rel was more predominate in LOT’S 1974 orignal production of “Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in P aris,” which he and Hall also compiled. “The anti-war, anti­ establishm ent, love-cynical, old agedespairing m essage surfaced (in th at show),” be said. “But tim es change and people change. We see the other Brel m ore clearly in the new revue, the one who sings of tenderness, loyalty, joy and survival. The biting tones are m uted,” Seipp added. Brel deals with die personal rath er than the general. “Whether he w rites of love, death, w ar or old age, he speaks of a person, usually nameless, rath er than a group,” Seipp said. “Brel doesn’t provide answ ers. He tells us how it is and leaves it to us to interpret,” Seipp said. The right odor dunce for the show, colors that would reflect the poetry and music that are Brel, was im portant to Seipp. Assisted by costume designer E sther Turner, scenic designer Keith Shaw and lighting designer Paul Estes, Seipp ultim ately made the choice: rose and charcoal grey costumes cm a deep blue, sculptured set — visual poetry to underline Brel’s m usical poetry. The cast of six includes Janice RobiHard and Ernie Clark, both new to the Music Theatre stage; veterens Harvey T ruitt and Adrienne Bridgewater, who appeared in the 1974 Brel production; and current music theatre m ajors Stephen Goodfriend and Debby Rosenthal. Tickets, priced a t 88 for the public and $4 for full-time students, are on sale a t the LOT Business Office (965-2856) and Diamond’s box offices or a t the door. THE DIET DILEMMA If you’va been puzzled about d i e t s , looking for the rig h t one . , . WEIGHT NO LONGER. Our Diet C o n tir Program is the sen sib le w ay to lose w eight because it’s based on sound nutrition, using low -cert, natural f o o d s r i g h t from your grocery store, no prepackaged foods, shots or drugs. There’s no starvation dieting either. That’s why the program w orks so w ell— because you got a ll the nutrition you need, yet lose the w eight you w ant So end your dieting dilemma. CALL US TODAY UNIVERSITY M ED ICA L CEN TER 2525 S. Rural Rd. Suite 6-N TEM PE 967-1371 The natural way to lose weightl • ion Mot Curtir, lac. SiftV OUT OF THE HEAT. OUR DELIVERY SERVICE CAH’T &E OEAT. Delivery Hot Line: 990-1110 Delivery Hours: Mon.-Fri. 4 p.m.-12 Midnight Saturday 11 a.m.-2a.m. Sunday 12 Noon-12 Midnight Lo ok for our sum m er coupons in the Stste Press. PMC 10 Thundj^June^lÇM The US Festival '83 A n o th er W o od stock? Hardly so, but i By Karl Byrn Scenes w riter The US Festival *83 walked on an expectational limb from the start; specific promotional statem ents dubbed this Memorial Day weekend rockiest held north of San Bernadino, Calif, “the music event of the 80s,’* and generallycirculated talk created awesome im ages of “the greatest rockfestival since Woodstock.” But US '83 wasn’t a m agical Woodstock; expecting it to be so wasn’t fair; and the producers actually had something of a different scene in mind anyw ay—after all, this was to be the “US” festival, not the “US vs THEM” festival. By throwing a gig of this size under the auspicious ideal of uniting people through technological advancement, the pro­ ducers of US *83 — Apple computer inventor and multi­ m illionaire Steve Wozniak’s UNUSON Corporation — made clear their desire to play in Woodstock’s ballpark. Woodstock purists drubbed prom oters Fey line Productions for the absence of black or cross-cultural acts on the bill (though Michael Jackson and Prince had been asked to play), and though a one-day-each schedule of new wave (lacking genuine punk), heavy m etal, m ainstream and coun­ try offered m arketable variety, it created genre exclusivity. Obviously the star-studded bill was to be the festival’s pull, but Wozniak quite sincerely envisioned some m oral edifica­ tion in the process. Wozniak’s togetherness vision was presented in innocent faith (innocuously so during each evening’s videocast dram atizing the ecstacy of an alien who lands in the middle of US ’83 harmony) and was no doubt intended as one-step in Should wo play or should wo go? In Tucson last Thursday (abovo) Joe Strummor and Tho Clash tumod in tho florcost Arizona rock show in years. But at US *83 last Saturday, they almost punk-manouvorod themselves off the stage. • S c u lp tu re d N ails •P e d ic u re s • M a n ic u re s long-term penetration — no world-change-NOW a la Woodstock. But because US ’83 emphasized the m arketplace (via technological fairs, expos, and product ¡dugs during and between perform ances) and not Woodstock’s political arena, US ’83 was accused of sterile significance. However, such accusations would be ignoring the potential importance of the satellite hook-up th at broadcast part of Men a t Work’s perform ance to the Soviet U nit» (though to a select audience) in exchange for a broadcast to the festival of a Russian band called Arsenal. Furtherm ore, the festival’s techno-push in the name of m usical good-will m ay be less a fau lt of the fest than a reflec­ tion of a rock culture that has gotten m ore m aterialistic with age. Still, the MUSE No-Nuke concerts of 1979 and the Con­ cert for Kampuchea of 1980 can be held against US ’83 as re­ cent examples of a large-scale, though less profitable, mobilization-oriented rockfests. Unlike those events and Woodstock before them, US ’83 hardly employed rock as a social power aside from its use in packing crowds. But Wozniak can hardly be accused of manipulating rock for greed: though UNUSON received sponsorship from the brewers of M iller Beer, much of US ’83’s $18 million budget ($8 million of which was to go to bands) cam e from Wozniak’s pocket. The Woz, as he is often called, personally lost $4 million on last Labor Day weekend’s.US ’82, and though he predicted a second loss, the Woz’ faith in his event led him to risk again. In fact, the big issue of the festival, largely a press and VIP concern, was US ’83’s financial success. Unless the event at *22.50 *12.50 *4.00 RUNDLE’S LIQUOR* a MKT. m a . mill ' Corner Mill & La rg e 16” C h eese P izza and 32 oz. o f Pep si University Av». COLONIAL HOUSE OF HAIR Old Milwaukee Calif. Cooler 4-Pack Capitan Tequila PLAYBOY IkU Hagami 743 W. Univ. (between M ill & Hardy) 9 6 8 -4 0 0 6 *3.95 $1.99 $2.99 $3.99 $ .49 w/coupon TtapiTiwM Pizzeria Meagan Daza Natural Ica Cream , Adult Magazines, Groceries, tea. 933 f. University 1 Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. 966-6123 ! 9 6 7 -9 0 7 9 COUPON 0*0*0*&yf* ■ ■ ■ ■ ■CUP IMS COUPON■ M B FREE ■ *5°° O F F i Goggles | Well, the first thing people notice when they order their very first Schlotzsky* sandwich is its size. kb no small thing, Ham, salami, spiced luncheon meat, Cheddar moraareQa and parm esan chooaoo, lettuce, onions, tomatoes, black dives, and our own special seasonings — aQ piled high on a lightly-browned Schlotzsky b u n ,/V i baked fresh daily And well, that leads us to die very next thing. With Purchase of Any _ O ' Swimsuit ($4.95 Value) B *ot lot valid with any otiwr special. I Witt this coupon Expire 8-31-81 “ Witt this comm Expire 8-31-83 ■ Umrsity SpitfcK On * I University Spertni Goa* ■ ■■■■■NOdooanu m u mm ■ ■ J | SPEEDCX^ a re n a 7 WEtt ad d as •Q uality Athletic Shoes •Running S ta r •Racquet Stringing 6 Repair •C u ita n Litterin g H I • S w ln Wear •T een Outfitters •P ra Team Wear •ASU Clothing •A ctive S p e rtiw e ir Our sandwich is round. Hiat!s not so unusual, ex c e p t... when was the last time you picked up an entire balanced m eal in two hands? Nosy thatfe no small thing! lilis coupon worth $1.00 on one large Schlotzsky® sandwich or two regular Schlotzsky® sandwiches. Redeemable at participating Schlotmkyfc Sandwich Shop locations. No mom than two ■ plasm. Costernar pays stem and local taaao. Not mbd w y uaod w fiw sg sK n cp when m conjunction wtth any other spoetai offer Copyright Schtotzskyb, Ine., 1961 (ScHtotzskyls) Not mdoomabia far cMh. I f f ’'1 O f f e r 9 X plf 9 $ 6 / 1 /8 3 (Scniotzsk/s): “Your Summer Sportswear Center" THE WAY WE MAKE ITB NO SMALL THING”’ 1038 S . Milt A v e n u e , T e m p e *9cHtifeiky»«irigimmd*»dn imluto a alof >e of fleewith Cons re>ble, 1 ’83 se in d of ived FUS o to n on ed a in. VIP it at 1 ) I I I I I I least broke even, US ’83 and US ’82 would have no successors. Attendance estim ates for the three days rolled in a t800,000, pushing US ’83 ahead of US ’82’s 500,000 and Woodstock’s 400,000 and making tt the largest three-day rockiest ever. At $20 per ticket, UNUSON has recouped about $12 million, not counting m erchandising proceeds. But UNUSON had predicted that a 700,000 draw on the three all-rock days (with 100,000 on the all-country day this Saturday) was needed to beat the red. Official stats have yet to come in, but with such a close call, Wozniak told the press, “I will not bankroll another (US Festival) m yself.” The press had been saying that Wozniak’s huge vision wasn’t as hugely m arketable, and th at his m essage fell on deaf ears th at cam e out only for entertainm ent anyway. True, the faithful who hoorayed as MTV cam eras panned the audience probably did so less from event-high thanforPavlovian reasons, but such audience reaction is not untypical and can’t be directly linked to any US audience avoidance of Wozniak’s message. And even if US ’83 was basically a huge suntan oil concert without any political/philosophical soul beyond its creator’s ideals, the attendance figures are rock history, and are nothing short of im pressive. Aside from conceptual and financial concerns, the dominant issue of the fest was som e Clash rabble rousing. The Clash, Saturday’s headliners, were unsigned as of showtime, and in a classically punk but poorly tim ed move (their corn­ plaints could have been m ade earlier, but that might have deadened the charge) threatened not to play unless all bands on the bill and UNUSON itself donated a percentage of the profits to charity. The com plaint concerned the festival’s and subsequently the band’s association with M iller Beer adver­ tisem ent, as well as festival policies that forbid fans from bringing food into the concert area, forcing them to conces­ sion stands (a policy for which Wozniak later apologized). The Clash themselves were paid $500,000 for appearing, and claimed to be donating some of that money to the poor of E ast L.A. (UNUSON donated $38,000 to a boys cam p on Mon­ day, but claimed to have already been planning to do so; the Clash just provided the chance to do so sooner, Wozniak said.) Wanting the platform and the avoidance of the riot they feared would occur if they left, the Clash went on. In the heat of attack, the Clash’s m anager had labeled Van Halen a “ham burger” band. E nter a crocked David Lee Roth of Van Halen, Sunday’s headliners. Amidst obscene insults to the audience, the whiskey bottle-brandishing Roth said ‘T his is REAL whiskey . . . the only band who would put tea in a bottle to drink onstage . . . is the Clash!’’Roth’s drunkenness ruined Van Halen’s show, which led to disbelief th at their $i million contract would be honored. A local law enforcement offical later accused Roth of attem pting to instigate a riot, and in general, the heavy m etal day capped a bum name. The heavy m etal fans had busted the heads off drinking foun­ tains, leading Wozniak to rath er naturally state that the heavy m etal day did not in fact represent the US spirit. The final word, artist-w ise, cam e from Steve Van Zandt of Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul, Monday’s opening act, who didn’t comment directly on the issue but seemed to sew up any ostracism of the m etallers by co m m e n tin g in jest, “I’d like to thank Van Halen and Ozzy and those guys for continued papa IS HAIRCUTS $6.00 PERMS $22.50 HENNAS $12.50 GOOD THIS WEEK ONLYI 1036 S. T e rra c e TEM PE CENTER 18 E. 10th St. & Mill o p e n 11 t o 8 968-0056 $450 H A IR C U T S w ith coupon (SchlotzsK/s) H air styles fo r yo u n g m en & women. T em pe • 968-6685 COLONIAL HOUSE OF HAIR Delicious TUNA Schlotzsky INTRODUCTORY OFFER (CormrafLemon&Terrace) Hanging On: The US Festival ’83 may not have been Woodstock, but ideals die herd. If the US idealism seemed programmed, the spirit was enough to encourage this fan to bring his banner out of the closet. PER M S w ith coupon ( R tg M $1050 (Rig. starting at $20) 5 743 W . U niv. (betweenMill& Hardy! | 9 6 8 -4 0 0 6 PA P R E S E N T S : T H E U LT IM A T E IN L U X U R Y LIVING WITH BRANDNEWAPARTMENTS 24-hr. Guarded Gate Security •COMPLETE CLUBHOUSE WITH Weight Room Kitchen Whirlpool Bath Tennis Courts Game Room Backgammon Tables Swimming Pools Pool Tables Saunas •RESERVED COVERED PARKING •INDIVIDUAL STORAGE AREAS •LARGE COVERED PATIOS AND BALCONIES •WASHER/ORYER HOOK-UPS •BARBEQUE AND PICNIC AREAS •PARK-LIKE LANDSCAPE No Lease Required RftNGHQ MUfUETTA 1717 S. Dorsey Lane Tempef Arizona 85281 (602) 966-5184 2 S E S S IO N S . . . O N L Y 4 W EEKS SU M M ER S P E E D R EA D IN G C O U R S E S JU N E 13 T H R U J U L Y 11 A special four-week course, based on the Sack-Yourm sn Speed Reading Program, will be offered to graduates, undergraduates, faculty, staff and the community. This special program requires pre- and post-reading rate testing, reading of timed passages, and development of college level vocabulary. OPEN REGISTRATION: J u n e 6 th r o u g h J u n e 1 □ M o n d a y t h r o u g h F rid ay, 1 O e.m ,-1 p.m. R e a d in g E d u c a tio n P a y n e Hall. B-1 1 2 SECTIONS: « A. B. FEE: M-W M n ig h t 9 : 3 0 - 1 0 : 4 5 a.m. 7 : 0 0 - 9 : 3 0 p.m. $30 LOCATION:L "• , •••’■SB ¡¡P FA R M E R BUILDING 1^ 0 1 FO R M O R E IN FO RM ATIO N : C A L L 9 6 5 -7 7 6 6 Page 12 Thunday; June 9,1983 SMITH-CORONA* H EW LETT PACKARD Model A T GAMMAGE CENTER: SUM M ERFUN ••• MASSENKOFF Russian Folk Festival Saturday, June 4 * 8 p.m. HP-1 OC HP-11C HP-15C HP-41 C HP-41 CV Reg. $70 $90 $120 $200 $275 OUR PRICE Model Reg. OUR PRICE $62 $80 $100 $175 $225 Corona 12 E n tll 2200 2500 Ultra Sonic $260 $320 $400 $440 $575 $199.95 $249.95 $329.95 $349.95 $419.95 'plus factoryrabats Texas Instruments Model T I3 5SP Stud Bus Anal TI55 II TI58C Ti 59 Reg. $28 $35 $50 $115 $250 OUR PRICE $19.95 $29.95 $42.95 $89.95 $199.95 We handle the full line of Hewlett-Packard & Texas OFFICE PRODUCTS WAREHOUSE 968*1198 • 1755 W. University 52nd S t A University • Tempe Here's one thousand years of Russia, Its soul, Its history, and most of sll, its people, genuinely represented by Nikolai Maasenkoff, accompanied by virtuoso balalaikas and spirited dancers. 2 m iles w est o f ca m pus Tickets: $5 ($2.50 for ASU students, faculty, and staff) ••• id 'ffr- r M AX MORATH Living A Ragtime Life Tuesday, Juno 14 • 8 p.m. Max Morath presents an exhilarating tour of tum-of-thecentury America — the ragtime years — that is not to be missed. You will be charmed and enlightened by Morath, with his versatile talents as a pianist, singer, and comedian. Tickets: $5 ($2.50 for ASU students, faculty, and staff) ••• BEBGt PRINCEMINE COMPANY Buy 1 pair of G la s s e s a t Regular price G e t Y o u r 2nd P air 5°fo O F F G as Perm eable H ard C o n ta c ts $99 Wednesday, June 20 • 8 p.m. Michael Berg, C. J. Prince, and Todd CoUard add flair to classical mime that erupts as progressive mime theatre, taking psychology, graphic Images, dialogue, masks, storytelling, sound effects, and aliened that move from the body into the heart Tickets: $5 ($2.50 for ASU students, faculty, and staff) pee AT THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER: ••• N E IL DIAM OND Tuesday, June 7 • 8 p.m. Wednesday, June 8 * 8 p.m. Don't miss this dynamic tlnger/songwriter/entartainer appearing for two spectacular performances. S o ft C o n ta c ts fo r A stig m a tism $159 F A M includes your choice Of any frame in stock and lenses, glass or plastic, tint or photogrey. I L Y O P T I C I A N S 5 1 3 4 w . Mc D o w e l l r d „ p h o e n i x < 1 Q O S W. B E T H A N Y HOME RD„ PH O E N IX • 846*0147 1 2 0 E. U NIV ER SITY. T E M PE • 967-1999 Tickets: $15, $12.50, $10 ••• A T KERR CULTURAL CENTER: ••• MISSAL TRIO Wednesday, June 8 • 8 p.m. Joshua Missal, violin and viola: Sonya Misaal, cello: and Pegge Missal, piano. Tickets: $5 eee MUSICA DOLCE Saturday, June 11*8 p.m. Dean Wallace of KHEP-FM says, “. . . the group called Musics Dolce Kiss come to mean an extremely Interesting evening of musical rarities. Not only do they play antique, all-but-forgotten instruments and play them unusually well, they ate also highly capable of putting together a program that piques our interest, satisfies our curiosity, teaches us something about the ancient musical styles and tastes.. Tickets: $5 ••• A LL KERR CENTER SERIES PERFORMANCES ARE $1 FOR ASU STUDENTS WITH I.O. ••• AT SUN DEVIL STADIUM: ••• ‘THE BLOW OF AMERICA” Monday, July 4 • 7:30 pjn. America's Largest July Fourth Fireworks Production — featuring the entire Osmond family (Including Donny and Marie). W E W IL L R O C K Y O U NIGHT FLIGHT from L.A. T hursday-Saturday Thurs. Tropical Drink Night Ladies Free Tropical D rinks 2 for 1 Long Island Ice Tea Party Fri. Ice Teas 2 for 1 D raft M ugs 2 for 1 Car Crash Night Sat. C ar C rash D rinks 2 for 1 D raft M ugs 2 for 1 Tickets: $10, $9. $8. $7 ($1 discount for children 2 to 12) O p e n f o r H a p p y H o u r K io n .-F r i. a t 4 : 3 0 ••• For m ors information, call the Gammage Box Office, 965-3434. 919 E. A pache Blvd. Appearing June 7-11 9 6 6 -7 7 7 0 StttrPraa» Page 13 T h u n ^ A jn c iy W More about U S '83 continued hom paga 11 opening up for us.” The most exciting perform ances, from the acts that were expected to shine — The Clash, Little Steven, U2, The Pretenders, and David Bowie — were certainly worthy of preservation, and fortunately the entire fèstivàl was videotaped by MTV. But due to business hassles with record companies, no album is planned. This is unfortunate, if for no other reason than to put Oingo Boingo vocalist Dan E lfm an in his place. During his band’s set, Elfwian yelled to the crowd “People say the US Festival doesn’t have the energy of Woodstock; well I say screw them! Woodstock is over! T he’60s are dead!” Such statem ents are hypocritical from an essentially R&B band like Oingo Boingo. An album of US ’83 would at least serve to show E lf man that neither he or any of his “new music” cronies can hope to m atch something with the earth—moving soul of Sly and the Fam ily Stone’s “I Wanna Take You Higher” off the Woodstock LP. Luckily, an audience m em ber yelled back to Elfm an, “You owe your career to the ’60s!” That’s putting things in perspective. _____________ TOPROTECTTHEUNBORN AND THE NEWBORN THISSPACECONTWBt'TFOBYTHEPUBLISHER March of Dimes Mesa Tribune photo editor Don Stevenson’s Pulitzer Prize nominated series on Navajo Indians is part of “ Beyond the Printed Pape,” an exhibition of extraordinary photojour­ nalism on display hi the MU Gallery through June 22. A lso on display are works by Frank Hoy, ASU associate professor of Journalism and telecommunication; Thn Koors, Phoenix Gazette staff Photographen and Peter Sehwepkar, Arizona Republie staff photographer. rTH EJO Y N T? r o u p h , u r p 2 Dinners for i E 0 J 1 V f O from 2-10 p.m. $5.49 I Choice of: eLasagna eCheese or Spinach M anicotti eBaked Ziti O \ T H E JO Y N T l O O 606 S. M ill 967-7926 0 CAUtY OUTS 75* U ADDITIONAL o Expires. 8-18-83. Buy 1 cone get 1 cone FR EE. | V i Includes ¡ dinner salads and garlic breeds § T R Y O U R N EW H A R D IC E C R EA M f W EËÜVB1 O U q E xp ire s 8-31-83. ¡Lawam C O U P O N ..» ^ D a iry Queen 9 5 0 S. M ill A cross fr o m G am m age IBH P B H B B B B B B B B B B B B B Q I HEY ASU STUDENTS J i m ’ s A u t o S u p p ly N O W (f We now deliver your favorite pizza, including our great Pizza Hut’ Pan Pizza..right to your dooc O PE N : JUSTGALL 990-1110 Lim ited delivery area. Mon.-Fri. 4p.m . *til closing. Sat. 11 a.m. ’til closing. Sun. 12 noon ‘til closing. M963PizzaHut. Inc. S U N D A Y S & ______ E V E N IN G S $3.00 OFF MV URBE DELIVERED PIZZI 3 0 % average discount on all parts and accessories, except tools and special priced items. M-tlM 1420 N. Scottedole - P le n a m ention HUM otitorPizzaHut* offgr.NgdoNvaryof coupon «men ordering. Limited delivery aree. • «M3PlataHut.Inc. HOURS: BETDUME DELIVEREDPIZZI FORIK PRICEOf k MEDIUMPIZZBWITHIK MMEHUMBEROFlUPPIMt 88 Mon.-Fri. 8-5Saturday 94 Sunday t Please m ention coupon when ordering. 1828 E. UNIVERSITY KH B3,H H B B P .B B B B S P CM Hayden & University QCQ c q q q Umitmt dolivory ars». Next to Minder Binder’s yO O "JO O O • 1983 Pizza Hut Inc. M 900000C M B O O B B O O G D O O O O O O C m-itn 1420 N. »cottidal» lint validin otterPizzaHut* otfar.Notfahvaryof atcoltoW cHavarata» SUMMER SCHOOL SPECIAL W ith M aster lo ck w ith $350 guarantee 10-speed Lotus b icy cle Reg. $21.95 Reg. $150 $30.00 FIRST 1 966-6896 905 S. Mill ” * Í6 f w shop 829-1743 Campus Pac Reg. 35.95 Reg. 24.95 Sale 22.95 Sale 17.95 Day/Nite Pac Reg. 32.95 Sale 19.95 M D yyAR.NET. We ca rry Vuarnet and P e e p e r K e e p e rs is h Reg. *13.00 Reg. *13.00 Long hair extra for Hl-uter and perms. T h e S t u d e n t E m p lo y m e n t O f f i c e is t e m p o r a r i l y l o c a t e d in P a y n e H a ll, R o o m 4 2 , d u r in g t h e r e n o v a t io n o f M a tth e w s C e n te r. a I A $ 1 0 .0 0 Summer Hours 7 a.m.-4:30 p.m. g ia n t s a l e Slx-Pac $ 1 0 .0 0 STUDENT FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE OFFICE Tempo Center A lp e n lit e SATURDAY Hairstyles 905 E. Lemon, Tem pe O P EN O p M W IM fS place! h a ir c u t t b r s FRIDAY Hairstyles 966-1391 The OU Gas Station On The Gamer O f 6tb& MU 9-8 M -F 9-6 Sat. 12-6 Sun. $ 1 0 .0 0 Reg. *13.00 Reg. *40.00 Cad for appointment Tempe Bicycle Shop HAIRSTYLES PERMS (ind. cut) peg. *35.00 T e m p e B i c y c le w a te r b o ttle s $ 1 .0 0 TH U R SD AY W EDNESDAY 530.00 C le a r a n c e o n a ll b ic y c le s . y ■'/] ' Our HOT Sum m er School Specials TUESDAY HI'LITES !Sale $119.95 Sale $14.951 _ Heats on cool it ir in g ! Y o u ’ ll fin d fu ll-tim e ca re e r o p p o rtu n itie s at A d v a n ce d M ic ro D e v ic e s, th e c o m p a n y fo r e n g in e e rin g . E xcitem ent1 . This is yo ur c h a n c e to jo in the c o m p a n y that's o n the le a d in g e d g e o f every c ritic a l te c h n o lo g y in th e se m ico n d u cto r industry. With your BS. M S o r PhD in E le ctrica l E ngineering , S o lid State Physics, M a te ria ls S cie n ce , o r C o m p u te r S cien ce, yo u ’ll find a ll th e te c h n o lo g ic a l e xcite m en t your c a re e r c a n h a n d le a t AMD. A n d thé rew ard s W e just p a sse d $350 m illio n in s a le s a n d o u r sights a re set o n b re a k in g new re c o rd s A M D c h o se th e w ave a s its sym b o l to show th e excite m e n t o f th e w orld’s fastest gro w in g 1C co m p a n y. If yo u c ra v e that kin d o f excitem ent, jo in us a n d c a tc h the w ave. Send yo ur resum e to B a rb a ra T o o tlm a n , C o lle g e g e la tio n s M a n a g e r, A d v a n c e d M ic ro D e v ic e s, D e p t A S P -6 2 ,901 T hom pson P la c e , Sun n y v a le , C a M fo m ia M O M , o r eaM In C a lifo rn ia (4 0 S ) 749-41M ; o u tsid e C a lifo rn ia (BOO) 5 3S-S460, e x t 41 3S. E q u a l o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r m /f/h. ------------R m m if f u b le Pizza Restaurants I I V f I I I I I I I I I I I T U i P E R S I E A Y ! ASU Students, Faculty, and Staff If you’ll come to the R ound Table and try the freshest,best-tasting pizza in town tonight, it’s yours for half-price (w ith presentation of your ASU I.D ). It’s topped with just picked vegetables, fine natural cheeses, and the leanest meats, on a fresh rolled pizza crust. ItamVTabWM This Tuesday P resent your ASU I.D . and receive a 50% D iscount o n any Large Pizza. I I D I C (C o u n try S ty le in c lu d e d ) P iz z a R e s ta u r a n ts w G ood O nly A t: 1849 N. Scottsdale Rd. O n Alpha Beta Center) 947-4396 7901 E. Thom as Rd. (a t H ayden) 994-3360 Every Tuesday a t The Round Table! I W lf t W Page 15 Thuraday, June g, 1983 Sun Pevis sweepthroughtourney bet sightsforsixth championship By Ken Sain Sports w riter When an ASU team packs its bags for Omaha, Neb., big things are expected from the Sun Devils. This year may prove to be different. In the 11 previous trips to the College World Series, the Devils have finished no worse than third only once — their first ap­ pearance in the tourney in 1964. i Five tim es the Devils claim ed the national title, and they finished runners-up three times in the eight-team tournam ent. \ ASU will open up CWS play Saturday in Omaha against South Regional winner Alabama a t 6:10 p.m. Arizona time. Ju st puking it to the CWS this y ear was con­ sidered impossible half way through the conference season. The Devils held a dism al 6-10 m ark in the Pac -10 Southern Division, and post-season hopes were labeled pipe dream s. But something happened to the Devils that caused them to turn their season around. | “We becam e a team ,” left fielder B arry Bonds said. “At the sta rt of the year we had a lot of individual talent from all over the nation — ‘O’ (Oddibe McDowell) from Florida, Hank (Doug Henry) from Southern California, and others from all over the place. “We played a lot of gam es early in the season ju st on individual talents. We were not really a team . During the middle 6f the season, Coach (Jim Brock) got us together and said be would run us hard. “Slowly we becam e a team , and we no longer relied on individual talents to keep us going. We played as a team .” H Brock also feels that the Devils cam e together as a team . “During the gam e I kept feeling that there was something I should be doing,” Brock said after ASU secured the West II Regional title. “I finally decided that they were play­ ing so well, the best thing to do was to leave them alone.” H ie West II Regional was considered one of the toughest in the nation, but ASU had no problems with any team in the tournam ent. H ie Devils defeated Brigham Young 19-11, Cal State-Fullerton 8-0, and Fresno State 7-2 in earning their 12th trip to Omaha. BYU was expected to be a tough test for the Sun Devils. The Cougars entered the gam e with a 54-9 record, and a No. 1 seeding from the NCAA. The game was full of sur­ prises. Eight hits, including two home runs, and the Cougars jumped out to an 8-0 lead in the middle of the second inning. But die Devils were able to come back with five runs in their half of the inning to keep close to BYU. ASU was forced to use four pitchers in the gam e, but backed with an offense that punched out 22 hits and 19 runs, the Devils overcam e the eight-run deficit to defeat the Cougars 19-11. Jim Jefferson entered the gam e in the fourth inning to shut down BYU. After that fourth inning, ASU gave up o ily two runs in the rem aining 23 innings. Bonds hit a three-run homer in the second inning. The homer was hit over the green center field fence that stands 35 feet up in the a ir, 409 feet from home plate. Brock said it was only the third tim e someone was able to hit the ball over the green monster. contlm Md paga 1R Craig Pritchett of A8U is caught in a run-down between first and second be— . ThoSun dsvMs cerned their twelfth trip to tlw College World Serle* this past weekend as they swept through the N CAA West II Regional Tournament INTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS cftfcTg IM ,.. SUMMER RECREATION 1983 “For the students, faculty and staff at Arizona State University" INTRAMURAL EVENTS AEROBICS E x e rcise o n T u e sd a y and T h u rsd ay, 5:15 to 6:15 p.m . in P .E . East 143. C la ss is free, requ ires no registration and is open to A S U students, staff, facu lty, and sp ou ses. First cla ss is Tu esd ay, Ju n e 7. 3-MAN BASKETBALL NBON LEAGUE T h is leag u e is open to Sum m er S ch o o l students and faculty/staff m em bers. G am es w ill be played on Tu esd ay and T h u rsd ay at 12:15. A $5 fee per team w ill be taken with yo u r entry, w hich is du e b y W ed., Ju n e 8. P lay b egin s Ju n e 14 an d ru n s through m id -Ju ly. P ictu re I.D. and fee ca rd s w ill be ch eck ed and held at the gym door. FITNESS CLUBS Set yo u r ow n pace in on e o f the Fitness C lu b s. C h o o se the 500 M ile Jo g g in g C lu b , the 500 M ite B icy clin g C lu b , the 100 M ile Jog/Sw tm /Cyde C lu b , P arcou rse C lu b , or the Faculty-Staff “Fitn ess fo r Lu n ch B u n ch ” C lu b . T h e re le a n entry fee fo r each clu b . F in ish e rs receive clu b T-sh irts. Sig n u p today! RACQUETBALL ANB TENNIS N eed a racquetbail o r tennis partner? Sign up at the Intram ural O ffice. P rovide yo u r nam e, ph on e num ­ ber an d level o f play. “A ” la fo r advanced, “B ” Is fo r interm ediate, and “C ” is fo r begin n in g players. P layers are resp o n sib le fo r arran gin g th eir own m atches. M eet som e new players — sign u p today! MBC0UR8E FITNESS CIRCUIT T h e P errier P arcou rse. ASU*s o u td o o r fitn ess c ir­ cu it, is a series o f 18 ex ercise station s spread o ver a 1.7 m ile p ith o n cam pus., M aps are available a t the S T A R T sig n , wast ed the racquetbail courts- INTRAMURAL SPORTS OFFICE OPEN RECREATION Physical EducationWest Lobby Phone:965-5638 F o r d a ily recreation activities and fa cility hours, call the IN T R A M U R A L H O T LIN E , 965-2626, fo r a re­ co rded m essage. ENTERTAINMENT BARGAINS T h e Intramural S p o rts O ffice in the P.E. W est L o b b y w ill be open from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m . M onday through Friday fo r d is­ co u n t ticket sa les to A S U students, fic u lty , and staff. D isco u n ts are avail­ ab le to lo ca l m ovie theater screen s. B ig Surf, and Legen d C ity. Please present yo u r valid A S U I.D. at the tim e o f pur­ ch ase. T h ere is a lim it o f six tickets per day per I.D. N o refu n d s o r exch an ges al­ low ed. M em bership cards, w hich entitle you to a d isco u n t adm ission price, are available to: Knotts B erry Farm — B uena Park Sea W orld — San D iego San D iego Z o o & W ild A nim al Park M agic M ountain Park — Valencia Universal S tu d io s M ovie Land W ax M useum - ADAPTIVE INTRAMURALS Adaptive Intram urals are exercise and recreation activities fo r disabled students, faculty, and s tiff. M ost activities take p la ce in the P h ysica l Ed u cation East B u ild in g , R oom 145. O pen hours are n o on to 5 p.m. M onday through Friday. Fo r m ore Inform adon , can 968-3090. AQUATIC CENTER W eekdays: N oon to 3:45 p.m. Faculty, staff, student o n ly with validated A S U I.D. W eekends: N oon to 3:45 p.m. Faculty, staff, students and fam ilies. M inim um age: 10 SO* chug* per person with validated ASU I.D. GYMNASIUM HOURS P h ysical Education W est (M en’s G ym ) M TW ThF N oon to 9 p.m. Sat. & S u n . N oon to 6 p.m. A n A S U validated fee receipt a n d a photo I.D. are needed fo r adm ission to the gym . Equipm ent fo r p lay m ay be obtained at the equipm ent room with yo u r A S U I.D. and driver’s licen se. I.D .'s w ill be held du rin g gym use. G u est tee is $1. Fe e fo r con tin u in g students is 5QC. C o n ta ct the Intram ural O ffice fo r com plete adm ission p o licy statem ent WEI6HT ROOM T h e M atthew s H all W eight R oom is open to A S U students, facu lty, and staff M onday through Frid ay 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. RACQUETBALL COURTS Tw elve o u td o o r 4-w all co u rts are availab le fo r reser­ vation b y ca llin g 965-3618. C o u rt 12 is a ch allen ge court. TENNIS COURTS T h e 21 A p a ch e Bou levard C o u rts are available on a first co m e b asis fo r A S U students, staff, and faculty. Thurcday, June 3,1983 Pase 16 honey tr ea t SaiísQAfest fr o zen y o g u r t announces its M P — ------------- 1015 N. S co ttsd a le R dr 966-9696 S A ILB O A R D W EAR goes everywhere, S h ip to Shore, for recreation, for com petition, for sp ectacular spectator w ear _ . M fc GRAND OPENING SPECIALS ' smaaics Jantz«i E E f in g ii Helps You Shake Those Minimum Wage Blues! Call _____________ ; O F Us Today. BARTENDING COMPLETE BARTENDING •W in e tastins instruction COURSE •Learn 130 d iffe re n t drinks Your tick e t to steady work, m eeting p eople, and m aking m oney! •C ash resister o p e ra tio n •S to c k in s & inventory o f liq u o r •C u stom e r se rvice traini ns •P lacem e n t assistance This Friday, Saturday & Sunday Give aw ay drawing for these prizes: •Kodak Disc Camera •5 ” Personal TV •AM/FM Cassette Walkaround Stereo Look for th e Honey Treat Bear th is weekend at our two location s Alpha Beta Tempe — andCenter Center a t S cottsdale • McKellips Rds. Call us at 894-6565 o r co m e in at 1537 E. A p a ch e , Tem pe. S A V E M O N EY on PARKING EX PEN SE and GASOLINE BILLS in conjunction with the City o f Phoenix Public Transit Administration, the ASU Department o f Parking and Transit offers all ASU employees the opportunity to enroll in a free computerized ride sharing program. During the week of June 6 through June 10, this service will be available at the Memorial union, Room 220 (Greenlee) during regular working hours. The process takes less than three minutes and will provide you with a computer print-out o f other potential car poolers together with their phone numbers and such pertinent information as whether they are smokers or non-smokers, their work schedule, the building where they work, and other details. EVEN IF YOU'RE NOT PRESENTLY INTERESTED IN CAR POOLING, COME AND SEE WHAT THIS PROGRAM HAS TO OFFER. » « S lip .- 2 0 th ANNIVERSARY June 13-20 Rosita’s fights inflation by rolling back prices. •K ID S E A T FR EE 12 and under w hiledining with parents (choice o f child's p la tes) •F R E E P IT C H E R O F B E E R O R S O D A with the purchase o f 3 or more dinners • 2 5 t D R A F T B E E R with meal • $ 1 .9 5 G IA N T G O L D E N M A K G A M T A 16 oz. 1090 W. 5th St. • 9 6 6 -0 8 5 2 3 Blocks N orth o f U niversity betw een Priest an d H ardy ^ h u rsda^ u n e^ 98 ^ o problems Wranglers able to coexist with ASU community By Ken Sain S p o rts w r i t e r The arrival of a professional football franchise on the ASU oompK has caused little problem for the re st of the Univer­ sity community, according to ASU officials. Since the announcement on Aug. 5, 1982 that the United States Football League planned on placing a franchise in the Phoenix area, m em bers of die ASU adm inistration have feared the football team would cause problems for many dif­ ferent aspects of the campus. “Our office has had a good working relationship with the (Arizona) W ranglers office,’’ Assistant Vice President for Public Affairs M iriam Boegel said. The University has received over $450,000 in revenue from the eight gam es played in Sun Devil Stadium thus far. ASU receives a $1.50 surcharge on every ticket sold in addition to concessions and parking revenue. “All die money is being held in a revenue account until it is decided where it can help the University m ost,” Boegel said. “The first priority is the weight room relocation.” The ASU football team used to use the home team ’s locker room under the south bleachers a t Sun Devil Stadium for its weight training center. An NCAA rule, which prohibits student-athletes from using facilities that are currently being rented by any professional franchise, forced a relocation of the weight room. The new weight-training center is near the ASU Aquatic Center. ' “We basically have the sam e things we had before, and they did a nice job of remodeling,” ASU football strength coach Don Clemons said. “The remodeling cam e right a t the sta rt of spring training, and th at is a very im portant tim e for us. “It was quite hectic for a while, but overall I am happy with our new facility.” According to Boegel, the University may have to pay far repairs to Sun Devil Stadium. Two years ago cracks in the north end of the stadium were discovered — many architects felt the stadium was sinking. “That has yet to be clarified,” Boegel said. “The Univer­ sity has some responsibility in that aspect.” Another concern of some members of the University athletic departm ent was the effect the pro football team would have on the ASU spring sports attendance. P a rt of the contract that was signed between the school and the W ranglers prohibits the franchise from scheduling games that would directly coincide with an ASU sporting event. However, gam es could be scheduled on the sam e day; three times this year the ASU baseball team has had a home gam e on the sam e day as a W rangler home football game. In the fall, bead baseball coach Jim Brock did not feel that the W ranglers should be able to play on the sam e day as his baseball team. “ It seems obvious that both can’t play on the sam e day,” he said. “We would have to have first priority and the tenant continued png* 1S D O N 'T FA LL BEH IN D DAT iT Prepare Now For: 1, Y O ct. 8 X X Classes now available for DAT, PSYCH, QRE-BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP. OCAT, CPA. FaN S A T — Aug. 13 E8L — June 13 — other ciis s s« starting soon. CALL TO DAY Educational Center LO W C O S T A U T O IN SU R AN CE CO M PETITIVE RATES Student D isco u n t A vailable 7 V /A u g .s X / “X t o f f photo by Andy Aw m The Wranglers have had many problems on the field the past few weeks, but according to University officials, Arizona’s , first professions) football team has caused few problems for ASU. 967-2967 For Information about other centers In more than 80 major U.S. cities and abroad. CALL TOLL FREE 800-223-1782. SAVEOK? STYLE UP TO*25 OFF! SILADIUM*C0LLEGE RINGS NOW ONLY •R e n te rs Insurance •M e d ica l In surance • M o to rc y c le Insurance • M o b ile H om e Insurance Steve D abbs at 966-3494 D rop b y o u r o ffice and p ick up yo u r F R E E Rand M c N a lly R oad A tla s w ith F R E E Rate Q uotation. FOR THE PRICE YOU CAN'T BEAT IT! ’M exican C o m b o -D in n e rs $1.75 - $-*.95 ’C h im ic h a n g a $3.00 - $4.25 ’D ay tim e S pecials $1.50 ’M argarita & B e er S pecials ev e ry d ay ’E n jo y s p o rts & Music-TV o n o u r c a b le te le v isio n . Low p ric e s, c o n s is te n tly g o o d fo o d , s u p e rb m a rg a rita s a n d a frie n d ly , re la x e d , in fo rm a l a tm o s p h e r e a re so m e o f th e r e a s o n s o u r b u s in e s s is u p 70%. $ 9 4 9 5 2 0% D is c o u n t w ith th is a d to e v e ry o n e in y o u r party. Expires 6/30/83. We've got w hat you w ant— a handsom ely styled selection of co llege ring s at a p rice you can afford. SILA D IU M * C o lle g e R ings ca re fu lly crafted in the A rtC arved trad itio n from a fine and durable jew eler's m etals (G ood fro m A dd yo ur ch o ice o f custom o p tio n s to the design you select and y o u 'll have a ring yo u ’ll w ant to w ear fo r years to com e. m id n ite o n l y ) D A S H IN N B u t don 't delay. V isit the A rtC arved R in g Table and get your ring at a p rice that’s too good to last! M e x ic a n f o o d a n d c o c k t a ils ig g g i ..... S o t fa n c y , ju s t g o o d CLASS RINGS. INC THURSDAY & FRIDAY •JU N E 2 & 3 ASU BOOKSTORE d epo sit r e q u ir e d m a s t e r c a r d c 5 p.m . 731 E. Apache Blvd. (O n e block w est o f Rural, a cro ss from T em pe T e e p e e s) c 1982 A R TCAR V ED CLASS RINGS. INC More about Wranglers •ir would rent other days. “Our conference schedule is such that we have to play on Friday, Saturday or Sunday. If a' situation arose where we played a day game and (the USFL) played a t night, you can ju st imagine the problems. If they consistently got 40,000 peo­ ple, the situation would be intolerable.’’ The W ranglers have not averaged 40,000. They have avenged dose to 25,000a t every game. The season’s high at­ tendance was the home opener against the Oakland Invaders M ardi 0. Over 45,000fans showed up for th at contest. But the attendance figures have b e n taking a nose dive ever since. The best team in the league, the Philadelphia Stars, drew a m e n 10,351 fans recently. In their last four gam es, W rangler attendance has hovered a t the 20,000 m ark. The W ranglers sold over .18,000 season tickets. “T h en seems to be a certain sincerity between the Univer­ sity adm inistration and the W rangler’s adm inistration,” Brock said. “I expected the worse, but I have seen no effect on our attendance.” . •: The attendance a t the ASU baseball games have been down from the record-setting pace they had last year, but there are other factors to be considered. Turnstiles are now being used to count the crowds instead of the hand counters which have been used in previous years. Standing room only crowds that use to be over 10,000, barely number 7,500 this year. Brock has said that the stadium is shrinking. The ASU baseball team is not as dominant as they were last year. This year die Devils owned a 17-13 m ark in the Pacific 10 Southern Division standings. Last year the Devils finished with a 25-5 m ark in the conference. In the three games that the W ranglers and the baseball team have both had home gam es, the Devils have averaged just under 4,500 a game. That figure includes a crowd of 7,095 against divisionwinner Stanford April 23. That figure is also misrepresented because over 3,000 litde-leaguers were given tickets as part of an advertising promotion. “It is tough to take into consideration all of the factors that determ ine if the spring sports have been hurt by the W rang le r« ” Boegel said. “The baseball team does not have as good a record as last year, and the weather has not been as pleasant. “I would like to think a m arket as large as Phoenix could support both team s.” “There being here has not hurt us a t the gate, as much as it has with the m edia,” Brock said. “We have definitely had less newspaper and radio coverage this year. ’’ DOUBLE BURGER FULL M EAL D EAL $1.99 r i SUN DEVIL HAIRCUTTERS "Pride of the Sun Devils" Summer Special $A O f) ■ ■W P" p i Fresh Baked Whole Wheat buns, for that change of pace ScniotzsKyfr) TEMPE CENTER 18 E. 10th St. A Mill o p e n 11 t o s 968-0056 Shampoo. Conditioning, Precision Cut, Blow Dry Men & Women (R eg. $ 12) G ood through 6-8-83 (betw een Rural & M cClintock) 130 E. University 8 -1 4 -8 3 . CAM DO Corn 1993 1389 E. APACHE G o o d o n ly at (In th* A rche«) bream ONLY AT: Sculptured nails $20 customers only. Expires Look who* you get) An cdl-beef burger A .r e o r d e r o f crispy g olden fries, tbur favorite sm all soft drink A n d to to p It off. a co o l and cream y 5 OA D AW QUEEN* Soft Serve Sundoe. H ead for your participatin g D AW QUEEN* BRAZIER* store, to g e t m e Burger Fun M eal D ear* — the best bargain intown. Roffler 966-5462 Hours 10 a.m .-11 p.m. 966-6808 H ours: M on .-Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-5 "C O U P O N " IF YOU LOVE CLOTHES 20% OFF YOUR FOOD Good for member prices for one w eek, w hich is 20% off non-member price. Give coupon to membership desk for one w eek temporary membership. Expires June 30,1983. — .COUPON------------------------ - S a m p le M em ber B rices Y ou’ll BUFFALO EXCHANGE WISCONSIN CHEDDAR - $1.95 lb. JARLSBURG SWISS - $3.18 lb. HONEY - 79* lb. B ring y o u r ow n Jar. PEANUT BUTTER - 99* lb. B ring y o u r ow n Jar. TODD’S SALSA - $1.31 p t. LOW PRICED SANDW ICHES-$1.00 each a n d u p . Buying • Selling • Trading TEMPE Hours: 3 East Fifth Street 968-2657 10 to 6 Mon.-Sat. Closed Sundays G E N T LE S T R E N G T H C O -O P N A T U R A L FO O D S 40 E. Fifth St., Tempe 968-4831 O pen: 9-9 M o a -Sat. 10-6 S u a Page 19 Thunday, Ju n e g , 1983 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. classifieds F or Bertt/Lease Books. BUY • SELL * TRADE your books st Changing Hands. For quality cloth arid paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30%of our re-sale price in c n h or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Cal Steta*Fultarton'am am Tunw r attempta to cool o h aw ing an am m oon gam« at aw n c a a w m i II Regional Towmamant held at Packard Stadium last weekend. The Saturday afternoon gam* waa played with tempeiatw'es aoailng past 110 Segieea, and was MghHghted by a duet atom In the late In n in o s. - More about CLASSIFIEDS START HERE Omaha continued from pago 1« Bonds drove in four runs for the gam e and scored four timas in his 3-for-3 perform ance. Greg Steen also drove in : three runs. ASU’s second gam e was a rem atch of last year’s West Regional Championship gam e, when the No. 2 ranked Devils were knocked out of the tournam ent by the third-ranked Titans of Cal State-Fullerton. Henry pitched the entire gam e scattering five hits and not allowing a run. Serving double duty, Henry also knocked in a run in the fourth with a double, as the Devils defeated the Titans ft-0. Bonds hit his second home run of the tournam ent with a solo shot in the first. U rn McNaughton also homered for the Devils with a m an cm in the fourth. Steve Moses also drove in two runs for ASU. Kendall C arter recovered from his shaky sta rt against BYU to handle Fresno S tate in the championship game. Carter improved his record to ll-2 on the year with the 7-2 Sun Devil victory. Bonds hit his ninth homer of the year in the fifth inning. Bonds three hom ers and his six RBI’s earned him the Most Outstanding P layer aw ard for the tournam ent. Bert M artinez hit ids third collegiate career grand slam in the third inning. Jefferson relieved C arter in the eighth to finish the game. Named to the All-Tournament team for the Devils were pitchers Henry and Jefferson, catcher Don W akamatsu, third basem an M artinez, second basem an Greg Steen, and outfielders B rads and McDowell. The Devils offense poured out 45 hits and 34 runs only three games. ASU commited- four errors, all in the first game againstBYU. Wakamatsu and Stem were tremendous defensively. Wakamatsu continued to gun down prospective thieves by throwing out all four runners who attem pted to steal second b&sc. Steen hand]ed.jnaqy groimd balls in toe outfield and threw out the runners. Steen also ted toe Devils as they turned six double plays. A nnouncemcnts PAREN TS COM ING to visit and naad a nice place to stay? Try Bad and B reakfast 9800982. Browse through our three floors of. •New A Used Books •Art Prints A Posters •Calendars A Cards •Handbound Journals M -F 10-0 S A T 10-6 SUN 12-5 CHANGING HANDS BOOKSTORE S ervices FACULTY: WRITING syllabus or man­ ual this aummar? Let Burgess help you publish. C all Tom Thom son, Cam pus Editor. 9663864. ____________ ' CAM PUS R O O M M A TE SER VICE POUNDS AN D Inches lost from the very lin t day. Los* up to 35 pounds In four weeks without health risk. 14 yearn of research and clin ica l testing. Ptiyslclan approved. C a ll Kim 831-8790. •Reserve your room now for the summer or fell. •Beautifully furnished houses and townhouses in the Tampa area. Many have pools. Transportation •Move In today. •SPECIAL SUMMER RATES. DRIVE CA R S f if e to m ost points o f the United States, over 21. Schernii Driveway, 991-5633.________________ C all u s now ! 414 MM Avenue «06-0203 O ld Tow n T emps 8/4 897-7030 a* Typing For Sale F or Bcnf/Least STUDIOS, O N E and two bedroom , pool, walk to ASU , u tilities included. Cam pus Inn 9656110. : _____________ TH R EE BEDROOM townhouse near ASU. No pats 9610.254-4187,253-1210. CALIFORNIA C O O LER S pack 32.90, O ld Milwaukee 31.90, W ine Senate S 2J8, Capltan Tequila $3.99, Ok) Playboy m agazines .48, cold wines. Imported b e a n , Haagen Daz lea Cream . Rundle’s, University and M ill. 907-9079. _____________ _________ DON’T PAY rant, buy. 24 foot Air Stream trailer in low rent adult park. Pool, one m ile from ASU . Owner w ill carry w ith low down. 997-7471 ask for Iona______ iBOPSTicKs buffet Oriental Buffet featuring C anton ese & Traditional Chinese Food lu n o TH P 1 *3.35 a l you can cat Chopsticks Restaurant W E H AV E apartm ents and houses. ASU area ca ll Selective Roommate S e r v ic e , 978-1197. A p p lic a n ts scre en e d , re fe re n ce s checked . n a platration 32S.________ ________ _ 1324 5. Rural (across from Holiday Inn) B ien 11am -9pm | _________ EVIRYDAY Wanted RESPON SIBLE, NON-SM OKER, mala, fem ale to share East Phoenix apart­ m ents. $225 includes utilities, pool. 340-3123 mkt-momlngs.___________ 12 d ifferen t kind s o f Chinese fo o d to cho o se from I 9 6 8 -2 5 251 ALW AYS D EPEN D ABLE, typing edit­ ing, term papers, books, dissertations, resum es. Excellent skills. Shirley’s Typing Service 838-5096.____________ _ N EED TYPING done at 91.25 par page? C a ll Suaan at 8336373._____________ CH O O SE YOUR room ! Several rooms available In beautifully furnished houses at sum m er rates, beginning at 3110, No fee! 897-7030. __________ Special O rd ers & Take O u t A vail. ACCUR ATE, FAST, experienced ty p ist IBM Selecrlc 31.25 per page. C a ll Sharon 8336687 or Teresa 9629079. H e lp W a n te d JO B S ABROAD: Work or teach In a foreign country this sum m er or begin a career. Source booklet tells where. Send 33.96. 0 . Shelton, Box 34763, Charlotte, N.C. 28234.______________ 1 A C C E N T W ORD p ro cessin g and typing. Close to ASU, 94S-288S._______ FAST, ACCU R A TE typing, 31.2»page. C a ll Teresa at 962-0079 or Linda a t 9956775. ____________________ P oommote a l yon can cal reliable. Cyndl, 9653627.____________ EXOTIC FIREARM S business, Title 2 Firearm s (machineguns). Offering old­ est, largest, bast established Federally licensed m achlnegun business In U.S. over SIM M Inventory o f rata, modem and antique m achineguns. Exolualve and lucrative Investment, collection and business lo r unique Individual. Sharon Davidson, Sm ira, O liver and Associates, 802-2659182, 3443 N. Central «1800, Phoenix. A Z 86012. D IN N ER T *3.95 A-1 RESUM ES, oover lettera, research papers, theses. W ill edit grammar, punctuation, spelling. Fast, accurate, A SECRETARIAL service. Q uality typing, la st, accurata. IBM electronic. 20 years experience. Dana. 9416111. A L L PAPERS typed to your com pleta satisfaction. IBM Selectric. Near ASU. Reasonable. M rs. Oakley, 987-0802. PROFESSIONAL, QUALITY typingtheses, term papers, resum es, repeti­ tive letters. B A . In English, w ill edltAndta Lawrence, Tam pa, 967-6410. QUALITY TYPING, reasonable rates, near 43rd Avenue and Ball Rd. 9358367. ' ................ . " ~ ~ TYPING, R EASO N AB LE rates, Nor­ thwest Phoenix. 49th Avenue and Peoria Avenirs area. 9376636.________ W ORD PROCESSINO. Knowledge of A P A style. Theses ,, dissertations, letters, resum es, 31.00 doubts space page. 263-5778. ________________ W O llt C C l w m — ——— N EED RIDE Vlelnlty Southern- M ill. Arrive by 7:30 AM , laava between 11:001:00. Pay 3250 round trip, 9066328. ASU loves roast beef The ^ d e ts are only sdid brass. The laces are thick rawhide. But, most important, the sole is kx^-lasting, rugged Vibram.* AD in afi, it’s no wonder the Tnnberland boat shoe, fbr men and women, holds up on concrete sidewalks as well as it does on fiberglass decks. . Lean, Trim & Delicious. N o gristle. No surprises. No Sir! It’s Am erica's Roast Beef. Yes Sir! Our professional services include: Two more reasons why you &Itove Arby’s: ■ ARBY’S® MEAL SPECIAL , ANY SANDWICH, SMALL FRENCH FRIES, AN D M EDIUM SO FT DRINK FO R O N LY |a a a (NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER SPECIAL OFFER.) Summer Special I c2 5 > ^ " a RBY’S® MEAL SPECIAL • ANY SANDWICH. SMALL FRENCH FRIES, AND MEDIUM SOFT DRINK FOR ONLY |A A A 9£ . W i P CASUAL SPORTSWEAR (N OT VALID WITH ANY I JEWELRY America’s roast beef, Yes sir! S & DIAMOND CUTTING 3 E 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. Huntington Square ' ' 3121 S. M ill, T e m p e #968-5840 - • 3 R egistered Jew elers (A m erica n G em S o ciety) • G a n Identification •D iam ond A ppraisals •In su ran ce A ppraisals •E state Jew elry A ppraisals •C ustom D esigning o f Jew elry •Jew elry M aking o n Prem ises “ IN THE A R C H E S" 967-8917 M EM BER AMERICAN GEM SO C IETY orT^jgAi Map S M ftk tfë ^ T S LA Íp " ^a*W PooW í -TÍRST SOEteQPtE’fe T Ö E p o ö B GpT Zmr.117RIHKC®$A0(3PM ^PR IZ ,E 9’Î^Itû^*T-SiaK lT, TWwite-^ tsshlsif I A j i^ g r ^/ ûo kE m a ® ' .