Workers shooting fireworks from butte terminated for possession of alcohol W ed n esd ay October 26,1983 By Lisa Phillips Staff writer Several employees of a firm contracted to provide fireworks at ASU football games were ordered off the Tempe Buttes and later fired for being in possession of alcohol dur­ ing Saturday’s game, officials said. Ray Stout of Fireworks Productions,-Inc., said he fired «»ight individuals after they were asked to dispose of the ffl^nhnl but refused. None of the individuals was an ASU stu­ dent, he said. ' . “They had been wamétfyibout taking beer up there,” Stout said. “Drinkiiui on the butt^tejuwtcusable.” ASU Assistant Police Chief Norman Peck said no charges were rnai'° by ASU Police against the individuals, and none of the alcohol in their possession was confiscated. “We let their boss handle it once they came off the butte,” he said.” Peck said several of the individuals were carrying beer cans when they were ordered off the butte, and a couple of them “were quite tipsy.” statej press! Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University Vol. 66 No. 38 © Copyright, State Press, 1983 ASU Police were notified by security guards on the butte that the people setting off the fireworks had alcohol, accor­ ding to Peck. The guards are responsible for preventing peo­ ple from climbing the buttes during a game, he said. Miriam Boegel, ASU director of public events, said the situation on the butte was “a major safety question that had to be resolved.” “We had a prior report and we were watching it,” she said. Boegel said the individuals were given the choice of taking the alcohol out to their cars or ceasing the fireworks. “There was some reluctance to get rid of the alcohol,” she said. “They were then asked to leave.” Stout said his employees are usually dependable and had been warned when they were hired that it was illegal to drink while handling fireworks. Peck said ASU has contracted Stout’s firm for a number of years to handle the fireworks, and this is the first problem he has encountered. Stout said he will retain the ASU fireworks contract. M illionaires-To-Be C lub ca n ’t afford to operate By Steve W aterstrat Copyeditor The Millionaires-To-Be Club of ASU is folding due to lack of funds. The club has no money to provide publicity for the speakers it invites to campus, resulting in small audiences, said Bill Foy, the club’s president. The basic function of the club is to invite successful members of the community to speak at ASU’, where anyone is welcome to hear their formulas for success. “It’s unfair to the speakers to 1 e 1C or 15 people show up,” said Foy, “ ui»i the return on my time just isn’t worth it. ” The last speaker Foy has booked is Eldon Barmore, president of Rio Salado Bank. Barmore will give his insights on success at 8 p.m., Nov. l, to anyone interested enough to show up at the MU Cochise Room. . a senior business major, will not *Foy, V /, U --------- ----- -------' solicit anymore speakers this semester, he skid. “I’m very hesitant about booking people and having nobody show up,” he said. Thirteen people attended the most recent Millionaires-To-Be meeting, which featured a talk by syndicated columnist Art Mollen, a Phoenix doctor who commands $2,000 per speech, but spoke to the club for free. Foy stressed that Millionaires-To-Be meetings are open to the public free of charge. The club has no 6fficial roster, he said, and no dues. Although the absence erf dues is one reason the club has been unable to pay for publi­ city, Foy said he prefers not charging them. The Associated Students of ASU delegates funds to clubs that submit budgeted re­ quests by the end of September, but Foy said he missed that deadline. A member of the club last year, Foy said he found out he would be president just before school started this fall, getting him off to a disorganized start. School and work have not left him the time ‘I’m very hesitant about booking people and having nobody show up.’ he would like to put into running the club, he said. "*•' : But he said the club should only be dor­ mant temporarly. “Next semester we could get off to a fresh start,” Foy said. He would like to remain active in the club if he “can get some people to help out,” he said. He would like to continue the success the club had last year, Foy said, when Scott Goldman, a sophomore business major, was president. ^ At the club’s last meeting, Goldman said he “spent $200 of my own, and put in about 30-40 hours a week” promoting the club last year. Foy said he does not have that kind of time or money. ASASU can provide funds to clubs in need, according to Vice President Ray Burnell. “The club can go through an individual senator, who will write up a bill and take it through the legislative process,” Burnell said. In this way, a club that misses the deadline for submitting budgets can still get financial help from ASASU, he said. Women’s leaders trade barbs before packed house . ^ y M.K. Reinhart taff writer i Two of the nation’s foremost womens saders clashed in a debate on women s ights issues, amidst cat-calls, hoots, howls nd often deafening applause from a mixed udience in the MU Arizona Room Tuesday. Phyllis Schlafly and Sarah Weddington «changed opposing ideas on topics ranging •om abortion to pension funds, each prompng numerous outbursts from an overflow rowd estimated at more than 600 people. Schlafly, an accomplished author, at>mey and journalist who spearheaded the Stop ERA” organization, began her 15 linute opening statement with some ackground into her initial involvement in alitics and women’s rights. In an age when the feminist movement ras in full swing, Schlafly said she “saw a eed for somebody to articulate the other ide.” “Women are not some sort of subgroup tiat all think alike,” she said, adding that ___ __ In <ÍMAÍ -----— the National Organization of Women is “not for women’s achievem ent. . . they are for a different sort of agenda than I am. ” She said that NOW and other feminist organizations’ views of equal rights for women “ are sim ply not in the mainstream.” ■» , Schlafly said such groups contend that “ the number one women’s right is the right to kill her unborn baby.” Weddington, who a t 26 won the landmark Roe vs. Wade abortion case before the Supreme Court, often referred to various legal precedents throughout the evening and was adamant in her response. “I do believe in the U.S. Constitution, the right to make as many choices as possible. But if medicine and the courts can’t decide when life begins, then that is a question that should be left to the individual.” But according to Schlafly, “You don’t get rid of it simply by saying you don’t know if it’s life or not. “I don’t know how you can deny that it is —— — i A row of women clap in response to one of Phyllis Schlafly’s comments. The SehlaflySarah Weddington debate filled the Arizona Room of the MU Tuesday night with supporters of both sides. (human life),” she said. “It’s not going to grow into an animal or a plant or anything qIsg ” Turning to other topics, Schlafly proceed­ ed to attack the equal-pay-for-equal-work issue. “If women were more qualified (then men) they wouldn’t need quotas,” she asserted. “I think the American woman is the most fortunate creature that ever lived.” Weddington agreed, but for different Phyllis Schlafly Sarah Weddington “We are the most privileged, but we didn t win those privileges with the help of Ms. Schlafly or her friends,” she said. “We have rights because women went out and worked for them.”' , Men and women will never receive equal average pay, according to Schlafly, as long as many women remain out of the work force to raise children. “The notion of compensatory work is the latest gimmick,” on the part of equal rights proponents, she said. It is their attempt “to put their own subjective values on jobs. “ I find it so odd,” Weddington retorted, “that Ms. Schlafly thinks that women make less, and if they are willing to accept it, leave it at that.” Discussion on the social security and pen­ sion systems .prompted a comment by Shlafley that Weddington “does not understand the social security system.” “It is the most pro-woman system we have,” Shlafley said. “Women have the right to try, but it’s only you who will decide whether they will suc­ ceed or not,” she said in closing. Weddington concluded that, “The pro­ blem is not women, the problem is lack of equality.” Stet« Press nation/world wreckage of the Marine building. U .S . M a rin e s in v a d e islan d to "re s to re d e m o c r a c y " V ic k e r s granted sta y o f e x ecu tio n BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (AP) — Hundreds of U.S. Marines and paratroopers invaded the Caribbean island of firwaifa in« lightning airborne strike Tuesday, under ordcra to protect American residents and “restore democracy” in the tiny Marxist-ruled state. President Reagan called the swift pre-dawn operation “completely successful” in its initial stages. But armed Grenadian resistance continued through the day, and casualties were reported — an unspecified number of American soldiers were hurt, and three Cubans killed. The Americans clashed with a Cuban work force that had been extending a runway a t the Point Salines airport. Thirty Soviet advisers and 600 Cubans were captured in the inva­ sion, U.S. officials said. There was no immediate word on lasses within the 1,200-member Grenadian armed forces. Reagan said the 1,900 Marines and Army Ranger paratroopers, who were later backed up by 300 troops from six Caribbean nations, seized the two main airports on the mountainous, 21-mile-long island. PHOENIX (AP) — A federal judge has granted a stay of execution for Robert Wayne Vickers, who was scheduled to be executed Nov. 2 in the 1978 murder of a prison cellmate. _ District Judge William P. Coppleon Monday grantedtbe stay of execution sought by the American Civil Laberhes Union. Vickers had been scheduled to die in the gas cJ amiP®J at Arizona State Prison at Florence in the stabbing death of inmate Frank Ponciano. .... A brief filed by the ACLU contends Vickers’ rights were violated under Arizona statutes which provide for a jury to determine guilt or innocence and a judge to determine the sentence, if any. , According to the ALCU, the Eighth Amendment erf theU.S. Constitution requires that a jury be involved in the deathpenalty issue for sentencing. M a rin e s in L e b a n o n dig in BEIRUT, Lebanon (A P)—U.S. Marines were ordered into sand-bagged bunkers Tuesday and told to “shoot to kill” anyone approaching their camp after three trucks that of­ ficials feared might be filled with explosives drove nearby. The Pentagon said the death toll from Sunday’s terrorist hnmhing of a U.S. Marine command post rose to 214 as six more bodies were recovered and one man died of injuries in a military hospital in West Germany. The suicide strike was carried out by a man driving a truck packed with a ton of explosives. It was the bloodiest attack against the U.S. military since Vietnam. The Marine commander, Col. Timothy Geraghty, told reporters more bodies were still in the rubble. About 70 Americans were injured, many of whom are being treated in m ilitary hospitals in West Germany. Italy and Cyprus. French spokesman Lt. Col. Philippe De Longeaux said 38 French troops were killed, 15 wounded, and 20 were missing in the bombing at a French command seconds after the at­ tack on the Americans. About 300 Marine troops arrived at the camp to replace their fallen comrades and the Marine commandant, Gen. Paul x. Kelley, arrived to inspect the jagged concrete C o n s u m e r c o s ts rise; in fla tio n re m a in s lo w WASHINGTON (AP) — Prices for cars, food, and housing accelerated in September, pushing overall consumer costs up 0,5 percent in the biggest one-month increase since May, the government reported Tuesday. However, inflation for the first three quarters of the year was still at the slowest pace in &decade Both private and government economists said the recent pickup in prices was no cause for alarm. But White House spokesman Larry Speakes injected a note of caution. “While this monthly increase is small, and inflation re­ mains a t a very low level, this month’s increase reminds us that keeping inflation under control requires constant vigilence, ’’ Speakes said. Food and beverage costs rose 0.4 percent — twice the August increase and the biggest gain since last April—as the crop-damaging effects of last summer’s drought drove prices higher for fruits, vegetables and poultry. CORRECTION POLICY- A n y Running Court, Cleat, Basketball Shoe $5.00 O FF W AREHOUSE (Except Sale Shoes) SPORTS TEM PE 1606 E. A p a c h e (Just West ot McClintock) 9 6 8 -9 5 4 4 MESA 1916 W. B a selin e Corner ofDobson S Baseline) 8 3 9 -0 7 8 1 Ha*iCwd ■ H M i t ipSSS m HOURS: Mon.-Thurs.9a.m -9p.in. Fri.-Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m. It is the policy of the State Press to acknowledge and cor­ rect errors when they occur. If you see an error, call our newsroom at 965-2292 to let us know. All corrections will ap­ pear on this page. TO URING C L A S S E S AN D TRIPS S u » S e r tit N A U T ILU S • A E R O B IC S B ic y c le H a r b o r Tem pe 933 East University Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-9487 WATCH FOR THE SPECIALS ' OF THE MONTH m Feature Bike THIS MONTH N is h ik i C r e s t a h a ste m akes w a is t . (A G O O D B E G IN N IN G TO U RING BIKE) $300 Reg. $369.95 ONE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF MOUNTAIN BIKES IN TEMPE S t u m p j u m p e r , M t . Fiji, C y c l o - P r o R a m , P e u g e o t E x c lu s iv e " M a n t i s ” M tn . B ik e D e a le r C o m e In a n d p e o p le t a lk w h o k n o w 5128 S. Rural Rd. w it h th e N autilus is the state of the art in co n d itio n in g for men and women. With 20 m inutes of exercise, three tim es a week, you can achieve results fast. With personalized supervision, yo u can burn up calories, tighten flabby m uscles, and take inches off your waist. t o u r in g . (North o f Baseline) 839-4580 NISHIKI, FUJI, SPECIALIZED B IC Y C LES [ $40"6ff " 1 i V.I.P. with MEMBERSHIP co u p o n j 1 YEAR Page 3 Wednesday. October 26,1983 G rounds crew planting flowers for A S U centennial celebration By Wayne Baker Staff writer The ASU grounds maintenance crew is out to beautify the campus for the University’s centennial celebration next year. According to Ed Peck, assistant director for buildings and grounds maintenance, construction began this week on the lawn west of Hayden Library to plant flower beds around the circular crosswalks. The project is the grounds crew’s con­ tribution to the University’s centennial celebration beginning in March, he said. Peck said the project will cost close to $2,000 and will be funded entirely by the grounds plant development fund. The estimation includes curbing and watering system costs, he said. Donald Dickerman, supervisor of grounds maintenance, said the actual construction began earlier this week and should be completed within 2V4 weeks. He said Hie project was in the plan­ ning stages for three weeks. Dickerman, who designed the layout, said the floral display will include rings of blue-gray junipers, dark purple chrysanthemums, beige and light blue snaps, pink petunias and blue pansies. Peck said between two and four workers will be working on the project at one time. He said the grounds crew project was the result of a request by President J. Russell Nelson that the entire Universi­ ty participate in the centennial celebra­ tion. “This is a fairly significant year and we really want to put forth maximum effort,” Peck said. Dickerman said another flower pro­ ject has received approval by the facilities planning management and was due to be underway this week. The second flower bed will be on the northwest corner of Lemon Street and Rural Road, he said. The $1,800 project will form rings around the 50-foot palm trees already there, he said. The rings will be comprised of yellow submitted to Miriam Boegel, would write the words “Arizona State Univer­ sity” in gray plant materials on the southwest lawn of Grady Gammage Auditorium. Boegel said funding for the project is questionable. “We have to weigh the costs of this project against others that we’ve got going,” she said. Dickerman said if the proposal Ps-s-s-st — p a s s it on. A secret too good to keep is the extraordinary gift shop tucked in a comer of the University Art Collections Second Floor, Matthews Center T H E G A L L E R Y S T O iiE ■“ I 9<>: P le a s e c u t o u t th is c o u p o n ! WOMEN’S INTRAMURAL SCH EDU LE A ctivity Entries Taken Cross Country Oct. 31-Nov. 10 Meet Arm Wrestling Nov. 14-23 Meet Powerlifting Meet Nov. 14-Dec. 1 P lay B egins 990 W H O PPER Nov. 14 With this ad only. Dec. 1 Dec. 5 Entries Taken P lay B egins Oct. 31-Nov. 10 Nov. 7-17 Nov. 14-23 Nov. n4-Dee. 1 Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. 14 21 & 22 1 5 Offer expires Nov. 9.1983. Limit one coupon per customer. Good only at 740 E. Apache, Tempe MEN’S INTRAMURAL SCH ED U LE A ctivity Cross Country Wrestling Arm Wrestling Powerlifting LIMIT 5 IN TR A M U R A L S P O R T S O FFIC E Physical Education West Bldg. Lobby 965-5638 „ArentTou Hungry? I I I I I I I I I I I I I I State Pn Stete P ie» Wednesday. October 26,1983 spress tate opinion Patience is the best remedy for every trouble — Titus M accius Plautus Reagan must show patience on Taiwan issue Next April,*if all goes as planned, Presi­ dent Ronald Reagan will visit the People’s Republic of China. If past experience is any guide, he will be fascinated by perhaps the oldest continuing culture on earth; relish the wonderful foods erf almost infinite va­ riety; and be told by his hosts that all would be well between Peking and Washington if only the U.S. would cease its support for the Republic of China on Taiwan. I have some friendly advice to the Presi­ dent. Without being impolite — a guest in another’s home should almost never be — Reagan should acknowledge the suggestion but take no action to implement it. We have gone far enough for the time being. The pre­ sent arrangement is quite simply in our own best interest. It is pragmatically sensible to continue to act as if there is but one China de jure, while de facto continuing to have diplomatic and trade intercourse with the two parts of China. It is after all they — the two. governments — who insist on one de jure status. Furthermore, as among the most pragmatic of people themselves, the Chinese understand. Increasingly, they are Guest Editorial • Bruce Mason unofficially recognizing each other. One should not get caught up in their militant rhetoric; it is their actions and our interests which must guide our policies. Since the Nationalist leaders of China fled to Taiwan in 1949-50, the two capitals (of the one China) have kept up a constant barrage of propaganda to the effect that there is but one China and that the United States, as well as other countries, must make a choice: it must be Peking or Taipei; it cannot be both! But, of course, it has been both, and it should continue to be both unless or until they work out their own solution to unification. Why should the U.S. unify China if China is not itself unified? It is true, of course, as the balance of in­ terests in the F a r East has changed in re­ cent years that the U.S. has found it necessary to shift de jure recognition from Taiwan to Peking, but we should be clear as to why this has happened. The root cause was the Soviet Union, not the debate between the two capitals over which one truly represents the one China. There is no foreseeable likelihood that the People’s Republic can attack and defeat Taiwan; nor for the reverse to be possible. To help main­ tain the present reality in which sometimes aggressive insults are tempered with in­ creasingly peaceful relationships between two areas of China, the U.S. should continue to supply the Republic of China (Taiwan) with defensive weapons while cautiously dealing with Peking. I would be perfectly content to have the Chinese throwing insults at each other across the Taiwan Straits for the indefinite future. Especially, since the evidence mounts that the people of both the mainland and Taiwan are increasing their w i a l intercourse that may yet eventuate in a peaceful rapproachment. Chinese families split by the Civil War are meeting in Hong Kong, New York and elsewhere bringing on a kind of unofficial peace. Trade relationships are increasing between them. The U.S. can, and does, trade with both. It can, and does, have official and unofficial representation in both capitals. And Americans and Chinese from Taipei and Peking are visiting each other’s fascinating countries. Things are not all that bad. Americans tend, a t times, to be convinced that change is progress, but, of course, often it is not. Patience — a common and ad­ mirable trait in the Orient — is useful in the Occident. Mr. President: Enjoy your meal, take a walk on the Wall, and smile when Peking issues its “us or them” ultimatum. They don’t mean it, a t least not now. Bruce Mason is a professor of political science at ASU. His column is one of a series of guest editorials written by faculty members for the State Press. ASU environment poses problems for foreign students E d ito r: I read Jessica Kreimerman Oct. 18 article concerning the by speaking quietly and infrequently, eventually learning to challenge that foreign students at ASU face, and as a foreign spgflir like the man on the six o’clock news while in public. I student myself I heard echoes of my own experience since was surprised at the stereotypes an accent alone could generate. I was equally suprised at the discrimination and, at coming to the univerisity. times, racism. Having white skin, I was fortunate not to be I dearly missed my family and friends, but they could not the object of such discrimination (at least by white understand why I chose to come so far. Making friends was Americans), but I was under the impression that the western difficult with people, holding such different interests and United States was somewhat more open-minded than that of ideas, and so many of th a n ignored me or were actually other parts. And so many students seemed to love to “party ” r ude. I met two students who had gone to school in the same I was not used to hearing so much talk of fun and excitement, tjw n as I; they had been at ASU for a year, and scarcely nor the casual discussion of failing a test. responded when I attempted to strike a conversation, an act I Was this the way all Americans were? Even though I was b ilieve would not have happened had we been home. The foreign to this environment I knew they were not, for I am an j ,*>d was different, the water tasted bad, the radio stations American, and I am from North Carolina, raised in what cid not play my music, the summer heat was intense, and most Americans know as the South. i wre was scarcely anything green growing except patches To any foreign students who may agree with the feelings ¿routing between the expanses of concrete. expressed in Ms. Kreimerman’s article, I would like to say Many times people did not understand what I said. I that ASU and its surrounding environment are not what t ¡ought my accent sounded ignorant, so I tried to conceal it America is, but what a part of it is. One of America’s largest F l e t c h e r o v e r s t a t e s f e m in is t f a lla c ie s E d ito r: In response to Tracy Fletcher’s editorial of Oct. 25 predicting the outcome of the Schafly-Weddington debate on women’s rights, I would like to ask: where do you cjm e up with your rash generalizations that Schafly represents “mainstream American women” and that Weddington promotes “ fallacies concerning the ‘rights’ of women” ? I consider myself to be a part of mainstream American women, but I cer­ tainly don’t agree with Schafly’s interpreta­ tion of equal rights and what it will mean for women. Is it a fallacy for women (and other minorities) to want to be treated fairly and equally under the taw? To earn equal pay for equal work? (Women are still earning 62 cents for every $1 that men make, for com­ parable work.) Just because a person believes in the right of a woman to choose to have an abortion (re not) does not mean they are unethical and have no respect for individual life. A woman’s decision to have an abortion (or not) is a very personal one, and no one — especially the government — should have the “right” to make that decision for her. And just because a person is a feminist does not mean they do not know how to con­ duct themselves at public debates; we are not all radical feminists. There are a lot of feminists (men and women) that believe strongly in equality. I am a feminist but I re­ sent the “fallacies” of being labeled radical, unethical and having no respect for in­ dividual life. I think other feminists would agree with me. V P O U C E I H P DEPT. h¿js bhûKCh -the Umtts conventionaV ¿Mime prevet-ittOV’ wvtri.... joKca. c *\ ‘ Vyjri&e b a d K - soaririh ariete. a n d now- Hope Kingsley Junior, Communications STA TE PRESS TRACY FLETCHER Editor TOM BICKFORD Meneging Editor City Editor CHRIS COPPOLA Sport» Editor JAY TAYLOR Asst. City Editor MICHAEL HUMPHREYS Asst. Sports Editor KEN SAIN Opinion Editor MATTHEW SCULLY Scenes Editor MARY PAT BRADY News Editor DON SLUTES A sst. Scenes Editor MARIA KHAN Photo Editor ANDY ARENZ Copy Chief ANDREAS. MEYER The S tste Press is published Tuesday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona S tate University, Tempe, AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965*2282. Advertis­ ing & Production: 965-7572. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published lor and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The new s and- views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. universities in one of America’s target metropolitan areas is not typical of the majority of the United States, nor of other universities or cities for that matter. Is any particular spot in your homeland representative of toe entire country? I invite you to become aquainted with America and its people. The aquaintance will no doubt be reciprocated. It may not be easy, but it could very well be worthwhile for both of us. I have been here for slightly more than a year and the peo­ ple are still often tones rude, the water still tastes bad, and by God, I miss tomatoes grown in clay. But, I have met many good people and experienced many great things. I may (me day go back, I may continue to stay, re hopefully I will move on to still other places. Wherever I do go I will carry with me the memories and the experiences of the people I have met and the places I have seen, and I will be able to tell other peo­ ple of them. Maybe it will inspire these people to learn more about their fellow human beings. At the very least, I know it has done so for me. Kenneth Rohla J ttrv C ’ Jl-idi uHBWVvWW'MUShMCLr. pouca Don’tWalt, Don’t Delay T h i s I s It, T h e V a l l e y ’s B i g g e s t SKI C O M IN G T H IS S U N D A Y AT TH E Ramada TO W N EH O U S E (Del Webb) SUNDAY O C T . 30 11 a.m . to 7 p.m. Kino & G oronado Room s EVERYTHING FOR S K IIN G O N S A L E RAMADA TOWNEHOUSE 100 W. CLARENDON PHOENIX SAVE 20% to 70% S U P E R SKI S A L E B A R G A I N S mi n KM 0 S K IS POLES BOOTS B I N D IN G S fro m * 5 9 " fr o m * 7 " fr o m * 4 9 " fro m * 2 9 " PARKAS B IB S SW EATERS S U IT S fro m fro m fro m fro m *1 *29" *19" *69" G LO V E S , G O G G L E S , JR. A P P A R E L & EQ U IPM EN T, C R O S S C O U N T R Y , HATS, U N D E R W E A R , T E E -N E C K S , A N D M O R E, M U C H M O RE. F R E E S P E C IA L SU N R ISE LIFT T IC K E T S FIRST 100 P E O P L E . All sales final — No lay-away. Limited to stock on hand. If q u e stio n s, ca ll 955-8740 o r 968-9056 State I tttortnxriav. October 86,1983_ Ex-Gov. Castro decries Latin American military aid By Steve Waterstrat Copy editor The United States places too much em­ phasis on military rather than economic aid to Central America, said Raul H. Castro, form er am bassador to three Latin American countries and former governor of Arizona. \ “ I get the feeling we’re going back to gun­ boat diplomacy,” Castro told a small au­ dience at the Lyceum Theatre Tuesday. The speech was sponsored by the College of Fine Arts. The United States should aid Central American allies through social development hynel tting average citizens rather than through military aid, said Castro, who resigned as governor in 1977 to accept the position of ambassador to Argentina, which he held through 1980. Economic aid given to the governments of El Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, Guatemala and Panama, supposedly to benefit common people, often “ends up in Swiss banks and places like that,” Castro said. “I don’t believe in the trickle-down theory in international economics,” he said. Sending doctors, nurses, architects and teachers to help countries in need is bettor Hum Humping money or military advisers on them, Castro said. V "The putting-out-the-fire-with-a-check policy of the United States is not very effec­ tive” in dealing with problems in Central ‘If we are to counter Soviet influence (in Central America), we must help the people, who are peasants, to make a better life for themselves.’ Affordable Cleaners ASU SPECIAL 890 ANY GARM ENT ea. Dry C lean ed & Pressed N o limit Excluding suede & leather; excluding wedding dresses. C o u p o n must be presented when garments are brought in. ‘The putting-out-the-firew ith-a-check policy of the United States is not very effective’ in dealing with problems in Central America. America, said the Mexican-born Castro, who served as ambassador to El Salvador from 1964-68. . „ / , The major problem with Central American countries is “the vacuum between” the "marble-palace' elite and the people who have nothing,” with no middle class, Castro said. “A country cannot prosper without a mid­ dle class,” he said. The large volume of “peasants without pn«igh to eat” creates the opportunity for communist influence, Castro said. “ If we are to counter Soviet influence (in Central America), we must help the people, who are peasants, to make a better life for themselves,” he said. Doing this, he said, is the best way to avoid discontent among the masses and the danger of revolution. “Communism only grows where there is poverty,” he said. Castro summarized the problem by say­ ing the U.S. often fails to realize the diversi­ ty of Central American countries. They have individual needs and problems, making a close observation of the countries by non-military advisers necessary for long­ term solutions, he said. Holding a law degree from the University of Arizona, Castro has a private law prac­ tice in Phoenix. YOU'VE GOT TO PLAY HARDBALL WHEN IT COM ES TO YOUR CAREER 847 W. University (SE Comer of Univ. & Hardy) (EXPIRES 12-1-83.) CLO SE OUT SALE! 50% OFF EVERYTHING Super Savings on Sportswear & Surf wear • O p — G&S — O ff Shore Shorts & Shirts •Bathing suits T H A T 'S W H Y N S A OFFERS Y O U THESE EXCITING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES • te a # ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING COMPUTER SCIENCE LINGUISTS THE REW ARDS AT N S A Thar* or* opportunities in « variety of research and development prefects ranging from individual equipments te very complex interactive systems involving large numbers of microprocessors, mini­ computers and computer graphics. Professional growth is enhanced through interaction with highly experienced NSA professionals and through contacts in the industrial and academic worlds. Facilities for engineering analysis and design automation are among the best available. At NSA you'lL discover on« of the largast computer installations in tho world with almost ovary major vondor off computer equipment roprosonted. NSA caroors providq mixtures of such disciplines os systems analysis and design, sciontific applications programming, data has« management systems, operating systems, computor notworking/socurity, and graphics. NSA offers a wide rang« of challenging assignments far Slavic, Near Eastern and Asian language majors involving translation, transcription and analysis/ reporting. Newly-hired linguists can count on receiving advanced training in their primary language(s) and can plan on many yoars of continued professional growth. NSA effort a salary and bonofit program that's truly competitive with private industry. There are assignments for those who wish to Navel and abundant good living in tho Baltimore-Washington area for thoso who wish to stay dose to homo. Countless cultural, historical, recreational and oducationcd opportunities are just minutes away from NSA's convenient suburban location. M ATH EM ATICS While supply lasts. Sale ends 10-29-83. Huntington Square 3121 S. M ill, Tempe #968-5840 You'll work on diverse agency problems applying a variety of mathematical disciplines. Specific assignments might include solving communkatiensreiated problems, performing long-range math etnatk a) research or evaluating new techniques for communications security. Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755 An Equal Opportunity Employer, U.S. Citizenship Required. On campus recruiting November 4,1983. To find out more about NSA caroor • opportunities, schedule an interview through your college placem ent'office. For additional information on tho National Security Agency, write- to National Security Agency, Attn: M322 , Fort George G. Meade, Maryland 20755 . R. M. HARLFINGER &CO. PRESENTS... NEVER A COVER CHARGE SUDS SU PER BARS TEMPE'S NEWEST NOW OPEN 910 NORTH HAYDEN ROAD TEMPE, ARIZONA O pen Daily 3 p. m □ □ □ □ □ □ □ >Sat.-Sun. Noon □ □ □ □ 7 2 0 0 SQ. FT. OF FUN OUTDOOR PATIO 2 5 $ POOL TABLES (3) 2 5 $ FOOS BALL VIDEO GAMES FULL STEREO SOUND 2 COLOR T V s' HANDICAP PARKING HANDICAP RESTROOMS 110 CAR PARKING CARRY OUTS TILL 1 A.M. SUDS SITY SUPER BARS w a n t y o u to e n jo y y o u rself, b u t c a u tio n y o u to th e d a n g e r s of DR UNK DRIVING ! If y o u h a v e h a d to o m u c h to drink: w alk, rid e, c a ll a c a b , or c a ll a friend! PITCHERS OF BEER Pitchers of MIXED DRINKS . . Large 60-oz. Large 60- oz. Size 3. $ M IL L E R BA R P O U R O NLY - :----- ^ E D N E S D A M Y S PITCHERS OF BEER $ } 9 9 4 O N .& T H U R S . HEAD & HEINE DAYS "M EN 'S NIGHT OUT Large 60-oz. L IT E EVERY DAY ALL DAY EVERY DAY ALL DAY W M IL L E R 2. 9 9 — HEINEKEN & MOOSEHEAD 12-oz. Bottles DRINK This coupongoodfor one(1) FREE DRINK of your choicewhenpresentedtoSUDS employee. NAME. ADDRESS. CITY. One Coupon Per Visit Per Day -ZIP. ASU ExpiresNov. 1,1983. rr State Presi Wednesday. October 26,1983 p o lic e re p o rts ASU Police reported the following ac­ tivities occurred between Friday and Mon­ day: •A tripie-beam balance scale valued at $500 was stolen from a laboratory room in the Engineering Building F-wing Monday. The i»cpU and weights were inscribed with the words “Soils Lab.’’ •An ASU employee reported $375 worth of «¿»mage to three Simplex fire detection heads, after they had been pulled loose from their ceiling mounts on the eighth floor of the Cholla Apartments A-wing Monday. •An ASU student reported property damage to her 1977 Oldsmobile while it was parked in Lot 41 Monday, with an estimated repair cost of $400. The student told police paint ehipa from another vehicle were on the door and rear panel of her car. •A men’s Univega 12-speed bicycle valued a t $350 was stolen from the bike racks east of the Psychology Building Monday. The bicycle had been locked with a cable and m aster lock. SSOCIATED STUDENTS •A blue Schwinn Traveler bicycle valued®! $60 was stolen from the west side of the Sahuaro Hall stairwell Monday. The bicycle was locked with a cable lock. •An ASU employee reported damage to the north wall of the second floor of the Fine Arts Annex over the weekend, as different colors of paint were apparently thrown on it. Police said it appears a hole was kicked in the wall on the east side of the room. The west wall in the men’s restroom also had paint on it. * . . . . •A women’s silver Schwinn 10-speed bicycle valued a t $180 was stolen from the west side of the Physical Education West Building near the swimming pod. •A men’s Custom Cruiser bicycle valued at $169 was stolen from the east side bike racks at Sahuaro Hall Monday. The bicycle had been locked. •An ASU student reported the right rear window of his 1979 Chevrolet was shattered Friday. The damage was estimated at $150. M IN O R IT Y W O M E N ’S D A Y THURSDAY, O CTOBER 27 , 1983 2:00-4:00 A lu m n i Lounge, Memorial Union All minority women are invited to attend and participate ip an informal get-together to meet other minority women and give program ideas. For more information, please call 965-1253. — Sandy Sistek ASU to offer computer clinic for Valley children A five-week computer clinic for Valley children is being sponsored by the ASU elementary education department Nov. 7 through Dec. 8. Three classes will be offered: Mondays from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. for 12- to 14-year-olds; Wednesdays from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. for 6to 8-year-olds; and Thursdays from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. for 9- to 11-year-olds. There will be a $50 fee per student. In-person advance registration is re­ quired and will be held in ASU’s Payne Hall Room 203 from 8 a.m to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday. For more information, contact Gary Bit­ ter a t965-6719 or Mack Ralston at 965-3339. C enter to sp o n so r com puter softw are co u rse A software quality assurance short course will be offered Nov. 7 and 8 by the ASU Center for Professional Development. The program is designed for software developers, technical management person­ nel, quality control staff and all others in­ volved in the production of computer software. A basic knowledge of the software development process is expected of all par­ ticipants in the course. There is a $295 registration fee. The program will be conducted from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. both days in the Engineer­ ing Sciences Center at ASU. Additional information may be obtained by calling 965-1740. LISTEN TO YOUR CLO SET FREE YOURSELF FROM UNWANTED CLOTHING Sell what you don’t wear. Get what you really want. BU FFALO EX C H A N G E Diamonds are also a guy’s best friend. Dax features Argyle patterns in vests and long sleeve crew neck sweaters. 3 EAST 5th STREET TEMPE 968-2557 MON-SAT 10-6 706 South Forest • Tempe • 967-8747 Monday thru Saturday • 10-6 Thursdays until 8:30 In the Oxford Square Shops, just north of “The Warehouse". C lothing M erchants Page 9 OFF Y0UCDinner: ANeAT M ore college students applying 50 • * vC w r r AU Lunch: aioosefroml2ltems 310 3.81 for aid despite fewer program s CHUnGS By the College Pr«M 8 e rvk c After three y e a n of watching aid programs being cut, gut­ ted, threatened and fatten, more students have applied for aid thia teD, aid officials across the country report. Moreover, the students are having a relatively easy time of getting aid, they said. Thanks largely to education’s new status as a hot political issue, they said the Reagan administration and Congress not only have spared many of the programs that were on the chopping block as recently as last spring, but have eased some of the confusion that convinced many students not to apply for aid since 1981. Same areas that have been cleared up include the seeming­ ly arbitrary changing of eligibility requirements, the late processing of aid applications and the uncertainty over how long certain programs might last. "Students do seem to feel more confident that there is aid money around for them this year," said Diana Mateer, aid director a t the University of Phoenix. “The big scare seems to be over.” Dallas Martin, director of the National Association of Stu­ dent Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) in Washington, D.C., said, “There’s an awful lot of fanfare over education right now, and we are entering a campaign year.” “This year, so ter, is going teirly smoothly,” be said. “Things are much more stabilized and predictable. It’s a much, much better environment than we bad a couple of years ago.” Aid officials warn there is still potential trouble in the uncertainty ova- the new draft-aid law, which requires all m a la students b o n between 1960 and 1965 to certify they have registered for the draft in order to get financial aid. The law affected an estimated 15,000 students at ASU alone, according to University officials. After the U.S. Department of Education implemented the Taw last spring, a Minnesota judge first temporarily and then permanently ordered' the government to stop making military registration a prerequisite for student aid. He argued the prerequisite, which also includes a section that those not eligible f a the draft must sign, violated students’ First Amendment rights. But o v a the summer, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the rniing it said the law should be implemented a t least un­ til the full Supreme Court gets a chance to review it. The Education Department, which is responsible f a mak­ ing sure colleges enforce the law, then kept changing the deadline by which schools had to start requiring students to comply with the law. The requirement took full effect on Oct. 1, said Education Department spokesman Duncan Helmrich. “Things were going great until the injunction (against im­ plementing file law) was lifted,” said Robert Misenko, stu­ dent aid d ire c ta a t the University of Minnesota. “All the dif­ ferent grace periods and compliance dates — beginning with July 1, then Aug. 1, then Sept. 1 — really complicated things.” . „ Moreover, the full Supreme Court review may abolish the law after all, though a decision in the case won’t come until sometime in 1984. More than 30,000 students returning to his campus still needed to sign file compliance form, Misenko said. Aid directors elsewhere say they have had little trouble convincing students to sign the forms. “Students are more than willing,” reported Melvin Lindsey, aid chief a t MiamiDade County Community College. “We’ve also had to make a window in order to get students’ GSLs (Guaranteed Student Loans) processed,” Misenko add­ ed. “F a some reason, the government has required that the draft compliance forms must be signed before we can pro­ cess GSLs.” Otherwise, there have been no m a ja changes in this year’s aid eligibility requirements. “Congress had frozen all eligibility requirements f a fe d a a l financial aid through 1986,” NASFAA’s Martin said. The freeze effectively ended the Reagan administration’s attempt to make it harder for financially independent students to get federal aid. The administration wanted to make students live away from home f a two years, as opposed to the current one-year requirement, in o r d a to be eligible to get aid as an indepen­ dent. , If the ch a ise had occurred, “there clearly would have been ‘I just hope people don’t get the false illusion that just because Congress stabilized the money, our worries are over. Students are still swimming upstream.’ B e e n w ine served Mfenu o r B u ffet Eat m o r Take o u t I C H in e s e comer umv. a Hardy b u ffe t J TRYANEWBEGINNINGAT CO N TA CTS* CONNECTIONS „CALL 234-3459 «Meet o th er Jew ish singles •Special 3-m onth offer •No obligation consultation Interviews Available On Campus SUN DEVIL HAIRCUTTERS ■- IV “ Pride of the Sun Devils" some students made ineligible” f a aid, Martin said. _ Congress’ final aid package f a fiscal year 1984, which started this month, also increases Pell Grant ro a n and board allowances from ¿,000 to $1,600, and forbids secondary loan agencies from discriminating against students from schools with high default rates. ‘‘Overall,” said Martin, “it's a livable package.” Perhaps as a result, aid directors said the relative calm had brought “scared off” students back into aid offices. But others worry that it may be too early to relax. “The cuts may have stopped,” Misenko warned, “but stuHmte are still losing ground, especially as tuition con­ tinues to climb at public institutions.” On top of that, “come every sitting or summer, the Educa­ tion Department will always have something to confuse us a make life complicated,” he added. “1 just hope people don’t get the false illusion that just because Congress has stabilized the money, all our worries are o v a . Students are still swimming upstream.” FA LL S P E C IA L $ C A f l Sham poo, C o n d itio n in g , P r e c is io n C u t, B lo w D ry I" r ” r I M e n & W o m e n (Reg. si3) P e r m S p e c ia l / $ 10 O F F G o o d only at New 130 E. U n iv e r s it y ( In the A r c h e s ) c u sto m e rs on'v E x p ire s 9 6 6 -5 4 6 2 Roffler S p e c ia lis ts Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-6. Sat. 9 - d 12-16-83. S E R V I N G A S U S I N C E 1964 8 0 9 0 0 a> a> < d a> a> N N N N N (7i <35 co <751/3 ¡mO$< I OPEN 7 DAYS (foOSj XTDT3 'WJL ;u tO o -S -U u i Q *f*■i*O s c a> a> a> o co c cc ^ "2j "q3 "a) o .-£ .t; ttt to r o o o o o in to p p iq do C(\| V -s 5 -1 g§>* fc " ¡ “ £5*2 be filled in the Health Service pharmacy .The^dispensing of birth control pills at ASU began in September 1982. For those who wish an alternative birth control method, Calmelat said diaphragms, foams, condoms, and counseling on fertility awareness and rhythm are available. B y M ike Rynearson Calmelat also said vaginal sponges « e k v a i j ^ M c m m Staff w riter A lack of awareness among many female students of tne pus, and IUD insertion can be performed m Heal* ^ 2 . “ availability of the complete gynecological service on campus by one of the two visiting gynecologists who come to campus has kept those who may be seeking such programs away from the Student Health Service, an official said. Student cost for the EGS service is $19 But according to April Calmelat, the nurse practitioner a year, which includes testing, routine who runs the Extended Gynecology Service at the Health Ser­ vice, the volume of patients using the service still has created lab work and a complete examination. a three-week appointment backlog. She is the wily member of the EGS staff and already has a for four-hour stints one day a week. These same doctors also load of 1,200 individuals who translate into more than 3,000 d e a l w ith a ll major gynecological problems. visits a year. She said as a result of her heavy workload she is “The biggest problem that I have is trying to find room to three weeks- behind in her appointments. see people who are already in the program and are having The program, which began four years ago as a full-time problems,” Calmelat said. service, is a complete gynecological service, including ex­ Calmelat said on occasion she also gets requests for aminations, testing and birth control counseling and service. counseling on opposite m atters—trying to get pregnant. Previously, any gynecology health care was limited, pro­ “If someone wants to get pregnant after trying for a long vided for by visiting doctors on a part-time basis. period of time, and is having difficulty doing so, I also Student cost for the EGS service is $19 a year, which in­ counsel them,” Calmelat said. “If it’s a problem that I feel is cludes all testing and routine lab work, a complete examina­ more major than fertility awareness, then I refer them off tion, a one-hour birth control and venereal disease education . _po. r^agg and any follow-up examinations or birth control campus.” To cope with the additional interest in the program, k-Uis is counseling. now in the process of enlarging its staff, she added. After the session is over, if the person wishes to receive Program provides birth control, counseling for female students Speaker will address cameras in courtroom B o B o C h i n e s e B u f fe t All You Can Eat 11 a.m.-4 p.fri. 4 p m -9 p m Lunch Dinner only 8 2 .7 9 only 83 .3 8 M e n u C h a n g e d D a ily S e rv e s D o m e s tic & Im port B e e r 502 S. Dobson, Mesa O p e n 7 days a w eek 898-8222 A T T E N T IO N "Undecided" Students in the Liberal Arts College THE TIME IS HERE! E arly Bird A d v ise m e n t for S p rin g R eg istra tio n from O c to b e r 2 4 to N o v e m b e r 8 Cameras in the courtroom are the subject of a Nov. 2 ad­ dress by Dennis Russell of the ASU department of jour­ nalism and telecommunications. The speaker will examine the history of electronic coverage of court proceedings, from the 1935 Bruno Hauptmann trial to the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Chandler vs. Florida in 1981. He will also explore the history of cameras in the cour­ troom in Arizona: the appellate experiment, the trialcourt experiment, and the state Supreme Court decision making camera coverage permanent jn Arizona’s trial courts. The public is invited free of charge to hear the address, which will be presented at 2 p.m. in the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors’ Auditorium, 205 W. Jefferson St., Phoenix. „ Additional information about the lecture is available at 965-4007. Avoid the last minute rush M ak e a n a p p o in tm en t to d a y in S o c ia l S c ie n c e s 1 1 1 . C o m e in or c a ll 9 6 5 - 2 9 5 4 . S w eet S tu ffs f '~ \ L and Y o u r S w e e t T o o th M a k e a G ood M a t c h m • r i 'J P & o° o o H a l l o w S ■PS yo e e n a n d i e s o& S O F T S E R V E V V IG E C R E A M L o c a t e d In t h e Mon.-Ttuirs. 1 0 -8 p.m. Fri. 1 0 -5 p.m. THEGRAND MARKETPLACE T 13 State P r w VISA* (M asterC ard) W EEKUr 'REPUBLIC' WE SELL I MONEY OROERS 39* OPEN & HOURS Visit your new Drugstore/ Food Mart at HUNTINGTONSQUARE 3201 SOUTH MILLAVENUE SALE BEGINS WED.. OCT. 26 PRICES GOODTHRU SATURDAY. OCT. 29 COME IN TODAY! Wr HOTORCOLD NATURAL HEARTH pH FOAM CUPS BREAD .6-4 ok. size 51 count - 24 oz. .. Igrade aa large eggs 490 BANQUET FRIED CHICKEN 2 lb. box 2 .3 9 790 R e g .694 PEANUT BUTTER KISSES 2% LOWFAT MILK * SPACE SÂÆR 51 79d 1 dozen IWe limit quantities PHONE894*6747 O ffers g oo d at this location only. HofcOL N g 5!£ At Southern Ave. • Tempe CARNATION ICE CREAM HIBACHI DOUBLE GRILL V* Gal. ir 790 'k Gal. 790 PEPSI ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL ALLFLAVORS 5 .9 9 1 .3 9 HERSHEY & MARS ALL PAPERBACK BOOKS FUNSIZEBARS 16 OZ. 2 litre 1 Pint 20% 490 3nZ2H D A BEER, WINE & LIQUOR CENTER SNACK BAR •cold bgbi •DNim a dessert •HOT & COLD DRINKS »SANDWICHES •MICROWAVE OVEN TO USE 1 .7 9 O FF 1 .0 9 PHOTO CEN TER • S p e e d y film service • Q u a lity photo-finishin g • C a m e ra s & a cc e sso rie s •Fresh film WHIES «VODKA «WHISKEY •SCOTCH «AND MORE Ph a r m a c y our surah P N M N uam o r a i YOUMAMYYMMAWRRARB money-sawn KRWCQL r - 4 •PHONE-AHEAD RBTLL SERVICE] •QUALITY PRESCRIPTIONS I •EVERYDAY LOW PRICES I Pharm acy Hours: p® Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 894-6747 ___ PE* 13 SKOL VODKA 1.5, Itr. 6 .8 9 Sm all Soft Drink only $WfTHy 25Ù BUD OR BUD LICHT 7 .9 9 *10 0 OFF Our fine w Sm all Ice Cream Cone photo-finishing service on all color print or disc filfn. Limit one coupon per customer and coupon must accompany purchase. E xp ires 10-31-83. AMY NEW PRESCRIPTION AT SUPERx *ufhu B •Not uanafarabte batwaan SUPERx Store*. Limit 1 prescription par coupon. Coupon muM accompany ordar. Doctor w l be contactsd for re * authorization. Void whare laatrictad by tew. Doaa not -uply to inauranoa or govwnmant criptkxvpaymant piana. Öfter voids al odiar discounts. A Case M l, Expires 10-31-83^^^2^ P ie ce s of gold P u z z l e d p l a y e r s a t t e m p t to ‘d e c i p h e r ’ a n s w e r s to I m ys Holland said when he got out of graduate school, w.. studied business administration, he went into construe partnership with a fellow student and his father. By Rosarme Dupras S taff w riter Anyone solving a gold and black jigsaw puzzle called Decipher may never have to worry about financial aid again. He said after seven years he “ became discouraged. . . . was __ doing a rt photography in my spare time and wanted to inu ¡rate creativity into my w aiting life.” - The real motivating factor behind the puzzle, which has a mysterious code on both sides, is probably the $100,000 that will be awarded to the person who breaks the code. “I got to a point where I had to learn how to live a little b|LMy h^ginpgs life was no fun,” Holland said. "It’s like a sophisticated pet rock — a great present for your smart-aleck brother-in-law,” said Warren L. Holland Jr., the 30year-old Virginian who developed the puzzle. The game looks likea small black box of expensive perfume at first glance. In fact, Holland said he got the idea after shopping at cosmetic counters. “ My friends thought I was crazy the way I would buy things and not use them. I would buy lots of perfume and cosmetics and look at the boxes . . . I bought some pretty expensive boxes,” said Holland. Inside the box is not perfume, but a bright red velveteen pouch. Inside the pouch are 150 gold pieces with black figures on them. Piecing it together is only the beginning, though. The reason Holland calls his invention a “puzzle within a puzzle” is that on both sides of the completed jigsaw are rows of numbers that form a coded message. The puzzle is a cipher, or code, which involves the substitution of numerals f a letters to encode the message. Holland said, “Most anybody can put the puzzle together in a couple of hours.” “When I was in college,” he said, “I had a lot of crazy but 1 never did them. I just w ait to work.’1 He said he c4» ted the cipher “just doing research, like you do when you’re cdleg e. . .and I created my own code.” Holland first became intrigued with the idea for his ¡ame after reading an article about Thomas Jefferson Beale, a i alive V irg in ia n , and the three ciphers he wrote in the 1820s. Assembling the puzzle is not such an easy task since the color doesn’t vary and there are numbers on both sides of the pieces. Discovering what numeral represents which letter is the clue to deciphering the game. “I’m the only one who knows the cor­ rect answer, ’’ Holland said. The solution to Decipher is locked in a safe deposit box at the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York City. Holland undergoes polygraph tests to verify that he hasn’t told the answer to anyone. “I typed the correct solution on a new IBM typewriter, and burned the ribbon when I was done,” he said. “My friends thought I had read too many spy novels.” whic De< ciphe Lie ed hi Scoti Lloy< According to legend, the ciphers give information aibaut ai treasure of gold and jewels, including where Beale burii id if, which is said to be somewhere in the Blue Ridge Mountains “It’s almost a cult,” Holland said. “People come down from all over the country, digging up people’s farms . . . cows filing into holes . . . people getting arrested.” He said the problem with the legend is that most expertspink it was a practical joke. “The other problem,” he said, ‘ that even if it is real, you have to dig up other people’s pri•o]«rty, “V with said. So the ( mitt “I and< . Ui duct out. “I the I seqi Holl T h e g re a te s t c o w b o y w h o e v e r ro d e in to th e w ild w e s t . . . from P o la n d . Gene Wilder, Harrison Ford Warner Brothers mcjt just ìcrtfe Birds M€ D irected b y R o b e rt A ld rich Eight hundred years later we Capuchins,— followers of Francis — are still in the "People Business.” As a community of priests and brothers we spread the Gospel message of peace and justice to our age. me WilderisayoungPolishrabbisenttoAmericain1850tobecomethespiritualleaderof a congregationinSanFrancisco. HeaimlesslysetsoHaloneonthelongjourneyacross theuntamedwest. Heisdestinedtoperishafterlosingall hisfoodandpracticallyall of hispossessionsandtravelinginthewrongdirectionfordays, untilheisbefriendedbya kind-heartedbankrobber(HarrisonFord). Forddoesn'thavethehearttosendtherabbi across the wildwest alone, sothe oddcouple are off toward San Franciscotogether. AlongthejourneyHarrisonrobsa bank, and togethertheyencounter Indiansonthe warpath, a monasteryfull ofspeechlessmonksanda bandofoutlaws. October 28, 8:30 p.m. e Shabbat Services 7:30 Hillel e 1 0 1 2 S. Mill Ave. Francis of Assisi loved animal?. But his real business was PEOPLE! INVITE YOU TO A PARTY AT Interested? list’s talk. TIMOTHYO’TOOLES 1123 S. Rural Rd. North of Apacho on Rural Rd. in Tampa SUNDAY, NOVEMBER6 • 7 P.M. Thrift Connection 612 Mill Ave. 894-6189 HAPPY HOUR PRICES WILL BE IN EFFECT FROM 7-9:30 ON WELL DRINKS. BY INVITATION O N L Y Everything for the Student N ew & U s e d •Books & Magazines •Jewelry •Children’s Toys & Clothes •Soda $3 a Case You can get an invitation by calling HHM • 967-7563 Jew ish Student Center «Furniture »Appliances »Household Items «Clothes 234 Operated by Tempo B o ys A Qirls C lubs State liquor law requires proper I.O. be shown. ¿Idiversified travel me. W ants Y o u to Know: O ur Sabre Com puters are telling us H o liday-tim e reservations are fillin g fast — call us A .S.A .P. to get S up er S aver Fares w hile they last! Faculty, Students, G ro u p Leaders — C A L L U S F O R A R R A N G E M E N T S Ski Trips, R esearch Trips, etc. (Any destination is not foreign to us and ou r services are free.) W e re 64 E A S T B R O A D W A Y , S U I T E 2 United Bank Building T E M P E 967-7855 • 967-1900 Sam e lo ca tio n sin ce 1970 r 11WITH THIS CO UPO NI OOFF SALE Pre, No t H A L L O W E E N Cla Sta Mgs • wake-up • Masks • Props • costumes ORIGINAL COSTUMES DESIGNED R e n ta ls • S ales THEATRICAL MATERIALS • TRIMMINGS TROTTER BROTHERS THEATRICALS 620 w. Van Buren, Phoenix, AZ 85003 254-0817 IHI/VITH THIS C O U PO NI ■■i J G Page 15 Wednesday, October 26,1983 state F i r m :o m y s t e r i o u s c o d e >1, w hite he istrutti do in e d . . . [was I to iniit* p¡ate which is against Virginia state law. ” Decipher players face better odds, Hollancfsaid, because his cipher is real and solvable, and his “treasure” is insured. Lloyd’s of London, the pioneers in underwriting risks, declin­ ed his request to insure Decipher after they sent the puzzle to Scotland Yard for study. The experts said it could be solved, so Lloyd’s turned him down. little b t.My crazy id he o4» ted you’re color his ¡ame ;ale, a Native is. tion a b xit ile buriid un tains e down from . cows fulling experts think that said, e ’s pro]éerty, “We went through 10 to 20 brokers . . . and finally ended up with Admiral Insurance Company (of New Jersey),” Holland said. So now he, along with all the Decipher players who rfegister for the contest, waits for the March 1,1984 deadline when the sub­ mitted solutions will be reviewed for. the first time by Holland. “If the cipher isn’t solved by that time, I’ll release some clues and extend the deadline for another year,” he said. Until the deadline, Holland will continue to promote his pro­ duct around the country. “A lot of the local markets don’t find out about it until I come around.” “I’m looking for some real big things at Christmas time — it’s the biggest market. If things go real well, maybe we’ll make a sequel — like ‘Son of Decipher’, or ‘Revenge of Decipher’,” Holland said. M Dry, Brittle Hair? ANY HAIR INC. THCftAPM ^ÜÜp? ■ À f o r THERAPPE « LOW ñ S H A M P O O 225 W. University, Ste. 113 1A mile west of M ill 829-8483 . - LITTLE Ask the professional stylists at C^H? • 967-9030 Become cl Plasm a Donor ANY HAIR CUT SS — Mon., Tues. & Wed. I t S s e C k £ * j$ r e l a x i n g COMPLETE AUTO PAINTING STUDENT SPECIAL Quality Work *17995 awHh GUARANTEED insurance Estimates Welcome co u p o n V in yl T o p C o lo rin g — B o d y S id e M o u ld in g s 967-3597 IM M E D IA TE C A S H ^Committed to high standards in education and research, Northwestern College of Chiropractic offers you comprehensive chiropractic training on a modem campus distinguished for its excellent facilities and dedicated Paym ent After Each Donation '^ ycw w o uld like to know how Northwestern College of Chiropractic can help you achieve your career goals, complete the form below or call the admissions office COLLECT at (612) 888-4777. __ Call 894-1338 for an appointment. Tempe Plasma Corp. Ron’s Auto Body & Painting 234 W. 4th S t.rT e m p e of Chiropractic As the need tor specialized health care continues to flrow, Northwestern College can help you enter a secure and satisfying career as a Doctor of Corner of Rural Rd. & Univ. Blvd. I ________ _ ^ /y f\V ^ S Tem pe T o w n e Plaza GG MM AA T T_ GRE _ Call now and prepare Educational Center N am e._ Address. ' City ----- _____State.____ ,— Zip------- ' 1 Phone (_ _ Years of college experience. SEND TO: Northwestern College of Chiropractic, Admissions Office. 2801 West S4th Street. ' Bloomington, Minnesota 564S1 • (812) 888-4777 Women’s Health Center FREE Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results M CAT Premarital Bloodtesting $15.00 Same Day Results I now Evening Hours Available prepare Classes now available for DAT PSYCH. GRE-BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP, OCAT, CPA. 2 HOURS OF FREE TUTORING Speedreading & ESL claeaee «tailing mid-Sept. t co d a y j I F am ily P la n n in g In stitu te Prepare Now For: Classes Starting: p its se see d m e mom info rm atio n on Northwestern College o f CM roprncUe I I I This ad worth $2. New donors only. D O N 'T FALL BEHIND n a t ■ S 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 For information about other c a r £ 2 S H 7 K ,° r U S. cities and abroad, CAUL TOLL FREE 800-22 Established 1Ö76 T E M P E • 968-7471 2525 S. Rural Rd., Ste. 4-C Mon.-Fri. Lab Hours 8-3 State Press Optimistic THE JOYNT Job prospects for students improving the College Press Service After months of issuing gloomy forecasts, college place­ ment officers around the country have grown more op­ timistic in recent weeks about students’ job prospects tins year. “ I fhiwit recruiting is going to be up by 15 to 20 percent na­ tionally from last year,” said Victor Lindquist, placement director at Northwestern University in Evanston, 111., and author of the Endicott Report, a national survey of student placements. “That’s still down from what it was two years ago, much less three years ago,” he added. “ I don’t see any sudden turn. This is going to be a gentle turn.” Lindquist and others have little hard data on which to base their optimism, but they take heart from the trickle of recruiters moving back onto campuses as fall recruiting sg&sod starts. “The big thing is that we’ve been on a downward curve for some time,” said Jack Shingleton, Michigan State University placement director and author of another annual national student job survey . “I think we’ve bottomed out, and we’ve started back up, he said. It would have been hard for student job prospects to sunt much lower. “I don’t know how it could get any worse than it was in ’83,” Lindquist said. “Hiring of graduates was off by 41 percent nationally last year.” shingiPtnn said the number of firms recruiting at Michigan State is about the same as last year, but the companies plan to hire more graduates this time. “One of the Big Eight accounting firms was telling me that it was planning to hire 10 percent more people than last year,” he reported. At the University of Texas-Austin, “it looks better than last year for sure,” said Glen Payne, associate placement direc­ tor a t Texas’ business school. “ Last year 490 firms came to campus,” Payne said. “This year we’re back up to 600, and so far they’re not canceling at nearly the rate they were last year at this time. ” One of every five firms that signed up to recruit at the University of Califomia-Berkeley last fall canceled, Berkeley placement head Jam es Briggs said. He said the number of scheduled interviews is up slightly this year, and the firms he’s talked to are more confident. “People finally believe that we’re in a recovery,” ho said. “They’re more optimistic, and companies anticipate a return to growth.” “Last year was the worst we’d seen since the early 70s,” said Don Wood, education placement director at the Univer­ sity of Northern Iowa. “This year remains difficult, but recruitment is up. ” It seems to be rising most significantly among business and marketing majors, and from high technology companies. The hard-hit energy industry’s recruiting is still off. It hit bottom last year when Dallas-based Dresser, Inc., a supplier of oil exploration equipment, that is ranked 83rd on the For­ tune 500, told more than 100 Michigan State students that they had jobs, but then had to renege on the offers. “ Dresser will never come on this campus again,” Shingleton said. By Jam es Papalexsis of Dresser’s personnel office said “Those were entry-level jobs in remote, rural areas. *'Rather than have people relocate and then impose reducdons in the work force, we decided not to bring them on board.” , _ Dresser, which used to hire about 800 new graduates an­ nually, still has “a few thousand” employees laid off and so will keep this year’s campus recruiting “very limited,” Some energy firms, however, are starting to show up again a t Texas, Payne said. Phillips, Gulf, Conoco and Shell have returned after a year’s absence. Energy recruitment “almost ceased to exist last year, Payne said. “Banks and accounting came through the reces­ sion almost like there wasn’t one.” He observed a minor slowdown in recruiting by high-technology companies. “IBM had been sending 25 interviewers,” he said. “Last year it was down toabout 12 or 15. It’s back to 20 this year.” The market for teachers still appears to be sluggish, despite the rash of new proposals for higher teach«: salaries and more teaching hiring. y Yet “the school population is still declining, and budgets are still tight,” said Northern Iowa’s Wood. “I think that ‘It's going to depend on whether the basic industries peFk up. It’s like dropping a pebble in a pond. One sign of recovery is college recruitment’ things will pick up dramatically in a few years, though. They have to. So few people are going into education, and more children are coming along. Already, enrollment is up for kindergarten and first grade. ” Berkeley’s Briggs said some recruiters are returning with a greater appreciation for liberal arts majors. They show in­ creased interest in hiring generalists, and are softening their formerly strict requirements for technical training. He said liberal arts majors are having good luck among m anagement, financial services and retailing recruiters. But some of the placement officers’ tentative optimism rests on timing. Lindquist, for example, believes the 1984 presidential elec­ tions will inspire “a lot of economic pump priming in the next few months. If we get a sense of euphoria about the economy out of that, it will improve Reagan’s chances and it will im­ prove campus recruitment. “If you really want a good handle on what’s going to hap­ pen, talk to (Federal Reserve Chairman) Paul Volcker,” Lindquist said. “It’s going to depend on whether the basic in­ dustries perk up, and if we see construction of new plants. It’s like dropping a pebble in a pond. One of the ripples of economic recovery is college recruitment.” I WE D E LIV E R 967-7926 i | BEER__ PIZZA WINE j I Large 16” Cheese Pizza I N e w sr o o m S ta ff O p e n in g s Applications for positions on the News StafFof the STATE PRESS for the Spring Semester 1984 are now being received at # 15, North Basement-Matthews Center. There will be openings at most levels — re­ porter, photographer, copy editing, assistant sports editor, assistant city editor, arts ®* entertainment writer, sports reporter, city editor, news editor, managing editor, sports editor, copy chief, photo editor and opinion page editor. Applicants must pick up job referral forms from Student Employment in Matthews Center and an application blank a t# 15, North Basement Matthews Center. Applications d o se November 1 4 ,1 9 8 3 . 4 p.m . Newspaper experience is desirable but not m a n d a to ry . These are part-time, salaried posi­ tions open to any student in good standing. Applicants must be available Wed., Nov. 23, for indoctrination and VDT training prior to break-in week Nov. 28-Dee. % ATTENTION W. A l Pasley's ASU Cam pus Forest Dr. Division o f Valley Travel Phoenix, AZ 83 0 0 5 Phone: 2 4 4 - 1 0 0 8 Monday. Applicants m ust be full-time (at least seven hours) students at ASU; but major in any department is acceptable, as is class standing of freshman through graduate. YOU'RE NOT PAYING 3BOO E. A irline Dr. ■J ST A T E P R E S S IF YOU'RE PAYING FOR AIRPORT PARKING ... o £ VALLEY TRAVEL LOCATED JUST Vz BLOCK NORTH OF ASU, VALLEY TRAVEL IS THE TRAVEL SERVICE FOR ASU STUDENTS! O PEN 707 S. FOREST DR. 967-9403 1 I I $3.99 EXTRA TOPPINGS 506 EACH So pay attention. Next time you plan a trip, do what our customers do. If you book your trip with Valley Travel or Sky Harbor Travel Service you can pull right into our FREE parking lot and w e w ill chauffeur you right to your terminal. When 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. College St. 1 606 S. M ill O ld Tow n T em pe Monday-Friday 8:30 a.nv,-5:30 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.*4 p.m. Page state P i« « Alpha Eta Rho p resen ts “ A via tio n Fun D ays” When: Sat., Oct. 29 and Sun., Oct. 30 from 9 a.m.-dusk Where: Falcon Field Mesa, Arizona What: Open Cockpit Bi-plane Rides & Hot Air Balloon Rides Who: Everyone Invited i PÌZZA* j I TASTE & COMPARE 8 Slice A v Cheese and I Med. Soft Drink or ¡10-02. Coors or Bud 990 I I Daily Mon.-Fri. 2-5 p.m. I BUCK CAT SPECIALS Thousands of costumes to choose from. Be a soldier, spaceman or valley girl. •SCRUB SUITS — 15% OFF •SURGICAL M ASKS & HATS - 490 each •CAMOUFLAGE, O.D. GREEN, KHAKI MILITARY CLOTHES - 15% OFF C am ping, C lothing & S u r p lu s Expires 10-31-83. LEE’STAILORING ¡ The Joynt •Fashion Designing for Ladies oCustom Suits for Gentlemen oAlterations ! 606 S. Mill Ave. 967-7926 SU R P LU S Limited to stock on hand. 894-9137 1332 E. Apache (A . J. B a y le s s C enter) sa j ■BBBBB DESERT HAWGS H a r l e y D a v id s o n S p e c i a l i s t s T U N E -U P SPECIAL HONDA YAM AHA KAW ASAKI SUZUKI BM W 399 5 * p a rts Factory M ech an ic Sales, S ervice, A cçe sso rie s n i l E. APACHE TEMPE *966-4919 M o n .-Fri. 10-6 Saturday 10-5 894-1055 Broadwayt McClintock Alpha Beta Shopping Center INTERNATIONAL CAREER? (W > A representative will b e on th e cam pus WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1983 to discuss qualifications for advanced study a f AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in th e field o f INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may b e scheduled at CAREER SERVICES 108 ACADEMIC SERVICES m RT.nn- AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thunderbird Cam pus G lendale. Arlaene $ 5 3 0 6 Are You Guilty of neglecting your hair and nails? Terry Brubaker Hair & Nail Designer Terry can give your hair those new sheer transparent colors or a super natural spicing. Come in and see Terry for all your nail care needs, too. Jazzing Colors pjjvvN •>«>4° L c o ^ r vN * & t?s * &fO*«*■ íí > &oNb c» V4Vö ^ ' \M\^ boNJ NOW$10 Reg. $18.75 Shampoo, hair cut and blowdiy Sculpture Nails N0W$12 Reg. $18 Now$25 Reg. $45 ANY HAIR 225 W. U niversity Suite 113,_Tempe ('It mile west of Mill) 829-8483 Hours: 8 a.m.-9 p.m. DONNY O'BRIENS 2 2 2 S. MILL 17 State Press rq g C IQ _ _ — — — — — — — mmmm— C o n s e r v a t io n h o t lin e s a v i n g A S U m o n e y Energy-aware observers point out waste problems in campus buildings B y Rosaline Dupr as Staff w riter Thanks to savings-minded students, faculty and staff, the ASU energy conservation hotline has been accomplishing the goals it was created for. “In the last fiscal year, we saved about $14,000 to $15,000 from palls to the hotline, which is about $30,000 annually,” said Ron Griffen, manager of University utilities. People who are familiar with certain sections or buildings on campus can point out energy waste problems by calling the hotline. “There are a lot of things that people can spot who are there on a day-to-day basis that we might never know about, Griffen said. “A lot of things that were suggested to us a year ago have saved us money.” The conservation hotline has “substantially” contributed to the University’s energy saving; said Herb Miller, Physical Plant director. “For this year, I don’t see any real problems, ” Miller said. “The increases (in energy consumption) we were projecting are being pushed into next year — they’ll happen sometime in 1984-85,” he said. costs from funds intended for academic programs, but the funds could come from renovation or construction projects. “When we got a fixed budget earlier, the Legislature didn t increase our budget, and we were expecting the rate in­ creases, so we planned for i t . . . The Wee President s Coun­ cil cut programs a t that time,” Zafra said. i ‘The difference between the actual consumption of energy and what we projected is a real small amount that s why we’re doing all right,” Griffen said. The Arizona State Legislature appropriates funds that will be spent for utilities after the University estimates its utility cost for the fiscal year, Griffen said. “Each month, we get in 80 or so utility bills, and we request a sum of money, then draw against it, he said. Griffen said no difficulties in paying utility bills for this fiscal year are being projected. Multi-step rate increases from Arizona Public Service are expected to begin on Jan. 1, 1984, but the dates are tentative at this point, according to APS spokesman Grant Smith. “We have asked for them, but we have to wait until the State Corporation Commission rules on our request,” Smith said. '■> . . ‘ He said the dates of the upcoming multi-step rate increases are contingent on the condition of the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station. Smith said an increase of less than 1 percent had been delayed earlier this fiscal year. This delay helped to offset high energy consumption that occurred during July, August and September, Griffen said. If Legislature funding does not meet utility costs, the deficit must be made up through conservation or other means, said Victor Zafra, vice president for Business Af­ fairs. “I would think that our planning is good enough that there shouldn’t be a real problem with it this year,” Zafra said. Zafra said it would be too late in the year to meet the utility The conservation hotline, 965-SAVE (7283), is manned by Walt Dollbaum, who is working with Griffen in the con­ servation project. ENJOY THE BEST ACCIDENT AND INJURY CLAIMS nM um üg ao ltw Disn ein ytCla ssS icvanD A"tW Sn h arfs' M "T heW Fa n tH w atain Faxa "(G )w B"W A RD A M ES"(PG) KNOW YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS Call 957-2010 FREE ATTORNEY CONSULTATION No Recovery - No Fee r " T H E ■ c u p E O E L 1 V E R A L S ■ D IN E FO R 0 N ■ 1 w i L RA od ey D an g"er(tR ie)idin Cr'E Sn Y M O N ET rsRicE hY aO rN dD G rH eE erLIM U 'D T IT" |l| W E D E L IV E R P in ts , Q u a rts a n d C a k e s MIDNIGHTMOVIESEVERYFRIDAYANDSATURDAYNIGHTFORONLYADOLLAR!^ ■ I 2 0 % 't & j t f lt r O F F 9 0 3 S. R u ra l 967 -23 4 0 W IT H A S U I .D . HOURS: S u n .-T h u rs. 11-12 a.m . Fri. &• Sat. 11-1 a.m . JO Y N T “ 2 CA N 0 if 1.1 i $ 5 .4 9 Reg. $8.50 Expires Nov. 11,1983. Choice of: •Lasagna •Cheese or Spinach Manicotti •Baked Ziti Includes 2 dinner salads and garlic breads T H E JO Y N T 606 S. Mill c 0 u p 0 N 1 ■ w 751 A D D IT IO N A L , 9 . • E • Live m usic, D E L 1 V E R A 9 6 7 -7 9 2 6 CARRYOUTS WEDNESDAY: S O ■ ■■■■■■COUPON ■ ■ » - J \ CD e 1 3131 S. M c C L IN T O C K , T E M P E VALLEY PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER (Corner Southern & McClintock) 8 3 8 -1 1 7 8 C O N C ERT N IG H T TH E “V A R M I N T S ” plus $1.00 well, wine & beer all night long. Page 19 Wednesday, October «6,1983 Stetehr«* state press POW Wow S e m i n ó l e s w ill m e e t D e v i l s t h is S a t u r d a y n ig h t Bowl. Bowden decided then that he would model his program When Bobby Bowden took over the head coaching reigns of after that of ASU. Saturday night Bowden’s Seminole team will face off the Florida State football program in 1976, he looked around against the Sun Devils in Sun Devil Stadium at7:30p.m. the country for program after which he could model his own. “I don’t think you could put two teams on the football field There was a school in the Southwest that was building a strong program which impressed Bowden. That school, that are as offensively alike as Arizona State and Florida Arizona State University, finished the previous year ranked* State,” Bowden said. ASU head coach Darryl Rogers has built a reputation of ofsecond in the nation after defeating Nebraska in the Fiesta By Ken Sabi Assistant sports editor fensive football in the west coast in his 19 years of coaching. Bowden has earned the same reputation on the east coast in his 18 years of coaching. Saturday night’s match-up could be a replay of the in­ augural Fiesta Bowl. Arizona State outscored the Seminóles 45-38 in the ’71 classic. One reason a high-scoring game could be expected would be the Seminóles defense. After surrendering 142 points in only four games their defensive unit has been marked ques­ tionable. . “We have really struggled this year defensively, Bowden said. “We were hoping to come into the year with some im­ provement on defense, but as it was, we did not make any progress defensively and have made little each week.” Rogers does not agree with Bowden’s appraisal of his defense. “Florida State has played much better on the defensive side of the ball as the season has progressed,” Rogers said. The Seminóles will come into Tempe with a 4-3 record, but they could be the one of the best 4-3 teams in the history of college football. ... . Their schedule includes seven teams that have been ranked in somebody’s Top 20 this season. Two of FSU’s losses have come to traditional powers Auburn and Pittsburgh. Both of those games were on the road. The other loss suffered by the Seminóles was at the hands of Tuian«» with their on-again off-again quarterback Jon English. Again, the game was on the road. The Seminóles are looking at the game against the Sun Devils to turn around their season. Florida State went into the sonsnn with a consensus ranking of No. 6. Bobby Bowden has been one of the nation’s outstanding coaches for the past six years. In that span, he has taken the Sem inóles to four bowl games. Florida State tailback G rtflA II« iil» o n * o l1 h « top running bM ks in ttw nailon, M#r»fllng 117-9 I»” *»p*r flam*. A ll« *“ » A R IZ O N A H U S Q V A R N A A Great Deal on a Great Bike!! W OMEN’S HEALTH CENTER PERSONALIZED and CONFIDENTIAL CARE •Free Pregnancy Testing •Free Abortion Counseling •PreMenstrual Syndrome Program T h is great m ountain bike com es with 18 speeds, a rear rack, chrom e m o ly tubing, and weighs only 33 lbs. C h o o s e between blue or bl§ck, and 23- or 19-inch. Y o u ’ll love it! ON S A LE FOR $44500 Regular $599 Their three losses have hurt them, but if the Seminóles can win all of their remaining four games they should earn a bowl berth. , Easy to say, but the schedule is not in FSU’s favor. They will play ASU on the road, then South Carolina at home, and close the season with Miami at home and Florida on the road. Kelly Lowrey will lead the offense for the Seminóles, but scorecards will be necessary to keep track of the offensive players. The Seminóles are so deep at every position on offense that Bowden decided to platoon the entire offensive unit except forLowrey. Even star running back Greg Allen, who led the nation in scoring a year ago, will share time with Roosevelt Snipes. The offensive line will also move in and out. Bowden has become famous for this type of offensive philosophy. In the last meeting between the Devils and Seminóles, he used a two-quarterback system to perfection. Jimmy Jordan and Wally Woodham alternated quarters in leading the Seminóles to a 31-3 victory over the Devils in Tampa. •Low Cost Sterilization •Additional Gynecologic Services Available NEW DRUGS A VAILABLE FOR •Painful Periods «Birth Control «vaginal infections TWO LOCATIONS PHOENIX Community Medical Plaza 1840 W. Maryland, Suite C l a g u n a m o u n t a in e e r 1725 W. UNIVERSITY, TEMPE • 9 6 6 -6 6 3 3 246-9792 o r 242-8649 TEMPE 3030 S. Rural Suite #7 894-5534 Please call for an appointment. State Pr黫 ucionnnn nn— Do Your Computer Work At Home! Pick ‘em Welcome to another State Press Pick ’em contest. This week 448 people set a season record by entering the contest, but only three came out as winners. The first prize winner is Paul Lindquist, who missed only one game. He wins a 810 gift certificate from the Bare Cover clothing store, and two “Shipwreck” banana splits from Yogurt Oasis. Second place went to Dennis Werbeach, who also missed one but was 12 points behind Paul in the tie­ breaker. He wins a large pizza from Pizza Hut restaurant. Third place went to Tim Howe. Tim missed one too, but he was so far off the tie-breaker that he’ll have to Settle for third. He receives a Budweiser goody bag, courtesy of Hensley and Co. In case of a tie, the winner will be the person who comes closest to predicting the final score of the ASUFlorida State game. Also, don’t forget to put your name and phone number on your entry. Entries will be accepted at the State Press offices un­ til 5p.m. Friday in the basement of Matthews Center. Florida State _ _ _ _ _ _at ARIZONA S T A T E . Predict the score. Home team in caps: Favorite Underdog CO LLEGE □ Penn State 3 Vi 1Vfe □ B OSTON COLLE G E □ ILLINOIS □ Florida □ M ARYLAND □ West Virginia □ M ississippi St. □ Washington □ □ □ □ □ □ Michigan AUBURN North Carolina MIAMI(Fla.) ALABAM A U C LA □ □ □ □ □ □ □ PRO G A M ES □ Dallas 7Vz □ C H IC A G O 1Vè □ Green Bay 4% □ MIAMI Vz □ A T LA N T A Vz □ S A N FR A N C ISC O 5Vz □ L.A. RAIDERS 2Vz Vz 3 Vz 2V z 7Vz 2 Vz *‘"‘“ '***‘'*****‘***‘******’*‘1 Save Time and Effort P ac-10 Football Standings Conference Overall W L T W L T Team 1 1. Washington 2. UCLA 0 3 1 C R T with c o u p le r or Printer with co u p le r $5 v 09 v ib° 3. Oregon 4. Arizona St. 5. USC 6. Arizona 7. Cai 8. Washington St. 9. Stanford 10. Oregon St. BRS LEASING, INC. 3914 E. M cD o w e ll • 277-3282 Rentals / Service / Sa le s 1 STUDENT SPECIAL | Shampoo I & Cut 45824® L o st F Found LOST A ladles gold Seiko w atch approximately tw o «make ago. If found call,864-2513. Reward! LOST ONE pair Olympic Vuamet sunglasses to MU on Tuesday, O ctober 1® Great sentim ental value. Rewrard. 631-0477._______________ _ YELLOW gold college ring with purple a to m vicinity of Physical Science aroa. $80 reward, 9954707." Call ooilect._________ • __________ l o st M otorcycles 1900 YAMAHA XT280. Excellent s tu ­ dent transportation. Greet g as mile­ age, exellent condition. $450, firm. 967-0669. Tom. _______ -j,___ ADVERTISING REP. Musi have sharp attitude, neat drees and mature, professional mind. Work to your own offlos 5.-00 to 91», Monday thru Friday, Saturday ftOOtoftOO. Apply a ttar 19*» a.m. Unlfam, 4415 8. Rural, Falrianee Vtllaoa. __________ ;________ __ EXCELLENT CONDITION, 1981 Kawasaki LTD 55® Fairing, s a d ­ dlebags, many extras. Must s e e it) 81400. OavkI a t 9557572.9046389. A NEW multi-level marketing company needs energetic people. The potential is unlimited. No bookkeeping or merchandise handling. Call Phil, 965 4183 days, 2534026 evening«.________ ATTENTION STUDENTS I II you are a p ast student of Rosemary Rader, I want your signature on a petition protesting her lack ot tenure. Please call Susan at 894-2488. : _ ATTENTION PART Ttotol If you are looking for a part time Job that pays a s wall a s a full time Job, you’ve found It. (Earn u p to $7 per hour.) We’re looking for people to work Monday through Friday, 3 6 0 to 8:30 p.m. to our public relations department. Located In Cen­ tral Phoenix. For an Interview call after 111»»jn. Ask for Deve, 2557054. DOVE SO A P- you a n such s dish! Love, Rad Batty. ' . _________ _ BREAK AWAY trio tor the boHdays. Represent the worlds largest beauty company. Call Jans, 9650327.________ Personal HYPNOSIS: DEVELOP self confidence, g et rid of e tn a s and tension, Improve memory and concentration, sto p smoking or lose weight. Undsay Brady, Certified Hypnotist, 8856671■ OVERWEIGHT? NEED 50 people for new herbal nutritional program and to share to company profit# Call Dawn, 9464417o r807-7393 CASHIERS AND cocktail waitresses. Apply to person. 1 - 5 , Monday through Friday. 3131B. McCttatock._______ _ R eal Estate COMPUTER RELATED JOBS. - Ac­ countants, engineers, finance, pro­ grammers, sales, retail. Free Into. Write CIM-A, »371 Krem«, Unit I, W eatmlnstar. CA9 2 9 5 3 .____________ $49,900. Two bedroom block home on com er lot, fenced yard, lush landscap­ ing and Arizona room. Evenings Chris, 8352646. Red Carpel Weery, 968-3414. GET HEALTHY, wealthy. Health, nutri­ tion company seeking motivated people for mariwtlng sales position. Ground floor opportunity. Full time, part-time, will train. Call Susan Morris, 697-7393 or 945-4417. ____ LIQUOR STORE clerk four dollars per hmir Flexible hours. Phone. 2762603. H E LP W AN TED — PART-TIM E bn> e 6 Ì r ò “ rJS m c o n ta c tin g m o d e rn , c o m fo rta b le __ utatS lin e i. E a rn in g s, e s ta b lis h e d c u s to m e r s o n to n a a v e ra g e $4-$6 p e r h o u r, p a id w h ic h in c lu d e n o s w w o n a l layoffs. Please call DIALAMERICA for details. 829-1140 ___ ^ ^10/28^ FOUR BEDROOM, Ideal tor ASU rental. Sal tor w » carry, assum e VA loan. Fast possession. Evenings Cento, 9666009. Red c « p e t Wssry, 9653414, ________ LOVELY TWO bedroom villa located n s « pool. Eat-In kitchen, nice private yard and covered patio. Priced to sail a t $51,90® Evenings Chris, 835254® Rsd Carpet W ssry.9653414. __________ OWNER HEADING north, m ust soil this lovely, well kept three bedroom homo with bonus room. Largo yard, covered patio. Be tha next lucky OMmer. Only asking $58,400. Evenings Chris 83 5 264® Rad Carobt Weary. «953414. RENT NO more- closing c o ats down put you In th is luxury Los Raclmos Condominium. Refrigerator, w asher and dryer. Priced for quick sale at $47,990. Call Pam Haiten - Corona Gallery of Home». 9661433__________ SOUTH CENTRAL Tam ps patio home. Two miles to ASU. Two large be­ drooms, tw o baths, $57,00® Good terms. Evenings Alberta, 9674)359. Rad Carpet Weary. 9653414.___________ Ths STATE PRESS disclaims all respon­ sibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. R eal Batate Typing SOUTH SCOTTSDALE 50’S. Three bedroom n e w Hayden, Motorola. Owner will carry, Immediate p o sse s­ sion. Evenings Onto, 830-4042. Red Carpet Wear». 9053414. ____________ A ! PROFICIENT typist, IBM Setoctric. Pam, «65200®_________________ ____ AAAAH. FORMER secretary desires all types o t typing- Location Southern and • Rural- Fran, 9359027.________________ VISITING PROFESSOR and «rife desire furnished apartm ent or house, January through March. Will bo careful tenants. 8350297. _____________________ AAA TYPING, editing, resum es, paper», letters Twenty year» experience. Scottsdale- Tempe. 9457430, Barbara Andersen . _____________________ H o Q i n m f l t F W a n te d ACADEMIC TYPING. WHI edit spellln® punctuation, grammar. Fast return and accuracy guaranteed. Joan 8350772. FEMALE, NONSMOKER, share lovely apartm ent a t Sun scape. Private bed­ room and bath. Pool and Jacuzzi. Call Kelly, 954-9931 d ays, 94 5 4 9 3 0 e v e n i n g s . _____________ FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. Private bedroom suit# to lovely tow nhousa with pool, tennis. Pries, Baseline. Mary 5351327. _________ ______________ FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted. Stu­ dent, non-smoker, 1* mile ASU, two bedroom, $200 m onth plus t* utilities. 804-2441, ____________ _ _________ FEMALE ROOMMATE non-smoker w anted |p share new two bedroom, two bath eondo n e w Fiesta Mall. $250 par m o n th . C all (days), 2452027, (evenings), $05709®__________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted. Own bedroom, brand new com plex,'pool, pets, dishw asher, AC. Quiet, con­ venient location. $175. Maryann, 8 25 8143. _ _ _____________________ __ Services ALPHA RESUME. Full services dis­ count with ad. 1000 E. Apache, Suite __________ 106, Temp». 967-7247. COLOR DRAPE analysis and face design by Judy. 8394)401._________. HAVE UNWANTED facto) or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation. Located to Tampa. Call Sharon, Desert Electrolysis Center 835188® S tudent discount.__________ SAVE TUITION dollars, residency counseling c u ts red taps, no toe until residency la granted.9666065.________ SECRETARIAL SERVICE five mlnues from ASU Library. Term papers, research papers, resum es and man­ uscripts. Alt correspondence. Fast, accurate, good spelling and grammar. Cell Jacq u s. 9674)900. ____________ TIRED OF being ripped off on auto repair? G uaranteed, expert work dona by professionals. ASU area. Dennis. 6200004.___________ . Travel C H IN A - HONGKONG- Japan; 22 days. Dr. R oger Axford, .8353255, July 1 8 - A ugust8.1964,82996.___________ DRIVE CARS free to m ost p oints o t tha United S ta te s, over 21. Scheall Prtveaway. 901-5533. ____________ _ FREE CARS available for all major cities. Call u s now, AAACon Auto Transport. 264-0201._________________ ACADEMIC EXPERTISE,' utlllztog word processing, providing outstanding quality and accuracy. Specializing In d is se rta tio n s , th e se s. P re c ls slo n Typing. 6351327. _______________ ACCENT WORD processing and typing ckto» to ASU. 9452666. ________ ACCURATE TYPING all kinds, re­ asonable rates, excellent service. A gnes LIndetrom 8355666.___________ ALL SECRETARIAL services. Quality typing, fast, accurate. Resumes. Cover letters. IBM Electronic. 20 years experience. McKelllps- S c o tts d a le road«. Dana. 941-5111._________.______ ALL TYPING dona fast and accurate. .90 a page. W ent processing available. C lose to ASU. Call Carta or Bobbl 865919® ___________ __ _________ ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing at $1.25 per page. Call Susan «18334)373. ALWAYS DEPENDABLE, typing edit­ ing, term papers, books, dissertations, resum es. Excellent skills. Shirley’s Typing Sendee 638-5099._____________ A-PLUS Typing. Term Papers, Re­ sum es’, securities and finance papers a specialty. Papers com pleted on Electronic memorywriter. Call Judy 8300401. _______________ .___ ALL PAPERS typed to your com plete satisfaction, IBM Setoctric. N ear ASU. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley, 967-0602. CALL CAROLINE for your typing needs, reasonable rate«, quality work, near Rural- Southern 967-9226.________ CORRECTING TYPEWRITER 30 year» experience: legal, medical, electronics, construction, performing arts, educa­ tion, computer. Graduate and Instruete r «toft Leah, 962-1060. __________ FAST, ACCURATE typing, S1-25fpage. Call Teresa a t 962-0079 or Linda a t 989677® allta typing «vallabto.________ FORMER LEGAL secretary will type papers, over night If necessary. $1.00 page. Satisfaction guaranteed. 267762®___________ ___________________ JOH-REE SERVICES. Typing, word processing, farm papers, report», resum es, totters. $1.00 double spaced page. Call Maris anytime. 965478® PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Excellent spelling and grammar. IBM Setoctric. pickup and delivery. Call Jallne 94 5 4647.________________ ;__________ ___ PROFESSIONAL TYPING. IBM Cor­ recting Setoctric, accurate spalling, punctuation, quality work guaranteed. (Elflot/Alma School roads) Joyce 8 35 1480. _______ _________________ QUALITY, accurate typing. Three blocks from cam pus. Electronic memory writer. Experienced In ell ph a se s of typing. A lto charts, graphs, typetatting, professionally done, re­ asonable rates. Tempe location. Call 24 hoyrs. New Moon Secretarial. 6846234,841-7099.__________________ Alleviate baggage check-in, long lines, crowded air­ planes, poor service, and high fares of the airlines. Fly with us sipping champagne at 25,000 feet in a luxurious corporate aircraft whisking you to v isit fam ily and friends in Denver/Boulder area. Round trip fare is $170. Leaving Thanksgiving, November 22-23; returns November 27. Cali Michael, q u ic k a » « 76- TYPING $1.75 par page, editing extra. Carolyn, 8350656. ________________ 10/26 Typing 31.00 PAGE typing. Pickup and delivery o n -c a m p u s . Knowledge all format styles. 20 years experience. Susan 902-1201; D ebbie 963-3122. Call evenings.____________ ' ______ $1.25 PAG® Accurst», fast, electronic typewriter, can type anythin® Includ­ ing script, symbol», and shadow printing. G ram m «, spelling and punc­ tuation edited. Office on cam pus. Judi, 965606® _________ __________ SI.SQfPAGE. 10% c ash discount, rush service available, technical symbols. 8:30 - 4-JO, M onday-Friday. 1 mile from cam pus. B usiness Office Servtoea, «94-1517. STUDENT DISCOUNT for fast, accur­ ate, high quality typing. Will edit gram m eri p u n c tu a tio n , sp e llin g . C hristina8351062.___________ ■ TERM PAPERS, resum es, charts, etc. Editing dona. 832-727®______________ $1.40IPAGE. TYPING, farm papers, thesis ell types. North Central Phoenix. Why Worry Secretarial Service, 9 45 3582. _______________ ____ TVPING THESES, dissertations, farm papers, ate. Eight years experience. Accurate tost service, spelling corrected. 9459207. _____________ WORD. PROCESSING for collage theses, reports, and resum e« In P eradlta Valley area. 905278®________ WORD PROCESSING. Knowledge ot APA end Ttirabian reference sty toe $1 double spaced page. Accurate. 265 577® W anted A-1 EXCELLENT Typing. H ighest qual­ ity. Term papers, theses, resum es, etc. IBM Electronic. Call Unde, 8957502. NEED MONEY? Paying top dollar for gold Jawehy. diamonds, c la ss rings, pocket watches, and silver coins. Fraa In home estim ates. Call anytime, Jo e 9556637. ___________________: A-1 PROFICIENT typist IBM Selectrtc, Loralne 833-8365, University and Dobson in Mesa.______________ ______ PAYING CASH tor gold, «Hirer, dla* monds, class rings. Mill Avenue Jew elers. 414 S. Mill. 9655067.________ mm mmmm ©c m w rn m â m Ê m m fÆ im M m SïïÊ & m . m m iM m & r ^ â i By De Staff' The posili] The gradi arts a single both. Uih gram Prese requi of a fit Oth quire scien Co r quire undei algeb requi Stu credi scien quire Tw also ' Cum elude Act philo the c long I kBIItël XU. M i ls By LI Staff Lei unde ment the A year, Phoe We legis conv recei “A shoui woul sione sibili By M Staff Al prop unan duel Ac libra throi moni At esco Burr met thee S filH to m were show mon He nigh