Consulting firm to provide long-term parking schem e By Mike Ryoearson Staff w riter A Phoenix consulting firm has been hired a t a cost of $48,500 to conduct a three-month study a t ASU to form ulate long-term solutions to ASU parking/traffic problems, a departm ent of planning spokesman said. Paul Fiedler said BRW Inc., which already is two weeks into the study, has been asked to come up with a list of recommendations dealing with such areas as bicycle paths, em ergency vehicles, parking congestion and tram overcrowding. “Some sim ple solutions, such as a possible left-turn arrow in a particularly congested area, might be implemented right aw ay,” Fielder said. “But the m are complicated changes in­ volving large am ounts of money would be based on budgetary decisions by the adm inistration,” he said. One area th at the firm will be watching closely is the tram service. Largely a result of longer operating hours and enlarging die fleet from five to six, the tram service handles approx­ im ately 48,000 persons a week this sem ester, com pared to about 30,000 per­ sons a week last spring, according to Ed Hick cox, director of parking and transit. Because of the increased use, som e problem s have occurred, Hickcox said. “We’ve had a few com plaints about the loading and unloading of passengers,” he said. “Some of the people, in their eagerness to get a seat in the particularly congested areas, are creating safety hazards by pushing and shoving their way on board. “One possible solution to this m ight be a covered tram stop, where people m ust stand in lines separated by railings,” he said. contkiuad paga 9 S M I pinto by Bob I Rider* of the ASU tram system frequently find bench space at a premium during peak fise people per bench. Urne periods. The open-air trams era designed to W e d n e s d a y September 7,1983 Voi. 66 No. 10 Arizona State University m i " m i * * . K p re s s h ® Tempe, Arizona © Copyright, S tate Press, 1983 Probe finds no w rongdoing in charges of discrim ination By M.K. R einhart Staff w riter An investigatimi into charges issued by a form er University Media Systems employee of affirm ative action violations and stressrelated hospitalization of employees within UMS has uncovered no wrongdoing, several ASU officials say. Unable to substantiate any of the claim s made by form er UMS supervisor Linda Dix­ on in a letter issued last month, Ken Pollock, associate executive vice president for Infor­ mation Resources Management, said, “The case is closed” . On Aug. 15, Dixon sent a memo to P resi­ dent J . Russell Nelson, ASU adm inistrators and UMS staff alleging that the ad­ m inistrative staff within UMS had violated University policy and affirm ative .action guidelines and that five UMS employees were hospitalized w ith stress-related illnesses. The memo did not connect any individual with the accusations. Pollock said three UMS employees were hospitalized during that period, but only one could be construed as having a stressrelated conditimi. The memo also says, “There are those who a re presently documenting sound legal evidence and . . . will rem ain to confront a m anagem ent that continually ignores University policy and affirm ative action guidelines.” Officials said they were unable to.find any evidence of these violations or any pending legal action. Pollock said that upon receiving Dixon’s memo, im m ediate attem pts to contact her were unsuccessful. According to two of Dixon’s form er co-workers, she and her children moved to Montana in order to reunite with her husband. Repeated efforts by the State Press to contact Dixon were un­ successful. According to W arren Fry, director of University Media Systems, Dixon never vocalized any of the complaints outlined in the memo. He added that she was a valued and trusted employee. In response to the memo, Fry said he assem bled 17 directors, m anagers and supervisors from different UMS areas and went over the memo “point by point,” but none of the employees were aw are of any problem. In her memo, Dixon also said, “my predecessor resigned for sim ilar reasons.’’ Her predecessor, Donita Ramos, resigned in December and according to her letter of resignation, her reasons were to attend school full time. When contacted, however, Ramos said she made her decision to resign based on school and “other reasons.” She declined to elaborate on those reasons. Ramos said she had seen Dixon’s letter and would “not disclaim what she said.” “I’m sure, knowing the kind of person that (Dixon) was, she had reasons for saying what she said,” Ramos said. Ramos said she knew nothing about the specific issues in Dixon’s memo so could not comment on them. According to Pollock, a report on the inci­ dent was forthcoming, but a spokesperson for the executive vice president’s office said there would be no w ritten m aterial on the m atter and that dispersm ent of such m aterial would be against University policy. Administrators assess Nelson’s term By Lisa Phillips Staff w riter Two years ago, ASU officials w ere only beginning fo realize the im pact growth was having on the University. At that tim e, when J . Russell Nelson assum ed the presi­ dency of ASU, he was faced with a rapidly increasing enroll­ m ent, a commitment by the Arizona Board of Regents to research and a sluggish economy. Nelson, who cam e to ASU on Ju ly 1,1981, from the Univer­ sity of Colorado a t Boulder, said his priority over the past two years has been to further the Arizona Board of Regents’ Mis­ sion and Scope Statem ent, which charges ASU with the responsibility of becoming com petitive with the nation’s best public universities prim arily through research. “My goal is for adm inistrative action to bring these goals about,” Nelson said. “In a university, I would view the selec­ tion of people to work towards these goals to be th e m ost im­ portant thing we do. ’’ Paige Mulhollan, executive vice president, said he believes Nelson takes his responsibility to the Mission and Scope Statem ent very seriously. He added that Nelson cam e to ASU, in p art, because he ap­ proved of the research emphasis. The board’s research goals have led to a large expansion of the engineering and business colleges. The University’s total research funding from all sources in 1980-1981 am ounted to m ore than $12.1 million. R esearch figures for 1981-1982 to­ taled more than $13.8 million. The increases cam e in spite of large budget cuts for both years. “I worry a lot about (eigineering and business) growth,” Nelson said. “Certain fields wax and wane in their popularity with students, and these are currently very popular areas. “You have to worry when student interest increases faster than the resources necessary to accom m odate that interest,” he said. He ariitpd that it may not be in the best interest of the University to allow such rapid growth because of the strain it puts on the colleges. “While I am confident that the dem and for engineering graduates will continue to increase, I’m much less confident that demand for business school graduates w ill increase,” Nelson said. “President Nelson cam e a t a tim e when the Arizona economy had turned flat,” he said. “We’re still trying to build a campus to accommodate the num ber of students we already have.” Nelson agreed that ASU has a “severe shortage of A prim ary objective of building expansion under Nelson has been to emphasize a “m ultiple use possibility” for all resources, both financial and physical” and would like to see new facilities, which would allow their continued use even if increases in space for the College of A rchitecture and the Col­ lege of Fine Arts. He also said study space is not available in they are no longer needed for their original purposes. Faculty Senate President John Evans said while it is in­ adequate quantity. evitable that technology and business get m ore attention Nelson considers' a shortage of financial resources to be than m ore traditional fields of study, Nelson m ust keep a pro­ one of the m ajor challenges of his adm inistration and in­ per perspective on ASU’s growth. dicated that he will be looking m ore to the private sector for “While other colleges are not neglected now, the opportu­ funding. nity for neglect is there,” Evans said. He also said it is essen­ “As an institution, we need m ore private money,” Nelson tial to m aintain a broad base of knowledge among students said. “An opportunity that we have is to broaden public enrolled in technological fields. aw areness and support.” “I’m absolutely convinced th at one of the causes of social Victor Zafra, vice president for business affairs, is problems is the disassociation of technology and somewhat more optim istic about future resources for ASU. hum anities,” Evans said. He added that the president of any “ I’m persuaded that in tim e, the University’s needs will be recognized and m et,” Zafra said. He added that the Univer­ sity should be careful not to “go overboard” in its efforts to improve academ ic quality and research facilities for technological fields at the expense of other curricula. Nelson has been faced with two University-wide budget cuts imposed by the state since he became president. The 1981-1982 budget was cut by $ percent, and the 1982-1983 — _ — :— . « / --------------- -------------------------------------- budget was cut by 10 percent. Nelson described the cuts as “very unpleasant for the university should spend tim e each day talking to people in­ University.” | * ." volved in the hum anities. :t “One liability of any busy person is to have to get through ' Among the effects of last year’s cut was the delayed open­ many meetings about practical m atters each day, and they ing of the Daniel E. Noble Science Library, which was don’t have tim e to talk to people about hum anities,” Evans scheduled to open in July 1982, but opened last month. “ It was clear we didn’t have enough money to do said. Mulhollan claim s th at while considerable financial em ­ everything we wanted to do th at year,” Nelson said. “We phasis seems to be placed on engineering and business, none decided to continue acquiring m aterials for the library, ' of ASU’s colleges has received a “fair shake” in the past two rath er than to open it with inadequate m aterials.” Troy Crowder, special assistant to the president, said the years. “ASU suffers from a severe lack of funds th at affects all president is “well equipped to analyze the financial implica­ colleges,” Mulhollan said. “The problem with ASU is th at it tions” of situations because of his background as a professor has never been given adequate resources to achieve its m is­ of finance. continued page 12 sion. Administrative Review ‘ASU suffers from a severe lack of funds... it has never been given adequate resources.’ State Pres« •7.1963 Wedn state press nation/world 41-foot-diameter concrete tube a t 100 mph. Thd spillways are holes that were carved through sandstone 150 feet away from the dam on each side. On June 2, the Bureau of Reclamation became aw are that something was not right a t the dam. At first, officials heard the “distant rumble that d id n t sound quite right,” said Tom Gamble, who is in charge of the dam, then debris was seen shooting out of the spillway. Soviets pdmit shooting jetliner (AP) - The Soviet Union, just minutes after the United States brought “definitive proof” before the world commu­ nity, adm itted officially Tuesday for the first tim e that it shot down a South Korean jetliner. But the Soviets said their interceptor pilots were convinced the civilian Boeing 747 was a U.S. spy plane, and the “entire responsibility” for the tragedy rests with the United States. Russian vodka boycotted The Krem lin continued to claim the Korean jet m ay, in­ deed, have been flying an intelligence mission for the United . CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — The New Hampshire Liquor States, and issued a blunt warning: The Soviet a ir force acted Commission Tuesday voted unanimously to stop selling Rus­ in accordance with Soviet law and would do the sam e again. sian vodka a t state liquor stores. It was “a lengthy, gross and obviously pre-planned viola­ The 3-0 vote to stop selling Stolichnaya vodka was to pro­ tion of the airspace of the Soviet Union,” Soviet Ambassador test the Soviet Union’s downing of an unarmed Korean Oleg A- Troyanovsky alleged at the U.N. Security Council. airliner last week. Commissioner Costas Tentas, who made the motion, called The Soviet admission cam e six days after Korean Air Lines Flight 007 was downed over the Sea of Japan after crossing the act barbaric and said the Soviets “have no love of peointo Soviet territory on a flight from New York to Seoul, P “I feel it’s the least I could do,” agreed Commissioner Lyle SdUth Korea. All 269 people aboard w ere killed. Hersom. . Hersom and commission Chairwoman Jean Wallin haa Workers repairing supported the sale of Russian liquor in state stores. They said Glen Canyon Dam they changed their minds after the Korean jet was shot down. PAGE (AP) — Approximately 100 workers are currently Death sentences upheld involved in the em ergency repair and modification of the Glen Canyon Dam spillways, which were damaged by heavy PHOENIX (AP) — The Arizona Supreme Court Tuesday snowmelt which filled Lake Powell. ..pht»iH the two death sentences ordered for Donald Eugene The work, which will cost an estim ated $10 million, is ex­ H a lting for robbing and m urdering two salesm en at a Tuc­ pected to be completed by mid-June of next year. motel. . Between June 2 and July 23, the dam V m assive eastern son The two salesm en were beaten, hogtied and then shot in tne spillway was being dam aged by w ater hurtling through the chesLand head a t close range during the January 1980 robbery, according to Pim a County Superior Court-trial records. The high court found four a j ^ à W ^ ^cuirtbtances: that the defendant had been previously convicted 6f an offense in Arizona punishable by à life sentence; th a t he had been con­ victed previously of a felony involving violence; that the defendant committed the two m urders fen- pecuniary gain; and, that the m urders w ere convicted in an especially heinous and depraved manner. UAW endorses Chrysler contract DETROIT (AP) — A United Auto W orkers panel Tuesday overwhelmingly endorsed a new two-year labor contract that would put Chrysler Corp. workers a big step closer to parity with their counterparts a t G eneral M otors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. The new accord, tentatively agreed to by union negotiators and the autom aker on Labor Day, would give Chrysler workers a $2 .42-an-hour raise Over the life of the contract, the UAW said. That would put their base hourly pay, exclusively of cost-of-living payments, a t about $12.42 when the pact ex­ pires in October 1985. CORRECTION POLICY It is the policy of the State Press to acknowledge and cor­ rect errors when they occur. If you see an error, call our newsroom at 965-2292 to let us know. All corrections will ap­ pear on this page. Family Planning Institute D O N 'T FALL BEHIND Prepare Now For: Classes Starting: LSAT DAT GMAT Oct. 1 Dec. 3 Oct. 8 Oct. 22 ’Call now and prepare Aug. 30 Aug. 29 ’ Oct. 5 Oct. 31 l-H. Educational Center GRE W o m e n ’s H e a lth C e n te r FREE Pregnancy Testing MCAT Im m ediate Results Premarital Bloodtesting $15.00 Same Day Results now Evening Hours Available prepare Classes now available for DAT, PSYCH, GRE-BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT. 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The whole system plus $2,230 worth of software for onlv'72.| 19D RulL $2,195H SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER We'll make buying an Access irresistible by adding $600 worth of extras to the bargain, FREE! • Personal Pearl — F R E E a powerful application generator and relational’ | data-base manager • Money Mistro — F R E E a home accounting, budgeting and tax planning system. • Mÿ Chess — F R E E by Software Toolworks • Nylon Padded Carrying Care — F R E E • Subscription to the Source-F R E E America's Information Utility that provides access to a variety of data services. Youtt never gel this much for your money again! Don't m iss it! 8 8 Our Four-Day 9 6 0 0 Giveaway. Thursday through Sunday, Septem ber 8 - 1 1 only! At the Sunbelt Computer Expo, Phoenix Civic Center or the Programs Unlimited Stove. Ê Ê Ê Installed Prices • Monroe Lifetime Shocks Monroe-Matics Reg. $00 P a ir ................................ 1 3 6 * H . Radial-Matics flap. 180 P a ir .. ......... ....................... MLE » ■ FH. Gas-Matics Reg. $119.88 ........................................... Magnum-60's Reg. $95 P a ir ........................................ McPherson Struts Reg. $139 Pair ...........................« L e 185-88 PH. McPherson Super Struts Reg. $1B5............................ SALE IMS PH. Offers good for most cars & light trucks. Offer includes labor. We Employ NAISE Certified Mechanics. # 1 » PROGRAMS m m UNLIMITED M O N FRI SAT 10 6 10-5 COMPUTER CENTERS CENTRAL & CAM ELBACH (4916 N. CEN TR A L AVE.) 264-1414 Stete Press W e d n e s d a y , S e p te m b e r KAET to televise classes for state schoolchildren By Bob Beamesderfer Staff w riter Arizona schoolchildren will be watching m ore television tips year, but it won’t be afterschool specials. KAET-TV, Channel 8, and KUAT-TV, Channel 6, will be providing televised courses throughout the school year for about 15,000 children in 14 school districts in Arizona, said the coordinator for the Arizona School Television Project. Addie Kinsinger said the project, which goes on the air Sept. 19, will provide 25 schools in the participating districts with 63 courses that are received from a satellite network that provides educational pro­ gram s to the western United States. Courses will range from a rt to social studies, including numerous m ath, science and com puter literacy courses, she said. Courses vary in length from 10 to 32 weeks. “We have a spectrum of courses for students from kindergarten up through 12th grade,” she said. The project is the first of its type in the state, she said, adding that Arizona is one of the last western states to get involved in educational television. “This is the first unified and coordinated effort,” Kinsinger said. “It’s im portant th at instructional courses are viewed as an in­ tegral part of classroom curriculum .” Lee C. Frischknecht, m anager of telecom­ munications and educational services, said educators will also be evaluating other technologies including related computer, teletext and video disc media. He said although cash funding for the pro­ ject was only about $55,000, donations of time and other resources amount to approx­ im ately $338,000. The school districts have provided an estim ated $95,000 worth of staff tim e and resources beyond the $1 per student/$l,000 maximum paid to participate in the pro­ gram , he said. In return, each school in the program receives copies of the teacher guides for all the courses, may videotape the broadcasts and will receive in-service training for teach ers and evaluation validation m aterials, Kinsinger said. Both stations h tW ilM W d an estim ated $250,000 in transm ission costs for the projetft, which will a ir in two segm ents for three hours each weekday of the school .year, Frischknecht said. The course program s were obtained for a fee of $10,000 th at was distributed among about 15 producer/directors, he said. The norm al cost of the m ore than 60 program s would have been close to $100,000, he added. “They’re betting on the coming growth,” he said. “If this grows into a full-blown pro­ gram they would be able to get their full fees.” He added that everyone who donated to the project understands the risk involved. Coordinators of the project said that any school in the state th at receives broadcasts of either of the stations involved is invited to have its staff view the program s. Such in­ volvement will help decide program m ing for the final phase of the project. Continuation of the educational program ­ ming depends upon involvement of m ore school districts, Frischknekt said. The pro­ ject needs 150,000 to 175,000 students next year for it to become an ongoing program . “It really depends on whether there’s a critical m ass of districts” getting involved in the project for the 1984-85 school year, he said. A crucial p art of its continuation is the for­ m ation of an intergovernm ental body that would perm anently adm inister.,the project, select program s and set up curriculum , he said. Frischknekt said he hopes that body will sta rt forming this fall. He added that if a U.S. D epartm ent of Education grant is received, the perm anent adm inistrative body would form faster because it would lighten the funding burden of the school districts and help ensure higher d istrict in­ volvement. “As quickly a s we can, we would begin to involve it as m uch as possible,” he said. The grant would provide $277,000 in funds, which would m atch the $338,000 in state and local funds and services, he said. “It has taken us three years to get to this point, ” he said, ‘‘and it will take another two years to see if it will fly.” Page 3 7,1983 A T T E N T IO N M U A B P o p -U p s C o m m itte e : . _ . t ' .J L | isn gyin g auditions to Tina the finest ; entertainment for the Rendezvous Lopnge. Sign up in the A c tiv ity Center SEPT. 7-12 • 1 to 4 p.m. | A uditions in the Lounge, Sept. 13-14 ; For information call 9 6 5 - 6 8 2 2 O B O O a B a B B O Q Q Q O B D O B B B B B B H B H B O O O a O B B O B B I HEYASU S T U D E N T S Jim's Auto Supply . maverage discount on all parts U / and accessories, except tools 0 and special priced items. H O U R S ; 8 - 7 ,D a ily ( M o n .- F r i) ; 8 - 5 „ $ a t. __ Hayden & u n iversity _ ‘ 1828 E. UNIVERSITY Next to Minder Binder's 968-5888 ÇUB STOP " S U B S P E C IA L IS T S O F A R I Z O N A ” Catering Sponsors 6 Foot Subs o f KMCR jazz Party Trays 91.5 FM Whole Wheat BROKEN SPEAKER? National Public Radio Sub Buns S T O P IN A N D T R Y . . . S H A M P O OA N DC U TR e g$12 S H A M P O O ,C U TA N DB LO WD R Y •Loudspeaker rebuilding S repair (konc/anto/pro) •JBL/EV/GAUSS/ALTEC warranty station •Saw speakers «Cestom crossovers •Free estimate •Custom designs Reg. $14 A L L I M P O R T S 80«: II00 Heineken Draft 80o-oö O ur p r o fe ssio n a l se rv ic es in clu d e: •3 Registered Jewelers (A m e ric a n G em S o c ie ty ) •Gem Identification •Diamond Appraisals •Insurance Appraisals •Estate Jewelry Appraisals •Custom Designing of Jewelry •Jewelry Making on Premises C- )#■ ¿£»1 pw JE W E L R Y Eg — • & DIAM OND CCITTING S 130 E. 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B era ln g sp e c ia liz e in 3r" EACH t i eITEMr75« f NEW CÀIÌPET TOO/ U U J u !wf11 Today is National Nothing , DINE IN OR TAKE OUT NEW Y O R K S TY LE Ä I Wednesday, September 7,1983 State Press Thanks,Students.-, , for the successful WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL campaign Lowenbrau salutes MUAB Union Cinema Film Series Throughout the year Miller will be sponsoring: * • IN T R A M U R A L S : R a cq u e tb a ll Sw im m ing/bivihg A rm W re stlin g P o w e rliftin g T ra c k /F ie ld W restlin g B o w lin g -J 9 Q 3 FA LL FILM S C H D U LE v 6 WEEKS PORKY’S THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY TOOTSIE IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT FIRST BLOOD •H O M E C O M IN G FIRST BLOOD SOMEWHERE IN TIME FRANCES THE CHOSEN STAYING ALIVE RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK THE LORDS OF DISCIPLINE FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III CREEPSHOW •A SU FO O T B A LL T A I L G A T E P A R T IE S •S IG M A CH I D E R B Y D A YS •L IT T L E S IS T E R S S U P E R S T A R C O M P E T IT IO N •LA M D A CHI W ATER M ELO N B U ST • LO W EN BRAU SPO N SO R ED F IL M S • L IT E D O R M B O W L IN G L E A G U E •A S U C O N C E R T S E R IE S • S IG E P A L L F R A T E R N IT Y W IF F L E B A L L T O U R N E Y 8 -1 1 13-14 15-18 2 0 -2 1 22-25 27-28 29-30 October 1 -2 4-5 6-9 1 1 -1 2 13-16 18-19 20-23 25-26 27-30 LOWENBRAU Presents An Eerie Evening of Entertainment featuring "AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON” (No Charge) FASTIMES AT RIDGEMONT HIGH GHANDI THE TOY HIGH ROAD TO CHINA THE BLACK STALLION RETURNS OCTOPUSSY KISS ME GOODBYE • A S U M A R K E T IN G C L U B September 6-7 31 Halloween Night November 1 -2 3-6 8-9 10-13 15-16 17-20 22-23 - . A ll film s a re sb o w o in the Union Cinema (lower level of the Memorial Union). Showtiraes are: Tuesdays through Saturdays, 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Sundays 7 p.m. only. Ticket prices are $1.50 for the University community and $2 non-University affiliation. Third showing on Friday night for Porky’s Third showing on Friday and Saturday night for Tootsie Third showing on Friday for Staying Alive 6 p.m. & 10 p.m. Ghandi Thurso-Sat., 7 p.m. only Sun. • T H E L IT E C E L E B R I T I E S TALEN T CO NTEST Fo r in fo rm a tio n on how w e ca n help yo u r stud ent o rg a n iza tio n , c o n ta c t o u r C a m p u s R epresentatives Ben Anderson and Roseanne Kelton c/M High I h Ben Anderson 966-1555 i Bf 11 Roseanne Kelton 968-8686 S M cP m t WiA m i» . September 7.1983 ¿ f if ie t c t o * 967-6091 An ASU student'w as arrested for theft, then released on his own ' » « p i ™ « Saturday, a lte r allegedly attem pting to a bicycle from the Choila Apartm ents, according to Univernier PoBce. ... Police said Mark Allen Chambers was apprehended by citizens a t 12:15 p.m. He had been seen looking around the bike rack area. He was to leave the area with a bicycle when he was stopped, police said. The owner of the bicycle, Arthur Ramsey, was located and ydr«i to pr esen t identification that it was his bicycle, Police said. Chambers was arrested by Detective Donald Otto for theft and taken to the ASU Police Departm ent where he was booked and released. A car ratfiator valued a t $150 was reported stolen Monday from a vehicle parked in Lot 51. Police said the student, Corvair Welch, found th at the ratfiator from her vehicle, which was parked in the north lot of Palo Verde Main, had been taken about 11 a.m . Officer Jam es Klosterm an arrived on the scene and observed dam age to various w ires in the engine. He also found tools under the hood, which the victim said did not belong to her. Klosterman said he attem pted to obtain fingerprints from the vehicle for identification, but was unable to. The tools were impounded. Police said. Police also reported a bicycle, valued at $189 was stolen Monday from a bike rack a t Palo Verde Main. Police said the student, P at Harrington, reported that tas maroon bicycle was secured to a bike rack on the west side of A-wing with a cable and m aster key lock. He said the bicycle, cable and lock were missing a t about 10 & D a ily S p e c ia ls Breakfast / L u n ch / D inners Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun. 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Tempe Center University & Mill 3 Harrington told Police he had just purchased the bicycle from Tempe Bicycle Shop. (Next to Low Cost) In other activity, police report: •A traffic accident at 11 p m. Friday in which three males pushed a white Datsun into another vehicle in Lot 63, causing an estim ated $500 dam age to the vehicles. Pictures and fing e rp rin ts were taken but police have not reported suspects a t this time. •Tools valued at $2,935 were reported stolen from the Engineering Construction site on Thursday between 6 a.m. and2:30p.m . •A maroon and gold 5-speed bicycle, valued a t $192, was reported stolen from the west bike racks a t Manzanita F ri­ day, between 4 and 7 p.m. The bicycle had been locked with a cable. •Several items valued a t $130 total were reported stolen from a 1971 Honda in Lot 41 on Monday a t about9 a.m . — Sandy Sistek Minority grads awarded Dr. Betty Greathouse, assistant dean of the graduate col­ lege, haa announced th at ten m inority students have received graduate fellowships for the 1983-84 academ ic year. The aw ards were established for the purpose of increasing enroll­ m ent and graduation of m inority and women students. Recipients of the fellowships a re Francis Adeola, Shelly Bnngan, P atricia Brodie, Mi¡yarn Choca, Thomas Crewse, Teresa Dominquez, Benita H arrison, Christopher E. C andelaria , Elba Quintero and Luis Vargas. The fellowships are in agribusiness, business adm inistra­ tion, civil engineering, electrical engineering, geology, in­ dustrial eng in e ering, public adm inistration and social work. H o m e m a d e C o o k in g Applications out for posts on Minority Affairs Board A T G A M M A G E C EN T ER : ••• ASASU /GC Present The Minority Affairs Board of the Associated Students has board positions open. Three positions each are open to graduate or undergraduate students in the following areas: Asian/Pacific Islanders, Blacks, Hispanies and Native Americans. The MAB facilitates student programming and ser­ vices to the ethnic minority students of ASU. Applications for the positions are available in the ASASU office in MU Room 20B-J. For further informa­ tion, contact Ronald Pina, 965-1191. A L JA R R EA U Sunday, September 11*8 p.m. Hear jazz and blues at its best as sung by Al Jarreau in one performance. Tickets: $17.50 ASASU /GC Present GEORGE BENSON HtaÉc0 Tuesday, September 20 • 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. Jazz artist George Benson returns to the Gammage stage for an encore performance including pop music and rhythm and blues. Tickets: $16, $13.50 • •• C R IT IC ’S C H O IC E / S T U D E N T S E R IE S Gammage Center presents the 1983/84 Critic’s Choice/ Student Series beginning October 13. All program s begin at 8 p.m. at the Gammage Center. National Symphony Orchestra October 13,1983 *September 12, 1983 r— f free JSssSSW"“ j W K W C o p y C w r t ^ - ,, _ 1 I .a ii j w E . C m * ® -0 1 ' Tu cso n October 25,1983 'September 26,1983 "Amadeus” November 4,1983 'October 3, 1983 Christopher Parties«* {litar November 15,1983 'October 17, 1983 "Ewta" January 27,1984 'December 12,1983 "Pacific Overtures” February 16.1984 'January 23,1984 The Alvin Alley March 1,1984 'January 30,1984 B SSSK S? W * * ae* n w Intimate P.D.Q. Bach j____ ■ — «ASU-*-*« American Dance Theater •&- • \ The Newport Jazz Festival All-Stars March 29,1984 'February 27,1984 "Pump Bmys and Dinettes” April 5,1984 'March 5,1984 Dance Theatre ef Hariem April 19.1984 'March 19,1984 m am m m ■ j r | P R r I wM I R V * V There’s a new {dace in town where you can make just about anything you want printed look better for less. ■ S h m It’s a Kroy Copy Center. Come on in.We’ll help | you set your own bold, eye-catching headlines with Kroy® lettering machines. For your typing, we have i l B v state-of-the-art typewriters.We’0 show you how to put ■ things together at a layout station. _ zi And when you’re through, we’U get you all the high-quality copies you need. q 1 K | ft’s all very easy, hist, inexpensive, and fon. Next tim e, get your idea read and remembered. Do it The Kroy Way. KR O Y Copy Center LETTERING-FLYERS-RESUMES ■REPORTS ■CHARTS COPIES 'Student Pick-Up Dates Student Series events a rt available to fidMIme ASU stu­ dents. With tlw exception at “trite ," on* ticket may b* purchased tor.$1 fa Etudmit S *il ** events by p r— ntfng • phato I D. and activity card. A maximum ef lam $1 Debate may be purchased by praaandng la o phafo I D . carda and two acDtety carda. One guest ticket, at hdi price, may be purchaaad wMh a student ticket. Nate: Special Student Series tickets far "E«Ha* wM be asadab ls at ana-half the pubitshad rssenwd seat ttekst price. For further information on all Gammage Cen­ ter, University Activity Center, Kerr Cultural Center, and ASU Stevens House program­ ming, call the Gammage Box Office, 965-3434. •d^dk-*rA'*-r*.'A>-‘í-v- -• Page 9 Wednesday, September 7,1983 M o re a b o u t P a r k in g coottnuad from page 1 “The I iUmtag wU&eadfe row of petHe, and the fiiW/l T B r from each row would fie r board.” fflh i _ According toFM D ^rfthk l>lemcould be implemented along with a food service, which would m ake available coffee, donuts sandwiches and cold drinks to those waiting for the tram . The addition of sm other tram this year at a cost of $65,00C has helped alleviate some of the peak-hour congestion, accor­ ding to Hickcox, by decreasing the tram intervals from six to seven minutes last spring to five minutes this sem ester. Another problem area that requires attention is the tram service to the south residence hall areas, including sahuaro and ocotillo halls, Hickcox said. “We’ve been receiving com plaints from the south residence halls for a long tim e because of the lim ited service we provide there,” he said. There are currently two tram s running daily to the south halls. “If we ihcreased our service there, we would have to cut down on our service to Lot 99 and in the long run end up haul­ ing less passengers overall,” Hickox said. “It’s a farther walk from the farthest reaches of 59 to the center of campus than it is from Sahuaro to the center of campus, so until the consulting firm s recommendations come in, we’re going to have to continue operating with a lim ited southern service,” he said. Statt photo by Larry W a o M An incoming tram on Orange Circle attracts a crowd of students, running to look for open seats. Students wishing to receive rides to the parking lots during the between class peak periods often have to watch several trams pass by before finding seats. RUNDLE’S LIOUORS • MKT. 730 S. MILL Corner Mill & UniversityAve. CALIF. COOLERS 4-pt CAPITAN TEQUILA AZURA White Wine PLAYBOY Used Magazines $ 2 .9 9 $ 3 .9 9 $ 2 .9 9 $ .4 7 Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. 967-9079 DRIVE CARS FREE Cars Available Many Points U.S.A. We ara I.C .C . licensed and insured. M u si be 21 yaars or more. SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY 991-5533 m iiM W imi J0M UK CLUB! Stretch your clothes dollars at Arizona’s only wholesale clothes club! Introducing an exciting new way to shop for the ciothes you need and save more money than you ever dreamed possible! At The Apparel Cliib! > HERE’S HOW IT WORKS! A typical retail store (even a discount one!) has somepretty hefty mark-ups! But T h e Apparel C lu b covers its costs not with big mark-ups but by offering memberships for only $25.00! A nd that’s for the whole family for an entire year! You can easily save $25.00 in just one visit! ANY HAIR Curls & Waves $45 & up ANY HAIR Curl Retouch $30 ANY HAIR Relaxer Perm $20 ANY HAIR Press & Curl $15 ANY Style Cut $7 & up ANY HAIR Color $18 & up ANYHAIRINC. 225 W. University Suite 113, Tempe ('A mile west o f M ill) 829-8483 Hours: B-aJH.-9.pjn.. bit of money on purchases, too - but not as much as members save! Just com e in. Look at the price tags!\Ne think you’ll be so impressed that you’ll want to becom e a member! You simply fill out a membership application. Pay the $25.00 fee. And you can start saving right away. T h e Apparel Club. It’s the new way to buy the kind of clothes you want at prices you can finally afford! a WHAT DO I G ET WHEN I BECO M E A MEMBER? N ear wholesale prices on name­ brand, first-quality clothes including many designer lines. Y o u ’ll be astounded at the wide selection of fine men’s and wom en’s clothing. From dresswear to sportswear. If yo u ’re not com pletely satisfied with any purchase, you can return it within 14 days and your money will be refunded! HOW DO I BECO M E A MEMBER? N on­ members are always w elcom e at T h e Apparel Club. In fact, non-mem bers can save quite a V^APRAREL p | H R Northeast Corner of 7th St. and Camelback Road • 265-6595 Just south of Thom as on Scottsdale Road (adjacent to Tang’s )• 947-2557 Mon.-Fri. 10 to 6 • Sat. 10 to 5:30 • Sunday 12 to 4:30 Wednesday, r 7,1963 Marketing experience offered by ASU club By Sandy Statelf Staff writer P ractical m arketing experience, interaction with peers and professionals in m arketing, and career infor­ mation are a few of the benefits students in the ASU M arketing Club can obtain, according to group m ember Mimi Dubsky. “M arketing means meeting the needs and wants of the com m unity,” said Dubsky, in ternational m arketing senior. She said the students can become fam iliar with faculty, students and others in the field to get a general overall interaction in the community. ” Dubsky said the Marketing Club is the student chapter of the American M arketing Association (AMA). H ie AMA is a nonprofit educational organiza­ tion whose function is to serve the professional needs of m arketing practitioners, educators and students. She said the club’s meetings are very inform al. Dur­ ing the bi-monthly meetings, the student has the oppor­ tunity to m eet different business people and professors mi a first-hand basis. The meetings are scheduled for every other Friday from 3 to 7 p.m. in the Business Administration Building, Room 401. The first two hours are scheduled for a guest speaker, and the remaining two are for social tim e in which the students can talk to the speakers or professors one-on-one. The first meeting is scheduled for Sept. 9, with a representative from Coors speaking on the m arketing/m anagem ent concept. She said the remaining meetings will include a guest speaker from the American Hospital Supply speaking (M i health and m arketing, a guest speaker talking on personal motivation, and Richard Reinsberger from Southwestern Life Insurance Co., speaking on how to interview. “We try to schedule speakers in different fields,” Dubsky said. “The guest speakers are people who in­ terview students for future positions in their company. Through the club, the opportunity exists for the student to become fam iliar with the different speakers.” “It gives them a foot in the door,” she said. There are 400 members registered in the club. Dubsky said memberships last one year, with a $15 tuition fee for returning members and $30 tuition fee for new members. 3 7 T W i A W S « Y ¡ T IM P E ^ IF YÖ U SÜ RH T \ SAIL IT ' A ll Saints Newman Canter will cSfefirate Masstoday . at 4:45 p.m., followed by a Mexican dinner. Costs for the ! dinner are $2 in advance or $2.50 at the door. American Society for Personnel Administration will meet for orientation purposes today at 5 p.m. in the Frontier Room in Howard Johnson’s at Apache Boulevard and College Avenue. National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences will meet to plan for the coming year tonight at 6:30 in the second floor reading room of Stauffer Hall. University Toastmasters will meet tomorrow at 5:15 p.m. in MU Coconino Room to discuss “ speech organization.” History Club/Phi Beta Theta will be holding their an­ nual Student-Faculty Mixer tomorrow night at 6:30 at the Newman Center. All students are invited. Beer and wine will be served. Shotokan Karate of America-ASU Chapter meets Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. in Physical Education West Room 113. For more informa­ tion, call Bryce at 967-0622. THRASH IT or JUST W ANT TO WEAR IT, WE G O T IT! „ □ S U '" * ’' "w*: Bucci TNT-SURF-H-SPORT Surf and New- Wa ve Clothing START SCHOOL BACK IN STYLE The Professional Business Fraternity o f IOTA XI Chapter a t Arizona State university PIPELINE • OFFSHORE • LOCAL MOTION G&S • INSTINCT • CATCH IT • LANCE MR. Z0GS • GOTCHA • PARACHUTE PANTS RUSH - FALL '83 Vuarnet’s and B u c c i’s Dean's Patio — S ept. 6-9 M orey Boogie Boards ALPHA KAPPA PSI lota Xi is looking fo r applicants w ho are: versatile and creative, exhibit organizational skills & leadership qualities, and c o n d u ct them ­ selves in a professional manner. ♦HARDWORKING ♦RESPONSIBLE G o tc h a L o n g S lee ve S u rf S h irts 2 FOR ONLY $19 820-0594 ‘ DEDICATED ’ PROFESSIONAL In The Falrlanes Village 4427 S. Rural Rd. (past the freeway) E xperien ce is O ur Business Scot N A U T IL U S • A E R O B I C S W lia t a re y o u w a itin g fo r ? 933 East University Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-9487 If you could o w n p a rt o f a fo o d store, w hy w ould you shop at a store that you don’t own? G iving all your hard-earned money to other people doesn’t make m uch sense. W hy not give it back to yourself by shopping at G entle Strength Co-op, Inc. As a part ow ner y o u help direct the running o f the store and you benefit by helping decide what to do w ith y o u r “p ro fits .” G et involved w ith a com m unity organization that w orks for you. T r y u s o u t fo r a w eek. it FIT T O BE TRIED 99 SEM ESTER SPECIAL — $59 SEM ESTER AEROBICS — $39 V.I.P. MEMBERSHIP — $129 2 FOR 1/YEAR — $159 20% O F F ON A L L NEW M EM B ER SH IPS | 20%~oVFVourlFood Good for member prices for one week, which is 20% off non-member price. Give coupon to membership desk for one week temporary membership. Expires Sept. 15,1983. "| A L L NEW M E M B E R S R EC EIV E A C O M P LIM EN T A R Y “FIT T O B E TR IED ’’ T-SH IR T I I I I & A GENTLE STRENGTH C O -O P N a tu r a l F o o d s * 40 E. Fifth St., Tem pe 9 6 8 -4 8 3 1 Open: 9-9 Mon.-Sat. 10-6 Sun. c°1 A4 A & _ «S' Vo & v C V* A B E N E F IT C O N C E R T FO R TH E AMERIC A N H EAR T A S S OCIATION STEVIE NICKS & FRIENDS S U N D A Y , S E P T . 25, 5:00 P.M. CO M PTON TERRACE DRAWING SEPT. 20» NO PURCHASE NECESSARY* ONE ENTRY PER PERSON WINNER WILL BE CONTACTED BY PHONE WednodayjSrotonbcfT^JWS State Pres» Page 11 ■CO UPO N 1 Jo b s i 983iatd year for college grads rn ■■ . ^ . : • By the College Press Service When it comes to getting a job, Grambliiig Placem ent D irector L.B. Smith has one short piece of advice: “You don’t w ant to be a college graduate in 1963.” Victor Lindquist, placem ent chief a t Northwestern and director of the annual Endicott Report of how students around the country are faring in the job m arket, said 1963 has been “the worst employment m arket in my 25 years in the profession.” Although graduates of two-year colleges may be a little m ore successful this year in finding jobs than their counter­ parts a t four-year schools, counselors around the nation are seemingly unanimous in calling this die worst student job m arket within memory for all collegians. At some schools, as many as half the firm s that normally recruit on campus failed to show up to interview students this year. Nationwide, job offers to all spring grads fell by 17 per­ cent from 1962 levels. Even engineering and com puter science grads — who typically were fielding six or seven job offers just a year ago — have received 12 percent fewer offers than the Class of 1982. Officials say things may be getting worse in the short run. So far, job offers to four-year college grads are down an average of 34 percent since 1982. Oddly enough, liberal arts m ajors are the only four-year cam pus grads doing better this sum m er and fall. Thus far they have entertained 10 percent more offers than the Class of 1982. Starting salaries for hum anities m ajors rose 7.6 per­ cent, a College Placem ent Council (CPC) campus survey, released in August, found. Engineering m ajors continue to attract the highest starting salaries and the most number of job offers, but nowhere near the heights their predecessors achieved in the late seventies and early eighties. Businesses have made 42 percent fewer offers to them, the CPC reports. And while the $26,736 average starting salary for chem ical engineers ranked second only to petrpleum engineers’ $30,816, it was actually 1.2 percent lower than 1982’s average figure. According to Northwestern’s Endicott update, the number 50C OFF Choose from 12 Items CHunGs ' • i . 'r r' :' • ' ■ ^ ^ ' of college graduates hired has declined 41 percent in the past two years. Corporate recuiters, moreover, report their campus inter­ viewing is down 62 percent in the sam e period. » Gram bling’s Smith said about only 55 percent of his school’s spring graduating class has found jobs. At Oregon S tate University, “We’re wondering if all this talk of economic recovery isn’t ju st politics,” M arjorie McBride, associate placem ent director, said. “The doors sur^ aren’t swinging open here.” Oregon State’s picture: 36 percent fewer recruiters visiting campus, 18 percent fewer student interviews and “still the worst (job m arket) I’ve ever seen,” McBride said. “I don’t know of any campus or any m ajor that’s been im­ mune from (declines in the job m arket), ” Lindquist said. Community college grads seem tb be doing better. “We have 87 percent of our grads placed, and 12 percent went into other continuing education program s,” said Ann Pierce, St. Louis Community College-Florissant Valley’s placem ent director. “But it’s because we have had so many technical pro­ blem s,” she explained. “Overall, we had a more difficult tim e, but like a lot of other community colleges we’re finding that companies are looking for two-year graduates with specific technical training. ” V In fact, she added, “m any companies are choosing twoyear technical grads over applicants with bachelor’s degrees — even over engineers and computer science m ajors — because they don’t want to have to pay th em as much, and they can train them the ‘company way’ as opposed to a university’s program approach.” “When my colleagues in engineering placem ent start com­ plaining about their low placem ent rates,” Lindquist said, “I’m telling them ‘welcome to the world of liberal arts placem enf” ’ But better tim es may be ahead. Most job experts, along with corporate employers and per­ sonnel directors, expect 1984 to be a better year. “Hopefully, it’s going to look up the closer we get to the ' presidential elections,” Smith said. “Between now and next spring I ’m looking for a m arked upturn.” D O U BLE BURGER FU LL M EAL D EAL 9 1 - 9 9 Look w hat you g etl An a ll-b e e f burger. A * sm all order o f crispy g o ld en fries. Vbilr favorite sm all soft drink. And, to to p it off, a c o o l an d cream y 5 oz. DAIRY QUEEN® Soft Serve Sundoe. H ead for your p articip atin g DAIRY QUEEN® BRAZIER® store, to g e t the Burger Full M e al D e a l'“ — the best bargain b ra zie r ln,°*a WE TREAT YOU MONT CAM DO. Corn 1983 Good through 9-12-83. ONLY AT! 1389 E. APACHE (between Rural & McClintock) .C O U P O N . 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FOR ONLY • S p e c ia ltie s o ffe re d la th e fo llo w in g fie ld s : COMPLEMENTED BY Generalist (Evenings only) Estates, Trusts & Wills Litigation Corporations & Real Estate • ABA Approved • Internship • Employment Assistance For a free brochure about this career opportunity call (619) 293-4579 or mail the coupon below to: UnivereiLy of San Diegp 1Lawyer’s Assistant Program $1.95 $1 OFF PITCHERS ALL NIGHT LONG DON'T FORGET OUR PERSONAL PITCHER NIGHT IN THE BAR! Room 318, Serra Hall San Diego, CA 92110 ASU CO M E ON DO W N TO DONNY O’BRIEN’S TEMPE CLASSIEST CLUB & rin«-X"4°*iy984 □ Ph0ne-----— ---- — » □ S ? * 1 l< £= D °?y 7. 1984 í l 8^ E 2ÓnÍí l 8 4 222 □ Fall 1984— Evening <- V I I Summer 1984— Day _ Sept. 27—June 20. 1985 I__ I June 4—-Aug. 16, 1984 The University of San Diego doe» n o t, discriminate on the basis of race, sex, color, religion, age, national origin, ancestry, or handicap in it» policies end jjrogram s. S . Mill, T e m p e (Across from Flour Mill) 9 6 8 -0 5 2 7 State Pué» Wednesday. September 7,1963 IfcgeJHZ W in d o w T i n t in g M o re a b o u t Review. continued from $5 O FF A N Y COM PLETE A L T O A {fTO ACCESSORIES AVAILABLE $39.95 Stone Damaged Windshields Repaired! Custom G h ii 897-6025 5235 S. Kyrene *18 3 5 ° /« 0 OFF 1 Nelson's background has enabled him to con­ sistently take an active role in financial decisions, Mulhollan said. “President Nelson understands financial m at­ ters but does not dwell on them ,” he said. “I think people who have been in academ ic adm inistration for a while rise above their background.” Nelson said, “It’s pretty hard to escape your tozona,” Nelson said! “My’ concern r a l h a f T should be operated effectively and efficiently if wfe keep i t ” s Zafra said, “Reality is often m ore than numbers. The president m ust keep th a t in mind when making a decision on TontoKOha.” Another decision with strong financial im pact for the University was allowing the Arizona W ranglers to play in Sun Devil Stadium. Nelson is \ ‘Just because you have a monetary consideration doesn’t mean that it will be the deciding factor.’ — Nelson Jantzen T E M P É 1015 N. Scottsdale Rd. 966-9696 professional background, but ju st because you have a monetary consideration doesn't mean that it is going to be the deciding factor.” One of Nelson’s m ost difficult financial con­ siderations is the issue of whether to sell Camp Tontozona, because many different points of view will make the decision especially complex, Crowder said. “People have strong attachm ents to Camp Ton- In addition to ASU’s financiai in University officials have observed a toward an increasingly open a (fa policy. “ The most strikingl trend) is an inci ness in the University for input by a gi of groups,” Mulhollan said. Crowder said Nelson responds well I disagree with him. “It’s clearly my understanding thal Nelson seeks my opinion, that’s what Crowder said. “He doesn’t expect m agree with him .” Nelson said, “Openness is probah achieved at the level you would lil achieved, but it is a goal.” Betty Turner Asher, vice president affairs, said the Nelson admnist generally been responsive to all men University community, but added tha of non-traditional students have not bei “I don’t think we have done a good ding to the older student,” she said. sity is not a homogeneous group and wi tify and serve all types of students.” It is “reality” that you cannot cc with everyone, Mulhollan said. “Students who go to school on the m during the day have access to more tl traditional students,” Nelson said. H the proposed west-side campus to b e ; better serve non-traditional students. *U S SalísQAJest State unsure at this point if he m ade the right decision. “It was ha id to find, up to that point* any pro team that played in a college stadium ,” Nelson said. “This was a real precedent and only tim e will tell if we achieved what we thought we would achieve.” Evans, who indicated he has always been op­ posed to the W rangler decision, does not feel it has had any adverse effects on the University. Jack Kinsinger, vice president for at fairs, described the concept of a west-s as a “good faith” effort on the part would eventually provide full services l living in the west Valley. Among Nelson’s other concerns an lined in the June 1983 North Central As Colleges and Schools accreditation repi “I felt the general appraisals in the tion report, both on strengths and con right where they should be,” Nelson sai MICHELOB presents the 1983 IN T R A M U R A L G O LF T O U R N A M E N T ai «I sf fo r M e n and W om en WHO: WHEN: WHERE: th c< to th st Men & W omen full-time A S U students Pi Sunday, Sept. 18 — M en’s C la ss A & W om en’s Sunday, Sept. 25 — M en’s C la ss B At Cam elot G olf C o u rse 6210 E. M cKellips Road Sv Ra T (8 minutes east of Mesa) CO ST: Te Bo $6.50 per pe.rson includes greens fee and M ichelob novelty items AW ARDS Ac Ba D Ba Aw ards to team, individual, longest drive and closest tq the pin. Intramural C h am p io n T-shirtS to the fitst place teams and individual winners. Si Go Sw D Fla Ra Si Rai ENTRY DEADLINE By 4 p.m. Thursday, Septem ber 8 (Tomorrow!) Intramural Office P.E. West Lobby D si 9 6 5 -5 6 3 8 Cr< M An M Po M M Ì M Ì iM M Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q O Q O M QOOOOOOOOOQOOQOOOOOOOOOOQOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOonoooooooooooonoooooooV SUt« Press ó m jP I N é IN C e £ A ò £ ò M 8 0 -8 I +o WE DELIVER •>«80* ‘ 967-7926 j I B E E R • WÏNE i Large 16” Cheese Pizza kingl trend) is an increased openirsity for input by a great num ber »llan said. Velson responds well to those who n. ly understanding that when Russ f opinion, that’s what he w ants,” He doesn’t expect me to always ', vice president for academ ic afhe concept of a west-side campus i” effort «1 the part of ASU. It provide full services for students Valley. ’s other concerns are those out1983 North Central Association of Mis accreditation report. eral appraisals in the accreditaon strengths and concerns, were should be,” Nelson said. THE JOYNT “ WT^p. 1 W Ô 21-Ô 3 > ASU’s financial trends, many ials have observed a movement reasingly open adm inistrative ‘Openness is probably not ever level you would like it to be sa goal.” Vsher, vice president for student lie Nelson adm nistration has esponsive to all members of the iiunity, but added that the needs Istudents have not been m et we have done a good job responstudent,” she said. “The Univerigeneous group and we m ust identypes of students.” ’ that you cannot communicate lulhollansaid. go to school on the m ain campus ave access to more than do nonnts,” Nelson said. He considers st-side campus to be a vehicle to traditional students. Page 13 Wednesday, September 7,1983 J4.é MIIUOM MltUOK IN IN 'go-81 $3.99 I 0,1 wu m EXTRA TOPPINGS 50* EACH J IN -81 '8 0 -8 1 "Teaching People To Use Personal Computers" $29 Student Annual Membership Fee includes instruction and first two hours computer time free. Then, time-sharing by the hour. Apple, IBM, Tl, TRS-80, Xerox, Fortune. All with printers. Mon.-Fri. 10 to 9, Sat. 10 ta6 The concerns presented in the report included inadequacies in the adm inistration of m erit pay and unclear grievance procedures relative to af­ firm ative action. Nelson will be proposing a plan on how to distribute m erit pay this month. He said he hopes to get considerable faculty input on the plan. He considers himself to be “firm ly committed” to affirm ative action and expects that a review of the University grievance procedures will be published soon. “Affirmative action has its ups and downs,” Nelson said. “I think my own commitment to it has been a good influence on the University com­ m unity.” Nelson feels that the value of an ASU diploma .will rise as more emphasis is placed on excellence in research and teaching. He added that he is con­ stantly reassessing his priorities in order to best achieve mission goals. “Every day is a little correction on the way you look a t the world based on what you learned the day before,” he said. 035EABCH l i l MtllCN MetreCnter Ita Fiesta-Mesa Penise Yettey 2851 W. Peoria 1110W. Southern 4625 E. Cactus Rd. 943-2938 898-0610 953-1884 FUNDING 13.6 niltW N 3 & S 0 ON THE CORNER C OF 8ASELII BASELINE & MILL V ' 831-WOOD • Enjoy sports from our new satellite dish on three TVs 80-ÔI 81-62. 14* IMŒËA5E. •We videotape & show your softball games FR E E on our 7-foot screen • Happy Hour: 2 beers 80C 4-7 M-F •Thursday Ladies Night: 40C beer, 50C wine mm B U R G E R K I N G * œ li* IN TR A M U R A L H IGHLIGHTS A T T E N T IO N : C L U B S P O R T S INTRAMURAL SPORTS A S U undergraduate and graduate students are encouraged to participate in intramural sports regardless of skill level or previous sports experience. Intramurals emphasizes the enjoyment of sports participation and competition. Men and women may participate together in Corée Intramurals, dr separately in the Men’s or W om en’s programs. Faculty and staff - may also participate in. the Corée Program. Entry forms for all events are available in the Intramural Office, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays. The office is located in the P.E. West Building Lobby. Sign-ups are for both individual and team sports. Some team sports require attendance at a Managers Meeting to enter the sport. Individuals wanting to be placed on a team should check at our office for the time and location of the Individuals' Meetings. At these meetings, teams of interested individuals will be formed for volleyball, football, basketball and softball. $1ATE C O R EC INTRAMURAL SCHEDULE Activity Entries Taken Swimming Relays Sept. 12-22 Racquetball Tourney Sept. 26-Oct. 20 Team Superstars Oct. 17-27 Bowling Oct. 31-Nov. 10 Entries Taken Badminton Doubles Tourney Aug. 22-Sept. 8 Badminton Singles Tourney Aug. 22-Sept. 8 Golf Aug. 29-Sept. 8 Swimming & Diving Meet Sept. 12-22 Flag Football Sept. 19-29 Racquetball Singles Tourney Sept. 26-Oct. 6 Racquetball Doubles Tourney Sept. 26-Oct. 13 Cross Country Meet Oct. 31-Nov. 10 Arm Wrestling Meet Nov. 14-23 Powerlifting Meet Nov. 14-Dec. 1 ICE H OCKEY JUJITSU FENCING KAYAK LA CR O SSE WATER POLO RUGBY S O C C ER OUTING CLU B TA B LE TENNIS VO LLEYBALL WHEELCHAIR ATHLETIC CLU B Play Begins Oct. 7 & 8 F A C U L T Y -S T A F F VO LLEYBALL Oct. 28-30 Nov. 4,5,6 Nov. 19 P.E. East Gym Bring yo u r A S U Faculty o r Staff I.D.! Tuesday & Thursday , Noon,to 1 p.m. ( WOMEN'S INTRAMURAL SCHEDULE Activity Remember, Wednesday, September 14 is the deadline to turn in a club sport budget request form. Be sure to turn the form in for your club sport by 4 p.m. today at the Intramural Office, P.E. West Lobby! Play Begins P le a s e c u t th is c o u p o n o u t! Sept. 9 & 10 Sept. 10 & 11 Sept. 18 Oct. 7 & 8 Oct. 10 Oct. 14-16 Oct. 21-23 Nov. 14 Dec. 1 Dec. 5 MEN’S INTRAMURAL SCH ED U LE Activity Entries Taken Play Begins Badminton Golf Aug. 22-Sept. 8 Aug. 29-Sept. 8 Sept. 10 411 Class A: Sept. 18 Class B: Sept. 25 Swimming & Diving Flag Football Pool 3-Man Basketball Racquetball Sept. 12-22 Sept. 19-29 Sept. 19-29 Sept. 26-Oct. 6 Sept. 26-Oct. 6 Cross Country Wrestling Arm Wrestling Powerlifting 'Oct. 31-Nov. 10 Nov. 7-17 Nov. 14-23 Nov. 14-Dec. 1 Oct. 7 & 8 Oct. 10 Oct. 7-9 Oct. 17 Class A: Oct. 14-16 Class B: Oct. 21-23 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 & 22 Dec. 1 Dec. 5 df LIMIT 5 9 9C W H O PP ER With this ad only. m Offer expires Sept. 20,1983. Limit one coupon per customer. Good only at 740 E. Apache, Tempe HuSSn]** 11 #3* & Pase 14 Student decorates pool with paintings "ByAsha Nathan —— chitecture. - ■............... ..— ------ — dtaff w riter Not everybody has a Hippocampus erectus in their backyard, bi|t Lou Asselin-ha»-twa— because he put them there.,;'! ' it V>-w If The 22-year-old architecture m ajor from New Hampshire decided, at die suggestion of his roommate, to paint two seven-foot sea horses on the bottom of his swimming pool a t 1425 Hudson Drive in Tempe. He said he has always been interested in a rt but is m ore serious about ar- Lou Asselin, a sophomore architecture ma|or, tends to the sea horses he painted on the bottom of the pool at the house where he lives. . * ....... ■,£ “They, alm ost go together as far as design is concerned,” he said. “The ^theory of architecture can be thought of ss a rt.” Linda fiockert, a telecommunica­ tions m ajor a t ASU and one of Lou’s room m ates, explained hew it all hap­ pened. “We were sitting around the pool one day before school started this sem ester and we decided to clean and paint it. After we painted it,” she said, “ Lou climbed in around 10:30 that night and climbed o u t. . . the next morning. We had sea horses in our pool.” The project took alm ost four hours to complete. “I love it. It’s very original,” she add­ ed. Painted in shades of blue and gray and outlined in black, the creatures cover about one-third erf the pool. Asselin has done some woodcarving and architectural perspective drawing, he said. He also did freehand drawing at Santa Monica College in California, where he studied before he cam e to ASU this sem ester. Ten-year-old Randy Gonzalez, who lives next door to Asselin, said, “It’s nGsit«” n/Bkft Senftner, a room m ate who owns \^ > v A Staff photo* by D w M M U M l « the house and cam e up with the idea, said, “I thought it would lot* good. “It sure increases the value of the house,” the ASU sophomore added. Asselin said he hopes to go on to graduate school a t H arvard or Grinnell after he completes his undergraduate work a t ASU. CHANGI HANDS B O O K ST O R E NEW d? U SED BO O K S m Êt Back to School Specials . 414 M ilUTempe, $5 OFF M en's and Women’s Cuts $10 OFF A ll perms $5 OFF Colors, Cellophanes and Hennalucents A r ito n a 8 5 2 8 966*0201 Sport and Surf Clothing The two h i horsos painted by Lou Assslln sit calmly at tho bottom of tlw pool at tho homo of Mike Senftner. Call F or A p p o in tm e n t 414 S. Mill Ave. #101 (Next to Spaghetti Co.) 894-1191 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I * I I Equipment and accessories... and much morel t-shirts • shorts • shoes • w arm -ups '■* ■ * * ■ , Bring this ad in and save an additional 10% on o u r already low prices. __________ Scottsdale i roller skates • w eights • tennis McCormick Ranch I I Paseo Village Shopping Center Tempe 991-4554 Southern Palms Center 1628 E. Southern Corner Southern and M cClintock 831-5445 W O M E N S H E ALTH C E N TE R PERSONALIZED a n d CONFIDENTIAL CARE eFree Pregnancy Testing eFree A bortion Counseling epreM enstrual Syndrom e Program H ow Co§t Sterilization •Additional Gynecologic Services Available NEW DRUGS AVAILABLE FOR ep a in f ul Periods e B irth C ontrol evaginal infections TW O LOCATIONS PHOENIX TEMPE Community Medical Plaza 1840 W. Maryland, Suite C 246-9792 or 242-8649 3030 S. Rural Suite #7 894-5534 Please call for an appointment._____ HISPANIC B U S IN E S S S T U D E N T FALL RECEPTION The Hispanic Business Student Association, Qollege of Business Administration, will hold its fall reception on Wednesday. Septem ber 7 at 3:30 p.m. in the Sold Room of the Memorial Union. The purpose of the reception is to welcome new and continuing business students with an interest in educational opportunities and developing career options in business. The goals and activities for this fall along with the new officers and chairpeople will be introduced. Refreshm ents will be served. Please join us. For more information concerning the Hispanic Business Student Association, stop by our rush table during Rush W eek, Septem ber 6 through September 9, sponsored by the College of Business Administration, B A Council. THE WAREHOUSE DELI 9 3 3 E. U n iv e rsity T em pe p resen ts 9 6 6 -2 5 0 8 r THE VARMINTS playing W ed. (Sept. 7) 9-close MARTY MITCHELL BAND playing Thurs.-Sat. (Sept. 8-10) 9-close ; C a lifo rn ia C o o ler N ig h t (Thursday) 8-C1 WATCH! 5 0 $ Coolers M onday N ight NFL on a 6-ft screen (with b eer and food specials during gam e) Visit th e "S aw m ill C o rn e r K itch en " serv in g th e b e st H O A G IE in tow n. H ap p y H orn 4 -7 (M -F) 9 5 $ W ell D rinks, 4 0 $ D rafts & $ 2 .5 0 P itch ers S e r v in g th e c o ld e s t d r a ft o r b o ttle b e e r in to w n . Estab. 1975 "Good Food and Drink" S M tÜ Ë L Page 15 Wednesday, September 7,1983 tS B X B â l TERMINAL RENTALS F a m D e c w r ite r s a n d C R T s o u s Upper Case $34 Upper/Lower Case $40 Limited Supply Call 966-3105 with Greek S pecialties Computer Terminal Service Delivery Available ■Now O ffe rs - H appy H our f - ------------------------ CO U PO N -------------------------- | 4-9 p.m . Everyday ARIZONA S NEW EST CO N CEPT IN HAM BURGERS A L L D R IN K S 2 f o r 1 - (E x c e p t b o ttle d b e e r ) I ir \r rW ZIPS SQUARE BURGERS 50« O F F A N Y P I Z Z A A REPLICA OF THE FAMOUS WHITE CASTLE Gyro • Souvlaki Pastitso • Mousaka THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 1 SMALL ORDER OF FRIES WITH THE PURCHASE OF 3 ZIPPERS OR MORE. EXPIRES SEPT. 23.1983. BARGAIN^PRICE o f 5 fo r $1 3 1 0 5 S. MILL AVE., TEMPE • 967-6083 966-6565 IO6 Ë. U n iversity D r., T em p e J X ^ d r a F ir s t c h e c k in g THE accou n t a n d t h is c a r d ,y o u PAT can b an k In tro d u cin g w h en ev er y o u w a n t. Rene Fo sn ig h t Formerly of C C Cutters s3 00 O F F s t y l e CUT Reg. S12 M en • S14 W om en (Of fer g o o d with all stylists.) W ith T h is A d. (E xp ire s 10-1-83.) 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe North of University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square 968-5 946 “O P E N E V E N I N G S ” T U E S ., W E D . & T H U R S . TILL 9 PM WE S A Y YES! W E S A Y YES! W E S A Y YES! WE SAY YES! WE SAY YES BACK TO SCHOOL "SPECIALS'1 With a First Interstate checking account, you’ll never have to worry about getting to the bank during “bankers hours!’ We have an office right by the campus, and even when our human tellers aren’t working, our Day & Night Tellers® are. They let you get cash, make deposits, pay­ ments, and transfers any time at?ll. When you open a checking account at First Intestate, you auto­ matically receive a red First Interstate Bancard. With it, you can make cash withdrawals at more than 700 Day &. Night Tellers all over Arizona and the West. It also lets you cash checks at more than 170 First Interstate offices in Arizona, and nearly 950 in the 11 Western States and Hawaii. You may also wish to apply for a gold First Interstate Bancard. The gold card does every­ thing die red card does, plus, it guarantees your personal checks to more man 21,000 Arizona merchants. To get your First Interstate checking account, just fill out the form below and take it to our University office. All we need then is your ASU University Office 707 South College Ave. Ifcmpe, Arizona85281 OVER SO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 1978 P O N T IA C S U N B IR D coupe V-8, auto, air, red/w w in wheel covers 1974 C H E V Y N O V A 2-door, V-8, 1973 D O D G E C H A R G E R , 2-door hardtop, V-8, auto, cold air, mag wheels $1695 Bank Ff&NTERS^BANKOFAF&DNA. NA Member FD I. C. •FederalReserve System Equal O pportunity Employer I $1695 ------ 1 Please print 1 your name (die way you want it printed on your checks) 1 1974 F O R D PIN TO 2- B ' Fox has worked with athletes ih England as well as the United States and he feels there is a difference in the attitude toward competition. “To change meh’s expectations you need a complete change in attitude WwMds sports,” he said. “ Especially in America, sports are tdOtemportanj, They are p art of the educational system. Children grow up being taught to com­ pete.” We need a re-emphasis on sports altogether. It shouldn’t be on winning but on recreation and enjoym ent,” he said. “In B ritain sports are more for enjoym ent than for real heavy-going competition,” he said. “If men and women would realize that women can be good (athletes) they would be all right competing with each other,” he said. Women’s assumptions that they .cannot com pete carry over into other parts of their lives as well, Corbin said. “If a task is perceived to be m ale in orientation, if it is com­ petitive, women will tend not to get involved,” he said. According to Corbin, this prevents m any women from entering such occupations as doctors or lawyers. Teaching women to have confidence in them selves athletically is a slow process, however. “I call it the little engine that could;” he said. “We show them films and slides of someone who thinks they can’t run a mile and then show them doing it,” he said. “We would have them jog 100 yards and then say '‘See, you did it and you didn’t think you could,” ’ he said. “Then we would add a little more at a tim e until they are running a coupleof m iles.” “By giving people a little amount of success a t a tim e, you show them not only that they can do it, but th at it is OK for them to do it, ” he said. Interested in helping others? m A lp h a P h i O m e g a m '■ààm National Coed Service Fraternity SB Im b M E E T IN G & P IZ Z A P A R T Y TH U RSD A Y , SEPTEM B ER B M .U . 2 1 1 5 :3 0 -6 :3 0 A ttention: F oreign Car O w ners SAVE UP TO 70% ON RECYCLED FOREIGN AUTO PARTS MG, TRIUMPH, HONDA, DATSUN, TOYOTA, VW and-OTHERS A ll M odels Foreign 3024 S o . 40th Street, P h x. (near 40th a U n ive rsity) 243-3291 'Mention this ad & get an additional 5% off! GRAND OPENING SALE! G e t d o w n t o b u s in e s s fa s te n M t h t h e B A - 35* University and Forest 894-9588 Hours: M-F 7 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. and at our M esa store 1840 W. Southern 969-3326 Offer expires Sept. 17,1983. P p tte s a n — Ask about P r o t e i * PubJW ijog Service, If there’s one thing business students have always needed, this is it: an affordable, busi­ ness-oriented calculator. The Texas Instruments BA-35, the Student Business / Analyst. Its built-in business formulas let you, perform complicated finance, accountirijg and statistical functions - the ones that usually require a lot of time and a stack of reference books, like present and future value C 1983 Texas Instruments calculations, amortizations A powerful combination. and balloon payments. Think business. With The BA-35 means you the BA-35 Student spend less time calculating, Business Analyst. and more time learning. One keystroke takes the place Te x a s of many.. The calculator,is just part In s t r u m e n t s of the package. You also get Creating useful products a book that follows most and services for you. business courses: the Business Analyst Guidebook. Business professors helped us write it, to help you get the most out of calculator and classroom. Page 17 WWnesda^Septonber^jJWa mmm^tawuwmroe Probation should make ‘Run for Roses’ wild race ByKenSain Sports writer Last season, th ree team s from the Pac-10 finished in the nation’s top six after all the smoke had cleared from the bowl battles. This year, no less than five team s from the Pac-10 have been ranked in one of the pre-season top-20 polls. The prospect of another year in which the Pac-10 is the class of the collegiate crop ap­ pears bright. The State Press sports staff evaluated die 10 team s in the conference and ranked them according to their predicted order of finish. With both Southern Cal and Arizona on probation, a team could conceivably finish third in the conference and still go to the the games. The last three gam es are where the Cats could be challenged. Arizona will host two team s are in the m idst of rebuilding years. F irst they play Washington, then UCLA. The toughest game of the year seems to be the traditional Thanksgiving meeting against ASU. The Wildcats-Devils gam e will be played at Sun Devil Stadium Nov. 26. Tom Tunnicliffe is probably the best quarterback in the Pac-10. Vance Johnson and Chris Brewer add good depth at the run­ ning back spots. Brad Anderson returns as Tunnicliffe’s favorite receiver. On defense the Cats have one of the best linebackers in the nation in Ricky Hunley. Ivan Lesnik returns as one of the prem ier This year, no less than five teams from the Pac-10 have been ranked in one or another of the preseason top 20 polls. Rose Bowl, which is great news for the re­ maining Pac-10 team s. Here are the State Press predictions for the 1983 season: 1. SOUTHERN CAL — The only hole that needed im m ediate help for the Trojans was at coach. John Robinson retired, then became coach of the Los Angeles Rams. Ted Tollner now steps into the head coaching spot, and football a t Tailback U. could never be the sam e. Tollner was once the offensive coor­ dinator for pass-happy San Diego State, and has said th at junior Sean Salisbury will throw the ball a lot m ore than has been the USC tradition. Salisbury has the capability to complete 60 percent of his passes. USC will have the great tailbacks again, but no single name will dominate the headlines. Todd Spencer is the leading ground-gainer from last season, but he is one of seven to see tim e a t that position last year. Tony Slaton is a legitim ate allrAmerica candidate a t the center position, and the rest of the Trojan line will again m ake “student body right” (me of the m ost feared expres­ sions in collegiate football. Only four starters return on defense, but those starters could be the best in the nation. The outside linebacker spot is manned by Jack Del Rio and Keith Browner. Del Rio has a shot a t earning all-Am erican honors. 2. ARIZONA — As much as it may hurt for ASU fans to accept the news, the U of A pro­ bably has b etter talent on paper than any team in the conference. An easy schedule, coupled with much talent and experience could lead the W ildcats to a 10-1 year. The Cats face losing football program s for the first eight gam es of the year, and their only problem will be keeping awake during fm m G defensive linemen in the conference. Larry Smith has done a rem arkable job rebuilding the U of A program . If he was not forced to serve the penalty for another coach’s violations, the Cats would be legitim ate national title contenders. 3. ARIZONA STATE — It has taken a few years for the two Arizona schools to contend for the Rose Bowlsince they joined the Pac10 in 1978, but this year both schools should have good team s. With the above team s on probation, ASU will earn its first trip to the Rose Bowl Jan. 2. Well, even bridesm aids have fun a t a wed­ ding. The ASU offense should carry the Devils until the defense gets the experience it needs. 4. WASHINGTON — Head coach Don Jam es lost 15 starters off a team that was ranked No. 1 in the land for seven weeks. Facing one of the biggest rebuilding jobs in the conference, Jam es will have his hands full with trips to Louisiana State, UCLA, and Arizona, and a stern test a t home against USC. Jam es has experience returning in the of­ fensive backfield. Som etim e-starter Steve Pelluer will assum e the quarterback spot after being knocked out of the position at mid-year in 1982 by Tim Cowan. Jacque Robinson could be the finest run­ ning back in the conference. He was MVP in the Rose Bowl as a freshm an two years ago. He led the Pac-10 in rushing last year with 926 yards despite being injured early in the season. The biggest hole left by graduation could be the shoe of Chuck Nelson. Most of the records Nelson broke are the goals of ASU’s Luis Zendejas. Gary W ebster, who led continued pag« 20 Keith Browner, USC outside linebacker! conies from a long line of football-playing brothers. Browner will lead an experienced Trojan defensive unit. I ■ I Although he sustained a broken hand In pwseason practice, Vance Johnson of Arizona is still one of the most feared backs in the Pac-10. P apa ja y ’ s N e w Y o r k P iz z a STUDENT SPECIAL MtTS unuauTcp FAST . . . FREE. . . DELIVERY Shampoo & Cut Martial Aits Supply Co. 10% O F F High Quality Student Uniforms (Limited free delivery area) S e rv in g A S U & T E M P E f o r n e a r ly 13 y e a rs NEW YORK WITH THIS COUPON OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 p.m. Name Brand Protective Equipment $2 O F F a n y large j C j S u n D evil C o m b o j ¡Sicilian* Style Pizza! o | A n y large pizza with your I j with two or more toppings. | u (choice of up to 4 toppings. J O LYM PIC HAIRCUTTERS Regularly $20-$25 I Good on delivery, take-out or dine-in. • Expires 9-30-83. Q ftP L . . . . . . . . . . . . . 966-2679 8 9 4 -5 4 0 4 Expires 10-15-83. Hours: 10-6 Mon.-Sat “I One coupon per person. | Offer expires 9-7-83. HIM I *55355 N IGood on delivery, take-out or dine-in. J j I__ . . . . --------------J W e D e liv e r B ee r & Soft D rin ks 6 W. 7th St. Tempe I o ¡ONLY $5.95 (plus tax) I Expires 9-30-83. *Extra Thick Crust TEMPE LOCATION 831 S. Rural UCLA tailback Kevin Nelson, a senior, returns to lead the Bruin running game In 1983. Nelson was the leading UCLA rusher in the 1983 Rose Bowl. V id e o A rcade! $10 tokens for $1 Every Day j ll & u n i v . ) 966-1003 JU U I V v J w ^ U U ^ as^ a w y v / -rv w y 804 S. rAWSIHI ((Mmi«7/& univ.) • 966-4292 • 967-9689 | U V /T State Press K ic k off Sun Devils enter season carrying several que^ ip imparks By Jay Taytor Assistant sports editor With the exception of a couple of spots, the ASU football team has set its starting lineup for Saturday’s opener against Utah State. According to head coach D arryl Rogers, the only starting positions on offense that are not set are the wide receivers and the strong guard spot. There are five wide receivers who will probably see action Saturday: Doug Allen, Aaron Cox, Paul Day, Jam es Hood and Jerom e Weatherspoon. The receivers will be the messengers bringing in the plays from the bench, rather than the tailbacks, who alternated last year. At strong guard, Dan Madden and Brian Lopker are still battling for the starting spot. The spots on the offense that are set, ac­ cording to Rogers, are: Todd Hons a t quarterback; Tex Wright a t fullback Todd Hons (loft) and Darryl Clack should provldo a good deal of Artworks for ASU fans this season. Clack and Hons combined for over 3,000 yards In total offense last year. (providing he ish ealth y ); D arryl Clack it* tailback; Mike While and Jam es Keyten at tackles; M ark Shupe a t c e n t« ; David Fonoti a t quick guard, and Don Kern a t tight end. Clack has recovered from the injuries that hampered him earlier this fall, said Rogers. “D arryl is completely healthy now," he said. “The nagging injuries that he had earlier are healed now, and he is performing well.” The battle for the starting quarterback spot is over, with Hons the winner. When Rogers was asked, if he would go to Osiecki if Hons were not perform ing well, he expressed great confidence in Hons. “If I were to become uncomfortable with Todd, then I would go to Sandy,” said Rogers. “But I am very comfortable with Hons.” The defensive starting positions are m ore wide open. The spots that are set are: Mitch Callahan a t nose guard; Jim m y Williams and Greg BatUe a t intide linebackers; B rian Noble and Billy Robinson a t outside linebackers, and Mario Montgomery and Bruce Hill a t cornerbacks. The safety position is still op«1, according toRogers. “ We are'still trying to figure out who our best people are,” said Rogers. “Kevin Graven, N ate King, Dale Walton and David Fulcher are all very capable players, and will get some tim e Saturday.” In last Saturday’s scrim m age, Graven and Fulcher were the starters. Regardless of who the starters are, all the safeties are good athletes, and very hard hitters. ' At the defensive end spot, three men are still vying for the two starting spots. Ken Johnson, Fred Gaddis and Taleni Wright are all expected to play, with backup nose guard Dan Saleaumua also getting b o w lin g pagase Billy Robinson (31) and a boat of other Sun Davila wrap up a Stanford back Inlast year's ASU win over the Cardinal. Robinson Is expected to start at outside linebacker this year. some time, either a t nose guard or defensive aid . According to Rogers, the defensive linemen are com parable to last year’s unit a t the sam e tim e in their careers. “It is unfair to com pare the kids we have now to the group that was here last year,” said Rogers. “Out of the three positions, we sent four players to the pros (Jim Jeffcoat, Bryan Caldwell, Walt Bowy« and Mike Langston). “But these kids this year are about equal to last year’s group three years ago. I don’t recall anyone three years ago writing what a great defensive end Jim Jeffcoatw as.” continued peg* 21 ATHLETIC V Tha Class of the 80’s 2 1 5 E. 7 t h S t. - is* Tem po, A Z LADIES BUTTONDOWNS SHETLAND SWEATERS Sunday 5:15 p.m. Sunday 8 p.m. Monday 5:15 p.m. Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Wednesday 8 p.m. Thursday 5?p.m. Thursday 7:30 p.m. Sore Thumbs (co-ed 4’s) Starts 9/18 Sunday Strikers (coed 3’s) Starts 9/11 Sun Devil Singles (co-ed advanced) Starts9/12 Faculty/Staff-Alum ni (mixed 4’s) Starts 9/13 The Pinheads (co-ed 4’s) Starts 9/14 Threebaggers (co-ed 3’s) Starts 9/15 Dolls & Devils (co-ed 4’s) Starts 9/8 M ost le a g u e s — $3.50 a w eek The Memorial Union Rec. Center leagues are a good way to make new friends or get together with those yo u never have time to see. T H E M A JO R IT Y O F T H E S E L E A G U E S A R E F O R A L L S K ILL L E V E L S , FR O M B E G I N N E R S T O A D V A N C E D . All leagues are open to students, faculty, staff, alumni and their families. Sim ply pick the league you wish to bowl and return this sheet to the M.U. Recreation C ih te r, or 'phone SKIRTS T-SHIRTS PASTEL SWEATS ASU SWEATSHIRTS ARGYLE SWEATSHIRTS GREEK CLO TH IN G* 6.00 *8.00 * 10.00 *6.95 *6 .00 -*7.00 *21.95 * * 15.95 MINI SKIRTS ■CO U PO N I *2. I FO REST a s u s w e a t s h ir t ! 965-3642. B O W L 2 G A M E S FO R T H E P R IC E O F O N E. Any time there is open bowling. Bring this coupon to THE MU RECREATION CENTER. NOW UNTIL SEPTEMBER 18. OPEN: 10 a.m .-8 p.m. AA-F TO a.m .-6 p.m. Sat. 12 a.m .-5 p.m. Sun. CO LLEG E ASU «Ért«Prm Page 19 September 7,1963 jfS M It knows how to pinch a penny. An investm ent that w ill never haunt you. The HP-12C has built-in func­ tions which know the business: the business of dollars and cents. A unique logic system gives you reliable answers fast. It's dependable, powerful, and best of all, the HP-12C will never need a Christmas bonus. That's enough to put a smile on the face of the most demanding businessman. . So go ahead. Get ahead. Get there The HP-12C is a small invest­ ment that pays big dividends. Today, with the grades you'll get and the time you'll save. And later on, when you re Concerned with that all-important bottom line. Simply put, the HP-12C is the most powerful financial calcu­ lator made since m an learned the difference between profit and loss. C lu c k yo u r cam pus bookstore or a n y of th e fi Phoenix Computer Super Stores 4001 E Thomas Rd Nfc (602)957-6780 Gill Co, Inc 23 Park Central Mall (602) 264-0933 Personal computers and calculators for professionals on the move. f t £!Si HEW LETT PACKARD w in g dealers: Mesa Price Club 1720 W Broadway (602) 969-8022 J .K . with the HP-12C by Hewlett-Packard. For the authorized HP dealer or HP sales office nearest you, call TOLLFREE 800-547-3400 and ask for operator #11 M-F, 6 a.m.-6p.m Pacific Time. \ Price Club 4240 W Camelback (602)841-4542 Professional Bus. Equip, Inc 4502 N 16th St (602)248-0456 Western Business Machines 9840-A Metro Parkway East (602)242-1131 Prescott The Stockroom 113 West Goodwin (602) 445-7000 Tempe Wèstern Business Machines 1755 W University (602)968-1198 PG02331 M o re a b o u t P a c-1 Q YOU CAN LOSE 1 0 PO UNDS IN'JUST 2 WEEKS! 17-25L B S . IN JU S T 6 WEEKS! - compete with Cal for sleeper-of-the-year in junior college players last year in punting the Pac-10. and scoring van field goals and conversions, ^ y jQdiW crbakk Ricky Turner will return to M pfeHptentfve Pr°hlem s- WSU is perhaps will attem ptto fiH the vacancy ,. • - . .. The l^ e h m e sle ftb y g ra d ù a tio n àllbwedp, / g f c 4 ^ t e a $ in-the Pac that Will have its Jam es to have a superb recruiting year. J • «nM erbick run as often as he passes. Freshm an could, play an apportant, role B p O tllk Jjjm Walden is hoping Turner can Cougars back to their play of two thé Huskies’ season by file efta of the year, f j p take yearn ago, when they were elim inated from 5. UCLA — The Bruins’ biggest gap is at quarterback. Tom Ramsey has taken his passing attack to the USFL’s L.A. Express. The Beavers will not contend Tempe’s Rick Neuheisel earned the starting for the title. They may contend job against Georgia, but didn’t perform well. to win a game. UCLA’s schedule could force the Bruins to start the year with,an 0-4 record. They lost the Rose Bowl picture during the last week to Georgia cm national television 194, next of play. they face ASU, then travel to Nebraska and 8. STANFORD — Paul Wiggin has found a come home to face Brigham Young. replacem ent for John Elway. He is going to On offense the Bruins have Kevin Nelson let the Stanford band play with the rest of and. Danny Andrews returning a t the the team . tailback spot. Frank Cephous is expected to Seriously, the Cardinal will face a tough play well a t fullback. challenge to finish above the two Oregon Paul Berg mann set a single-season pass schools. Steve Cottrell will attem pt to make reception record for the Bruins with 41 Stanford fans forget about the departed catches. Duval Love is one of the better of­ Elway. fensive linemen in the conference. Cottrell is like Elway in one aspect — he is On defense Don Rogers is one of the few considered a fine pro baseball prospect. starters returning. Rogers, a free safety, 9. OREGON—The Ducks were expected to has received a lot of pre-season acclaim. finish among the conference elite two years 6. CALIFORNIA — Cal was one of the sur­ ago, but slipped to 2-9. This year coach Rich prise team s of file ’82 season. Coach Joe Brooks has decide^ to abandon the option Kapp led the Golden Bears to a 7-4 record, game and begin throwing the ball. Mike and already owning a 19-17 upset over Texas A&M a t College Station, the Bears could sur­ Jorgensen could be the best underpublicized quarterback in the conference. prise a few team s this year. 10. OREGON STATE—Joe Avezzano felt he Half of the starters from last year’s squad had turned the corner in his rebuilding of the return. Gale Gilbert will attem pt to improve OSU program during the pre-season, but a on his 1,796 yards through the air. 7. WASHINGTON STATE — The Cougars’ 50-6 drubbing a t the hands of Arizona in­ dicates that he needs m ore tim e. The high lig h t la st y ea r w as knocking Beavers will not contend for the title. They Washington out of the Rose Bowl in their season finale. This year the Cougars should may contend in one or two games. contkHMd from page 17 — - - _______ PROGpHI. F " S 5 7ÏÏV— vlleipiljp noaasa oitoWis ua« > •Nutritionally balsj^c«^gictj .g{n ^ebit’ïï yaw •Private dàily coupp«$qg.,7,ni j «dj bolsnimob me •Free nutritional b c h ^ q r •NostrenuoBs exercise ,lae3 an ihla •No shots *No drugs fN « contracts "The N atural Way to Lose W eigbtr University Medical Center TEM PE • 967-1371 YO U R BSN IS W O RTH A N O FFICER'S CO M M ISSIO N M THEA R M Y Your BSN m eans you’re a professional. In th e A rm y .it also m eans you’re an officer. \b u start as a full-fledged m em ber o f our m edical team . W rite: Arm y N urse O pportunities, P.O. Box 7713, B urbank, C A 91510. A R M Y NURSE CORPS. B E A LLY O U C A N B E . BICYCLE SALE F o r exam ple: Nishiki Century 10-Speeds l i s t P rice $160 Sale P ric e $139 95 Fully Assembled 25-year Warranty 30-day Free Check-up Sale Prices on Locks, Cables and Equipment Where you g e l the m ost for you r money. COLLEGE CYCLE 909 East Lem on - - - Junior Jacqiw Robinson, from Washington, led the Pac-10 in rushing last season as a sophomore. Robinson was the Most Valuable Player In the 1982 Rose Bowl. I FREE [BAGELS I Buy 1 doz. — get 3 FREE! OR $1 OFF .jfany lb. of meat I or smoked fish |Valid Monday-Friday I I %lb. plain cream cheese with any dozen I frozen Bagels. When Available 3-7 p.m. I Valid Monday-Friday j I L ^ ^ ^ s' Now is th e tim e t o s ta rt TAEKWONDO P i t t bagel factory and deli HOME OF THE GIANT BAGEL TEM PE-M ESA •Learn self defense! •Relax & concentrate better! (On all items up to $4.95), Valid Monday-Friday •Program s for men & women! You've th o u g h t o f learning a m artial a rt m any tim es. PH O E N IX PA R A D ISE VALLEY Buy one lunch — get the 2nd for %price. 971-8010 Closed M onday •G et in shape! Of equal value or less. Vi O FF LUNCH . (Fairtanes Shopping Center) •Have fun! BUY 1 dinner — get 1 FREEI 962-4100 . Open 7 days 10858 N. 32nd St. America’s Most Popular M artial A ft FREE D INNER 1660 W. Southern (E of Dobson) FREE - - -- 9 6 6 -0 8 4 2 (Off Rural Road across from Snow) Of equal value or less. (On all Hems up to $3.95) Valid Monday-Friday WHY WAIT LONGER? Take co n tro l o f yo u r life a n d .. ENROLL NOW FOR JUST $ at A Fitness C en ter 1620 W. U niversity a t Longmore Mesa «call 835-7689 Just 5 minutes from ASU were in the Yellow Pages limited offer. Restrictions apply. state Pres« Volleyball Team opens season with victory over New Mexico . By Tam Page 21 Wednesday, September 7,1983 Blodgett __ _ 3— BUBBLES OF JOY SUKKOT AT THE GRAND CANYON Balloon Bouquets Septem ber 2$-25 ---- -—:— „ „ ' Webb had 10 kills to lead the Devils and- Sports writer The 1983-84 ASIJ athletic season officially got under way F riday night, as the volleyball team dom inated the University of New Mexico 3-0 (16-14,15-6,1&4) a t Physical Education Building E ast. It was the season opener for both team s. The victory m arked a successful debut for Debbie Brown as the head coach of the Sun Devils. “I’m just really pleased,” Brown said. “I Stuck added nine. Stuck also had thrpe ser­ vice aces. / The Devils’ hitting percentage bettered the Lobos 35.7 percent to SOpeitent. One key to the Devils’ superior net play was senior setter Heather Forties. “ I think Heather set a good m atch,” Brown said. McKibben, Webb, Stuck and Forbes started for Brown along with sophomore hit- ‘The substitutes are very strong,’ Brown said. ‘They could at any time win a starting position. The bench was g rea t’ thought we were a little shaky and nervous the first gam e, but once they got their con­ fidence, they played well. “I can’t see anything negative about it. ” The Devils fra behind early in the first g a m e and found them selves needing to rally often in a seesaw battle. But the lady spikers overcam e a 12-point deficit behind sophomore middle blocker Sherri McKibbin’s service string to grab a 1- 0 lead in the m atch. The Devils jum ped out to a 10-2 lead in game two, and coasted home from that point, overwhelming the Lobos a t the net. “That will definitely be one of our strengths,” Brown said. “The girls arts quite tali and strong. They’re good hitters and good blockers.” Brown said she thought freshm an middle blocker Tammy Webb and senior outside hitter Lisa Stuck played well, and the statistics back th at contention. ter Valentina Vega and junior hitter Lisa Thomas. Brown was pleased with Thomas and Webb, the new faces on the Devils’ squad. “It was a little better than I expected,” Brown said. “You couldn’t tell they weren’t returners.” Brown said that although this line-up clicked against the Lobos, the starters aren’t necessarily set. “The substitutes are very strong. They could a t anytime win a starting position. “The bench was great. When the girls came in, they were ready.” ASU now prepares for a four game mid­ eastern road swing, starting Sept. 15 in Louisville. “Definitely the team s back there are strong,” Brown said. “We will have to play well to get the wins.” The next home game will be Sept. 29 against San Diego State. Reservations must be made by Tues., Sept. 20. for all occasions p a rty decor $40 includes meals and transportation. talking, foils & h o t air balloons Limited space. Call 893-3346 • 831-6840 m Hillel, 967-7563. ^ HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES Y o m K ip p e r S e rv ic e s K O L N ID R E Friday, September 16 7 p.m. v Saturday, September 17 10 a.m. in the Arizona Room Memorial Union in the Arizona Room B R E A K T H E FA S T D IN N E R f o llo w in g s e rv ic e s w h ic h c o n c lu d e at s u n s e t Saturday, September 17 Approximately 7:30 p.n“i. T'*bfUfl jd t Students $4 in'advance Non-students $7 by Sept. 14 $6 & $10 at the door M o re a b o u t A SU continued from page 19 Rogers said m any different players may see action against the Aggies. “I’m not sure how much we’ll see of anyone,” he said. “But I didn’t plan to see much of Todd Hons against Oregon last year, either. You ju st can never tell what is going to happen.” One spot on the team has never been in doubt. Luis Zendejas, the record-setting junior, returns to give the Sun Devils one of the strongest place-kicking gam es in the nation. By the end of this season Zendejas should hold every place-kicking record in the ASU books. Punter Jim Meyer has a strong leg and has been getting good hang time, according to Rogers. Rogers added that Meyer has bqen performing well in pressure situations. Rogers’ outlook for the upcoming season seems to be one of guarded optimism. “ I am not disappointed in the perfor­ mance or execution of anyone,” he said. “But then again, we haven’t done anything yet. “We’ll have to wait till the lights go on out there Saturday to find out just how good we rpallyare.” H A PPY NEW YEAR R O SH HASHANAH For security reasons and to assure adequate seating for the campus community, entrance to High Holiday Services will be by admission card only. T f Wednesday, Septem ber 7 tjfj 8 p.m. Arizona Room, MU Thursday, September 8 * 9:30 a.m. Arizona Room |g LEE’S TAILORING •Fashion Designing for Ladies •Custom Suits for Gentlemen •Alterations 894-1055 Broadway & McClintock Alpha Beta Shopping Center Friday, Septem ber 9 9:30 am A lum m Lounge SHABBAT MORNING SERVICE HILLEL-JEWISH STUDENT CENTER 1012 S. Mill • 967-7563 Sept. 10 at 10:30 a.m. Adm ission cords are. available a t HUlel BRING A M IL K IC D I S H © & JOIN US Fiesta Grande Hillel, 1012 S. Mill Ave. 967-7563 K y s Chicken Mexicans A thicken breast (let lopped wkh salsa, melted Cheddar cheese and green onion. Served on a bed of thin, crisp tortBa strips with guacamole and sour cream. 4.M Helps You Shake Those M inim um Wage Bluest, Call BARTENDING Us Today. jj® Taco Salad Crisp greens served in a cria> nstada shell Tapped wkh beel. grated Cheddar cheese, spicy guacamoie. sour cream, tomato wedges and Hack ones. M S t J^Chfm lchanga A crispy beef and bean bunko topped with a zesty sauce, moled Cheddar dieese and green onion. Served with guacamoie and sour aeo n . 4.45 COMPLETE BARTENDING •W in e tasting instruction COURSE •Learn 130 different drinks Your ticket to steady work, meeting people, and making money! Now at two convenient Js a tiapgi- •Cash register operation •S to ckin g & inventory o f liq u o r •C u stom er service training •Placem en t assistance TEMPE: PHOENIX: 1537 E. A p a c h e 2740 W. Peoria i. ify n r tf -A ft* » — j _ tir / o > .. (V 1717 S. R u ra l R d . T e m p e , A Z 85281 Just 2 miles S. of University n û T V iri IV L/IL/M V > envelopes 5 0 Bo« n ess 1 100 Plain l 4 I ■w W 22 oz. r, 1 TONY’S PIZZA IVORY SOAP 1 5 " -1 6 " 1.69 290. 2 .3 9 6 oz. Jar jftW \ L Ä 290 1 .6 9 INSTANT COFFEE -1 PORTFOLIOS 10 lb. Bag Country Market ■*■" 1 1 TWIN POCKET CHARCOAL BRIQUETS zy J ENVELOPES 2 FOR 50 ct. Business 100 ct. Standard 790 2 .2 9 790 * [CHARCOAL Pack of 100, 9-inch size plaates. Grade AA Large Eggs We lim it quantities n ' PAPER PLATES ALL LAWN •FURNITURE ea. P LU S: THESE S P E C IA L D E P A R T M E N T S PHOTO CENTER •Speedy film service •Quality photo-finishing •Cameras & accessories •Fresh film wenng* SNACK BAR FROZEN & DAIRY •Dinners •Desserts •Ic e Cream •Fresh Milk •HOT & COLO DRINKS «SANDWICHES •MICROWAVE OVEN TO USE PHARMACY gut WPBb PNAMMOnSOFfBI YOUMANYTME-MVW6AND M0NEY-SAVM6 SERVICES. •PHONE-AHEAD REFILL SERVICE •QUALITY PRESCRIPTIONS •EVERYDAY LOW PRICES P h a rm a cy H ou rs: M on-Sat. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m.-8 p.m. fl $1.00 O F F our already low photo-finishing costs. Good on C-110, C-126 or C-135 with presentation of this coupon. 24 H O U R Film Service Bring your film to our Photo Center. Check our photofinishing pickup-and-delivery schedule and see how fast you get your pictures. RAINBO NATURAL HEARTH BREAD FR EE SM A LL COKE 24 oz. with p u rc h a se of a n y sa n d w ich at o u r re g u lar p rice . 2% LOWFAT Soft-Serve Vanilla Ice Cream Cone Just MILK % Gal. 79$ 290 — 894-6747 VALUABLE COUPON $ 1 00 O FF AN Y NEW PRESCRIPTION ATSU PERx 'N o t tretfefcrebfe bw m n SU PER* S to re .. Lim it 1 pm c riptlon p . coupon. Coupon muot accom pany ordar. D octor w * bo co nttetad fo r r a n authorirétiòn. V oid whore reM ricM d by few. D ore not «PPh. to im urenaa o r govam nw nt preK riptno-poym ant plana. O ffer v o id . »1 « b p r dfecount*. ' m , Expires 9-15-83.