A S U a n tic ip a tin g la n d gift fo r g o lf c o u r s e Staff reports Development of an 18-hole championship golf course a t ASU could begin as early as Jan. 1, if nearby land and w ater rights are secured in the coming months, officials say. The Arizona Board of Regents Saturday unanimously approved a request by the University to develop a site plan for the course, which officials say would be located east of R ural Road and north of University Drive. ASU President J. Russell Nelson told the board the request was “based on the belief th at land around the Arizona Public Service Ocotillo Power P lant (located north of University Drive between Hayden and R ural Roads) would be transferred to ASU” upon board approval of the request to develop a plan. Officials said the Sun Angel Foundation would be put in charge of funding, design and construction of the course. Regent A.J. “Jack ” P fister, who is General M anager of Salt River P roject, told the board he wanted to “acknowledge the generous gift of land from APS.” Officials did not disclose the acreage, value or location of the proposed land gift. P fister said APS would give ASU the land upon approval of the plan by the board, and the course would be developed a t the Sun Angel’s expense. Regent William Reilly, form er chairm an ofAHS, abstained from the vote. Nelson said the gift of land is expected before the end of 1963. He added that the pro­ posed gift still had to go before the APS Board of Directors for approval. APS of­ ficials involved with the land transfer were unavailable for comment. Nelson said ASU and the Sun Angels con­ ducted a feasibility study and, based on that study, the Sun Angels would support the building of the 18-hole course. Sun Angel’s D irector Dan Devine estim ated die cost of the course could range from between $3 million and $4 million. “The hardest p art we now face is securing the w ater rights. Golf courses use a lot of w ater,” he said. Devine estim ated the process of obtaining w ater rights could take up to three months. He said the Sun Angels will begin a fund­ raising campaign for the course in the com­ ing weeks and construction could begin by Jan. 1. He added that local businessman Seth Horn has donated $50,000 and real estate executive Rusty Lyon has donated $400,000 to die course development. Once completed, Devine said, the course should be able support itself through greens fees and mem bership costs. stale press W e d n e sd ay October 12,1983 Voi. 66 No. 30 Arizona State University ® Tempe, Arizona © Copyright, State Press, 1983 Senator says sales tax hike could affect tuition charges Statt photo'by Andy Aranz Taking steps Insidore Manzo, a junior In architecture, and Janet Suelflow, a Junior In m edical technology, take advantage of recent pleasant weather and Share a lunch on the west steps of the MU. «jolting By Bob Beam esderfer Staff w riter The Arizona Legislature will consider a one-half percent sales tax increase in December to support education at the sam e tim e it considers an equal increase to aid the Departm ent of Corrections, according to a member of the Education Committee. Juanita Harelson, R-Tempe, also a m ember of the Senate Appropriations Com­ m ittee, said she would sponsor the one-half percent increase, which could raise up to $60 million for state public education. Harelson said she told Senate Finance Committee Chairman Jeffrey Hill she would only support the one-half percent tax for prisons if a one-half percent tax for educa­ tion is considered at the sam e time. She said it was “unlikely we’ll get it, but it will be a proposal. ” H ie perm anent one-half percent increase for prisons is sponsored by senators Tony West, R-Phoenix and P eter Kay, R-Phoenix, and Rep. Jim Skelly, R-Scottsdale, who were opposed to last April’s emergency onepercent sales tax increase. Harelson said, “Last April, when we put on the one-percent tax, we had a bloodbath over here.” Harelson said the universities need to look for other sources of financing, because the state Legislature cannot continue to raise taxes for higher education. “We can’t do it under the current taxing system ,” she said. “It’s impossible to in­ . crease taxes to support universities. It’s not an approach you’re going to see a t this time. “I think as much as five years ago, I told University officials th at the key to the state treasury is gone," she said. Harelson said universities can no longer receive everything they ask for. “The golden days are gone.” But she said raising tuition should be a last resort when officials look for funding sources. i—“ I do worry about continually increasing tuition to the point where only those students who can crane up with the money can at­ tend,” Harelson said. “ I can understand the push to make the (Arizona) universities m ore competitive with other western universities on tuition, but I worry about freezing people out,” she said. “I worry that we’re pricing kids out of a university education in an urban setting.’’ According to Regent A. J. “Jack” Pfister, the Arizona Board of Regents was respon­ ding tojegislative pressure earlier this year when it raised tuition. Pfister said lawmakers told the regents if budgets were to increase, then tuition would have to in­ crease. “Given the state’s (financial) lim itations, if the regents didn’t do it (raise tuition) the Legislature would” have, Harelson said. “Raising tuition is an alternative, but it should be the last resort,” she said. “Which is where we may be.” ^ Brain shock victim denounces practice; others disagree By Jim MeCleary Staff w riter Some people would like to forget June 6, 1968 — the day R obert F. Kennedy was shot. With help from brain shock, Dennis N ester already has. The electroconvulsive therapy (EOT) N ester received when he was 19 blocked out all emotionally painful events oc­ curring prior to that point. N ester is now looking for ASU students to help him in preventing ECT in certain areas of the country. A fter 15 years, N ester now rem em bers everything except the day Kennedy was assassinated. He is aw are of the inci­ dent only through w ritten accounts of the m urder. The 34-year-old Scottsdale resident has spent m ost of his life struggling with feelings he did not understand. He has spent the past 15 years rebuilding a life which he say s doctors nearly destroyed through misdiagnosis and the use of brain shock. N ester discovered two years ago th at he had agoraphobia — a fear of open space, often causing victim s to be entirely housebound. N ester calls it the “gam ut of phobias.” H e said it is the fear of losing control, especially in a public place, and he is well aw are of the feeling, having spent two years confined in his home. Until two years ago, he was diagnosed as depressed and suicidal. But during group therapy for agoraphobics in 1981, he realized the symptoms of others were identical to his. Doctors have now recognized that N ester is a victim of agoraphobia, which doctors have determ ined impossible to cure with ECT. Nester described the first tim e he can consciously recall having an attack. “I rem em ber when I was about four or five years old. I felt I was being sm othered and that I wouldn’t wake up. I wanted to cry but I couldn’t; I was too petrified. “It was like i was drowning in an ocean and I had nothing to hold onto,” he said. He sa id a M ich ig an psychiatrist “misdiagnosed” him and after a three-hour session, perscribed “sleeping therapy.” He said the doctor told him, 'You ju st sleep a little while.’ Nester said he was told to lie on his back, and the doctor put a rubber bit'in his mouth and gave him two injections of mus­ cle relaxant. After the second injection, he lost con­ sciousness. Nester said, in effect, he “slept” for thé next two years. Sleep therapy was a way far the doctor to disguise ECT, he said. While sleeping, ECT was perform ed without his knowledge, N ester said. The two years following the treatm ent, he said, his awareness was gone. “I was helpless and emotionally crippled,” he said. Nester has attem pted to sue the Michigan doctors who misdiagnosed him, but lawyers have rather refused to touch the case or have requested exorbitant fees, he said. continued pag* 10 State Put» n a t i o n / w o r l d ACCIDENT AND INJURY CLAIMS st a t e p re ss KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS Call 957 -2 0 10 V a lid ity o f tea ch er's exam questioned PHOENIX (AP) —The Arizona Tax Research Association Tuesday released a highly critical report on the Arizona Teacher’s Proficiency Exam ination, questioning its validity in three areas. R esearch Analyst Michael T. M artin said a study of the ex­ am ination found th at it was weak in the structure of m any of its questions, the overall method in which the exam ination w as scored and the failure of the examination to consider subscores in determ ining classroom proficiency. The «»«mlmitiM is required for public school teaching in Arizona. , ; . .. “Not only are many of the questions on the test invalid, but the test is scored for overall knowledge on the individual basic «kill« and the cut off score of 00 percent was arbitrarily chosen for political reasons,” M artin said. D epartm ent of Education officials were not im mediately available for comment. , M artin said an item analysis of the 150 questions ad­ m inistered to 2,430 applicants from July 1962 through M arch 1963 indicates that 58 of those questions should not be used to screen applicants. U o f A research fa rm sold TEM PE (AP) — The University of Arizona’8 40-acre citrus research farm was sold a t auction for $5.61 million Tuesday to an Arizona-California group that plans a $200-million com­ plex of high-rise offices, hotels, restaurans and sim ilar proThe research farm was in an agricultural area when founded 40 years ago. Now it sits in a busy codim efcialresidential zone adjacent to two freeways and a few m iles from downtown Phoenix. It was sold under a Board of Regents decision five years ago to move m ost agricultural research from rapidly developing urban areas. . “We’ll try to preserve all the citrus trees we can m the landscaping,” said William Lund, operating head of Cor­ porate G alleria, a California partnerships that includes Ray­ mond Watson, chairm an of Walt Disney Productions; Laimy Eberling and Lund. The m ajority owners in the Arizona-Cahfonua group brothers Conley and Calvin Wolswinkel of Chandler, who are large-scale farm ers and real estate developers. A. Dean Bacon, m anager of the research facility since 1977, said w atchiie it sold “was like losing a child.” SHABBAT SHALOM fro m HILLEL Your Jewish Student Center W e w ill be serving Shabbat D inner Friday, O ct. 14 at 6 p.m. $3.50 RSVP 967-7563 I c a m Shabbat Service at 7:30. -fc M il 'Hie wn«rs . . . n Tests I f is k t r r f - t jfiw u M k e ffe c t uJkemyflu visif a chunk, (| C CD oO dW ld -fell a hst^thifp w fri4t exppaif ywo yisifwf Vs- 8 p.m. tBARBEQUE DINNER •SQUARE DANCING •BEER r *’t y m a t e w r s A f s a v t e s * o n ly $ 3 A t T h e H ille l B a rn 1012 S. Mill Avenue T A LL COME Helps You Shake Those M inim um Wage Blues! Call Us Today- COMPLETE BARTENDING COURSE c o n v e n ie n t lo c a tio n s : ,« ^ lt0 8 0 It is the policy of the State Press to acknowledge and cor­ rect errors when they occur. If you see an error, call our newsroom a t 965-2292.to let us know. All corrections will ap­ pear on this page. SAT., OCTOBER 15 Now at two ' S S V ’w .o * '* ’ CORRECTION POLICY WESTERN NITE Y o u r tic k e t to steady w o rk , m eetin g p e o p le , an d m akin g m oney I N o R eco very - N o Fee PHOENIX (AP) — Rep. Eldon Rudd, called for construction of Orme Dam, saying the contrw ersial dam proposed for the confluence at die S a J t ^ Verde rivers is needed for w ater storage. The state s top w ater of­ ficial im m ediately disagreed. . __. t “We need to provide some real conservation rf water. That means a holding facility a t the confluence ^ ^ Verde rives,” Rudd said in a statem ent released by jus office. “Since 1978, included last week’s storm s, we have lost m ore than 6 million acre-feet,” of w ater that could have been held by Orme, Rudd said. _____ “P ut another way, we have lost as much w ateras we will receive from the Central Arizona Project in the next 53 „ears ’’he said. _ State W ater Resources D irector Wesley Steiner said Rudd was wrong in saying Orme was needed for w ater storage.^ “It wouldn’t provide any greater storage capacity than Plan6, not one drop,” Steiner said. ___ Numerous interests had supported building Orme Dam, but most agreed two years ago to instead support the socalled Plan 6, which includes a new Waddell Dam on the Agua F ria River, a new Cliff Dam on the Verde, rebuilding of Roosevelt Dam on the Salt and reconstructing of Stewart Mountain Dam on the Salt. Hillel B A R T E N D IN G ATTORNEY CONSULTATION Rudd calls fo r O rm e D am construction H IT’M U P , M O V E ’M O U T „ FREEt •W in e tasting instruction •Learn 130 different drinks •Cash register operation •Stocking & inventory o f liquor •Custom er service training •Placem ent assistance t e m PE: PHOENIX: 1537 E. Apache 2740 W. Peoria 894-6565________ 863-4845 vl\fe~cW«wine janokiMj am! peRfifwM •cHe ek. “the -{willed ■people i*. Iht iutrW-cfe But I «•*'*£beceose. its jv s f ntt *frve. The-hrvHv. isSowc cf *ur services wt. M fer-fki* ¿tiers Some «f jwrt vs — ue m tlte T C M p r chvzch c m u s t T A Z -U f S . M i l i A f t . SvtJef kmsk$~ q:*>- ¿Ussestit lonTm». Pfc t*b hhek- fl*.9h ** *4 O *.- f&Ofm. 1 *4 . eve. B i l k 4 iscus3mw v + d p - »1 fta -im S to * fa ir tw )1 . /H fn ttfe r-6 . Page 3 Wednesday, October 1 2 ,1983 StatePrcts New professorship established; aids honors students’ research B y Lisa Phillips Staff w riter A new program allowing a selected professor to complete a research project while acting as a m entor to honors students has been established by the Honors Program of the College of Liberal Arts, according to the program director. Ted Humphrey, ASU professor of philosophy, said the research professorship “provides honors students the oppor­ tunity to be in contact with a faculty m em ber involved in a , creative research project.” The professorship will allow one “especially distinguish­ ed” professor to be relieved of his norm al teaching duties for a sem ester in order to spend tim e completing a research pro­ ject and lecturing students, Humphrey said. “It is an explicit expectation tin t this faculty m em ber give . Him to the students,” he said. “This will help establish a m entorial relationship between the faculty member1and stu­ dent.” Humphrey added th at the project, which was approved by the Office of Academic Affairs last spring, uses Universityappropriated funds to hire a full-time faculty m em ber to take over the norm al teaching duties of the professorship occu­ pant. Andrew Gilburne, a liberal a rts honors student, said the professorship is the “perfect” way for a faculty m em ber to contribute to a student’s efforts to learn about research. All honors students are required to w rite a thesis involving some degree of original research before being allowed to graduate from the program . A faculty m em ber who has tim e to give students special guidance in research will allow m ore students to overcome the fear and confusion th at often accompanies writing a thesis, Gilburne said. “I think it’s necessary to have someone who has been there before,” he said. ‘‘This will expose students to a professor do­ ing research.” M .J. Pasqualetti, associate professor of geography, is this sem ester’s occupant of the research professorship. His research project is “Decommissioning Nuclear Power P lants.” Candidates for the professorship are nominated by their departm ents and are selected by a committee comprised of faculty and students, Humphrey said. The candidates are judged by an evaluation of their project and teaching abilities, he said. “I think It is im portant that the project be well along,” Humphrey said. “It is expected that the tim e will be used to actually complete the research. He nafai another consideration in the com m ittee’s selection is tim eliness and student interest in the project topic. H u m p h re y said the new program will be beneficial to the college as well as die faculty and students, because a g reater num ber of projects completed reflects positively on the col­ lege. ^ “The research that the faculty does is absolutely essential to undergraduate students and the college,” he said. “If you were taught by a faculty where no research was being done, you would (mly get stale knowledge.’’ The College of Liberal Arts currently has 225 students enrolled in its honors program . The college offers an average of 14 honors class sections each sem ester and lim its the num ber of students in each class. C e n te r F o r B o d y A w a r e n e s s DANCE SHOP LEOTARDS TIGHTS FALL SPECIAL , ORDERS C la s s e s jn : JAZZ BALLET AEROBICS KARATE AND MORE ^ f /C \ \ / ) r / Walking Distancefrom ASU 8 9 4 -8 3 4 7 414 S. M ill Ave. RARE LION RESALE . 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\\^ S 967-9079 THE W AREHOUSE DELI 'Good Food and D r in k ' LUNCH A DINNER M O N .-FR I. 10:30-7 p.m . Sandw ich with Homemade Fries Sm all Drink or Beer ONLY tax * 1.99 incl. 3 EAST 5th STREET TEMPE 9 6 8 -2 5 5 7 M O N -S A T 1 0 -6 730 S. MILL V inyl Top C o lo rin g — B ody Side M ouldingst Estab. 1975 BUFFALO EXCHANGE RU N D LE’S LIQUORS 8t MKT. Quality Work GUARANTEED 117 couP®n FREE YOURSELF FROM UNWANTED CLO THING S ell w ha t you d on ’t w ear. G et w hat you rea lly w ant. raiser. N ester said he is concerned that the support for such a fund-raiser m ay be minimal because few people in Arizona will denounce the use of ECT. E rnest Lendholm, professor of psychology at ASU, said determ ination of the use of such treatm ents should be left to doctors. BREAKFA8T EVERY SUNDAY 650 WITH TH IS AD Noon-7 p.m. 6 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Mon.-Fri. 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Also Featuring "THE LITE W AIT' « 4 1 9 * Pitcher Glass $ 1 .9 « 494 W INE % lite r Glass $ 1 .9 9 494 W INE COOLER Pitcher Glass 9 2 .7 5 654 UVE EHTEITMNEKT NIGHTLY (No Cover, No Min.) — SUPER SPECIAL — ! One Egg. 2 Bacon o r Sausage, T o a s t B utter & Jam Coffee Included HOUR MON.-FRI. IM P O R T S — 9 4 4 DRAFT BEER IMPORTS T* “I am abi professional treatments th said. He said in to lobbying for legislatures to sion treatm en “It (ECT) many patients number of pec He said ceri chemotherapj well. Dennis Glai professor, sail beautifully.” But he adds one treatm ent “What (EC1 ty of certain brain chem ist 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. A T FO R EST 966-7788 — TEMPE, AZ Your Hosts: "T he Family" Past* State Page 11 W tóngdj^^O ctobw lSjJW ji Family P lanning In stitu te W omen’s Health Center FREE Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results Prem arital Bloodtesting $15.00 Same Day Results E ve n in g H o u rs Available Established 1976 TEMPE • 9 6 8 -7 4 7 1 2525 S. Rural R d , Ste. 4-C M on.-Fri. Lab Hours 8-3 Mon.-Sat. Lab Hours 9-3 IN F O R M A L D A N C E Experimental Works by Faculty Choreographers O C T O B E R 13 & 14 • 8 p.m . D ance Studio Theater • PEBE 132 “I am absolutely not in favor of non­ professional people telling physicians what treatments they can or cannot use,” Lendholm said. He said interest groups could benefit m ore by lobbying for research money in state legislatures to improve alternatives for depres­ sion treatment. “It (ECT) certainly seem s barbaric, but many patients want it. It does work for a large number of people,” Lendholm said. He said certain alternatives to ECT, such as chemotherapy, can have adverse effects as well. Dennis Glanzman, also an ASU psychology professor, said, “When (ECT) works, it works beautifully.” But he added, “In the worst possible case, one treatm ent could be unsafe. “What (ECT) will do is increase brain activi­ ty of certain enzymes which should change brain chemistry for the better. ’’ He suggested that if a person is suicidal, which is when ECT m ay be prescribed, he should be hospitalized and subm itted to shock only as a final alternative. “Counseling or drugs probably are safer and should be used as a first treatm ent. Doctors feel a m oral obligation to help patients and will use what they have,” even if ECT is their prim ary optimi, he said. He agreed with Nester that doctors avoid commenting on the treatm ent because of fear that they will appear in favor of ECT. Joseph Braun, a psychology professor who teaches an ASU course dealing with treatm ent of brain disorders, said, “I have severe reser­ vations (about ECT). I don’t think it should be used, especially how it is prescribed.” He said a person can actually come out of the treatm ent feeling worse than when they went in — the opposite effect it was intended to pro­ duce. Thrift Connection 612 M ill Ave. 894-6189 P a lm & C a r d R e a d in g s P a lm ........... $5 | C ard . . . . . $15 Everything for the Student New ft Used v Past • Present • F uture | Madam Ray x Price & Univ. 0 Minutes From Campus $ 967-9801 •Books & Magazines •Jewelry •Children s Toys & Clothes •Soda $3 a Case »Furniture »Appliances «Household Items »Clothes $2 General $1 Students and Senior Citizens TICKETS AVAILABLE A T THE DOOR F O R IN F O R M A T IO N CALL 9 6 5 -5 0 2 9 1 YEAR V I,P......................... $90 2 FOR 1 (V.I.P.)............... 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Sale 46.95 47.95 51.95 25.95 23.95 32.95 26.95 37.99 39.99 43.95 34.99 23.99 22.99 36.95 37.95 44.96 19.95 18.95 27.95 21.95 31.99 33.95 37.95 2499 13.99 17.99 16.99 23.95 IB IS 17.95 20.99 45.99 17.99 35.99 Term P a p e rs A c c u ra te T y p in g R e a so n a b le R ate s 2 Blocks West of M ill & University 225 W . University Suite 111 966-4786 ip k iit g lo r tin a 9 6 8 -7 7 2 5 J 1038 S. M ill Ave. Q Q O ds (Across From Gammage) s p o state press r t s Restricted Southern Cal in unfamiliar role of Pac-10 spoiler _ _ By Jay Taylor ■ — Sports editor There is a lot of talk among Pac-10 schools that this is a down year for the USC football program. The team is on probation, they can’t go to a bowl gam e, and they already have two losses and a tie m arring their record. But then there is the other side of the coin. Although the Trojans are ineligible for the conference crown, they are still 2-0 in Pac-10 play and can play the role of a spoiler for the other teams. Trojan head coach Ted Tollner said his will be com petitive despite the han­ dicaps they face. “We can’t win the conference champion­ ship, but right now we’re 2-0 (in Pac-10 play), and we get a chance to play most everybody,” he said. “That is a goal (beating conference rivals) we can be realistic about and m ake the m ost of. ^ “We want to be able to say that we beat the team that goes to the Rose Bowl, and we get to play m ost of the top contenders.” The only contender for the crown that USCdoes not play is U of A, and the W ildcats are also ineligible for the Rose Bowl. Tollner said the title chase is still wide open, with four schools having a good chance for the Roses (excluding USC and U ofA ): ASU, Washington, UCLA and California. Although Tollner came to Southern Cal from pass-happy Brigham Young, he said the Trojans’ offensive philosophy has not changed much from previous years. “We didn’t necessarily come into this year looking to throw the ball all the time like a lot of people thought we would,” Tollner said. “We basically structured the offense around the people we have. Tony Slaton (left) was considered an all-Am erican candidate at center during the preseason. Trojan quarterback Sean Salisbury (right) w ill lead the USC Trojans this Saturday in a Pac-10 match up against the Sun Devils. “Of course we will still use the sam e two or three strong-side runs and two weak-side runs we’ve always made our living on.” The USC offense has been m ore diverse this year than in the past. The Trojans have been using three tailbacks—Fred Crutcher, Michael H arper and Todd Spencer — rather than letting one back carry the ball 30-35 times a gam e as they have in the past. Harper was injured last week and will not ASU SPECIAL 8 9 $ e a . No lim it Dry C le a n e d & Pressed ★ SILVER FIRE I --.. SUITS ★ ★ army Iiitd _ . a -» -* i i c to stock o L J I 0 i—l—t o on hand. "Pride o f the Sun D evils" B a c k to S c h o o l S p e c ia l Mesa Store 1840 W. Southern 969-3326 M A A ■U w m p f" S h am p o o , C o n d itio n in g , P recisio n C u t, B lo w D ry M e n & W o m e n f f le g . $13) Perm Special / $10 O FF Good only at Expires 10-31-83. coats- parts BELTS-BOOTS SUN DEVIL HAIRCUTTERS New customers only. CAPS MASKS Expires 10-30-83. SELF-SERVICE TYPEWRITERS O pen 7 days a week '- 1 Camping, Clothing & Surplus (EXPIRES 12-4-83.) 715 S. Forest 894-9588 hats FATIGUES (SE Comer of Univ. & Hardy) Tempe Store ★ 15%OFF 84 7 W. University kinko's copies play against ASU. Crutcher, who is the starter, is the leading USC rusher with only 294 yards. According to Tollner, junior quarterback Sean Salisbury has also been making good progress in craning back from a knee injury, and is improving every week. “Sean was very frustrated against South Carolina (a 38-14 USC loss),” Tollner said. “But that was the only game he’s had that “They (ASU) not only have balance between the pass and the run, but they have balance within their running and passing,” he said. “D arryl Clack is an explosive run­ ner, and Hons is a polished and experienced quarterback.” Tollner said motivation is no problem for this gam e, as the ASU-USC series has developed into an intense rivalry. He said that with the relative closeness of the schools, and the winning tradition of both program s, the rivalry has developed quickly. Tollner said that despite the two lasses the Trojans have already sustained, he is not feeling an undue amount of pressure. “The rally pressure I feel,” he said, “is that if you have a team that is capable of playing a t a certain level, and they are not, how to get them to play up to that level. “We haven’t played well, and we are capable of playing much better,” he said. “It’s been five games now; we have to start playing. “There is a lot of ability here. We just haven’t shown it yet. ” HALLOWEEN SPECIALS Excluding suede &. leather; excluding w edding dresses. Coupon must be presented when garm ents are brought in. Good quality copies require good quality typing. Do your typing at mmI t\A«>fAi*m fin /iA iita has been belowi« Iti the11 Ilevel of perform ance we need him a t in order to win. “Sean is very sim ilaratatistically to Todd Hons,” he added. “They are both right a t the 60 percent (completion) m ark, and their touchdown ratio is higher than the intercep­ tion ratio. We think Sean is on his way to having a fine year.” Tollner said the Devils’ balance is one thing that concerns him. He called the ASU offense the most ver­ satile the Trojans have seen so far this year, both running and passing. Affordable Cleaners ANY GARMENT ' — 130 E. U n iv e rs ity 894-9137 1332 E. A p ach e (A. J. Bayless Center) II A m B oB o C h in e s e B u ffet A l l Y o v C a n Eat 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Lunch o n ly $ 2 .7 9 4 p.m.-9 p.m. Dinner o n ly $ 3 .3 8 M e n u C h a n g e d D a il y Serves Dom estic & Im port Beer 502 S. Dobson, M esa 898-8222 Open 7 days a week CELEBRATION S U N DEVIL STYLE II Hom ecom ing 1 9 8 3 KING and QUEEN APPLICATIONS are now available at: • T h e O f f i c e o f S t u d e n t L ife • T h e A s s o c i a t e d S t u d e n t O ffic e •M .U . I n f o r m a t i o n D e s k •M a tth e w s C e n te r •D o r m ito r ie s (In the Arches) 966-5462 Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-5 SERVING ASU SINCE 1964 All return applications are due in The Associa­ tion Student Office by October 2 1 ,5 p.m. « m u ti» Wednesday, October 1$, 1983 Going to Law School? No. 1? Find out how ! ASU voted to have best recruits but Brock says Devils backed in By Ken Sain Assistant sports editor Outside pressure could be mounting on Sun Devil baseball coach Jim Brock. For the second consecutive year, ASU has been named by Collegiate Baseball as having the top recruits in the nation. Team s that get the best talent year after year are expected to bring home national championships. But Brock is not so sure the Devils won the recruiting title outright. He believes the Devils slipped in the back door after other schools watched their top prospects sign contracts with pro­ fessional team s. “We didn’t have a great recruiting year, I guess we won it by default,” Brock said. “The other schools signed some great players but after they signed with the pros, they were left with good players. . “We were surprised that we got (No. 1-ranked recruits) again, he said.” ; . , Tending the list of top recruits for the Devils are junior col­ lege transfer Bob Grandstaff, right-handed pitcher Kevin Williamson, first baseman Luis Medina, shortstop Shawn Gilbert and outfielder Dan Ducusin. All were drafted in last June’s free agent draft by the ma­ jo r leagues. . Two other newcomers are fighting for a starting spot on the Devil roster. Steve M urray will be battling for the starting se­ cond base position. Mike Devereaux has a shot a t starting in right field. Both are transfers from Mesa Community Col­ lege. . 1;. ■ While ASU received the No. 1 ranking, some of the other team s that usually compete for the College World Series title also managed Top 10 rankings. Here is a look a t each. No. 2 — Oklahoma St. The Cowboys decided they needed some strong arm s to bolster a strong hitting attack. Five pitchers drafted in June are expected to play for the Cowboys. In all, Oklahoma State signed 11 new recruits. It could have been better, but five top-notch players signed with the pros. No. 3 — Texas. Graduation and the pros decim ated the na­ tional champions over the summer, The Longhorns added 18 new recruits to try to regroup for the coming season. Col­ legiate Baseball called their freshm an recruiting class the best in the nation, but their JC transfers left them in the third spot. No. 4 — Wichita State. The Shockers have emerged as a tmigh team over the past few years, and the addition of 13 new players will only advance them further. No. 5—Cal State-Fullerton. The Titans would have won the recruiting title if four of their best recruits had not signed professional contracts. Still, the Titans did add eight quality recruits to bolster the team that went to the finals of the West II Regional Championship. No. 6 — Arizona. The Wildcats suffered their first losing ever last year and coach Jerry Kindall is hoping the 11 recruits he signed will change that. M U . R O O M 219 W EDNESDAY & THURSDAY O C T O B E R 12 & 13 "How to Got Into Low School” "Law as a Career" C o n tin u o u s sh o w in g b e tw e e n 9 a.m . a n d 3 p .m . Come at your convenience In terested students w h o d id n o t receive th e P re-Law N ew sletter fo r S ep tem b er m ay register in SS-111 and pick o n e u p in th e P re-Law ro o m . Thanks to you ... It 's ON T.A.P. ( T h e A lc o h o l P r o g r a m ) ASU’s Kevin Williamson was listed as one of the top recruits that ASU was able to grab over the summer. Williamson was drafted In the first round of the secondary phase of last June’s free agent draft. ALCOHOL EDUCATION WEEK OCTOBER 1 0 - 1 4 No. 7 —San Diego State. The Aztecs added a ton of pitchers to a team that qualified for the West I Regionals last year. All five of their recruits were pitchers, but only one lefthander was added. No. 8 — Stanford. The defending Six-Pac champions should be tough again. The big fish that got away in Palo Alto was K urt Stillwell, but most of the 12 recruits attending Stanford are expected to add to the Cardinal depth. No. 9—Hawaii. The Rainbows have quietly been building a strong program on the Islands. They qualified for the playoffs last year, and with the addition of nine new recruits they could m ake it to the College World Series. No. 10 — Oklahoma. The Sooners had probably their best recruiting year ever. With some luck the Sooners may challenge the Cowboys and Nebraska. Brock said that for the next few years he will turn his atten­ tion to recruiting efforts on freshm en. Junior college transfers are eligible to be drafted after one season, while freshmen m ust wait three years before the pros can d raft them. “This year we have depth in both pitching and the position players,” Brock said. “What we would like to be able to do is stay away from the transfers and concentrate on freshm en.’’ A n h e u s e r - B u s c h - H e n s le y & C o ., D is tr ib u to r s , A S A S U , C o u n s e lin g & C o n s u lta tio n , I n t r a f r a t e r n i t y C o u n c il, M e m o r ia l U n io n A c ti v i t ie s B o a r d , P a n h e l l e n i c C o u n c il, R e s i d e n c e L ife , S t u d e n t H e a l th A d v is o r y C o m m i t t e e , S t u d e n t H e a l t h P .l.E .S . P r o g r a m , S t u d e n t L ife , T h in k , T h in k , T h i n k e r s . 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She added, “We played fair, but we could have easily come in second place hrfiinH Hpfonrfing national champion Texas Christian Univer­ sity .” ; , , , ASU placed fifth in the Invitational behind defending na­ tional cham pion TCU, Florida in second place, and New Mex­ ico and B Y U , which tied for third place. Coach Vollstedt was content with the overall perform ance of her team . “I think we could have done much better, but I was pleased with the team . In fact, we played better than the way we finished.” She was especially pleased with the perform ance of freshm an Libby Akers, who played in her first college tour­ nam ent and had scores of 77-79-79 for a total of 235. A stronger player, Nancy Moen turned in scares of 77-79-80 for a total score of 236, and was not too happy with her play. “Nancy was disappointed in her perform ance,” said Vollstedt. “She had confidence but lost it, so now she really needs to get her confidence back. ” Freshm an Danielle Ammaccapane, who placed ninth in the tournament, had scores of 74-81-75—230, over the par-74 layout. Pick ’em We have the results of last week’s P ick’o n . Each winder m issed only three gam es, but our tiebreaker decided the final ranking. The winner is Jeff Jackson. Second prize goes to Joe Shehigh. Third was a tie between Carrol H arris and Cindy Steinberg. They can pick up their prizes where you can turn in your forms — the Matthews Center’s basement. ASU ________ _ Predict the score. PRO GAMES N.Y. JETS Buffalo SAN FRANCISCO PITTSBURGH Washington L.A. Raiders L.A. RAMS 3% 2% 6% 5% 5% 3% 4% □ □ □ □ □ □ □ _________ lO O □ U 0 ( 0 1 0 L iu 2X3SS S tu d e n t D is c o u n t s _vs. USC Home team In caps: Favorite Underdog COLLEGE 14% □ Oregon □ ARIZONA □ UCLA ;8% □ WASHINGTON ST. □ WASHINGTON 15% □ Stanford □ CALIFORNIA 9% □ Oregon State □ Ohio State 1% □ ILLINOIS □ Texas 12% □ ARKANSAS □ ALABAMA 4% □ Tennessee □ □ □ □ □ □ □ ENJOY THE B EST Miami BALTIMORE New Orleans Cleveland GREEN BAY SEATTLE Atlanta o n all sc o o p s, P in ts an d Q u arts. Receive 20% OFF w h en you p re s e n t y o u r ASU S tu d e n t I.D. Card. F ree D e liv e r y on all P in ts, Q u arts an d C akes. 9 0 3 S. Rural C in n a m o n Tree P la z a 967-2340 N am e___ _____________ _ H O U R S: Sun.-Thurs 11-12 a.ni. Fri. & Sat. I l l a.m. Phone ____________ _____ contlnuM lpag«1t Buy a* sr one frozen > yogurt any size, m and get one 4-oz. size free w ith this coupon. Tastes just like ice cream, but has % the calories. , "Naturally" delicious. New flavors dally, 15 toppings. 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Citizenship Required CAM PUS INTERVIEW DATES: NOVEMBER 2 & 3. Sttte PHM» Page 17 Wednesday, October 1g, 1983 Hoop team looks for offense By Dean Obenauer Sports w riter Sun D evil b ask etb all coach Bob Weinhauer will have his hands full this year yrpgrimenting with all the new faces the team will have this season. In W einhauer’s inaugural season last year, he led the team to a 19-14 campaign that was topped with a bid to the National Invitation Tournament. It was his sixth po6t-season tourney in six years as a head coach. The first challenge Weinhauer will face will be «nuking up for the loss of 75 percent of last year’s total offense. With the loss of guard Byron Scotland for­ wards Paul Williams and Walt Stone, the team will need sew ing from a new corps of players. Scott was the Pac-10 leading scorer with a 21.6 point average, and probably would have been this year also if he had not decided to forgo his final year of eligibility. Williams was the conference’s secondleading sew er behind Scott with a 19.7 point per game average, and he went on to the pros. However, W illiams’ pro career has temporarily come to a halt after he was cut by the Phoenix Suns. Stone was the team ’s third contributer with just over nine points per outing. “Last year we had two outstanding players in Byron and Paul,’’ Weinhauer said. “It was easy fw everyone to let them take the lead. “This year we won’t have a superstar, so the others will take charge of the situations with m we confidence than they’ve shown in the past.’’ The returning team members averaged a m ere 16.9 points per game last year and played only 35 percent of tbe Devils’ total minutes. “Our returning players didn’t sew e much in support roles last year,” W einhauer said, “but they will score more this year with the confidence of knowing the burden is on their shoulders now.” Weinhauer will be placing the respon­ sibility on guards Chris Beasley and Kenny Vaughns. Forwards Jim Deines and Billy Jordan will be highly relied on, as will center Phil McKinney. Beasley scored the most of any returning player with an 8.4 average last year. “Beasley, Deines and Jordan, in par­ ticular, should score much b etter,” Weinhauer said. “We’ll look' to Kenny Vaughns to create scoring opportunities, to get the ball into the scorers’hands.” HEALTH CARE ITT courier Term inal system s, ine T e m p e , A riz o n a If you're planning a career in the health care field, you owe it to yourself to find out about the Air Force's Health Professional Scholarship . Program. Qualified l\S . citizens can receive scholarships for medical school. Our scholarships include: • LAB FEES EQUIPMENT RENTAL AND |579 MONTHLY STIPEND FOR DETAILS CONTACT: USAF Medical Procurement Office 2020 S. 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Plan to a tte n d and learn m ore a b o u t o u r engineering openings. if unable to a tte n d o u r "On-Campus career Day", please send resum e and salary history to: Pat Taylor, ITT Courier Terminal systems, inc., P.o. b o x 29039, Mall stop A12, USA273, Phoenix, Arizona 85038. . An Equal O p p o rtu n ity Em ployer Automotive Accessories— •Sound System s «Air Distributor for Conditioning ‘ Speed Controls «Alarm System s «Computers service a sales «Clocks «Replacement Parts S n tC C A r MESA DATSUN 1701 W. BROADW AY, M E S A • 834-3366 Special Monday Hours: 7:30 a.m.-9 p m. Parts Open Sat. 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ITT Courier Terminal Systems. Inc m /F /v / h numbers Pac-lO Football Standings Team 1. use 2. Oregon 3. Washington 4. Arizona 5. Arizona St. 6. UCLA 7. Cal 8. Stanford 9. Washington St. 10. Oregon St. Conference Overall W L T W L T 2 2 1 2 0 0 2 3 0 1 0 0 4 1 0 I 0 0 5 0 1 1 0 1 3 0 1 1 0 1 1 3 1 1 0 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 0 5 0 0 2 0 2 3 0 0 2 0 1 5 0 0 3 0 Team lead ers: Rushing D. Clack M. Crawford D. Wright Passing T. Hons S. Osiecki Receiving P. Day D .K era D. Clack D. Wright D. Allen M. Crawford Fall baseball scores: Friday, Oct. 7 ASU 5, New Mexico 4 New Mexico 6, ASU 3 Att. 67 50 33 Att. 105 4 Ree. 13 13 10 9 9 7 Yds. Avg. 6.4 429 214 ^4.5 4.4 146 iComp. lut. 3 62 1 3 Yds. Avg. 13.9 180 9.3 121 9.9 99 14.1 127 12.6 113 55 7.9 TD’s 4 3 -0 Yds. 693 57 TD’s 1 0 0 0 4 0 •-* Saturday, Oct. 8 ASU 3, New Mexico 2 ASU 12, New Mexico 3 The Nebraska Corahuskers ' m aintained their stranglehold on the top spot in the Associated P ress football poll this week with a 14-10 win over Oklahoma State. Only two team s in the top 20, Oklahoma and Alabama lost last week. ASU was in the 18th spot in the poll for the second consecutive week and is the lowest ranked team that has not lost a gam e thus far. The University of Arizona moved up a notch after winning its gam e over Colorado State. Three of the Pac-10 team s are ranked in this week's Top 20. 6-0-0 1. Nebraska 4-0-0 2. Texas 6- 0-0 3. North Carolina 5-0-0 4. West Virginia 4-1-0 5. Auburn 46. Ohio State 5-0-1 7. Florida 4-0-1 8. Georgia $4-1 t. Arizona 5-1-0 10. Miami, Fla. 411. Alabama 5- 0-0 12. SMU 4-1-0 13. Michigan 4-1-0 14. Iowa 3-2-0 15. Oklahoma 4-1-0 16. M aryland 4-1-0 17. Washington 3-0-1 18. Arizona State 419. Illinois 4- 1-0 20. Brigham Young sMEXICAN m i v& ITALIAN cs RESTAURANT Happy Hour 4 :3 0 ^ $1 Wine, Well, Margaritas 7 5 t beer Complimentary Hors D'oeuvres Served During Happy Hour Miniature Chimichangas • Chili Con Queso Specials 4:30-10 1-0 Monday Wine, Well M argarita................... $1 Men's Night B eer................; • * ' • • • " .......... 75t Tuesday All Tequila Drinks...................... $1 Wednesday Stifino's specialty D rin k s.... $1.50 Pint Colad». Freddy Fudpucker, Tequila Sunrise Thursday 1-0 Well Drinks i ................ ....... 2 for 1 Ladies Night Friday Margaritas and Pitchers of Margaritas .............. Half Price SATURDAY All Day Happy H our 11 a.m.-10 p.m. 2051 S. D obson 1-0 S. o f Baseline „ „ 831-1979 SERENDIPITY An Arts and Crafts Fair October 18, 19 and 20 West Lawn of the Memorial Union October 22 Apache Boulevard and College Open parking adjacent to Fair On the Campus of Arizona State University 8:30 a.m . to 4 p.m . ea ch day Experience the excitement of "Serendipity." A*tempting array of wares created by some of the finest Arizona and International Artisans. An opportunity to purchase high quality arts and crafts. Sponsored by: M U A B H o s t & H o s te s se s Famous Pizza St Subs with Greek Specialties ----------- Now Offers—---------- Happy Hour 4-9 p.m . Everyday ALL DRINKS 2 f o r 1 ÆMPVED' CLASS RINGS.1NC (Except bottled beer) Now when you buy any ArtCarved col­ lege ring, you not only get one ring loaded with style and quality, you get two. A great college ring— and a diamond fashion ring, FREE. Ifs a beauty— 1QK gold with a genuine 2 point diamond. Retail value— $60. The perfect way to express yourself, your style, or your feelings for that special someone. Available exclusively from your ArtCarved Representative for a limited time only. 50* OFF ANY PIZZA G y r o • S o u v la k i P a s t it s o • M ou sak a ASU BOOKSTORE 966-6565 October 10 thru 14 106 E. University Dr., Tempe Deposit required. MasterCard or V isa Accepted. 0 1983. ArtCarved Class Rings, Inc. Page 19 SfgteftfiL More about classifieds Women’s golf oenttnued horn page 19 “She had a poor second day, but still finished ninth,” said VoUstedi Senior Ttna Tombs shot a 76-79-79—234 and finished tenth In the tournam ent “Tina could have done better than that,” said V ollstedt “She could have easily been in the top five.” Next week the golf team travels to Tulsa, Oklahoma for the Nancy Lopez Invitational a t Cedar Ridge Country Club, the site of the U.S. Women’s Open where F arr won the prestigious honor of being the Opien’s low am ateur. Four of die five golfers competing a t the Nancy Lopez In­ vitational are Ammaccapane, Tombs, Akers and F arr. The battle for the fifth position is between Trish Certo, Julie Cross, Diane Sikorski and Moen. As far the re st of the season, Vollstedt feels positive about her team . “We’ve got the m ost potential of any golf team I've seen in the last two years,” she says. “It will take awhile, but w ell win tournam ents, and as the year progresses, we’ll get better.” For Rent or Lease WALK TO ABU. Brand new one bedroom oondomlnlume w ith mini Minds, stove, dlshwseher, dlapocal, washer and dryer, pool, JaeuzzL 8329. Joanne, Computer Realty, 884-2931, 831-1031. __________ For Stele COLLEGE BWEATSHIRTSI Harvard (gray)- Yale (white)- Princeton (navyjDartmouth (kelly)- North Cerellna (It. blue)- USC (white)- others. 81230 each postpaid. S- M- L- XL. Send check to LMg, Box 317, Brookhaven, MS 38801. COO otdsra oall 1-801-839-1086. HERPESI THIS Horpea brochure by a physician la a must for the sexually active. How to avoid, defeat and treat. Send 84.00 to Antler Publishing, Box 43384Tucson, AZ89733,_____________ DESERT HAWGS IT S MAGIC! Musical gloating cards for birthday and Christmas. Open them up and a tune plays. 83.00 each. Robert Galvin Company, 4081 Hlget, Box 19889, Deptartment SP, Sarasota, Florida 33979.___________________ ___ TUNE-UP SPECIAL OLD MILWAUKEE 81.79, California coolers 82.88, Fratelll Blanco 82.89, used Playboy magazlass .47. Cold Imported bears. Ice, wines, liquors. Rundle's, comer University and M ill. Harley Davidson Specialists HONDA YAMAHA KAWASAKI SUZUKI BMW THE NEW York Times Is avallsble at a 30% discount Monday thru Friday. Sunday edition available for 82.50. Call 969-9932. ______________ ________ STEREO Sales, Service, Accessories 1 7 1 1 E. APACHE M on.-Fri. 10-6 TEMPE • 9 * 6 -4 9 1 9 Saturday 10-5 _ CALL 954-9541. Announcem ents B usin ess Opp. FRIENDS MEETING) (Quaker Service.) 9-JO a.m. Sundays, Oanforth Chapel, ASU. Silent w o rs h ip - Fellowship. (9003636.) _____________ ~ MAKE EXTRA cash, sell a safety product. Contact Arcos Research, Tampa. 98S2B38. AND Christian? Try Lambda Campus Christian Fellowship I Yesl Jesus loves you! C all 2BS-1102 anytime!_______________ __ g ay GAYS, LESBIANS, aH are welcomeO asis M etro p o litan C om m unity Church. Sundays- 8:00 p.m.- Danforth Chapel, HANG GLIDE tide weekend! C ertified Instruction, equipment plus five flights tor only S46, com plete. Group rates and gift certificates available. Wlndsporta, 887-7121 (dally 1030- 6:001 ________ PARENTS COMING to visit and need a nice place to stay? Try Bad and BreMdastSBOOSSa. _________ ___ 'TH E CONGREGATIONAL Church of the Valley Is m eeting for Sunday worship a t 9 3 0 a.m ., a t the Cook Christian Training Softool on Unlversity, west of P riest You are Invited." THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, a t 7 3 0 p.m., M.U. room 219, The Gay Academic. Union w ill hold elections of offtoers and watch video tapes of Phoenix’s 1983Gay Rights March and an Interview with the author o f the “Torch Song T rilo g y ” . 9 6 » -6 7 » 1 fo r m ore information. __________ ___ Autom obiles 1974 PINTO station wagon. 4-speed, AC. reitable. 1600.00.088-1964. 1978 HONDA, Accord. AT, AC, 88,000 miles, new d o th Interior, p a in t M ust sell. Owner tarili deal, cash. 82,000. Call Peter before 12.1XL a fter GOO. 278-7808. 1978 CAM ERO exoeHent condition. AM-FM cassette, a ir, cruise. 84,089 or best offer. 8203663. 1980 MONTE Cwto. Perfect, maroon, removable roof! Loaded. W ire wheels. aportyl Best offer. C laudia. 8836476. 8229 DOWN Chevys, Fonte, V ana economy c ara Beat running oars and lowest pitaes around. Many cars prtoed undsr 81,000. Ws fin an ça U s ' Auto Salsa 186 East M ain. 982-1333._______ BRAND NEW, never been used, in unopened original individual cartons. AM/FM stereo receiver, cassette deck plays and records, turntable, speakers. Full original guarantee. Cost $400, sacrifice $140. Usually home. NEED MONEY? Can’t fit a lob Into clast schedule? May have what you're looking for. Call M ike. 969-2316 days, 292-2779evenings. ______________ ^ In t h in g — **VINTAGE CLOTHING for women! Hals, purass, shoes and a large selection of Jewelry. Clothing for every day to the exotic. Contemporary and antique Hams. The Freeway to Alma School Road on the comer o f Alma School and Rey Road In Bashes Shopping Center, Chandler. Worth the trip. Rethraads, 9638387._____________'____________ For Rent or Lease NEAR ASU. Two bedroom, two bath condo. Washer and dryer, dishwasher and pool, very clean. Call after 6.-00. 899-2219._______________________ __ M USICIAN NEEOED fo r B ap tist Church. Call 2868814 tor more Information. __________ __________ OPINION POLLS friendly person who enjoys phone work. Experienced profaned. 2744200, Melody, evenings sndSundsya _______________ OVERSEAS JOBS- Summer- year round. Europe, South A m erica Australia Aate, All fields. 8800- 81200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free Informa­ tion. W rite UC Box 52-AZ-3 Corona Del Mar. CA 92625. __________________ PART-TIME HELP needed working conventions and meetings. 85.00 per hour to atari. Flexible hour». 286-9808. GIRLS. GIRLS I have a few openings le ft, part-tim e and full tim e. Phone, light paper work. Nice office sur­ roundings. Apply at Uqltam, 4416 S. Rural, Falrtanes Village after 1030 am . No phone calls.________________ . RECREATION CENTER staff- to t tim e assistant. Person would be responsible for opening end supervising a recrea­ tion center and assisting w ith a program for throe to five year old children. Prefer recreation and pre­ school experience. 36- 40 hours guaranteed. Phone Jinny or Doug at The Dobaop Association. 831-8314. RECREATION CENTER staff person responsible for general canter super­ vision, operation and simple things. Initially hours mainly weekends and evenings. R ecreation background preferred but not required. Phone Doug or Jinny, The Dobson Association. 831-8314.____________________ _____ WRITER- PASTE-UP- layout artist to r a oompany nows tetter. Close to ASU. 87 to 88 an hour. For Interviews apply at 311» South Roosevelt, Temps.________ H elp Wanted Jewelry ACTIVISTS WANTED: Fem inists, EnvlronmentsDsts and others. Fun tim e poid staff positions fighting the Iniustloee of Regenerates. Call ACORN between 9 3 0 a m . and noon. For Interview. 293-1297. ________ . 14K GOLD Jewelry 9375% o ff retail prices! Chains, earrings, rings, dia­ monds. Going out of business sale! Joseph Ford Gold Exchange, 8638637. ATTENTION DOCTORATE studentsmajoring marketing- advertising. Construction company looking for mature, aggressive and self starting Individual. Part-time 2 3 0 p.m.- 6 8 0 p.m., flexible. Excellent pay and benefits for right person. C all MondayFriday, 8 8 0 am .- 2 8 0 p.m tar appolntroent. 9800686._____________ ______ BREAK AWAY big for the holiday*. Represent the worlds largest beauty oompany. Call Jane, 988 8327._______ _ TOWNHOUSE FOR ren t 8400 month, throe bedrooms, one bathroom, airconditioning and oommunity pool. Call ‘ 807-1128. ____________________ DIRECT SALES, no' experience neces­ sary. Earn 8160 to 8300 per week. Evening hours and wepkly pay. Denny, 838-4879. ___________ ’ Doing surveys, servicing displays and selling mem­ berships fo r health spas. Easy, p rofitable and fun. ALSO POSITIONS OPEN FOR: A ER O B IC IN STR U C TO R S — PH O TO M O D ELS, SPA A TTE N D A N TS A N D O FFIC E W ORK. 956-2200 89S*1263 An equal opportunity employer. H ELP W A N TE D - PASSPORT LOST between October 30, 1982 and November 1, 1862, a t M.U. Sated Afkery, 8208646._____________ . M iscellaneous SORORITIES, CLUBS, Churchs: Do you need W project to earn 3 tor your organization? For e different kind of fund-raising, give me a call. Barbara, 8 6 3 1 3 4 4 ._______________ __________ M otorcycles_____ 1881 YAMAHA XJ5S0H Maxim. Exceltont condition, 4,000 m iles, burgundy, adjustabla back re s t many extra». Must »all. 81300. OBQ. 881-2971. SUZUKI G8450L, 1882 bought new In 83, low m iles, warranty remaining, 81150.9638187. _________ __ R eal Estate 10/14 P A R T -T IM E te ^ a te d ^ o x lrn a te ly «ve m inuta from campus. Please call DIALAM ERICA lor details. 829-1140 L ost F Found 1979 KAWASAKI KZ400. Greet condi­ tion, com pletely tuned end serviced on September 16, 1963. Asking 8850. Contact Graham 277-8380, weekdays only 6 3 0 to 4:30. _____________ M AKE $10-$30 H O U R L Y . F U L L- OR P A R T -T IM E . R eal Estate______ ABOVE THE Salt In south Scottsdale area. Two fine three bedroom homes or two bedroom petto homes avallabaie In the 90»'. Red Carpet Weary. 8033414. BWE TO ASU. Near new three bedroom home only 852600 Low down as­ sumable FHA toon. Weal student Investment O w nerieoent9883261. Typing 81.50IPAGE. QUICK POSSESSION possible. Neat three bedroom home w ith fireplace and hugs fenced yard. Bike to ASU. 848,800. Chris, 938284« evenings. Red Carpet Cerahm Weary, 8833414. 10% oath dlaoount, ruth service available, technical symbols. 8 3 0 -4 3 0 , M onday-Friday, 1 m ile from campus. Business O ffice 8eryloee. 884-1617. _________________ THREE BEDROOM, two bath potto home w ith large yard, refrigerator, washer, dryer. Vary low down, SOS'. Rod Carpet Weery. 9684414._____________ A-PLU8 Typing. Term Papere, Re­ turnee', securities and finance papers a specialty. Papere com pleted on Electronic memorywritar. Call Judy 8330401.__________ ____________ ___ EAST Ml THEPOCKET Two and threa bedroom properttea with close commute to ASU. Pay­ ment» can bs as low as 8428/month with approxlmatsly $2,100 down. CALL YOUR PROFESSIONAL TEAM TODAY D r. Judie C ochran Roger C ochran, CPA M a y 21, fo n t M a s « •*» 998-1439 • 998-3844 PART-TIME salsa help needed. Apply In person at The House of Candles, 7126 Fifth Ave. Scottsdale. 930- 530._______ FABULOUS USED furniture for dis­ crim inating taatea. C lassic Con­ signments of Tempo. 1874 E. Apache B lvd.88S8041.______________ ■ SPECIAL LOW student prtoee on new and used blcyclea Expert repairs on all makes a t discount p riesa Tempe BlcyclaShop, 9thand M IIL 966-6966 D O IT DATE BOOK. 88.96 ASU book atora, attutarti beak cantar. GOURMET DININGROOM seeking re­ sponsible indMduate. Experienced only- W alters, broiler cooks, sautao oooka waitresses, oocktall wait resses, bartenders. The Grand H otel. 201 W. Apache Trait, Apache Junction, 86220. Furniture Bicycliles B ooks DRIVERS FOR trucks. High earning». Call between 9 fl0 Mid 1230 Mm. 2939268-_________ TELEPHONE SALES, Arizona Opera requires full end part-time teles people to promote Its exciting fall opera season. Respond 9 3 0 a.m. to 5 3 0 p-m. 840-0841._______ __________________ REMODELING SPECIAL 3100 off. Small, comfortable tyro bedroom 4* plex. 8310-00 per month. 8330327. East Phoepix: Tempe: H elp Wanted The STATE PRESS disclaims ail respon­ sibility for quality and prices of poods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. Roommate wanted FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. 88th Street and Osborn. 8212, utilities included. Call Shawn altar 330, 8908788.________________ ~ A-1 PROFICIENT typist, IBM Setectrte. Pam, 9932093 ____________________ A-1 PROFICIENT typist IBM Selectric, Loral ne 8336386, University end Dobson In Mat e.____________________ A-1 RESUMES, repetitive cover lettere, research papera, theses. F a s t accur­ ate, professional When quality counts, call Cyndy,9633627.______________ __ AAAAH. FORMER aacretery desires all types of typing. Location Southern and Rural. Fran, 8386027.___________ AAA TYPING, editing, resumes, papera, lettera. Twenty year» experience. Scottsdale- Tempe. 9437430, Barbara Andersen. ____________________ ___ ACADEMIC TYPING. W ill edit spelling, punctuation, gn m m v. Feet return end accuracy guaranteed. Joan 93S 0772. ACCENT WORD processing and typing Close to A8U. «432986.______________ ACCURATE ANO reliable. WHI edit spelling and punctuation. $130 page. Cell Debbio, 804-147»._____________ __ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. Stu­ d en t non-smoker, Vi m ile ASU, two bedroom, 8200 month plus Vi utilities. 894-2441. _________________ ACCURATE TYPING, term papers, theaes, resumes, ate. Sm ith Corona typatronlc, $1.00 per page. Narcl 9634256.__________________________ MALE OR female, non-smoker. Four bedroom house with pool. 8130 a month plus Vi utilities. Area; Baseline and McClintock. Call, 8203316 or 2833101. eak lor Clay._______________ ACCURATE TYPING a ll kinds, re­ asonable rales, excellent service. Agnes Llndatrom 6335898. •_________ WALK TO ASU. Seeking roommates, share large four bedroom house, very private, washer, dryer, squeaky clean bathrooms. John 962-0759 between 7:00 and 2:30. ________________ Services ALPHA RESUME. Full service» dis­ count with ad. 1000 E. Apache. Suite 106, Temps. 987-7247._____________ __ AUTO AND Ills insurance at low com petitive rates, student discounts available. Call Stove Dabbo. 9633494. CUSTOM SEW ING alterations, hams Mid mending. Fast and reasonable Berrie s. Joan, 2343106. ____________ ALL SECRETARIAL services. Quality typing, fast, accurate. Resumes. Covar letters. Cassette transcription. IBM Electronic. 20 years experience. McKelllps- Scottsdale roads. Dana. 9416111._______________ ___________ ALL TYPING done fast and accurate. .90 a page. Word processing avallabia. Close to ASU. Call Carln or Bobbi «639196.____________ l _____________ ALWAYS DEPENDABLE, typing edit­ ing, term papers, books, dissertations, resumes. Excellent skills. Shirley's Typing Service6336096._____________ ALL PAPERS typed to your compiate satisfaction. IBM Sotoctrtc. Near ASU. Roeeoneble. M rs. Oakley, 967-06Q2. SAVE TUITION dollars, residency counseling cuts rad taps, no fas until residency Is granted. 9663066._______ CORRECTING TYPEWRITER 30 years experience: legal, medicai, electronics, construction, performing arts, educa­ tion, computer. Graduate and Inatructor also. Leah, 962-1059._____________ SPANISH TUTORING In my homo. All levels. Also translations done and term papers edited. 9636116._____________ FAST. ACCURATE typing, 8135/pege. Call Teresa, a t 9826078 or Unde at 9986775, e lite typing available._______ TIRED OF being ripped o ff on auto repair? Guaranteed, expert work done by profsealonala. ASU area. Dennis, 8200084. _____________ NEED TYPING done at $ 135 per page? Cell Susan a t8336373.______\ ________ CAN YOU TYPE? YOU CAN! in ju s t 6 weeks Microcomputer instruction Flexible hours to your schedule Small classes Individmai help Learn to type or brash up skills KEYBOARDINGLAB CALL 966-7111 23 W. 7th St., Tempe Ju$t across M ill from ASU Visa/Mastercard Accepted 10/13 Travel AIRLINE COUPONS roundtrtp. Hawaii, $198. Eastcoest $290. Alaska, $360. Travel exp ires Novem ber 22. Tbenkeokrlna slightly more. 8239991. DRIVE CARS free to most points o f the United States, over 21. Scheall Drtvaewey, 9816633. ______ BRAND N ew deluxe condominiums. Ctooo to ASU. Fully appltancod Includ­ ing washer and dryer. Excellent Investm ent Financing begins a t 8% . Pool, Jaoouzl. 941,900. Com puter Realty. Joanne. 8032931,831-1081. FREE CARS available for a ll major cities. CaH us now, AAACon Auto Transport 2660201. _____________ REDUCED 81100 and very anxious to te ll this sharp two bedroom petto home near ASU. Quick poseotelon possible, 888.000. Rey, 8332631 evenings. Rad Carpet Carolyn Weary 8886414. __________ 8138 PAGE. Accurate, fast, electronic typewriter, can type anything. Includ­ ing script, symbols, end shadow printing. Grammar, spelling and punc­ tuation edited. O ffice on campus. Judl, 988 8886.__________________________ Typing PROFESSIONAL, DEPENDABLE, tim ely typing. Includes editing tor spalling, grammar. Try "m e-y o u 'll like mol Ruth, 2633017.________ ;________ q u ic k QUALITY, accurate typing. Three blocks from campus. Electronic memory w riter. Experienced In all phases of typing. Also charts, graphs, typesetting, professionally dona, re­ asonable rates. Tampa location. Call 24 hours. Now Moon Secretarial. 8046234,941-7090.______________ __ STATE- OF- the- a lt word processino tor your papers. Quality guaranteed, raaaonabto prices. 8901566 evenings, TYPING $1.75 per pege, editing extra. Carolyn. «330868.__________________ TYPING. NEAT, fa s t rush jobs accepted. 81.75 per page. 8330980, Lori. 81.40IPAGE. TYPING, term papers, •heels all types. North Central Phoenix. Why Worry Secretarial Service, 943 3562,9433148. ____________ VERY ACCURATE, neat, technical, term papers, resumes. $135 page, cover sheets Iras. Call Michele evenings, 2476211.__________ . WORD PROCESSING. Knowledge of APA Mid Turebien reference styles 81 double spaced page. Accurate. 2 63 5778. _____________ _ WORD PROCESSING tor college thesae, reports, and resumes In Paradise Valley area.9833780.________ Wanted NEED MONEY? Paying top dollar for goto Jewelry, diamonds, class rings, pocket watches, and silver colns. Free In home estim ates. Cell anytim e, Joe 9838837._____________ ;___________ PAYING CASH tor gold, silver, d ie monds. d ess rings. M ill Avenue Jewelers, 414 8 . M ill. 9636867.________ WANTED: FOOTBALL tickets to ASU UofA game. W ill pay top dollar. Please call. 2923417.______________________ State Press Wednesday, October 12,1983 Page 2 0 OPEN 24 HOURS Visit yo u r new Drugstore/ Food M art at HUNTINGTON SQUARE 3201 SO U TH M IL L A V E N U E SALE BEGINS WED., OCT. 12 ' S ? 5 i S B r S ■• « PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 15 COME IN TODAY! A t Southern Ave. • Tempe PHONE 894-6747 Offers good at this location only. CARNATION ARIZONA 7-UP 2 % LOWFAT MILK SPARKLING WATER 2 liters % gallon TIMEX WATCHES Men's and ladies' styles in sport or dress models. Gallon 790 Lim it 2 ’/¿-gallons, please. FOOT LOCKERS f f l 890 490 SUPER X IVORY HOUSE &GARDEN SOAP «SECT SPRAY 3 ’ti-oz. size 16'U-oz. size 3 .0 0 DOVE GRAND AWARD r » S C Ä ^ lC H B IS T M A S y iT a S fc ìi CARDS .iteri 1.00 CENTRUM SUPER X TAMPONS 30’s reg. DISH DETERGENT FF Mtr. suggested retail prices 4 for 2 for 13»» % 130’s Time-Zero Supercolor SX-79LÊn*FMm Polaroid 22 oz. 6 .6 9 2.00 970 TIME ZERO FILM 7 .3 9 PLUS: THESE SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS FROZEN & DAIRY \ BEER, WINE & SNACK PHARMACY LIQUÓR CENTER BAR R. i •HOT & COLD DRINKS «SANDWICHES •MICROWAVE OVEN TO USE •D in n e rs •D e s s e rts • I c e C ream •F re s h M ilk •COLD BER •OWNER fir DESSERT WINES «VODKA «WHISKEY •SCOTCH »AND MORE I OUR SUPBIx PHARMAOSTS OFFER YOU M A N Y Î1ME-SAVM6 ANO I M O N EY-SAVIN G SER VIC ES. •PHONE-AHEAD REFK1 SERVICE! •DUALITY PRESCRIPTIONS 1 •EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ■ *1 Pharmacy Hours: M on.-Sat. 8a.m .-9p.m . S u n d a y 10a.m.~8 p.m. 894-6747 VAL UAB LE COUPON Puppy Sm all OFF 4-pk. AA EGGS 390 Ice Cream Cone $390 CALIFORNIA COOLER S lu sh 1 doz. BOONESFARM 1 1 WINES 750 ml. 990 790 ANY NEW PRESCMPTNNV AT SUPERx RAINBO HONEY GRAIN BREAD ^5 " 7 3 0 •u~ u•N o t tren d e rebla bw w w n SUPERx Stom a. Lim it 1 prm cription per coupon. Coupon m uet accompany order. Doctor w * Be conrecred to r rwm authorization. V oid w here reetricted by buy. D o w no t apply to Ineurenco or goyom w ent _preecription-paym ent plans. O ffer v o id , k a l oth er dbcounta. fM ExP,res 10-18-83.