ta te
press
V o i. 66 N o . 19
Arizona State University
i Copyright, State Press, 1983
Unofficial enrollment reaches 40,000 mark
sity was ranked fourth in the nation last year with an enroll
By Deanne Hutchison
m ent of 42,094, and the University of Wisconsin at Madison
Staff w riter
Although figures are still unofficial, total enrollm ent far was ranked fifth with an enrollm ent of 41,691. ASU had an
the fall sem ester at ASU may exceed the 40,000 marie for the enrollm ent of 39,319 last fall.
According to P orter, the final figures probably will be
first tim e, according to President J. Russell Nelson.
Nelson announced at a meeting of the Faculty Senate Mon available in a week or two.
But according to Nelson, when the final calculations are
day that prelim inary figures show a total enrollm ent of
m ade, the ASU enrollm ent figure m ay “shake down to below
40,206.
However, the figure m ay not alter ASU’s rank as the sixth 40,000 when one particular group of students is removed in
largest single-campus public university in the nation when the future."
“When we report to the (Arizona) Board of Regents, they
compared to other universities’ enrollm ents last year.
According to John Porter, associate director of University will not include a particular group of students,” he said.
According to Joseph M att, assistant director of University
M anagement and Finacial Analysis, Michigan State Univer
M anagement and Finacial Analysis, portal students will be
discounted by the board.
P ortal students a n those taught in courses that are not
state funded. The courses are funded by the federal govern
ment, which also pays the costs of instruction, M att said.
“There are three numbers involved in enrollment figures,”
he said. “ One is tal enrollment, one is the official head
count enrollment a, id one is the full-time equivalent enroll
ment. The most im portant figure, in some respects, is the of
ficial head count enrollment. ”
Although Nelson’s number was the unofficial total enroll;
ment, he said the enrollment at ASU . . appears to have
moved u p a bit from last year.”
.J a c k p o t
Lucky Saga luncher wins free Hawaiian vacation
By Bob Beam esderfer
Staff w riter
The atm osphere was not unlike a
television gam e show or Candid Camera.
With Saga Food officials waiting until
the specified tim e, an unsuspecting
Customer, like the many patrons around
her, entered a cash register line a t the
A look of astonishment flashes across file face of Shannon Young after being told aha won an
sight-day trip to HawsH for being the Grand Marfcefptece’s S-mWkwfh customer. M sllrrs Inocencto
puts a M over the head of Young white Westey MMer, M U food service director, looks on.
Grand M arketplace.
Shannon Young stepped up to the
counter a t The Delicatessen, purchased a
40-cent can of grapefruit juice and won
an eight-day trip for one to HawaiHor be
ing the 5-millionth custom er served since
the Grand M arketplace opened nearly
three years ago.
Young, 22, of Columbia, Mo., had just
paid for her juice when Wesley Miller,
MU food service director, let loose with
m ultiple blasts from an aerosol boat
horn.
Amid a silence rare for the noontime
crowd, M iller announced the event to
onlookers and presented the apprehen
sive Young with a $750 gift certificate.
Melizza Inocencio, a senior business
m ajor who was dressed in traditional
Island garb, placed two live-flower lei
around her neck, transform ing (he ap
prehension to elatidn.
“ It feels pretty good,” Young said of
winning the week-long vacation. “I pro
bably won’t go alone. ”
Inocencio, a Saga employee who was
nervous about her hula-girl role, said two
girls who were hired to bestow the lei had
canceled out.
“I guess I’m the closest thing to
Hawaiian they can get,” said Inocencio,
who is of Filipino descent.
M iller said the winner was not precise
ly determ ined.
Saga’s 13 cash registers in the Grand
M arketplace are Connected to a central
managem ent console which provides dai
ly cash totals and custom er counts. Time
estim ates were used to determ ine the
winner, M iller said.
“There is no way to determ ine exactly
when the one hits,” M iller said. “One of
Food service employs almost
By Mike Ryaearson
Staff w riter
Seventeen years ago, Ron Tjaden took
a job as a table washier for Saga Food
Service in order to earn extra money
while going to school a t Rocky Mountain
College in Billings, M ont
Today he is the senior director of the
Saga Food branch a t ASU, which serves
an estim ated 1.7 million people a year a t
the MU Grand M arketplace and satellite
locations, twinging in an annual revenue
of IS million.
“When I took that job 17 years ago I
never thought that I would have stayed
(with Saga Foods) so long,” Tjaden said.
“I only took the job in the first place (as a
student) because I needed the money.
One thing led toanother and here I am ."
The University benefits two ways by
Saga’s presence a t ASU.
Saga pays *12 percent of its gross
revenue—approxim ately $360,000 a year
— to the University for use of campus
facilities. This money goes into the
general fund account, according to
Tjaden.
'
In addition, Saga employs 675 persons,
alm ost 500 of which are ASU students,
m aking Saga Foods the second singlelargest employer of ASU students in the
Valley, behind ASU itself.
the (food-service) area names was
drawn from a hat and we knew basically
what time it was going to happen.”
Saga officials predeterm ined the
seventh person in line a t The
Delicatessen a t 11:40 a m. would be the
winner, he added!
The Grand M arketplace opened Oct.
22,1980.
Young said she had never been to
Hawaii, but was a regular daily
custom er at the Grand M arketplace.
She told Ron Tjaden, Saga’s senior
food service director, she was aw are of
the promotion aiid used the coupons.
“It’s a pretty good promotional eve t, ”
the senior advertising m ajor said.
Aloha, Shannon
500 ASU students
To date, the University employs
a lm o s t 2,600 s tu d e n ts th ro u g h
w ork/study and other program s, accor
ding to Richard M urra, director of personel.
Of the 500 ASU students Tjaden has
working for him, he says four already
have expressed an interest in making a
career out of the Saga Food business.
“They haven’t m ade firm com
m itm ents yet, but I work real close with
them to m ake sure that when they
graduate they will have all the ex
perience they need in every aspect of the
business to gain a full-time position,”
Tjaden said.
Saga’s student employees work varied
hours based on their class schedules, and
are paid anywhere from $3.35 an hour to
$7.00 an hour, based on work level and ex
perience, Tjaden said.
“We closely monitor our students’
grades. If they (grades) sta rt falling, we
cut them back in hours to allow them
m ore study time.
“I have a good repore with students,”
Tjaden said. “ I have been working with
them for 17 years and enjoy being around
them. They’re a resourse base for us, so
we want to be a resourse base for them
also.”
Siale Piata
Thunctey, September 82,1983
nation X world
date
pees
GRANDOPENING
REO DRAGON
ALL YOU CAN EAT
State unemployment rate
drops for July
PHOENIX (A P)—With a surge in m anufacturing and con
struction, Arizona’s unemployment rate dropped from 9.7
percent in July to 9 J last month.
Arizona out-performed the national rate of 9.5 percent for
the first tim e since June, Departm ent of Economic Security
economist Dan Anderson report ed. Arizona’s jobless rate
registered its second half-point drop of the y ear with signifi
cant gains in Maricopa and Pim a counties.
Even the ru ral counties, said Anderson, experienced some
decline in unemployment.
Maricopa County’s ra te cam e down from 7.3 percent to 7
percent in August with Pim a County’s rate falling from 9 per
cent in July to 9.4 percent last month — the state’s largest
percentage drop.
Block rejects more
help for farmers
WASHINGTON (AP) — Agriculture Secretary John Block
today rejected calls from House Agriculture Committee
m em bers for expanded governmental financial assistance to
farm ers bit by what he acknowledged is the worst drought in
half a century.
“There a re many places where the drought is extrem ely
severe,” Block said, “but we have to appreciate die steps
already taken.”
mERLEnoRmnncosmetics
Ib P h K k S tC M M h » *
Learn How to Make Up
Your Face ... FREE
Call for your appointment
TODAY!
Citing the billions of dollars in federal assistance provided
throiMh a number of Agriculture Department programs,
Block said, “ tbere’s nothing to say that every conceivable
step that could be taken should be taken.
But, Anderson said the upswing in jobs is accompanied tor
w.ivr«rf signals. The figures are subject to distortion, he said,
because of the 10,000 telephone company and copper workers
on strike last month.
Demonstrators battle
police in Philippines
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — About 1,000 dem onstrate«
h ittH riot police near the presidential palace today, and of
ficials reported seven people killed and 100 injured. The pro
te ste « split off from 500,000 Filipinos who rallied against
President Ferdinand E. Marcos outside the main post office.
The violence began when youths chanting the name of op
position ifUMtor Benigno Aquino — assassinated exactly a
month ago— charged over a heavily guarded bridge leading
to Marcos’palace, burning two b u s« and a dredging crane:
CORRECTION POLICY
C H IN E S E B U F F E T
Lunch
$2.99
D in n er
$3.76
in clu d es
Soup & S alad
-------- - C O U P O N — --------
j
btm toctkry Offer
50« O F F
| o n th e purchaae of your
| n ext d in n er 4*9 p.m.
|
L im it o n e co u p o n p e r adult.
Scottsdale
Expires 9-30-83.
Mesa
1101 N. Scottsdale Rd.
Tri-City Mall
9 4 6 -2 5 5 7
1808 W. Main
8 3 5 -0 9 5 6
Mon.-Sat 11 a.m .-9 p.m. # Sun. 11 a.m.-8 p.m.
Beer & Wine e O rders To Go
Children 10 & Under 75« Per Year of Age
It is the policy of the State Press to acknowledge and cor
rect e rro n when they occur. If you see an error, call our
newsroom a t 965-2292 to let us know. All corrections will ap
pear on tins page.
“I f y o u d o n ’t d e s e r v e
a fr e e tr ip to E u r o p e ,
w h e id o e s? ”
W alk-ins W elcom e
Ear Piercing
Southern Palms Plaza
831-6655
1628*10 E. Southern, Tempe
A t t ila
R o b in
C in d y
x ru n A B aarsH K T N x r
d
The Timhtrland® boat shot1has a long-wearing, non-slip,
squeegee design, w hite Vihram® sole; silicone-impregnated
w aterproof leather uppers that stay soft and supple; solid
brass evelets that won't rust, and tough nvlon stitching. It’s
built to give vou maximum performance.
You expect the most from vour boat; don’t settle for any
thing less from vour boat shoes.
T f t a n l i n c J f i g>A iiT ki
Available in mV* fur mm and vwmvn
illlllMXldllU W
20%
DISCOUNT
9 D IF F E R E N T
STY LES
H u n tin g to n S q u a re
3121 S. M ill, T em p e • 968-5840
"We conquered Europe and now you
can too! The Grand Prize is a one-week trip
for tw o to your choice o f Alexander the
G reat’s G reek Islands, Attila the Hun’s
France ( Paris ) or Robin Hood’s England I
(London XAnd the G rand Prize w inner
I
can also w in a <5000 bonus. O r you
I
co u ld w in one o f 4 First Prizes: a week- M
en d for tw o at your favorite local resort. I
O r 250 Second Prizes: a Miller Special
Reserve jacket. O r 500 Third Prizes: a B
M iller Special Reserve 12-quart cooler. | i
‘T o enter, just pick up your official ig
en try form s w herever they sell new
M
M iller Special R eserve O r mail in a seif- I
addressed, stam ped envelope and w ell
send you one. W hile you’re at it,
try new M iller Special Reserve, die beer
that's a legend in its ow n bottle. Smooth.
Mellow. Okay, it^s expensive. So w h jtf
Hey, if you don’t deserve it, w ho does?”
Nopurchasentesssary Simpittlill«pan10mrpanU0<
ArizonaandNorthCarolinaaritojmo»le*il(hulking«8»mlWi tat»!»;
residencealtimeolentry VoidnhaieearpraNUMfeylaat. Ftocomptae.
dataai
entryalonw
.yiaitiw
mm
SpacM
nasai»rota«
ootlel and
ORsend
senad
dresaeOiipaiatipaliiii
. stampedamrelo
peto
MiiefSpeoJ^^
Reserve PlacemHistoiy"EntryRaqttasl.PO Ban4428ft.(Mr.*68009
Lend onaraquastparanvetope. Reqiiwtsmrislbereceived6y
NovemOer9 1983. OddsotaleivnndependonMeeuqaerotnilni»
recarreOAporomnaleratedwtma endlpro* GrandPnie 610.000.
1st PureII 5oo 2ndProa.*45.3rdPnie. $25 Sweepstakesends
Page 3
Thursday, Septem ber 22,1983
State Press
f — T H E J O Y N l* ™ !
Funding approved for system
to increase dormitory safety
By Mike Rynearsan
Staff w riter
Funds for the final phase of a three-year,
$3.4 million upgrading of Are and safety
system s in ASU dorm itories have been ap
proved by the Arizona Board of Regents, ac
cording to the director of the Housing Office.
Cliff Osborne said between $300,000 and
$330,000 was approved in last month’s
regents m eeting for the final tie-in of all dor-'
mitory fire alarm s and sprinkler system s to
the University Police Department.
The upgrading began in the sum m er of
1960 when several dormitory sprinkler
system s were replaced. As money became,
available, m ore dorms were reworked and
C
from 2-10 p.m.
u
2 Dinners for
$5.49 Reg. $8.50
O
repair work badly everywhere,” Osborne
said.
“We installed a state-of-the-art system
there, including new smoke detectors, heat
alarm s and sprinkler system s,” Osborne
said.
“We’re having a little problem with the
smoke detectors. They’re too sensitive. The
system keeps going off a t aU hours of the
day and night for no apparent reason. ”
“This is what you would expect when you
put a very complicated system into a very
old building,” he said.
The final phase of the upgrading, which
should begin in approxim ately three
months, will be an electronic tie-in of all
P
o
N
W
E
D
E
L
I
V
E
R
A
L
S
Q
I
1.
Choice of:
•Lasagna
•Cheese or
Spinach
Manicotti
•Baked Ziti
c
o
u
p
u n io n c in e m a
o
TOOTSIE
N
W
Dustin Hoffman
a soap
E
O u t o f w o rk a c to r b e c o m e s
D
o p e ra a c tre s s .
E
L
Includes 2,dinner salads
and garlic breads
TH E JO Y N T
606 S. M ill
I
THURS. thru SUN. • SEPT. 22 thru 25
7 & 9:30 p.m:
V
E
R
A
SUNDAY, 7 p.m, ONLY
$1.50 w/I.D. • $2 w/o
L
967-7926
Expires Oct. 8,1983.
S
0
1
LOUü€R t€V€t O f M6MORIRL UNION
•CO U PO N
M M il
★ Automatic (exterior only)
fire alarm s system s were checked and
replaced as needed.
To date, more than $3 million has been
spent on construction costs with another
estim ated $300,000 going to engineering
costs, consisting mainly of design work, ac
cording to A1 Mages, the planning and con
struction project m anager.
Mages said that essentiaUy all of the
upgrading has been completed to this point,
with the exception of working out a few bugs
in a couple of areas, especially at ChoUa
where a completely new system was in
stalled a t a cost of $1.3 million.
“Cholla (formerly ASU apartm ents) was
acquired in a poor state of repair. It needed
LEE’STAILORING ?
•Fashion Designing
for Ladies
•Custom Suits for
Gentlemen
•Alterations
894-1055
Broadway & McClintock
Alpha Beta Shopping Center
dorm fire system s to University PdUce
headquarters.
Also slated is a panel for every dorm lob
by th at will immediately show a firefighter
what floor and area a fire has been detected
in, according to Osborne.
“After the final system s are completed,
we will have an integrated, electriccontrolled fire and life safety system ,”
Osborne said.
“The system we had in the past was a
good one, but we feel the new one is much
better. It’s something that we can live with
for a long time. By implementing it, we’re
staying n ear the cutting edge of
technology,” Osborne said.
F R E E D IN N E R
^
Buy one of our delicious combination dinners and
get the second one of equal or lesser value
• F u lly attended 7 a.m . to 6 p.m.
•W e w ash vans & tru ck s to o l
•Courtesy towel drying
★ Do-lt-Y ourself
•O p e n 24 hours
•Fo am in g brush & engine d egreaser
•S p e c, eq u ip p ed R e c-V bay
504
$ 2 5 0
A P A C H E A U cC L IN T O C K
(A cro ss from P e p B o ys)
9 6 8 -4 9 2 2
ASU
Football
S p ectacu lar!
FREE.
With coupon
only.
S u s i e ’s
M ex ican C af e /L o u n g e
2405 E. University
(Between P rice & D obson)
C o m e join us fo r o u r Tw ilight D inners
o r Steak For Tw o o n all A S U h o m e
games and receive com plim en tary
transportation to and from the gam e.
OPtN
Mon.-Sat.
11-9
966-7091
Bus leaves at 6:30 p.m . with com plim en tary
liquid refreshm ents served o n board.
ONE TASTE IS ALL IT TAKES
A S U vs. W ICHITA S T A T E
S A T U R D A Y , S E P T . 24
S i
T h e IN N
a t M c C o r m ic k
R anch
T W IL IG H T D IN N E R S
5 - 6 : 3 0 p.m . daily
TOSSB) SALAD or SOUP DU |OUR
FREE WITH YOGURT PURCHASE
ANY ONE OF THESE GOODIES
•DROXIES
•COOKIE CHIPS
•GRAHAM CRUMBS
•M&M s
•GRANOLA
•SPRINKLES
•C O C O N U T
•BOYSENBERRY
•MELON
New York Steak Sandw ich
Potato W edge G arnie
$6.95
•M & M PEANUTS
•YOGURT CHIPS
•TRAIL MIX
•BANANA CHIPS
•CAROB PEANUTS
•CAROB CHIPS
•CAROB RAISINS
•BLUEBERRY
•STRAWBERRY
SPINACH SALAD
SEAFOOO SOUP
(A b len d o f Fish — Clam s, M ussels
C ooked w ith fu lie n n e o f Vegetable)
Served w ith Hom e M ade C routons
$4.95
CAESAR SALAD
EMINCES O F B E R FORESTIERE
(Slice o f Tenderloin
Sauteed w ith M ushroom s)
Baked Potato - Vegetable
$5.95
Expires 9-30-83.
PLUMPEST BAGELS IN TOWN
'SIN CITY" TEMPE, ARIZONA
I.
(2 Poached Eggs on English M u ffin )
and Canadian Bacon,
Potato W edge, G arnie
$4.95
SPINACH SALAD or TOSSB) SALAD
FILET OF SO U MEUNIERE
(Filet o f Sole Sauteed in Butter)
Flore n tin e Potato - Vegetable
$5.95
TOMATO SALAD or SOUP DU JOUR
FULL BREAST OF CHICKEN
CORDON-BLEU
(Breast o f Chicken Stuffed with Ham & Swiss
Cheese, Breaded, Cooked Golden Brown)
Baked Potato - Vegetable
$5.95
For Reservations C a ll 948-5050
■a
(Corner of Lemon fir Terrace) •
OPEN 9:30 to 12:00
TOSSED SALAD or SOUP DU JOUR
EGGS BENEDICT
1
Dinner C lu b & I'm A Rancher Discounts Do N ot Apply
*Redeem this ad for a complimentary drink in our lounge *
S to » P m i
opinion
Freedom is not safety but opportunity.
—Zechariah Chafee, Jr.
Equal opportunity at ASU not fully enforced
Chris C op p ola
City Editor
The swollen ideals that often occupy our
imaginations can abruptly flounder when
faced with the reality of a situation.
Such is the case with ASU and its handling
of Affirmative Action.
On the surface, it might appear as if the
University has made great strides in for
warding the cause of equal opportunity,
most evident in the formation of an
elaborate grievance procedure and appoint
m ent of a special assistant to the president,
Luis Aranda, to head up the Office of Affir
m ative Action.
But it has been these very strides that,
despite their obvious benefit, have provided
.as much frustration and controversy as the
problem they are expected to remedy.
The issue cam e to the forefront of the
University community’s attention this sum
m er (conveniently, since the campus
population deflates considerably) with the
case of Kay Hartwell, a special education
professor. Hartwell, you may recall, cried
foul ova- the hiring process conducted by
Robert Stout, dean of the College of Educa
tion, when he selected a new chairm an of
the special education departm ent last year.
Hartwell’s complaint did not question the
qualifications of Stout’s choice, Kenneth
Howell. It did allege that Stout had not con
sidered all applicants, that he had strayed
from established University hiring pro
cedures, that he was guilty of sex
discrim ination, and th at he had actually
preselected Howell.
After trudging the cumbersome path one
m ust follow when filing such charges with
University officials, Hartwell’s case was
reviewed by both Aranda’s office and the
ASU Board of Equal Opportunity — a ninemember panel com prised of students, staff
and faculty — for review. Both eventually
concluded, in reports to President J . Russell
Nelson, that hiring guidelines wore not
followed. Nelson, upon reviewing the
reports, ordered a new search for a depart
m ent chair, which is presently underway
Chalk one up for Affirm ative Action?
Well, not quite.
The Hartwell case has raised sam e distur
bing questions concerning ASU and Affir
m ative Action.
Nelson’s decision to nullify the appoint
m ent and sim ply order a new search im
plied, in essence, that Dean Stout erred.
But despite the ruling that hiring
guidelines were violated, no reprim and of
any sort was levied against Stout for his ac
tions. Jack Kinsinger, vice president for
Academic Affairs, has publicly said this, but
has indicated th at the new search will be
closely monitored to assure it is earned out
properly.
This can only detract from the credibility
of the University grievance procedure and
its entire notion of Affirmative Action in the
eyes of faculty, staff and students — all of
whom are faced with it as the answer to
discrimination.
How can those in power positions within
the University fe d deterred in light of an ap
parent lack of penalties for violators? Ex
actly how much more power for exploitation
does tenure add to this?
In addition, though both the Board of
Equal Opportunity and Aranda’s office
recommended the new search based on a
violation of proper hiring methods, only the
board ruled in favor of Hartwell on the sex
discrimination charge as well. Since both
did not agree on the sex discrimination
charge, Nelson did not rule on that issue.
This brir«s up yet another — and more
disturbing—concern.
operating with traditional adm inistration
blinders.
This is fa r from consoling in light of recent
revelations concerning fem ale and minority
gains and retention in teaching postions at
ASU. The am ount of women teaching here in
1962 was 8 percent. It was the sam e in 1965.
In addition, there is alm ost no evidence of
progress in m inority faculty in the past five
years. Considering the growing numbers of
qualified women and m inorities in a variety
of academ ic disciplines, this record is hard
to digest.
It’s no secret around the halls of learning
at this University that satisfactory attention
from the Office of Affirmative Action can be
attained about as easily as snowflakes in
August
Several faculty members, including H art
well, who has filed a formal grievance
against Aranda with the Arizona Board of
Regents, have charged that Aranda is not
accessible, that attem pts a t receiving per
sonal interviews with him are impossible,
and that it is not much easier when seeking
an an interview with an assistant grievance
officer.
Hartwell has said that her early efforts to
receive attention from Aranda’s office were
futile, and that it did not seriously consider
her case until after the equal opportunity
board gave it attention.
It is im portant to remember that
Aranda’s office is a Nelson creation that
came about after long and frustrating at
tempts to formulate it under the Schwada
regim e were thwarted. Despite this
breakthrough, one can only wonder if this
progressive adm inistration creation is
University officials can’t keep convincing
us that resolutions exist simply by
publishing the grievance procedures in the
form of a University Bulletin on a regular
basis.
ASU’s Affirm ative Action Review Board
has reported th at the University’s efforts in
this area lag fa r behind the efforts other col
leges nationwide. Dorothy Henson, who has
chaired the review board for two years, has
been reported as saying, “W hether it is ig
norance or downright defiance, I can’t say
. . . But it is clear there is a lack of commit
m ent.”'
Kinsinge r has already directed each
departm ent within the University to develop
an affirm ative action plan of its own, and
also has expressed an need for progress in
this area, which indicates things may im
prove.
The University has recognized the need
for action, but has not gone far enough. If
equal opportunity is ever to approach its
ideal realization a t ASU, then those who
possess the power to enforce it had better
start doing so.'
Feelings on 'suitability'mutual between JKGand A SU
Editor:
John Kenneth Galbraith’s statem ent that he did not con
sider ASU “academ ically suitable” to visit was pointed out to
me in the S ta te Press of Friday, Sept. 16, by one of our,
graduate students. At first, I had to chuckle to myself. While
ASU is ranked within the top five or six universities national
ly in term s of size, it is true we still have some distance to go
to achieve academ ic distinction. As I have consistently
pointed out since I took over as Chair of the Economics
Departm ent IS months ago, whether die University makes
th at transition and becomes a leading academic institution
depends on total funding received as well as how funds are
allocated within the University community.
My second reaction to the article was one of surprise a t tee
fact that G albraith continues to be labeled an econom ist
Although his degree was in economics some fifty years ago,
he has attem pted to practice sociology since the early 1940s.
He is neither a contributing economist nor is he apparently
capable of divesting himself of the opinion th at the center of
the universe is to be found somewhere in tiie vicinity of Cam
bridge, M assachusetts.
Upon further reflection, I began to wonder whether
G albraith’s statem ent m ight cast some cloud upon the quali
ty of the ASU Economics Departm ent and the capability of
our faculty to in te n d within the m ainstream of the
economics profession. Your readers might take interest in a
listing of those economists who have decided teat ASU was
«nitehi» to v isit During the past two or three years, our
departm ent has offered sem inars by a large number of na
tionally prom inent economists, including Nobei Prize winner
Milton Friedm an. Others
tap theorists and analysts
from Chicago, Princeton, UCLA, and several other leading
universities, as well as curren t and farm er officials a t the
Federal Reserve, the Council of Economic Advisors, the
Federal Trade Commission, and the International Monetary
Fund. Our .objective has been to extend invitations only to
those a t thé leading edge of economic research. We have not
contemplated extending an invitiation to Professor
Galbraith, reasoning that our lim ited resources would be bet
ter utilized by bringing in, for exam ple, Thomas Sargeant,
the internationally famous founder of the Rational Expecta
tions School of economic thought.
Finally, lest the impression rem ain that there is some defi
ciency in academ ic activity within out departm ent, I call
your attention to a study published in the American
Economic Review of December, 1962, which ranked some 450
departm ents of economics on the basis of volume of their
published research in prestigious journals. ASU ranked in
the top twelve percent.
William J . Boyes
Professor and Chair, Economics Department
Editorialist ignored
elem entary facts
Editor:
David Beycbok’s guest editorial dealing with the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) included m ore garbage per
hue than any other piece I have seen in tiie State Press.
The basic te d about the ACLU is that it was created to do
ju st one tiling: protect the constitutional rights of all
Americans, especially their F irst Amendment rights. That is
a l. But Beycbok chose to ignore tins elem entary fa d ,
creating in its place a melange of fantasy about m orals and
perversions and utilitarianism and “natural law,” etc. He
advocates “universal principles of m orality,” ignoring social
science’s m ost banal finding that all m orality is relative to
tim e and culture. And he speaks of “m an’s purpose,”
w hatever that is.
Deychok’s bizarre reasoning and libelous assertions sug
gest that if he is awarded a law degree from ASU, it will sym
b o lize the gross failure of the law school to truly educate its
students.
And this te d rem ains: the ACLU is the only organization in
America th at is devoted to defending our constitutional
rights. It would even defend Beycbok, despite the likelihood
th at if people of Beychok’s ilk took power, the rights of people
in general would be abrogated in the name of sonv narrow
defhition of “m orality.”
Thomas Ford Hoult
Professor. Sociology
»
o
1
h
„
o 0 qO,
/* !
U&-
it .
St«t< P ro «
_____________________ Thursday, Septem ber 82,1983
_____________ ^a 3 e 5
Panel discusses implications of régistration law
Unclear definition of ‘resident* prompts meeting
By Jim McCleary
Staff w riter
,
Government and cam pus officials m et
with ASU students Wednesday to attem pt to
relieve some uneasiness over a new law re
quiring out-of-state students to register
their automobiles in Arizona or face a $500
fine.
The m ain confusion involves the definition
of an “Arizona resident” and most of the six
panelists agreed that the term has a
nebulous definition.
“If this (law) does anything it shows the
need for a new resident definition,” said
Terry Stuart, deputy director of the Motor
Vehicle Division of the Departm ent of
Transportation.
He said people are considered Arizona
residents if they own, lease or rent a dwell
ing in the state and occupy it as a place of
residence; reside in the state for an ag
gregate of six m'mths or m ore; or are
employed other than in agricultural or
seasonal work.
If such residents have not registered their
automobiles in Arizona they are targets for
the $500 fine, according to Stuart.
He added that simply having an Arizona
driver’s license does not m ake the person a
resident of the state.
Students employed through work-study
program s or other financial aid program s
will not be considered residents, according
to the law.
However, out-of-state students who are
employed p art tim e may not be considered
residents even though they may have been
in Arizona for six months. The police officer
Staff photos by Bob M ilos
A SU students listen to various speakers explain the new vehicle registration law and how it affects
out-of-state residents living in Arizona.
TEMPE CENTER
OPEN TILL 2 A.M .
16” PiZZa — $4o00(5 9pm)
Pitcher Beer — $2.00 (after 5 p.m.)
Enjoy Sports & Movies Daily
A s P r o fe s s io n a l
J e w e le rs , w e a t
J o s e p h M . B e m in g
s p e c ia liz e in
th e science
o f Gem s
and
th e a rt o f
Je w e lry
O u r p r o fe s s io n a l
s e rv ic e s in c lu d e :
•3 Registered Jewelers
(Am erican Gem Society)
•Gem Identification
•Diamond Appraisals
•Insurance Appraisals
•Estate Jewelry Appraisals
•Custom Designing of Jewelry
•Jewelry Making on Premises
pm
JEW ELR Y
™
& DIAMOND CUTTING
130 E. UNIVERSITY DR.
"IN THE ARCHES"
967-8917
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
makes the final decision whether to cite a
student driver, Stuart said.
In other words, those out-of-state students
who are working part tim e or not a t all and
have been in the state for more than six
months will not necessarily be cited, Stuart
said.
However» he did not guarantee that those
in this situation are autom atically exempt
from this law; the officer will decide, he
said.
Lt. Charles McCarty of the Arizona
Departm ent of Public Safety told the sparse
crowd of about 50 that unemployed, out-ofstate students can reduce the possibility of
getting fined by patiently explaining their
status to the officer.
He said most people who get citations are
those judged by the officer as needing an
“introduction-to law enforcement” or who
are irate with the officer.
If a vehicle has been registered within
thirty days of the required date, the fine will
be $50. After thirty days the fine is $500, ac
cording to Stuart.
Stuart said the law was needed because
some people opted to chance the previous
$50 fine rather than pay up to $200 to register
a car.
Lee Prins, assistant m anager of the
M aricopa County Auto Licensing Depart
ment, said not only do violators face a $500
fine, but there has been discussion of a $185
court-cost charge possibly being added.
He said since July 24, when the law went
into effect, $4 million has been collected
from registering out-of-state vehicles.
There are usually 6,000 new vehicles
registered in the month of August, but Prins
said 13,000 vehicles were registered this
August.
Tabb F o rster, an ASU residency
classification specialist, said not only is the
definition of “resident” confusing, but it
also contradicts what is considered a resi
dent for tuition purposes.
To receive in-state tuition rates, students
need to live in Arizona for 12 months with
the intent of staying, she said.
“The $500 fine could cause a student to
drop out of school,” because of the financial
Terry Stuart, deputy director of the Arizona
Motor Vehicle Division, reads state statutes
regarding vehicle registration Wednesday at
the Memorial Union. Don Vance from the Fish
and Game Department also spoke at the infor
mation and discussion seminar.
burden of the fine, she said.
Lois Savage, special assistant to Arizona
Attorney General Bob Corbin, said the dif
ferent definitions of resident are perfectly
legitim ate. She said die benefits of being
classified as a resident are not equal, and
the waiting periods to enjoy them should not
be either.
State Pics»
September 29,1983
A S U sponsors seminar
to help young children
parents accept divorce
“Helping Young Children Cope with Divorce and
Stepfamily Form ation” is the topic of a Conference to
be held a t ASU on O ct 8. The program is designed for
divorced parents and stepparents of young children as
well as for professionals in child health, guidance and
education.
Therapists Frank R. Williams and Lynn K. O’Hem
will lead the conference. The program focuses on
strategies to help youngsters adjust to their parents
Job workshop
offered this fall
at Metrocenter
^
t UBOM
divorce, accept their rem arriage and fit into the new
family situations.
The conference is scheduled from 9 a.m . to 12:30
p.m. in the Pim a Room of the ASU M emorial Union. An
early registration fee of $10 is effective through Sept.
30. Registration is $15 after Oct. 1.
Additional information is available from Marie
Roosa, director of the ASU Center for Fam ily Studies,
965-3872,
9 ' 01
lÄ ä l
A two-day workshop on
“Effective Job Hunting in
Today’s M arket” is sche
duled a t ASU/Metrocenter,
Sept. 26 and 29 from 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. The fee is $25 per
person.
The non-credit, special in
terest workshop is offered
through the ASU OffCam pus P ro g ram . The
topics will include interview
ing techniques and resum e
preparation.
F uture workshops are
scheduled Oct. 10 and 13, and
Oct. 31 and Nov. 3 in the
Memorial Union, and Oct. 17
and 20 at ASU/Metrocenter.
Advance registration is re
quired. To register, call
ASU/Metrocenter at 246-6060
or 943-0306.
ADULT’S HOODED FULL-ZIP
FLEECE JACKET
O ur reg.
$ 1 4 .9 5
S ize s X S -X L in navy, royal, white,
sc a rle t, m aroo n , p in k , lig ht blue,
lavender, oxford grey. Style #87797.
YOUTH’S HOODED
FULL-ZIP FLEECE JACKET
O ur reg.
$ 1 3 .9 5
S ize s S-L in navy or
oxford grey.
Foreign Service
representative
to speak here
ADULT’S HOODED
PULLOVER
FLEECE JACKET
O ur reg. $ 12.95
10"
A representative from the
U.S. State Departm ent will
be at ASU on Sept. 29 to pre
sent inform ation to in
dividuals in terested in
careers with the Foreign
Service.
Ernesto Uribe will give
group presentations a t 2
p.m. in Social Sciences
Building Room 212 and a t 6
p.m. in MU Room 222.
The Foreign Service pro
vides careers in interna
tional diplomacy with the opp ertu n ity of extensive
travel. They are looking for
university graduates in a
wide variety of disciplines,
p a rtic u la rly m ajors in
political science, history,’
area studies, languages, and
other social sciences and
humanities.
Both sessions are jointly
sponsored by ASU Career
Services and the ASU Center
for Latin American Studies.
For more information, con
tact Jan Hill in Career Ser
vices at 965-2355.
Dimes
ilSMarch
SPACECONTRIBUof
TEDBV
THEPUBLISHER
T h ic k o r T h in
P a p a ra zzi's
OINE IN OR TAKE OUT
WE DELIVER
NEW Y O R K ST Y LE
14" CHEESE
$3.25
Each Additional Item75*
j
I
I
I
I
I
D AN ELLE PLAZA
9 6 7 -0 8 4 3
_^With coupon. Good thru 10-14-83.
S ize s XS-XL in navy, royal,
white, scarlet, maroon, pink,
light blue, lavender. Style
#87597.
YOUTH’S HOODED
PULLOVER FLEECE JACKET
O ur reg.
$ 1 1 .9 5
Sizes S-L in navy and oxford grey.
Style #97597.
ADULT’S
NYLON SHELL
GYM SHORTS
ADULT S PRACTICE
FOOTBALL JERSEYS
PIZZAS
j
| 1 QQ
I I
Our reg.
$8:49
Full cut 50 poly/50 cotton jerseys come in sizes
XS-M in white only. Style #10413,
921E. SOUTHERN AVE., TEMPE
3710 E. INDIAN SCHOOL, PHX.
Our reg.
$4.95
R U 8SK LL
ATHLETIC
Our reg.
$3.50
In sizes S-XL. Style #12803.
3518 W. NORTHERN, PHOENIX
4625 E. CACTUS RD., PHOENIX
Extra full cut with V-notch
sid es and elastic waist. In
size s XS-XL in white, navy,
royal, scarlet, maroon,
silver, black. Style #54180.
« U rfrm
Page 7
Thursday, Septem ber 28,1983
College presidents form group
to increase control over N C A A
By the College Press Service
The sam e group of college presidents that managed to im
pose tough new academic standards for athletes in the Na
tional Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) has announced
a drive to exert more control over all NCAA’s policy-making
procedures.
A group of 27 college presidents — members of the
American Council on Education’s (ACE) Committee on Divi
sion I Intercollegiate Athletics — emerged from a meeting in
Keystone, Colorado last week with plans to creat a new
NCAA group made up exclusively of campus presidents.
It is only the most recent challenge to the authority of the
NCAA adm inistrative staff. A group of some 30 NCAAmember schools have sued to keep the NCAA from
negotiating future television contracts for them. The case is
pending. The enormous revenues generated by the contracts
have been the m ajor tool used by the NCAA to keep the
m em bers in line.
The Board of Presidents, according to Bob Atwell, the
ACE’s acting president, “will be concerned with issues of
academ ic standards, financial m atters and the general in
tegrity of intercollegiate sports.”
The proposed 36-member boa rd would give the presidents
direct control over solutions to the grade-fixing and
recruiting scandals that have rocked college sports in recent
years, Atwell said.
“At the present tim e,” he said, “it’s difficult for presidents
to participate in policy-making decisions (within the NCAA),
particularly a t the Division I level.”'
Although the new board’s plans are still tentative, they
could mean tougher grade standards and more control for in
dividual schools over sports revenues.
the presidents, Atwell said, they do not give the presidents a
direct say in the policy-making.
“ Plus, college presidents really don’t have the tim e re
quired to be a delegate, but they do want to participate in
deciding m ajor issues. The Board of Presidents would give
them this opportunity.”
The ACE, in the m eantim e, is hoping to have the full NCAA l
vote on its proposal a t the NCAA convention in January.
The presidents, however, are apparently interested only in
Division I sports.
Atwell said his com m ittee has no plans to form a sim ilar
committee for the National Association for Intercollegiate
Athletics, which serves sm aller schools around the country.
GUARANTEE 1
WE GUARANTEEunconditional
satisfaction o r yourm oney b a c k !'
GUARANTEE 2
WEGUARANTEE the largest,
mostequipped facilitiesfor
yourmoneyoryourmoneyback!
GUARANTEE 3
WEGUARANTEE this willbe thepublidslast
chancetobuyone year for$50.SenateBill
1185 hasforced us toincrease ourprices!
N A U TILU S
SUPERS P A S
C H A N D LE R
A lm a School a n d Elliot
P H O E N IX
3rd Ave. & Indian School
N .W . P H O E N IX
35th Ave. & Bell Rd.
EAST MESA
8 0 1 S. Power R oad
SCOTTSDALE
7750 £ M cD ow ell
TEMPE
Rural Rd. South of Freew ay
MARYVALE
51st Ave. & Indian School
PVISCOTTSDALE Scottsdale Rd. & Shea
M ESA
Country C lu b &Southern
w it h in t h e f i r s t
3
M.
[Ë
§
■IIP-':
d a y s.
839-9904
241-9570
843-3247
981-1362
991-8296
831-8081
245-1170
991-2911
834*7283
photogray
/ %
If'
j
r
l vn
àP
The board ‘will be concerned with
issues of academ ic standards and
the integrity of intercollegiate sports.’
M O NEY BACK
GUARANTEÉI
*
• Price includes
The NCAA, on the other hand, said the proposed board is
unnecessary “since the structure is already in place for (the
presidents) to do what they want to do.”
“The NCAA has been built on institutional control and
(presidents) have always had the power to determ ine the
voting delegate for their institutions,” said NCAA spokesman
Dave Cawood.
But the ACE presidents m aintain their delegates are usual
ly athletic directors. Even it they are formally appointed by
W E G U AR AN TEE SATISFACTIO N
CLOSED SUNDAYS
S45 S in g le V is io n ■
S 74 B i- F o c a is
j
o
r
t
i
c
\
A
894-8377
H o u rs :
A t D n t in a
v /f/tio a ,
Monday-Friday
10 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
class is always
I n session.
Sat 10a m *1 pm
933 E. University
Tempe Towns Plaza
State Prêts
Thj*22j^52**2¡í£^2ü22¡L
police report
933 E.
University
T em pe
Ȁ.
The Tempe Police Departm ent ticketed a
bicyclist Tuesday night after his bicycle hit
the front of an ASU police car, according to
University Police.
ASU Police said Kenneth Forrest Zinke
was cited for operating an unsafe bicycle
and for riding on the wrong side of the road.
His bicycle struck the right front bumper of
a patrol car driven by University Police Of
ficer Mark Roberts about a t 11 p.m.
Roberts said he was stopped at the south
exit of Lot 63, preparing to enter Terrace
Drive, when Zinke, who was riding eastbound, hit the car.
Zinke, who' is not an ASU student, told
police that his bicycle’s brake cable broke,
and he was looking down at it as he ap
proached the vehicle. He said he looked up
and saw the car, but could not stop in time.
Police said Zinke scraped his left elbow
when he fell into a gutter after hitting
Roberts’car.
Zinke was cited by the Tempe Police
Departm ent, because the University Police
do not issue citations in situations involving
members of their departm ent.
Also Tuesday, police caught two men in a
student’s vehicle parked in the Gaminage
Auditorium lot.
The suspects, who may be charged with
crim inal trespassing pending an investiga
tion by ASU Police, had been drinking
alcoholic beverages. They told ASU Police
Officer William Hansen that they were look
ing for m atches and did not know who owned
the vehicle.
ASU Police Sgt. Robert Jones had
observed the suspects, one an ASU student,
checking doors on cars in the lot during the
George Benson concert.
Police said the owner of the vehicle was
contacted a short time later and said she
would press charges.
In other activity Tuesday, police report:
•A men’s bicycle valued a t $80 was reported
stolen from the north side of the R itter
Building.
•A car tire valued a t $70 was reported stolen
from astudent’s car parked in Lot 63.
•A wallet valued a t $48 was reported stolen
. from Hayden Library.
—Sandy Sistek
Re-entry workshop series planned
The first in a series of re-entry workshops
for new and continuing adult students
enrolled at ASU will be held Sept. 24 from
9:30 a.m . to 3:30 p.m. in the MU Pim a
Room.
A registration fee of $5 includes all
m aterials.
The workshop is sponsored by Career Ser
vices, the undergraduate admissions office,
the Office of Student Life, and counseling
and consultation offices.
Future re-entry workshops are scheduled
throughout the academ ic year.
For further information, contact the Of
fice of Student Life at 965^6547.
Thursday Night is ASU Night
at
S h o w us y o u r A S U
l.D. a n d y o u ’ll g e t a
d in n e r FREE w h e n
y o u p u rc h a s e o n e a t
t h e r e g u la r p rice!
(Offer good on all fresh pasta dinners.)
The
9 6 6 .2508
TONITE!
M IL L E R & M IL L E R L IT E
N IT E
$ 1 .5 0 pitchers
9 p.m .-11 p.m.
T h e S a w m ill p r e s e n t s . .
GO
SUN DEVILS!!
G u y H a rd e n B an d
Fri.-Sat. 9-1
Helps You Shake
Those Minimum
Wage Blues! Call
OF
Us Today.
BKRTENDD9S
COMPLETE BARTENDING
•Wine tasti ns instruction
COURSE
•Learn 130 different drinks
•Cash, resister operation
•Stockins & inventory of liquor
•Customer service trai ni ns
•Placement assistance
Y o u r tic k e t to steady
W ork, m e e tin g p e o p le ,
and m akin g m oney!
N o w at tw o
co n v e n ie n t
TEM PE:
7537 £ Apache
8
9
_
P H O E N IX :
2740 W. Peoria
___ „ 8 6 3 - 4 8 4 5 ^ ^
RESTAURANT
S‘Pasta
p ac ta Pedder
PPrirflprÇ
hm
Shop
m m
HAPPY HOUR 11 a m -7 p.m. • Open For Lunch
m - ü
7280 E. S t e t s o n
S c o t t s d a le • 9 4 6 - 5 5 3 0
O PEN
THE
9-8 M-F
9-6 Sat.
12-6 Sun.
Open evenings
K§
905 S . M ill
Tem pe C enter
829-1743
V '-t •
llS
Il
'SHOP
FA S H IO N C O L O R S F O R T H E
F A S H IO N -M IN D E D A T A S U
J g tm
m
THE GREAT INVOCATION
From the point of Light within the Mind of God
Let light stream forth into the minds of men.
Let Light descend on E arth.
From the point of Love within the H eart of God
Let love stream forth into the hearts ot men.
May Christ return to E arth.
From the centre where the Will ot God is known
Let purpose guide the little wills of men —
The purpose which the M asters know and serve.
From the centre which we call the race of men
Let the Plan of Love and Light work out
And may it seal the door where evil dwells.
Let Light and Love and Power restore the Plan on E arth.
P resen ted by
T he P a y so n M editation Group
P a y so n , A z. 85541
P .O /B o x 586
V
Page 9
Thursday, September 9 2 , 1983
Slate Press
state
prest
e
n
t
e
r
t
a
i
n
m
e
n
t
&
t
h
e
Zelig
W o o d y A llen co m e s through with m ost ‘b le sse d ’ m ovie
By Mary P at Brady
Scenes editor
The image of myself which I try to create in my own mind
in order that I may love myself is very different from the im
age which I try to create in the minds of others in order that
they may love me.
— W. H. Auden
Perhaps Woody Allen has not seen Auden’s famous com
m ent on the problem of self-identity. But even Allen would
agree that this is the theme of what may be his best film.
A retrospective of Allen’s work undoubtedly turns on this
universal theme — the problem of self and the desire to
please others and thus, be accepted.
In his latest film “Zelig,” which means “blessed” in Yid
dish, Allen braids parody, satire, tragedy and humor. The
result is a film that is both funny and insightful, satirical and
melancholic.
The film begins with several contemporary w riters (Susan
Sontag, Saul Bellow, Irving Howe) commenting on the
strange phenomena of “Leonard Zelig.” The audience is then
jarred into a black-and-white 1928 scene, narrated by a voice
Leonard Zelig shown here with playwright Eugene O’Neill.
that sounds all too much like that of a television docu-drama.
The narrator announces a string of absurd events in which
7-eiig appears to change depending on the company he is
with. In a series of stills, Zelig (Allen) is a black m usician, a
Boston socialite and a Chinese im m igrant. While he may look
Chinese or black, he is still unm istakably Woody Allen.
Eventually, Zfelig winds up in the psychiatric ward of a
M anhattan hospital, where he is-interview ed by staff
psychiatrist Eudora Fletcher, played by Mia Farrow.
Zelig assum es the attitude and posture of a psychiatrist, an
obvious pretense to all but Zelig. The reason and cause for
the fabrication is a m ystery to the staff.
It is a t this point, one realizes the movie is satirical. Word
ionleg out about the hospital’s curious patient and a series of
even m ore curious doctors and scientists swarm to inspect
Zelig.
Their ludicrous findings, all presented seriously ( His con
dition is a result of eating Mexican food” ) point out the inep
titude and often pompous nature of the scientific community.
In fact, this film satirizes ju st about everyone — from the
freak-hungry American public to the Christian reactionary.
The story of Leonard Zelig from this point on is both tragic
and comic. One is reminded of “Elephant M an.” Zelig is
m ade the subject of nightclub acts and variety shows. Songs
are w ritten about his “chameleon-ness.”
He is used as a vehicle fa r notoriety by his “dedicated”
psychiatrist and as an opportunity for wealth by his family.
Zelig will attem pt to conform to whomever he is near,
whether that be Greek restauranteurs or P aris showgirls.
Allen, by repeatedly providing examples of abuse, creates
an undertone of sad tragedy. Zelig is victimized by all.
While the idea of the selling of celebrity is prominent
throughout the film, it is also clear that Zelig is a non-person.
By conforming to what he thinks will please others, Zelig
erases his own personality.
The second half of the movie revolves around the
“recreating” of Zelig. Allen here changes the mood from
satire to intrigue—will Zelig be cured or won’t he?
Film editor Susan E. Morse and cinem atographer Gordon
L illis deserve to be commended. Placing Allen, Farrow and
others into 1920s film clips gives the movie a realistic,
documentary effect. In fact, the editing is so well done that
one is tempted to forget the story is fiction.
It’s difficult to analyze the acting because of the context in
which the characters are shown. Their perform ances cannot
be seen as a continuum; the film bounces between commen
tary by the “guest stars” and documentary footage. The nar
rator also sets the scene and explains much of the story.
Unlike many of Allen’s films, Zelig has genuine intellectual
appeal and the humor is m ore sophisticated. In fact, the
irony of comments by Bellow and Sontag go by unnoticed if
one is not aw are of their work or ideas.
“Zelig” opens Sept. 23 a t the Poca Fiesta and Mann s
Christown theatres.
Zelig and Dr. Eudora Fletcher celebrated as International
heroes.
AND JORDACHE Present an intimate evening under the stars wit!
THE R O TA R A C T CLUB
invites all students interested ln:
JS & "
•COM M UNITY SERVICE
•LEADERSHIP
•MAKING NEW FRIENDS
and
•HAVING FUN
to an orientation Gathering
SUNDAY
SEPTEM BER 25
2 p.m .
M.U. ALUMNI LOUNGE
For m ore inform ation call
8 9 4 -2 6 3 3
WORLDTOUR "83
SPECTACULAR MILLION DOLLAR
LASER U G H T SHOW !
MESA AMPHITHEATRE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1,1983 8 pm
SPECIAL LIMITED RESERVED SEATING
Tickets at Diamonds statewide, or Mesa Community Center Box
Office, University & Center
State Press
New writing program presen
ALL YOU CAN EA T
Lunch: Dinner:
50C O FF
I Choose from 12 items
3 .1 0
IC H U D G S
L
3 .8 1
Beeri wine Served
Menu or Buffet
eat in or Take Out
OPEN 7 DAYS
8 8 0 -1 2 2 2
^ CH ineSG B U FFET
C om er U n lv .i, H ardy
RoffliR O F TEM PE
HAIR CAR E
for men & women
(• s h a m p o o
0 :
• h a ir c u t :
» b lo w d r y
F u ll R o f f l e r P r o d u c t L in e
8 3 3 S o u th R u ra l R d . 6
U n iv e r s it y D r iv e
Tues.-Sat 8:30 em -B:0O p.m.
(with this ad)
9 6 7 - 5 4 5 4
C a ll fo r an
appointm ent
mittee
is propo
„ „
mittee
is propo
By Jim Hoff
According ti
Scenes w riter
_____.
,
The closest m ost readers ever get to knowing a Nobel or “If (he MFA p
Writing Progri
Pulitzer Prize winning author is in the brief biography an the
“The progra
back cover of a bode.
MFA program
That gap m anifests an a ir of m ystery and, in most cases, writers in the c
curiosity, reverence and som etimes disdain for the author.
Awriter-rea
Readers want to know how the author becam e so profound, so in
Creative Writi
sightful and so able to create those bigger-than-life characters group of autho
that take one to all corners of the globe.
This year, b
A common question for readers and young w riters is ‘‘Are
ministrative a
poets and novelist bom with a w riting gift, or is it a tool they’ve
and prepared
m astered?”
gained over $1'
The answer may be twofold, but the goal of the Creative
These funds
W riting Program in the English departm ent is to guide students
Marmon Silko
and the community to their own conclusions.
By hosting a series of readings by eight nationally and inter 29; poet Carol
nationally known literary artists, it hopes to expose students, as (“The Countr;
well as the writing community a t large, to professional writers early Noveml
Dec. 1; poet
and their work.
The readings will take place off cam pus in order to draw those Younger Poe
who "»ght otherwise be reluctant to penetrate the invisible Denise Lever
poets, April 5.
walls of a university.
John Irving
Conducting the program off cam pus m ay also benefit the
new novel at p
m aster of fine arts degree program the Creative Writing Com
By M a ria Khan
A ssistant Scenes editor
. . .
, ..
Things are starting differently tins year for the
- ASU Symphony O rchestra.
.
The orchestra’s “season opener will be held
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. and will provide its au
dience with sight as well as sound, according to
im p o r t / S p o r t c a r
S p e c ia lis t s
O v e r 1 0 0 t o c h o o s e fro m
P r ic e d f r o m $ 5 9 5
Slide show
to accompany
first concert
10%
D IS C O U N T
W/ASU I.D.
L ip m a n ’s A u t o m o t iv e
9 6 6 -4 7 8 8
711 N. S c o tts d a le Rd., T e m p e
6 Í
OßfK.
Eugene Lombardi, director.
Dm itri Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 — ms
opus — will be perform ed by the or
chestra while a slide presentation about the Rus
sian composer’s life and works is displayed on a
giant screen behind the orchestra.
“The powerful Shostakovich symphony is a
brilliant showcase for the various sections of the
orchestra. W ritten in 1953, it was an attem pt by
*the composer to capture in music his contem
poraries’ aspirations toward peace,” Lombardi
said.
' He added, “The music is all very exciting, very
dram atic, it shows the struggle Shostakovich had
with the politics of his country. It is especially in
m agnum
teresting in view of whatiis happening to
Symphony No. 10 premiered in Amer
by New York Philharmonic with Metroj
ducting. The work received the New Y
C ritics’Circle Award.
The slide presentatisri has been con
will be presented by Joseph Kezele, Jr.,
physician who is an authority on Shosta*
slides include pictures of the composer
try, and famous paintings which depict
surrounding the writing of the symphon;
According to Lombardi, Kezele has
celebration each year in honor of the
poser, who is often labeled a trag
Shostakovich is considered by many to
the victim of an oppressive govemmen
tem pted to stifle the creativity of con
artists.
Highlighting the evening will be a pe
by David Hickman, [international
trum peter. Hickman, who is a mem
School of Music faculty, fill be playing
F I T T O B E T R IE D
99
Äst*
/one!«/. IsoltfteX.&fMst.
suffer«!
.
ho/
k f f t s y 'r~
/ to u ch
Hfct s i w outitya*
w b th ts .
i'l he met Jesus, uhoartiL-r , . .
dm ws k/illiMio i m .
Me «(I iteeA a /»lu g -butLSememm ïIiw •fo me.
S E M E S T E R S P E C IA L — $48
V.I.P. M E M B E R S H IP — $104
Orsi»s*iA, *r*mwillmj S o a re w e —
THe 1 B W P E
o lim i 4
S E M E S T E R A E R O B IC S — $32
2 FO R 1/YEAR — $128
ut
christ
7J\V\ S-Alili Ave.
Wife w e f W t e r SloN ¿ R dvP meCTS
M 't / .
State Pi
W -7 8 + 7
« è f c r ? S . % ro m * * t* 4 y
933 East U niversity
Tempe, A rizo n a 85281
.968-9487
Thursday. Septem ber gg, 1983
sta tt Pr«*»
ssents international artists
mittee is proposing for next fan.
ises,
thor.
so initers
ative
lents
nterts, as
iters
those
isible
t the
Com-
^Thteyear, however, Green, with the help of Karla Elling, ad
ministrative assistant for the creative writing faculty, wrote
and prepared a proposal to the Humanities Council and thus
earned over $12,000 in order to initiate the program .
4 These funds will pay for the series, which includes: Leslie
: Marmon Silko, poet and novelist from Tucson, appearing Sept.
29 noet Carolyn Forche, whose series of poems
^ c ^ D v in g . who is a hopeful for the series, is working on a
i new novel at present and will not know until the end of the month
I
f whatiishappening today.”
0 premiered in America in 1954
larmboic with Metropolous con; received the New York Music
ird. j •
ntatieri has been compiled and
>yJosephKezele, Jr., a Phoenix
n authority on Shostakovich. His
ures of the composer, his counlintings which depict the events
riting of the symphony.
imbardi, Kezele has a birthday
year in honor of the late comften libeled a tragic figure,
msideried by many to have been
ppressive government which atthe creativity of contemporary
( evening will be a perform ance
:man, [internationally known
nan, who is a m ember of the
culty. fill be playing Eino Tam-
“Bowie is
the best.”
-E d d ie Goitia,
T e m p e T a ttle r
The man
who fell to Earth
FRIDAY & SA T U R D A Y
7 A N D 10 p.m.
ATOMIC CAFE
continued pag* 12
SU N D AY • 6 & 8:30 p.m.
burg’s “Concerto for Trum pet and Orchestra.”
Hiekman gave the American prem ier of this work
in 1978.
The evening, which will also include the over
ture to Vincenzo Bellini’s operatic masterpiece
“Norm a” and Frederick Delius’ 1908 fantasy
‘ ‘ S l i m m e r Evening.” will honor ASU Friends of
Music.
Friends of Music, an organization that helps to
support School of Music program s as well as ho p
ing to fund scholarships, will host a reception
following the concert. The reception will be on the
Gammage Promenade and will be ppen to the
public.
Wednesday’s perform ance is the first in a series
of six which will be held in Gammage Center. The
next perform ance will be Nov. 7 and will highlight
Ronald de Kant. De Kant will play Hindemith’s
“Concerto for Clarinet.” Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2
will aisn be performed. All of the concerts are
free.
Applications now being accepted
for the Film Selection Committee.
Memorial Union Room 208-J.
Now through September 30.
ÜÉ
M ovie Inform ation 965-5658
$1.50 with I.D. • $2 without
A S S O C IA T E D ^ S T U D E N T fí
n p . A H I Z O N A . S T A T E - U N I V e .B S I
T_ Y
David Hickm an, Internationally known trumpeter,
will be featured at the prem ier perform ance of the |
ASU symphony orchestra, Wednesday at 7:30 p .r
¡o e o o o o e o e e o o o e e o o o o o o o c
Join us
D
t jt c h t
V
—*
C L fir?
N
presents.
D R IN K N IG H T
€
Cappucino
,n> Croissants
All of dancers refreshing tropical drinks are 2 for 1, all night long,
la d ie s adm itted F R E E
e^ep? T h u rsd ay
OPEN 7:30 A M . DAILY
Wear a Hawaiin shit and get LETD at the dooti
So let's get Zombied or Bombed, or Mai Thai’d ...
atCLANCEYS
EVERY THURSDAY
L r O e entertainment provided by
PHOENIX’S OWN
SASSI
Breakfast,
Lunch &
Dinner
1
V
APACHE
919 L Apache
966-7770
Sponsors
of K M C R
Jazz
91.5 F M
National Public Radio
Yogurt O
a
s
i
s
.
. „ * * „ * „
0 .1
1
0t 0
Second prize is a large pizza from Pizza Hut restaurants.
4. UCLA
0
2
0
0
0
The third-place winner will take home a Budweiser goody
5 . Washington
1
2
0
0
0
bag, courtesy of Hensley and Co.
t .. „. . ' 6. Cal
2
0
0
0
0
Entries will be accepted until 5 p.m. Friday a t the state
7. Oregon
2
0
0
0
0
P re s s offices, located in the basement of Matthews Cent«-.
8. Stanford
1 ¿2
1
0
0
9. Washington St.
1 ■2
0
2
0
10. Oregon St,
Tie-breaker
_vs.
Wichita
Státe
ASU
■ -..-j
I This week’s gam es;
Predict thescore.
Cal State-Fullerton at ARIZONA
Kansas atUSC
Home team in caps:
spread Underdog
Wichita State a t ASU
San Jase St. a t STANFORD
Favorite
Houston a t OREGON
OREGON ST. a t Colorado
COLLEGE
UCLAat Nebraska
WASHINGTON a t Louisiana St.
□ UCLA
□ NEBRASKA 15Vfe
CAL is idle
32 Vi
□ CalState-Fullerton
I Nevada-Las Vegas at WASHINGTON ST.
□ ARIZONA
I
1Vi
□ LOUISIANA ST.
□ Washington
Team leaders:
3 Vi
□ IOWA
□ Ohio State
TD
Avg.
Yrds.
AU.
5Vi
□
San
Jose
State
Rushing
□ STANFORD
2
3.4
98
4Vi
□
MIAMA
29
|
M.
Crawford
□ Notre Dame
4.1
0
87
21
51/2
□ TENNESSEE
| D. Clack
□ Auburn
3.9
0
58
15
| D. Wright
PRO GAMES
0
2.0
2
1
I T. Lombardi
□ Cleveland
4Vi
□ SAN DIEGO
□ New Orleans
6 Vi
□ DALLAS
Yrds.
Int.
Comp.
AU.
Passing
□ L.A. Rams
2Vi
504
□ N.Y. JETS
3
41
69
T. Hons
□ SEATTLE
3Vi
□ Washington
TD
□ DENVER
Avg.
8V2
Yrds.
□ L.A. Raiders
Ree.
Receiving
0
10.1
□ Detroit
Vi
101
□ MINNESOTA
10
D. Kern
1
16.3
□ New England
130
8
□ PITTSBURGH 9Vi
P. Day
1
15.4
123
8
D. Wright
0
7.8
39
5
Name.
M. Crawford
0
7.5
30
4
D. Clack
1
12.3
49
4
D. Allen
Phone
COUPO N
TRY A NEW BEGINNING AT
CAR STEREO
CONTACTS i
[CONNECTIONS
J L CALL 2 3 4-3459
►
x
»M eet o th e r
J e w is h s in g le s
• S p e c ia l 3 -m o n th offer
•N o o b lig a tio n
c o n s u lta tio n .
A M -FM
CASSETTE
FITS MOST CARS
■
In ter v ie w s
A v a ila b le
O n C am pus
s89
ASU Public Events
TERMINAL RENTALS
Decwriters and CRTs
Upper Case $34
Upper/Lower Case $40
Lim ited Supply
Call 966-3105
Computer Terminal Service
|
D elivery A vailable
CONOCO, INC.
P E T R O LE U M P R O D U C T S ,
N O RTH A M E R IC A
M ANAGEM ENT DEVELOPM ENT
PROGRAM
PETRO LEU M PRO DUCTS,
N O R T H A M E R I C A W IL L B E
ON C A M P U S TO M A K E A
P R E -R E C R U IT IN G
P R E S E N T A T IO N . W E W IL L
D I S C U S S O P P O R T U N I T IE S
ON OUR M A N A G EM EN T
D EVELO PM EN T PROGRAM .
A L L B U S IN ES S S T U D E N T S
G R A D U A T I N G IN D E C E M B E R
O R M A Y A R E IN VITED T O
ATTEND:
AUDIO
S P E C IA L IS T S
S o u th e rn & M c C lin to c k
(Bashas Plaza) 838-3611
IF YOU'RE
PAYING FOR
AIRPORT
PARKING...
00
TH ER E SEEM ED TO BE SO M E CO N FUSIO N AT THE
FIRST FO O TB A LL GAM E, AS TO TH E 'D^NTIFICATION
N E C E S S A R Y TO U SE YO UR STU D EN T TICKET. HERE
A R E TH E FACTS:
__ ,
•YO U N EED YOUR OWN CURREN T ACTIVITY CARD
AND YOUR OWN A SU PICTURE ID .
•IF YO U DO NOT H AVE YO U R PICTU R E I.D. YET. JU S T
SHOW YO UR FEE RECEIPT WITH “PHO TO ’’ STAM PED
ON TH E BACK.
WE’LL S E E YOU AT TH E NEXT GAMEIIIII
Septem ber 2 6 , 1 9 8 3
6 p.m.
2 2 2 - M ohave
Open:
Mon.-Sal.
9 -6
sçgSS*'*'*
:3$sg
YOU'RE NOT
PAYING
ATTENTION
W. Al Pasley's
o
ASU
£- Campus
3 8 0 0 E . A ir lin e D r.
D iv isio n o f V a lle y Travel
Phoenix. A Z 85005
Phone: 2 4 4 -1 6 0 0
So pay attention. Next tim e you
plan a trip, do w hat our
customers do. If you book your
trip w ith Valley Travel or Sky
Harbor Travel Service you can
pull right into our FREE parking
lot and we will chauffeur you
right to your term inal. W hen you
return to Phoenix w e'll pick you
up and deliver you to your car.
All this free of charge if you
purchase your ticket from Valley
Travel or Sky Habor Travel
Service.
707 S. FO R EST D R .
96 7 -9 4 0 3
LOCATED JUST Vz BLOCK
NORTH OF ASU, VALLEY
TRAVEL IS THE TRAVEL
SERVICE FOR ASU
STUDENTS!
OPEN
M onday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m .-4 p.m.
j;
Page 17
September 28,1983
m ttF w i
Former coach forced to face
Brown in conference opener
By Tom Blodgett
Sports w riter
Debbie Brown will be returning to her
„|ma m ater this Saturday. But don’t expect
the University of Southern California to
welcome its form er volleyball star with
open arm s.
Brown will return as head coach of WCAA
rival Arizona State as the Sun Devils at
tempt to upset the always-tough Trojans.
Brown, who graduated in 1977, was a four
time all-American and twice the winner of
Miimaa aw ard as the best all-around player
in the nation when she played at USC under
the name Debbie Landreth.
Besides the players, few things have
changed a t USC since Brown played there.
Chuck Erbe is still the coach, and the Tro
jans, winners o f four national champion
ships, are as tough as ever.
But Brown is looking forward to the game.
“It’s sort of hard to-coach against the
coach you played under,” Brown said. “But
I have a lot of fond m em ories of USC.
“I’m sure there will be a lot of competition
between Chuck and I.”
The Trojans are ranked fifth in the latest
Tachikara-Collegiate Volleyball Coaches
Association poll.
The Women of Troy have one returning
player on each of the first three allAmerican team s as named by Volleyball
Monthly magazine.
Sophomore hitter Tracy Clark was on the
first team , senior h itter Dana Smith on the
second team and junior setter Kim Ruddins
on the third team .
That kind of talent can be devastating,
and Brown shows much respect for her
former team.
“They play real strong defense,” she said.
“They’re usually pretty consistent. They
have good all-around players.”
ASU has never beaten the Trojans. The
all-time series stands at 12-0 USC, but the
both solos and assists.
Ruddins has not played this season.
Replacing her is sophomore Sue Rampe.
Rounding out the lineup is newcomer Alisa
Eishen, who leads die team in service aces
but has had trouble hitting.
Although the Trojans should be a tough
team with which to open conference play,
Brown is thankful for the opportunity to play
USC early in the season.
‘‘They won’t have had a chance to scout us
yet,” she said. “ I have the sam e disadvan
tage, but I think I know m ore about them
then they know about us.
“If we come in there fired up, I feel we
ha ve a good chance to beat them.
-■
The Sun Devils will have a chance to tune
up for the Trojans as well as even their 2-3
record Friday night when they play at
Loyola.
“I have not seen them play,” Brown said,
“but their record indicates they have not
played well.”
^
Children's Cancer
^
Sunday, sept. 25 at 10 a.m.
Softball tourney at El Dorado Park,
2311 N. Miller. Open to the public!
kzzp , Ch.
12 News, ASU Track and Swimmers!
C A R S U N D E R *1 ,500 °°
UMI BUREN RUTO RUCTION
OVER 70 CARS IN S TO C K
77 OLDS TORONADO, epe. load*
79 PINTO, air,4spd.pwr.de*
73 BpiCK, 4*. air, arts, per.
71 VW BUS,
’66 FORD PICKUP, sta
77 HONDA ACCORD, 4spd, air
74 CUTLASS epe. auto. ».
73 CHRYSLER, 2-*, *. w73 FORD LTD, 4dr, air, power
74 VALIANT, 4* . topi arto, air.
76 CADILLAC COUPE de VILLE, air, toad«L
77 CUTLASS, tpe. H arto, air, power.
76 DUSTER epe, 6-tyL standar!
76 VW BUS, 7-pass. 4sp!
tim e appears ripe for that first upset.
“I am glad we are playing them now,”
Brown said. “They’ve been having a tough |
time so far this season. ”
USC has started out with a 5-3 record, hav
ing been upset recently by Oregon and Cal
State-Northridge. The Trojans’ other defeat
came at the hands of fourth-ranked UCLA.
The most effective hitter has been middle
blocker Janice Johnson, who has the best
hitting percentage.
Clark does lead the team in kills and digs,
but she also has m ade the most attack er
rors.
Sophbmore Leslie Devereaux has been
hinrking effectively, leading the team in
^ aandA SU B as^
$1850
$1650
$650
$1150
$750
$1950
$1050
$950
$800
$1150
$1950
$1850
$700
$2850
76 FORD TORINO, 44r, air. arto
77 DATSUN epe, air,5-speed.
74 HORNET, 2-d>„Sopisti*
76 PINTO WAGON, 4speed, air.
73 DODGE, 4dr„ Ml per, air.
72 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE, 4dr, air.
76 CAPRICE WAGON, air, pwr. stereo
72 MONTEGO MX, 4dr„ air, power
76 DODGE PICK-UP, H air, automatic.
75 OATSUN epe., 4speed, air.
’80 HONDA 750 CustomBike, sharp.
77 TOYOTA, 4dr., lux, air, 4spd.
70 INTERN! 4x4 Trawl All, loaded.
73 CHEVY IMPALA, 4dr. air.
$1150
$1650
$800
$550
$950
$750
$1150
$750
$1350
$1150
$1050
$1950
$1350
$1150
3035 E. VAN BUREN
PHONE 273-0906
Susie Merson bumps the baM over the net In a
recent ASU voHeybaH predice. ASU opens the
conference schedule thés Saturday at U SC.
THE LÔOK SAYS VUARNET
THE PRICE IS MARTIN
3131 8 . McCUM TOCK. TEMPE
VALLEY PLAZA SHOPP»« CENTER
(C om er o f S outhern
BE AT
CO W BO YS
EVERY NIGHT
6 M cC lin to ck)
838-1178
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22
Black, Brown, Blue,
White, Turquoise,
Pink
G la c ie r
G la s s
$4 O00
Red, White, Blue,
Black, Purple
FLASH DANCE
CONTEST
ENTER THE BIGGEST FLÄSH D AN CE CONTEST IN
THE VALLEY. W IN A N ALL EXPENSE PAID TRIP
FO R TW O T O H AW AII. SIGN UP AT CO W B O YS
BEFORE 9 P.M , O N TH URSD AY, SEPTEMBER 22.
2 for 1 Well, Wine & Beer
plus 754 Bottled Beer
all night long
Doors open at 6 p.m.
G et In Free W ith Student t.D.
Ja
Cj o
o .,., e
E il m
M onte,
C Ak 1-800-423-4465
Ja ck
ck M
M artin
artin «
om » w
------ —
^
i/ r T
THE SPORTSWEAR RACKET
915 S. M ill
T e m p e C e n te r
State Press
Family Planning Institute
Coach not worried over
trip to the Soviet Union
W om en’s H ealth Center
FREE Pregnancy Testing
Im m e d ia te R esu lts
Prem arital B loodtesting
$15.00 Same Day Results
By Ken Sain
A ssistant sports editor
E vening Hours Available
Relations between the Soviet Union and
the United States have been severely strain
ed since the downing of a South Korean
jetliner three weeks ago.
One field that has felt the im pact of the
tragedy is the sports world. Many American
universities have cancelled scheduled ex
hibition basketball gam es with the Soviets,
and other sports-related events between the
two superpowers have been cancelled a t the
Americans’ request.
However, the Soviets are still interested in
continuing an athletic relationship with the
USA and will welcome a group of Americans
to the World Wrestling Championships in
Contraceptive Care Clinic
Confidential Counseling
Pregnancy Termination
Caring Professional Staff
Established 1976
TEMPE • 968-7471
2525 S. Rural Rd, Ste. 4-C
PHOENIX • 997-7493
Mon.-Fri. Lab H ours 8-3
M on.Sat. Lab Hours 9-3
9100 N. 2nd Street
P ap a Jay’ s N e w Y o r k P iz z a I
Among that delegation will be ASU head
wrestling coach Bobby Douglas and form er
ASU standout perform er Gary Bohay.
Douglas will be an assistant coach for the
United States team , and Bohay, who com
piled a 57-3-1 a t ASU, will represent Ms
Canadian homeland. Dan Gable of Iowa will
be head coach of the squad.
Douglas is looking forward to the Cham
pionships, even though there could be some
political overtones surrounding the meet.
“I’m looking forward to the World Cham-
FAST. . . F R E E . . . DELIVERY
ABU’S wrestling coach wM act ss an assistant
coach for the United States entry at the Wodd
Wrestling Championships at Kiev, U.S.8.R.
‘The only problem I can see is
getting out of there.’
pionships,” he said. “It is very im portant
toward our performance in Los Angeles at
the Olympic Games.
“From the political standpoint, there is
some concern, but we are kind of away from
that in the sports aspect. The only problem I
can see is getting out of there.”
The United States has refused to allow any
Soviet planes to land in American territory.
Hence, the atMetes attending the World
ChampionsMps must take a 24-hour train
ride from Kiev to Budapest.
“There are some anxieties,” Douglas
said. “The athletes are thinking about the
Olympic games, but the long trips could be
quite a hardship for them.
According to Douglas, the Americans will
need a good perform ance a t the World
ChampionsMps in order to have the con
fidence they need to win a t the Olympics in
1984.
“It is very im portant for us to prove we
can compete a t the international level. The
confidence and the m ental gam e will be ex
trem ely im portant in Los Angeles.
“No m atter how they perform , they will
have to go through some tenuous traveling
and training restrictions. We have to take
what we learn from this trip and apply it at
the training center.”
Douglas is no stranger to international
competition. He represented the United
States in both the ’64 and ’68 Olympics. In
the Mexico City gam es in ’68, Douglas was
chosen captain of the team .
A fourth-place finish was the best Douglas
could manage a t the Tokyo Games in ’64.
Food poisioning kept Mm from competing at
Mexico City.
(Lim ited free delivery area)
Serving A S U & T EM P E fo r nearly 13 years ;v
i $3 OFF a n y
large
¡Sicilian* S tyle P izza
I with two or more toppings.
j G o o d o n d e liv e ry , ta k e -o u t o r d ln e -in .
o | A n y large pizza with your
u ¡ch oice of up to 4 toppings.
p
o
¡ONLY $5.95 (plus tax)
N IG o o d
E x p ire s 9-30-83.
•Extra
c j Sun Devil Combo
|
Thick Cruat
o n d e liv e ry , ta k e-o u t o r d in e -in .
E x p ire s 9-30-83.
I _____________ _______ —---- >
W e Deliver Beer & Soft Drinks
V id e o A rca d e ! $10 token s fo r $1 Every Day
804 S . A S H , -urn*u ™ .,9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 « 9 6 6 -4292 « 967-9689
continued page 19
STUD EN TS!
^ 5
C
Q ! Pü C 3,
^ i s c o v
|f > E E O I
5 e a d i i ^
9
TRY OUR WORD PROCESSING SERVICE
D ISQ
,u T
(10% discount with this ad)
AS)
•Hundreds of ran Jmes — home. auto, pro
•Speaker enclosures *0111 doth
•Customcrossovers •Monster cable
•Factory speaker recooinp
•ml. GAUSS. EV.ALTECmrranty center
« at Me Mft coafehtnie prices ■ tm
122 E. U N I V E R S I T Y
( I n The Arches)
967-0900
THE
d
SPEAKER SH O P
3030 N. 24th St.. Phx. • 956-1824
1515 E. Apache Bivd.. Tempe
(Next to Tang's) • 829-9110
TH ECO M PU TER
T E R M IN A L
OPEN
Mon.-Fri. 9:30-7
Sat. 10:30-5
NO TIM E T O B U R N ?!
Tan sa fe ly w ith th e fa s te s t UL liste d
su n lo u n g e in t h e va lle y .
SPEED READING COURSES
OCTOBER 3 THRU OCTOBER 27
A special ■■four-week course, based on the Sack-Yourman Speed
Reading Program, will be offered to graduates, undergraduates, faculty,
staff and the community. This special program requires pre- and
post-reading rate testing, reading of timed passages, and development
of college level vocabulary.
REGISTRATION:
★ PURCHASE A BED MEMBERSHIP
A N D RECEIVE AN EQUAL A M O U N T
OF BO O TH VISITS FREE!!
★ 5 VISITS F O R $5 IN TA N N IN G BO O TH
(Or $5 O FF bed membership)
★ FREE BED VISIT
WITH 3 BODY WRAPS.
1st tim e c u s to m e rs . M u s t b r in g
c o u p o n . L im it o n e c o u p o n p e r p e r s o n .
G O L D E N GLO
43 E. B ro a d w a y (Broadway & Mill)
Hours 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
9 6 6 -2 1 5 0
S e p t. 2 6 th ru Sept. 3 0
M o h d ay thru Friday
1 0 a.m .-2 :3 0 p.m.
Payne Hall - Reading C e n te r
R oom B - 1 1 2
SECTIONS:
A . M o n d ay & W e d n e sd a y 1 2 : 1 5 p.m.- 1 :30 p.m.
B . T u esd a y
C . W e d n e sd a y
D . T h u rsd a y
FEE: $ 3 0
LOCATION:
6 :0 0 p.m.- 8 :3 0 p.m.
6 :0 0 p.m.- 8 :3 0 p.m.
6 :0 0 p.m.- 8 :3 0 p.m.
F A R M E R B U ILD IN G 101
F O R M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N : C A L L 9 6 5 - 7 7 6 6
19
More about
Announcements
Douglas
FRIENDS MEETING! (Quaker Service.)
9:30 a m . Sunday*, Danforth Chapel.
. ASU. Silent w o rsh ip - Fellow ship.
’ n sse sa s.)_______________________
tuiM
wwd limnP«0SH
At this tim e last year,
Bohay was not interested in
participating in in tern a
tional competition. He had
his mind set on enrolling in
medical school following his
graduation from ASU.
Douglas said Bohay will
still attend med-school, but
he now has the m otivation to
be an effective w restler at
the international level, too.
Bohay went to the NCAA
Tournament last year and
took home a second place
finish. M s only loss of last
season was the champion
ship final.
ASU assistant coach Dan
Severn is a candidate to
compete in the 1984 Olym
pics, according to Douglas.
Severn wrestled for ASU
three years ago. He owns a
career m ark of 127-11-1 dur
ing his stay a t ASU.
Severn was eliminated in
the tournam ent to choose
foam m em bers for the World
Championships, but still har
bors hopes for the Olympics.
Douglas plans on rem ain
ing close to the action this
season. Bohay and Severn
will train with Douglas dur
ing the winter, along with
two other Olympic can
didates — Roy Oliver and
Don Shuler.
It all adds
up!
TH E LESBIAN and Gay Academ ic
Union w ill moot Thursday, September
22 at 7:30 p.m. In the M U, »219._______
BEDROOM SPECIAL: Brand new dres
ser, m irror, nlghtatand, headboard *119
with this ad. Matching five drawer
chest (3998. Arizona Sleep Shops.
4605 N. 27WI Asa., 246Q1S7.__________
BEDS, BO O KCASES, desks, every
thing) Scottsdale Used Furniture, 2200
N. Scottsdale Road, behind Kwan's.
949-0380.
Automobiles
1976 CH EVY Monza, 4- ipaad, air,
tinted windows, AM -FM stereo cassatta, low m llaaoa. $2,300 991-6347.
1978 PINTO Coupe. A ir, 4-apaod, 50,000
m iles, w ell maintained. $1,500 otter.
C all 3-10 p.m. 834-1565.
M A TTR ESS,
B O X SPR IN G S
se ts:
X -flrm twine 188, H ills $88, queans
*139. Arizona Sleep Shops, 4806 N.
27th A v o , 2460187.
_______ . /f
1080 PINTO Pony. Low m llaaoa,
excellent condition, 4-apeed, AC. Attar
9 M p.m ., phono 9674)016.___________
74' PINTO, 2.300CC angina, AM radio,
now tires, brakes. Rune good. $900,
negotiable. 036-7750 alter 53» and
condition eight cylinder
angina, 1977 Okfam oblle “Omega".
Tw o doors, hatch back, mileage 53,000,
A C , radio, cassette. Pries *2,200,
(negotiable). gOO-3313, “ Khalld", 2:00
_______________
CO N VERTIBLE, BUICK, 60, excellent
health, tires. *1,500 or bast otter.
066-0608 night 945-8475day, Mike. .
Bicycles
Clothing
VINTAGE CLOTHING for women! Hate,
purses, shoes and a large selection of
jewelry. Clothing lor every day to the
exotic. Contemporary and antique
Items. The Freeway to Alma School
Road on the com er of Alma School and
Ray Road In Bashas Shopping Center,
Chandler. Worth the trip. Rethreads,
_______________
• 9669593.______ ______________ ___
INTERESTING STUDIO on seven acres
in Paradise Valley. *300 a month,
in cludes u tilitie s. Serenity plus.
Available O ctober 1. Phone, 9544)347.
RENT, BUY house. Close ASU, 4- 5
bedrooms, two baths. Dishwasher,
fireplace, refrigeration, new carpet.
K ids, pets, waterbeds ok. 9669593.
TOW NHOUSE- 48th and McDowell.
Two bedroom, 1% bath, pool. *360
month plus deposit. Johnny- 274-5874.
■
TW O BEDROOM, two bath condo,,
fireplace. Lemon and Marianna. Complete appliances including refrigerator,
a re fo r e v e r
U n l e s s y o u h e l p«475.831-7511.
_____________ .___
TW O BEDROOM apartment; *260. Near
Mitt, Broadway: students in com plex.
Century 21 Sandlge Realty. Call Gary,
955-5300.
M a rc h o f D im e s
THIS s p a c e
c o n t r ib u t e d b v t h e p u b l is h e r
Jan-
sport, Caribou, beat quality. *23. Mike,
8 9 4 6 3 2 7 ._______________ ______
CALIFORNIA CO O LER S *2.99. Tequila
*3.99, Azure wine *2.99, old Playboys
47, cold Imported boars, cold wines,
cold juices. Rundle's, University and
M ill. 9676079.
_______ ____
D ESK, CO LO R T V s , sm all drafting
table, stereo receiver», speaker», older
reel to reel. Com puter printer. 9686022.
The STATE PR ESS disclaim s a ll respon
sibility for quality and prices o f goods
and services offered in both classified
and display advertising by its adver
H P CALCU LA TO R sale, 10% oft with
student I.D. HP41CV on sale, *229.
Com puter Superstores, 40th Street end
tisers.
Thomae Road. Phodnlx._______ ______
NEW EM ERSON stereo system . AMFM etoreo, turntable, cassette, two
speakers, a ll only *140. 9686007,
Announcements
LAST CHANCE
For Practice LSAT
strictly off the record
FEE: $10
TEST: Sept. 24
TIME: 8:30-12
SIGN UP: SS-111,
8-12 Tues.-Thurs.
9/22
Shops,
4805
N.
27th
Ave.,
2460167.________________ _ _ _ _
Laura._______ •
—
------------
STEREO
B R A N D n e w , never been
used. In unopened o rig in a l
in d ivid u al cartons. A M /FM
stereo receiver, cassette
d e ck p la ys and records,
turntable, speakers. F u ll
o rig in a l guarantee. C o st
$400.
s a crifice
$1*0U su a lly hom e.
CALL 954-9541.
9/23
DIRECT S A LES, no experience neces
sary. Earn 8160 to $300 per week.
Evening hour* and weakly pay. Danny,
___________________ _
M O DEL
IN
Haw aii,
no
experience
necessary. Five days expense* plu*
salary. M ust be fem ale. 18 year» or
over. P acific Em ploym ent. 6262106.
H elp Wanted
ACTIVISTS W ANTED: Fem inists, En
vironm entalists and other*. Fu ll tlm *
paid atari positions lighting th*
Injustices o f Rsganom tcs. C all ACORN
between 93)0 a.m , end noon. For
Interview, 253-1297.______________ __
A TTEN TIO N
LA N D S C A P IN G
A r
chitects. Work on your tim e designing
drawings for residential and commer
cial property. Sophom ore or Junior
preferred. Cell J e ll Meyer, 991-6147,
A YOUNG
pany has
po sitio n
requiredperson at
dynam ic sportsw ear com
a lu ll tim e general o ffice
available- som a typ in g
good benefits. Apply In
The U Shop, 905 S. M ill,
A YOUNG dynam ic sportsw ear com
pany has e permanent part-time
m ultistore marketing and Inventory
control position. Very dependable
vehicle required. F lex ib le hours:
Monday- Thursday- evening okay. Self
starter who work» Independently.
Apply in person The U Shop, 905 S. M ill,
Tempe._____________ _______.
" , .
A YOUNG dynam ic sportsw ear com
pany has a full tim e warehouse
position. A bility to work well with
numbers and light lifting. Good ben
efits, apply In person. The U Shop, 905
S. M ill, Tem po._________ __________
CATERING W AITERS, bartenders! The
v a lle y 's
m ost
p re stig io u s
and
fashionable catering firm Is now
accepting applications tor part-time
waiters, bartenders and bus persons.
Prefer experienced, attractive, per
sonable and energetic Individuals,
knowledgable In form al services.
Flexible schedule. Call B ill Pollard at
Avantl’s at Scottsdale, 9560928 for an
appointment.______ ____________ __
CREATIVE, OUTGOING people wanted
for European custom shoem aking. No
experience necessary. Gregg. 953-9161
before 63)0.______________ __ ______
DO ES BIG * S excite you? Average $16
*20 per hour, part-time, paid weekly!
We have the boat com m ission program
paying the highest percentage of
anyone In the valley! Sound too good
m ha true? C a ll us, 9661203- ________
INTERNATIONAL
SEEKS ON-CAMPUS
REPRESENTATIVE
Only sophomores and sec
ond semester freshmen
need apply. Above average
income and international
leisure travel guaranteed.
For information call Mary,
collect at Scholastic
Travel Corp.
(214) 739-3270
9/23
H o O m
a tC
83» M IL 6066797 o r9660000._______
N EED TH R EE fu ll tlm o, five part-time
cam pus area representatives in the
nutrition field. AH training provldad.
C ell for appointm ent 242-7500.
OPINION PO LL, friendly person who
•njoys phono work. Permanent porttim e, evenings, Sundays. **45200,
______
PART AN D full tim e openings. $100 to
$360 per week. GeH 9661843.10:00 a.m.
________ _
PART-TIME JO B S , Grand Mark*! Plae*.
Lunch hours and 1st* evening*, dtacounted m eals and good wage*. See
____________
PART-TIME COORDINATOR position
available. Telephone coordination of
madteal staff. Approxim ately 16 hours
par weak, evenings. C a ll Anna tor an
Interview appointm ent. 257-6331._____
SENIOR- Y EA R nursing students: Be an
o fficer In the Arm y Nurse Corps.
Continue your education In clin ica l
specialties and take your seniority with
you when you move. C all your Army
Nurse C orps recruiter today at 967-1611
or Tucson 206 3090.________________
S E T YOUR own hour*. W e need people
to distribute ftyere door to door In the
Tam pa area. Great way to got a tan.
Steady work tor honest dependable
people. C a ll evening», Larry, 8364994.
Instruction
PIANO LESSO NS: Adults- so easy, you
hardly believe It possible. 967-2155.
TUITOR W ANTED for M ET 381, Therm odynam ics. O nce o r tw ice weekly, a ll
sem ester. Contact A l, 9468246.
________
utIHttsa. 667-6441.
1981 SUZUKI GS2S0T, 2300 m iles,
excellent condition, Includes helmet,
«750 o r beet otter. 8356301.
Personal
ATTENTION: TH RIFT shopper»- T M
Hob-Nob has arrived. 221 W. University.
Haw aiian» bermudaa- Jewelery- book»
T-shirts- w ig» shoes + m uch, much
more. 9667114.
___________
BIG IS beautiful. Don’t wait to data.
S ocial Introductions for overweight
singles. Affinity + Inc. 279-2245 or
2316766 24 hour».
___________
SENIORS. NOW is the tim e to prepare
your resume. For advice ca ll 2768150,
attar 63» p.m.
______ _ _ _ _ _
W ANTED TICK ETS to ASU, U of A
football game. CaltM anny, 804-2261.
Real Estate
BY OW NER, low downpaymonL 30
years! Loan 11to% . Block homo: 4- S
bedroom*, two bath*. Alao rent, cloee
ASU. 9666603.________________ _
ACAD EM IC TYPING: WUI adH spalling,
punctuation, grammar. A ccuracy and
feat return u u u n le e ri Je a n 63601/2.
to ASU . Li»*,
AC CU R A TE. FA S T, experienced typist.
IBM S eiecric *1.25 per page. M »
sartatkm s, thee«*, legal brief», APA
format, our specialty. C a ll Sharon
8335667 Of T e re ia 9626079..________
__________ ___
NICELY FURNISHED M u sa near park.
Very large bedroom , two at *125 aach,
o r on* at «190.697-7030.____________
ACCU R A TE, FA8T. Degree hi secret»
rial training and madteal tarnUnotogy.
EX55 Electronic typewriter c a n -d o
alm ost anything Including sym bols.
61.25 per page, spalling, grammar and
punctuation edited. Quantity dte*
RESPON SIBLE FE M A LE roommate
wanted. Sham three bedroom, 2 Vi bath
townhouao In elegant com plex. Pool,
laundry, etc. C a ll Diane, days: 967-7504.
After S 3 » 6 8 4 5 4 7 1 .________ ___
ROOM FO R rent. *170 month, Vi
u tilitie s, near Southern, Dobson.
N o n -sm o k in g , conservative m ale
preferred. Evenings, 834-7012.
____
count». Judy, 060 6056.________ _
A LL TYPING done fast and accurate.
.90 a page. W ord processing available.
C lose to ASU. C ell Carin or Bobbl
ROOM FO R rent in house. Furnished,
laundry facilities. S155 month, utilities
Included. Fem ales only. 829-1218.
9669166.
Typing Service 8365099.______ _____
A-PLUS Typing. Term Papers. R »
sum es', securities and finance papers
a specialty. Papers com pleted on
Selectrlc. C all Judy 8390401.
jE L rtr tr p q
53».
C A L L CAROLIN E for your typing
needs, reasonable rales, quality work,
near Rural- Southern 967-9226. ______
CORRECTIN G TYPEW RITER. 30 years
experience: legal, m edical, alectronics,
construction, perform ing arte, educa
tion, com puter. Graduate and Instruc. tor also. Leah, 962-1059. _________ __
_______ ;_______
an hour. 8946114.
CUSTOM TYPING. Correcting Selectrlc. Near College Avenue between
Broadway end Southern. 9660961 ■____
___________ .
A PR O FESSIO NALLY typed paper can
Improve your grades. I'd like to be your
typist this year - group projects, term
papers, m asters theses, resum es. B.A.
In English. Andra Lawrence, 967-6410,
LO SE 15 to 20 pounds In a couple of
w eeks. No calories to count. Physician
approved nutritional plan. Free coun
seling. Me. Tait, R N. C a ll MondayFriday, 9:00-123» noon. 8976599.
PHOTOGRAPHY- CO M PLETELY
Tem pe.
pro
fessional and the highest, quality.
Portraits to portfolios and a ll phases of
com m ercial work. Sltonnaid Photo
HELP WANTED — PART-TIME
N a tio n a l M a rk e tin g C o m p a n y h a s o p e n in g s fo r sa le a -m in d e d
TIRED O F being ripped oft on auto
repair? Guaranteed, expert work done
by professionals. ASU area. Dennis,
969-5775. _______ _ _ _ _ _ _ ________
8200094.
land, 9963678.___________ _ _ _ _ _
FAST- ACCU R A TE typing at reason»
bte rates. Phoenix area. M rs. Clev»
______________ _
FAST, ACCU R ATE, reliable typing. 24
hours on moat papers. Technical
sym bols available. Business O ffice
Services. 2020 South M ill #111. 894-
CAN YOU TYPE?
YOU CAN!
1517,
in just 6 weeks
_________________________
N EED TYPING done at *1.25 per page?
C e ll Susan at 6330373.______ ________
q u a l it y
Microcomputer Instruction
Flexible hours toyour schedule
Small classes
Individual help
Learntotypeor brush upskills
near 43rd
0333397.
KEYBOARDING LAB
W ORD PRO CESSIN G
for college
theses and reports, in Paradise Valley
23 W. 7th S t, Tempe
area. «962780. ___________ _ _ _ _ _
J u s t ac ro s s M ill fro m A S U
W ORD PRO CESSIN G. Knowledge of
A P A and Turabtan reference styles (1
double spaced page. Accurate. 263
V isa/M astercard A ccepted
5776.
Tv/Radio Service
CO LO R PO R TABLE TV, 10" R CA XL100
solid state, 1 year o ld, has AM -FM radio
built In. Just Ilka new, guaranteed.
________
__________________
TYPING. N EAT, fast, rush jobs acceptad. SI .75 per page. 8360000, Lori.
CALL 966-7111
6106.2464423.
TYPING reasonable rate»,
Avenue and B ell Road.
QUICK, QUALITY, accurate work at
reasonable rates. Electronic memory
writer. Pick-up and delivery available.
Experienced in a ll phases o l typing.
A lso charts, graphs end art work dona
here. CM ! M arilyn at 9462606.
_____
■
m nriarn
c o m fo rta b le
b u s in e s s
e n viro n m e n t
co n ta c tin g
M ta h lia h e d cu sto m e rs o n long d is ta n c e WATS lin e s . E a rn in g s ,
w ^ c h ^ ^ S
a n d b o n u s, a ve ra g e *4-$6 P " h o u r, p a id
NICE CO LO R portable 19” , works
ex cellen t 6140 guaranteed. 2464423.
w eek ly T h o se a re p erm an en t p o s itio n s w ith n o s e a so n a l la y o jk .
H y o u h ave a g o o d , c le a r s p e a k in g v o ic e , p r t ^ r g ro o m in g to r a
b u s in e s s
o ffic e
e n th u sia sm
and
c o m p e titiv e
s p irit, o u r
e x p e rie n c e d m an a g e m e n t team w ill tra in y o u to s e ll o u r n a tto n a lly
rB C M * wh d p ro d u c ts (w h ile b e in g p a id , o f c o u rs e ). O u r T e m p e
(ritte ! is lo ca te d a p p ro x im a te ly fiv e m in u tes fro m ca m p u s.
Travel_____ _
Please call DIALAMERICA for details.
829-1140
9/30
_____________~
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Fast, pro
fessional work, IBM Selectric. *1.20 per
pane. Sheri, 967-3747 evenings.
FA S T, AC CU R A TE typing, (1.25/page.
C a ll Teresa at 962-0079 or Linda at
Graphlce, Inc. 9062609.______ ;______
9/22
Help Wanted
___________ _______
ALW AYS D EPEN DABLE, tyiSing edlt¡ng, torm papers, books, dissertations,
resum es. Excellent skills. Shirley e
TW O ROOM S available O ctober 1, (125
+ Vi utilities, in tour bedroom, three
bath house, 1to m iles south ASU.
Casual atm osphere. M ust like doge.
Prefer «indents. 9663259. Mike or Don.
INDIVIDUAL TUTO R tor Algebra. Three
years experience, certified teacher. *10
.-
verification. Feat, econom ical
revisions and updates. Ceeeette tran»
crtptlon capabilities. Pick-up and
dattuary available. V isa end Master
card. Confidential and professional
with reaso nable i»4ee. C a ll6316014.
N EED O N E or two people to m ove Into
m aster bedroom . Includes utilttlas,
W ANT CA SH ? Me too, for a slightly
used, ladles 14K gold wadding band
with three diamond». Appraised at
*225, W ill sacrifice for «100.9945095.
__________ -
A-1 W ORD processing w ith the IBM PC.
Latter- quality printing. Increased
accuracy with com puterized spelling
LO S RACIM OS Condom inium », one or
two roommates naadad, fully fur
nished, 1to m ile* ASU . Lota o*
recreation»! tactwtta*. 962-9307.______
laundry, pool, ctoa*
_______ ;________
ca ll Oyndy. 9063627.__________ ____ _
LAR G E UNFURNISHED mom available
O ctober 1. Four bedroom, two bath
house, two mUee cam pus, pool,
laundry. *150 + V* utlllttee. 967-3872.
FO R TR A N TU TO R IN G . C o m plete
tutoring including on-line work from
private term inal. Dave 9696045 after
1979 HONDA 750K. *1,700.1972 Honda
500K, (700, or offer. Exaltent condition.
M ust »Oil. 9568636. ___________ ___
Pam .9062006
A-1 RESUM ES, repatlthre oovor tetter»,
research papers, these«. Feet, accur
ate. professional. W hen quality count»,
FURNISHED AN D Vi m ile to A8U.
Single room- *160, m aster bedroom$166, atudto- *215.097-7030._________
14K G O LD jewelry 50-75% off retail
prices! Chains, earrings, rings, dia
m onds. Going out of business sale!
Joseph Ford G old Exchanaa, 9666637.
Motorcycles____
A-1 PROFICIENT typN t, IBM Selectrlc
FURNISHED H O M E on Mesa- Tam pe
bolder. *196 to $196 tor m aster. Clo««
to M C C. 897-7030. _______________
9667179.
________
6360401-_________ _______ ________ _
_______________
ALPH A RESUM E. FuU services dis
count w ith ad. 1000 E. Apse he, Suite
105, Temp«. 967-7247.______■
1977 K2-400 Kaw asaki, looks and runs
great, excellent gas m ileage. Recently
repainted. 829-1695, Joe, after 53».
1480.
A-PLUS Typing. Term Paper», R »
sum es', securities and finance paper*
a specialty. Papers com pleted on
Electronic memorywrtter. C ell Judy
FEM A LE RO OM M ATE needed O ctober
1. Great townhouse, clo se ASU,
non-smoker. «162 month plu» to low
Jew elry
*650.
Typing
61.00 PAG E: Professional results
w ithout the professional price; work
guaranteed; Elliot- Alm a School; 836
W a n te d
9660663.
N EED H ELP for Accounting 500. After
Dove. 6663464.
m
FREE
EE CA
C AR
RSS avallatile tor a ll ma|or
FR
eitles. Celt ue now, AAACon Auto
Transport. 2644)201.___________ ___
C LO S E ASU, «hopping: Private rooms.
$1663» to *228.00. Rotrigoretlon,
fenced yard. Pet. w eterbed ok.
N A V A JO
SAN D
pain terhour»
negotiable, full o r part-time. Call
batween 83» and 53». 2666003.
M alody.
Travel
__________„
, M U a.u M Nte
hwr.
FO R ECLO SU R E TOW NHOUSE,
bedroom, petto, pool, *41,900, near
A S U . C a ll G a o ro a . C an yo n Investm ents. 2744)675-_______________
M ATURE PERSON In early tw enties to
do activities with a 17 year old Mind
boy on waekends. 964-/260. ________
to 23» p.m. “ only".
TOHR/TNAVEL COMPANY
For Sale
BA CK PAC KS M ONOGRAM M ED
classifieds
Sleep
Tempo._______________ __________
FIVE MINUTES walk ASU, shopping.
Large apartment, one bedroom, In
sm all com plex. Refrigeration, swim
ming pool, laundry. Pel, waterbeds ok.
TO P R O T E C T T H E U N B O R N
A N D T H E N EW BO R N
TH R EE PIECE wall unite with shelves,
drawers and built In w riting desk. A ll
throe units yours for only 6160, Arizona
991-6152.______________________ _
SPECIAL LOW student prices on now
and uasd bicycles. Expert repairs on all
m akes a t, discount prices. Tem ps
B icycle Shop, 6lh and M ill. 9666896.
A HO USE for rent, five bedrooms. *625
month, you pay utilities. Call 9468258.
B ir th d e fe c ts
______________ _
DESKS, DESKS, desks, four drawpr
student desk, (49, seven drawer desk
(00. Arizona Sleep Shops, 4805 N. 27th
Ave., 246Q167._____________ _ _ _ _ _
F or Rent o r Lease
99999
,
Real Estate
-
8364079.
Furniture
W ANTED TICKETS to ASU, U of A
lootball game. C all Manny, 994-2281.
9634)387.
9 9 9 9 9
r
USED AR TLEY Flirts. G ood condition,
m usic Included . *150. C a ll, 967-5917■
G AYS, LESBIANS, a ll ara welcomeO a s ls
M etro po litan
Com m unity
Church. Sundays- 63)0 p.m.- Danforth
Chapel.__________________ _______
p.m .-103)0 p.m.
H elp Wanted
Furniture
'
___________ _
W ORD PRO CESSIN G, typing. C an type
anything. Guaranteed word perfect.
Located In Tem pe. 839-3412-_______ __
YOU WRITE It I'll typ« HI These»
papers, reports, etc. Resum es written
end typed. 9667136._______________
W anted
AIRLINE, CO U PO N S fly anywhere
U.s.A., Alaska, Hawaii. No restriction».
N EED M ONEY? Paying top dollar for
gold jewelry, diam onds, cla ss rings;
pocket w atches, and silver coin s. Free
In hom e estim ates. C a ll anytim e, Joe
C all 8295651.
9666637.
_________
DRIVE CA R S Ire« to m ost points of the
United State», over 21. Scheall
Driveaway. 991-5533._______________
_________ ____________
PAYING CA SH lo r gold, silver, d l»
m onds, cla ss rings. M ill Avenue
Jew elers, 414 S . M ill. 9665067. _____
State f t « «
Thursday, Sci
By M.l
Staff«
Stud
who si
summ
their <
reside
Rich
parkin
housin
signed
Sons
reside
f
there,
coritri
Speer
As z
this si
requir
Guaranteed Lowest Keg Beer Price
with Tap & Tub in the State.
(W e will meet or beat any advertised special!)
i r n n y f B
W eekly B eer &
I £ H 'll I
9 |
L iquor S p ecials
Walking Distance from ASU
LIQUORS
Up!
1217 S. Rural Rd., Tempe
Dan