Student input advised for merit pay policy By Lisa Phillips Staff w riter An Arizona Board of Regents com m ittee assigned to develop policies on distribution of m erit pay has recommended to the board that student opinion be considered when evaluating faculty fhr m erit pay. Shari Lewis, a m em ber of the board’s Compensation Plan Task Force, said die com m ittee believes student evaluation should be “one of the components but not the only component” of facility perform ance assessm ent. , The recom m endation, w hich w as presented to the board a t last week’s meeting, will be on the voting agenda a t the December regents meeting in Flagstaff, Lewis said. “If it’s adopted, the board will determ ine how (student evaluation) will be conducted and what weight it will have,” she said. Associated Students o f ASU President W alter B att said he believes student criti ques are an essential p art of any m erit pay plan. “I think in the long run, student evalua tions will only help the system since students are the consum ers of education,” he said. “As it stands now, not all students have the opportunity to evaluate their teachers.” B att said the Associated Students of the three universities presented a report to the regents in September asking them to make student opinion a p art of a m erit pay distribution policy. “We didn’t designate to the regents how we wanted it done,” be said. “We ju st told them we thought it was im portant. ” B att said the proposal requested that the evaluation system be standardized within each of Arizona’s three universities in order to accommodate differences within the schools. th u rs d a y November 10,1983 Voi. 66 No. 47 Arizona State University He added that students should not be ask ed to make value judgm ents when evaluating their teachers in order to main tain fairness in the students’ assessm ents. In addition to student evaluation, the regents com m ittee also recommended that peer evaluations, departm ent adm inistrator evaluations and other appropriate evalua tions be used in determ ining m erit pay. Faculty m em bers will be assessed on their teaching effectiveness, research and scholarly growth and professional service if the com m ittee’s plan is adopted by the board. sp li am t e v p re s s ® Tempe, Arizona © Copyright, S ta te P re ss, 1983 Former profs’ tales verify ’publish or perish’ notion Staff photo by OavM M klm tcz B a n tlin g to ge th e r Crow ds gathered on the lawn west of Hayden Library W ednesday to listen to the ASU Jazz-R ock Ensem ble. The group was playing to help celebrate Hom ecom ing activities on cam pus. By Jim McCleary Staff w riter It was shaping up to be a pretty lousy month for Chuck McGuire. In May he was in the middle of a sticky divorce settlem ent and was ending his teaching career a t ASU for reasons he couldn’t quite grasp. He was told a t the tim e by an anonymous spokesman for the personnel committee in ids departm ent that two professors would soon be term inated because of inactivity in the areas of publishing and research. McGuire, an untenured professor in the adm inistrative services departm ent a t the time, turned out to be one of those pro fessors. He has been out of work ever since. McGuire is certain be was on the wrong end of what is commonly called “publish or perish” —a belief that professors m ust pro duce research and publishings or face ter mination. M aurine Fry, assistant vice president for academ ic affairs, said she thinks professors who concentrate on course preperation and avoid publishing and research should be ter minated. “If they don’t keep up with a m oderate amount of research, their teaching will become stale, ” she said. Students actually benefit from professors who are active publishers because they stay cu rren t, “ which should help th eir teaching,” F ry said. Fry confirmed that the Arizona Board of Regents prohibits the University to inform untenured professors of the reason for their term inations. McGuire said he received a registered let ter in the m ail informing him of his term ina tion. He added the letter stated only that he was term inated and offered no explanation. He had been nom inated for the Distinguished Teaching Award in 1962 and had published quite frequently, he said, ad ding that many of those articles were reviewed by other journals. “I’ve always placed teaching as a priority and it cost me my job,” McGuire said. “I always thought that was what a university was for.” The decision to assign a term ination con tract begins; in the personnel committee at the departm ent level, which informs a pro fess«: that he has one rem aining year of employment. A term ination proposal passes through several levels, ending with a decision from the vice president for academ ic affairs. A recommendation to term inate may be vetoed a t any level. Repeated efforts to reach Jack Kinsinger, vice president for academ ic affairs, were unsuccessful. B arry Van Hook, professor of ad m inistrative services, was chairm an of the personnel committee when McGuire was term inated. He declined to discuss the situa tion. He did say that based on his observations of all departm ents on campus, professors who have trouble with publishing also have trouble retaining their jobs. The amount of time sacrificed by a pro fessor to do research and publish does not necessarily m ean students are being slighted, Van Hook said. “One thing the students pay for . . . is a degree from a university which is very well known, and (publications) give the univer sity renown, ” he said. continued pag« 11 Regents satisfied with athletes’ academic progress By Wayne Baker Staff w riter The Arizona Board of Regents is satisfied with the academ ic progress of ASU’s student-athletes, despite a drop in the 1982-63 GPAs of the football and basketball team s. Thomas Chandler, chairm an of the regents policy subcom m ittee, said the drop in GPAs was “slight,” but not signifi cant. However, be said the regents should continue to watch academ ic program s for ASU, U of A and NAU athletes close ly. “We haven’t been a t this long enough. It’s going to take some very careful monitoring, ” Chandler said. At its monthly m eeting last F riday, the board released a report on the'academ ic status of the student-athletes a t the three state universities. According to the report, the cum ulative GPA of the 1962-83 AlSU football team was 2.13, down from die 2.17 compiled by the 1981-82 squad. The 1982-83 basketball team had a cum ulative GPA of 2.00 for the academ ic school year, a decrease of .14 from the GPA of the 1981-82 basketball team. Joe McDonald, ASU associate director of athletics, previously said the drop in GPAs was not statistically signifi cant. “They may not have the highest GPAs, but more players are reaching their levels of academic capability and main taining it,” he said. Chandler said the subcommittee m et with U of A, NAU and ASU coaches and adm inistrators. “The best sign th at I think I saw . . .is I believe the top peo ple in the adm inistration have a commitment to see that the academ ic status of athletes improves dram atically,” he said. According to the report, of die 105 members of the 1982-83 football team , 33 were below the “good standing” level re quired by the University. Ten of those 33 w ere first-string players, eight were secondstring, five were third-string, four were fourth-string, three were red-shirted freshm en and three began their first sem ester& atASU in spring1983. Six out of 16 basketball players on the 1982-83 squad had GPAs below the University’s requirem ent for good standing. Students with 0 to 24 credit hours are required to have a GPA of 1.60 to be in good standing with the University. Students who have from 25 to 55 credit hours are required to m aintain a GPA of 1.75, and those with 56 hours or more m ust have a cum ulative GPA of 2.00. The junior basketball players had a cum ulative GPA of 1.85, which fell below good standing. The senior basketball players had a GPA of 2.35 and the sophomore cagers com piled a 1.82 GPA. Freshm en football players h ad a GPA of 1.96; sophomores, 2.06; juniors, 2.11; and seniors, 2.27. Chandler said ASU needs standards to judge the academ ic progress of football players, adding, “In order to evaluate the GPA of the football team , you have to have some (m easure) of who’s doing good and who isn’t.” The U of A 1982-83 football and basketball team s compiled GPAs of 2.06 and 2.15, respectively. Both w ere increases from the previous academ ic y e a r State Press state press nation/world Palestinian rebels corner Arafat Troops may w ithdraw from Grenada in three w eeks WASHINGTON (AP) - The 3,000 American troops still on G renada m ay be withdrawn from the Caribbean island in two o r three weeks, the uniformed commanders of the Navy and Army told a congressional com m ittee Wednesday. “W e've virtually achieved all our objectives” m ilitarily «nri »re trying to find the proper balance between the securi ty and civilian needs to be addressed, Adm. Jam es D. W atkins, tee chief of naval operations, told the Senate Armed Services Committee. WatkinB said the m ain effort now is to fe rret out remaining pockets of Cuban and Grenadian forces and weapons caches th at m ay be in the hilly, jungle-covered interior of Grenada. The Army chief of staff, Gen. John Wickham, added that “ we don’t want to leave a nascent insurgency there” and teat is why painstaking efforts are bring m ade to comb the dif ficult terrain. He said he had “no problem” with Watkins’ estim ate of a pullout in two to three weeks. S coon nam es provisional governm ent in Grenade ST. GEORGE’S, Grenada (AP) - Governor General Sir P aul Scoon named a nine-member provisional government for Grenada Wednesday. Scoon said the m em bers of the advisory council would ad m inister government functions until elections are held, but gavenoi date for the voting. Scoon chose Allster M cIntyre, a U.N. development official, to head the council. M cIntyre’s appointment was conditional on his bring released from his duties as a deputy secretary-general in charge of the U.N. Council on Trade and Development, Scoon said. Scoon is the representative of B ritain’s Queen Elizabeth II on Grenada, a m em ber of the British Commonwealth. The United StateB and the other governments which participated in the Oct. 25 invasion of Grenada recognize Scoon as the only constitutional authority on the island. TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AP) - Palestinian rebels backed by Syria rained hundreds of shells on PLO chairman Yasser A rafat’s last Middle E ast bastion Wednesday, cornering him in Tripoli and ignoring his pleas for a truce. The rebel barrage prevented the Palestine Liberation Organization leader from visiting loyalist holdouts a t the besieged Baddawi refugee cam p outside Tripoli. Black smoke from raging fires hung over the port city of500,000. But A rafat visited maimed supporters in hospitals, roving tee streets in a chauffeured Jeep while shells froin rebels in the north and east occasionally slammed into neighborhoods near his office. “There’s been no progress in talks anywhere,” A rafat told reporters who followed him to the Islam ic Hospital, where he chatted with patients and signed autographs. Scholarship named after Goldw ater WASHINGTON (AP) - Amateur radio operators named a «•hnlnrship for Sen. Barry Goldwater Wednesday, and Goldwater responded by going on the a ir to tell some of his fellow ham s atwut i t The Arizona Republican, a long-time ham or am ateur radio operator, was honored at a ceremony in his office by of ficers of the American Radio Relay League Foundation. Robert York Chapman, president of the foundation, said the $5,000 Barry Goldwater scholarships would be awarded a n n u a lly to college students who are licensed ham operators. The scholarships will be used for study of electronics, com munications engineering and related skills. Chapman said funds would be raised by solicitation among the league’s 15,000members. CORRECTION POLICY It is the policy of the state Press to acknowledge and cor rect errors when they occur. If you see an error, call our newsroom at 965-2292 to let us know. All corrections will ap pear on this page. Get the facts on admission to these law schools: Open discussion with law school recruiters: Ask questions, pick up application forms and literature on their schools. Arizona State University College of Law Brigham Young University J. Reuben Clark Law School Brooklyn Law School Golden Gate University School of Law Gonzaga University School of Law The Lewis & Clark Law School Loyola University of New Orleans School of Law McGeorge School of the Law University of the Pacific It’ s c o m p le te ! in o u N u tritiou s and appetizing, a full m eal you d o n ’t have to take tim e out to enjoy...because D o m in o’s P izza w o n ’t keep you waiting! Ju s t give us a call. W ithin 30 .m inu tes a high protein dinner will be delivered to yo u r d oo r at no ad d ition al charge. S o kick off a really great evening at hom e...call D o m in o ’s Pizza...w e’re #1 for rushing! r ■ a I$200 m SE N ON Q 0. Fast, Free Delivery7 903 S. 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Kucera Staff w riters A resignation letter from a form er Palo Verde West Residence Hall Association representative has the Hall’s council adviser “concerned” about the intentions of rem ain ing PV West executive board m em bers. Rosheeda Whitthome, assistant residence hall director, has asked die H all’s other executive officers to subm it for m al intent letters by 5 p.m . today, stating their desire to re tain their positions for the rem ainder of the school year. If such notification or resignation is not received, Whit thom e said she will then advise the PV West Hall Council on impeachment procedures. According to W hitthorne, executive board m em bers, ex cept PV West President Kevin Stiff who was out of town, “refused to attend” Monday’s hall council meeting. A fter Robert Groff’s resignation last weekend, W hitthorne said she was “concerned as to who else was considering sim ilar action.” Groff said all board m em bers had considered resignation, but many have reconsidered since getting W hitthorne’s let ter. According to G roffs letter of resignation, PV West hall council advisors “do not advise, but they issue orders and im pose restrictions.” Groff cited last weekend’s Mock Rock festival a t PV West as an example. According to Groff, W hitthorne arb itrarily ended the par ty, which followed the concert, a t 11:30 p.m ., though only one Homecoming events to include pep rally, Cady M all festivities of three kegs of beer purchased for the event had been finished. W hitthorne rolled the keg inside the cafeteria “under the pretense that she was moving the party inside,” he said. But according to Whitthorne, only certain individuals were allowed to attend the party, scheduled to last until 1 a.m ., and since most of them had left, she m ade an announcement that the party was over. “We were dispensing beer to folks who did not have a right to be there,’’ she said, adding this is forbidden under their “lim ited access’’ alcohol perm it. Groff said he believes the executive board could be faced with an investigation into m isappropriation of funds from the concert if enough board m em bers resign. According to Whitthorne, “a full accounting” of funds is a standard procedure following residence hall activities. In his letter, Groff attacked the University’s requisition system , saying th at “the (University) adm inistration shackles the student government with restrictions and tedious, redundant, totally useless procedures on using the money,” that belongs to the PV West residents. According to Whitthorne, Groff has m issed “ three or four” m eetings and the RHA ruling states that after three missed m eetings, a hall representative’s vote may be taken away. “For him, (resigning) was probably a good move,” she said. “It’s obvious that it was a pressure for him .” G roffs vacant position as RHA representative was filled Monday. Groff is now a first-floor senator for PV West. Remaining events far Homecoming Week 1963 include a pep rally today at Palo Verde Main, followed by a Manzanita homecoming party and a Cacty Mall roller skating exhibition and per form ance by the rode band “H ie R eporters.” M exican D ancers from the Ballet Folklorico as well as street dancers also wUl be perform ing on Cady Mall to day. All midi activities will begin a t 11:30 a.m . Tonight, Jerry RiopeUe will be in con cert a t Gammage a t 8 p.m. Classes are excused Friday in honor of Veterans’ Day. A 5-kilom eter Fun Run will be held in downtown Tempe Saturday a t 9:15 a.m ., followed by a parade featuring the Clydesdales, with Rep. John Mc Cain, R-Ariz., as grand m arshall. The parade «dll travel west from ASU on University Drive to Mill Avenue and will begin a t 10a.m . A Pre-Gam e Alumni dinner will be held in the MU Arizona Room a t 5 p.m. on Saturday. The homecoming football game against Oregon State a t 7:30 p.m. «dll feature a halftim e presentation of the 19g3 King and Queen and a perfor m ance by the ASU gym nastics team . Tickets are still available for the game a t the Sun Devil Stadium ticket office. (txpires 11-30-83.) A ll Hair Cuts $10.00 (Includes cut, shampoo and conditioner only) | Sculptured Nails $19.50 C om e in now ! Regifter to win 1984 Autograph G T. ¡ 903 S. Rural • Cinnamon Tree • 894-018^J TREAT YOURSELF R O YA U X 9 9 * WÊM D aini Queen ® (WITH COUPON) We're having a real sale on a real treat. 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Ballet Nacional Español appeared et Gemmage Center on Nov. 3.
I do wish Phoenix audiences would forget this in
fatuation with their own applause. Giving a stand
ing ovation to every touring group and applauding
anytim e someone on stage is quiet does not prove
that Valley residents are “cultured.”
The two singers, Manuel Palacin and Talegon de
Cordoba, were both enjoyable. One (I don’t know
which was which) was exceptional He made time
stop and aw ait each anguished note. His melodies
were inventive and his emotional range broad.
Flam enco singing is the most intense, angstridden, defiant singing yet devised by the human
race. Not any singer can produce the sounds it re
quires. Only those who were teethed on its musical
edge can pull it off.
The last number showed the corps a t what is ob
viously its forte — Spanish folk dancing. The jota
is an athletic dance from the north of Spain.
Before last night I had never been anything but
bored when confronted with jotas. Even so, one
was enough. The costumes were gorgeous.
In the jota, the company did appear polished
and energetic. There was one nam eless corps
member who I enjoyed throughout the concert. He
is the shortest person in the company and m ust be
from the north of Spain because he was so vocal
throughout the dance that I suspected he was
about to break into song.
One problem that greatly m arred the concert
was the antics of the stage crew. Over the course
of the concert they managed to drop a curtain on
two groups of dancers, wave their hands within
the audience’s view and cover the singers’ voices
with microphone feedback.
Visiting companies like the B allet N ational
Espanol do a great service for Phoenix audiences,
even when the quality is not what one m ight ex
pect from an international touring group. They in
troduce local audiences to a variety of dance and
music and pave the way for m ore elegant per
formances which ought to characterize a city of a
million and a half.
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T O U R IN G C L A S S E S A N D TR IP S
N ISH IK I, F U J I , S P E C I A L I Z E D B I C Y C L E S
« it e f r u ì
Thursday. November 10.1983
Student Experimental Theater
allows chance to learn, grow
The acting was technically pretty good,
By iUc Alpers
but the cast ju st did not physically look like
Scenes w riter
what the parts called for. In addition, the
The Student Experim ental T heater
characters’ life experiences are rather uni
(SJ5.T.) is an organization designed to
que and it is obvious that the actors had not
allow theater students the opportunity to
done their homework on these experiences
practice their craft.
nor had they been helped in this by t*ieir
Directed, designed, acted and occasion
director.
_ ,__
ally w ritten by students, S.E.T. productions
Ride Atkins comes across the best as
give students practical experience to go
Weston Hurley, a down-and-out folk singer.
along w ith the academ ic.
The scene in which he tells an Eskimo folk
S.E.T.’s latest production was Lanford
tale is one of the bright spots in the produc
Wilson’s “Fifth of July.” It was a fine exampfe of everything S.E.T. can be and
Susan L. Johnson is funny as Shirley
everything it cannot.
Talley but it is obvious that she is not 13. In
“F ifth of July” is the second play in
fact, until it is stated that she is » , * e ap
Wilson’s “Talley Fam ily Trilogy,” the first
pears to be somewhat simple-minded. The
being “Talley’s Folly” and the last, “Tale
rest of the cast gives competent but shallow
Told.” .
. . „ „ „
performances.
,
__ ...
J/ ft picks up the action of “Talley s Folly
The design makes good use of a difficult
some thirty years later. M att is gone and
facility, although the set looks m ore like a
Sally has returned to the homestead to scat
New York terrace apartm ent than the old
te r his ashes. The old generation of Talleys
homestead in Missouri. Yet it is very func
is gone and the new has taken up residence.
tional and adds much to the movement of
W hat each generation discovers about
theplay.
.
^
_
them selves and each other is the crux erf the
S.E.T. has allowed these students a
m atter.
Minn«» to learn and grow. If certain
Perform ed a t Drama City (the old Tower
d e ments are lacking, it is the nature of the
C enter), “Fifth of July” was given the “old
beast. What the students dem onstrated was
college try .” By and large, it was suc
the expertise of their level as artists, and
cessful.
that was certainly not minimal. It is to
Ride DesRochers’ direction was fast
everyone’s
credit that, within their lim ita
paced and well staged. The show had a good
tions, a decent piece of theater was
lode and movement to it. What was missing
presented.
,
was subtlety and character motivation.
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6. H am burger w /F rench Fries
S T U D E N T S
WOMEN AND W ORK
NOVEMBER 14, 1983 • 11:30-12:30 • Room 219, Navajo
Is It ¡Mil s Man’s World?/Sexual Harassment?
Jane Brand, Manager of Consumer Affairs, Arizona Public Service
Stan Lubin, Attorney, McKenbrec and Lubin
In conjunction with the Business Administration Council.
NOVEMBER 14, 1983 • 12:30-1:30 • Room 219, Navajo
Growth and Potential. . . what will it be like for you and work in th e future?
(Exploration o f career opportunities and long range careerplanning.)
Ruth Szilagyi, President of Impact for Enterprising Women
NOVEMBER 15, 1983 • 11:30-12:30 • Room 219, Navajo
The Multl-Commltted Woman
(H ow to handle all that life offers to you . .. how to he a supermom.)
Carol Karpeck, President, Communicate with Confidence, Inc.
NOVEMBER 15, 1983 • 10:00-2;00 • Cady Mall
Alums on the M a ll... Kick off for Day on the Job Program.
(Meet w ith recent ASUgraduates and hear about theirfirstfew years out o f college and
on the j o b . . . also sign up fo r the Day on theJob Program.)
In conjunction with the Alumni Association.
Women and Law, ASU Law School
11:00-11:30 Color Me Beautiful
,
11:30-12:00 How to Dress Professionally (Casual Corner)
12:00-12:30 How to Interview
12:30- 1:00 First Year Lawyering
2:00- 3:00 How to Open and Operate Your Own Law Firm
3:00- 4:00 Challenges Unique to Female Attorneys
In conjunction with the Women’s Law Student Association
NOVEMBER 15,1983 « 7:00-9:00 • Room 222, Mohave
Yoor Professional Image, Your Competitive Edge.
YOU C A N T BEAT
THE PRICES AT
___
(Professional seminar including image development, professional dressing, and
wardrobe planning fo r all facets o f your lifestyle. There will be a sm all f ^ f * * f°r
students and S5 fo r adults Please callfo r reservations by November 14 a t 905-1 J .)
Kathy Rodgers, Personal Style and Image Consultant, Image of Success
NOVEMBER 16,1983 • 11:30-12:30 • Room 219, Navajo
M emoring W orkshop. . . what Is it, what Is in it for me?
Mary Kay Graham, Consultant and Trainer,
Vice President of Impact for Enterprising Women
NOVEMBER 16,1983 • l(E00-2:00 • Room 212, East and West Cochise
Networking Reception
(Attend and meet the women's organizations on this campus and in the community,
especially those groups that will help you further your career networking groups.)
NOVEMBER 16,1983 • 2:30-4:30 • Room 217, Coconino
Executive Women’s Panel Discussion and Reception
2,95
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Green ChUi
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style
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M on-Fri 4:00-6:00 p.m.
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Margaritas
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Janet Lee Stockbroker, Kidder & Peabody & Company Incorporated
President, Corporate Business and Professional Women
Carol Ward, President, Marjon Ceramics
Outstanding Woman o f the Yearfo r Phoenix
Mary Jane Boyd, Tax Partner, Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Company
The only uom an Big Eight Partner in the Valley
Abo: Correa* Fashions for Today’s Executive Display
Goidwater's Careers Incorporated
in conjunction with Delta Sigma Pi Business Fraternity
NOVEMBER 17, 1983 • 11:30-12:30 • Room 217, Coconino
Turfy—hm sl Resume W riting
MaryJane Murphy, Graduate Intern, Career Services
NOVEMBER 17,1983 • 12:30-1:30 • Room 217, Coconino
Effective Interviewing Techniques
Soto, Advisor to Career Services
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 965-1253
1120 E. Apache, Tempe967-1129
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Campus salsa musicians capture spirit
of Latin American influence in Arizona
By Jessica Kreimerman
^Some have said the Latin heritage is not as prevalent
omona Hispanic Arizonans as it m ight be.
* if Oris is an accurate assessm ent, then it looks like ASU has
.-routed some of the Latin jazz and salsa beats that will, in
ra rt encourage the Latin heritage of many Arizonans.
Two groups, one a perm anent band and the other a class
exoeriment, have captured the “true essence” of the Cuban,
p,w>rto Rican and Latin American rhythms.
Tlie first is called Abel Valentino’s Salsations, composed of
«even ASU students — six from the United States and one
Latin — and three other players. According to Dominican
Mannv Simo, a senior dram a m ajor and vocalist of the band,
th e y like to think of them selves as a “ 10-piece ensemble of
raw unchained energy.”
.
. .
And they have energy to spare. They have been freelancing
from bar to bar w herever they can get contracts. They are
followed by many Latinos who are eager to dance the salsa
“the old way.”
Luis Enriquez, the m anager of the band and Saturday disc
iockey at KMCR, said the band is authentically Latin and
they have the rhythm the local Hispanic radio stations should
be adopting.
“I wish they (the radio stations) would grow up. All they
-lay is junk- they w ant to take us back to Mexico. The
Odea„0 can identify with salsa better than with m ariachi
music,” Enriquez said.
The ASU Am erican students who joined the band are all
f in e arts m ajors. John Wise and Phil Arnold on trombone,
joev Sellers on piano, Jeff Fields on trum pet and Marc
C o u s in s on bass, have adapted themselves surprisingly well
to the new tunes, Simo said.
^
..
.
The band has been together for less than three months and
has not made a profit yet.
“We are self-funded, but we’re getting m ore exposure. We
went to a jazz festival in Sedona and the people reacted very
warmly to us,” Simo said.
“Besides, w hatever we make we reinvest in arranging new
tunes. Joey Sellers and Aggie Mendoza take care of that.”
Their latest set of appearances was a t the Boojum Tree.
Playing old tunes like “Sabor a Mi,” a slow salsa, and new
vocalized songs, they made the Latins in the audience get up
and dance.
“What’s good about the group is that we’re completely in
tegrated —and that is a point I’ve tried to stress,” Simo said.
“You do not need to be in the culture to have the rhythm.
It’s a real tribute to these guys’ education,’’ he said.
The other group sprouting Latin beats is doing it specifi
cally for their education. ASU’s Latin Combo, a group of
music students, featured a perform ance recently.
Their “beat” is not so much Latin as a m ixture of jazz with
Afro-Cuban, Brazilian and other Latin highlights. The group
features Trish M astalsz on flute, Russ Schroeder on drums,
Yuki Nakai on piano and Arlene Ashe on bass.
I only saw them in practice, but the ensemble was begin
ning to faintly resem ble one of those records played a t a
cocktail party in the Ritz. It sounded good.
Like Abel Valentino’s Salsations, the Latin Combo was
formed recently, but the members of the latter were ran
domly selected. Of the group m em bers, only Ashe, a
sophomore from Arizona, has had experience with Latin
rhythms prior to this perform ance.
,
,
“We’ve studied several styles, like calypso, samba and
bossa, and we’ll continue to learn about the different ways of
performing them ,” Ashe said.
The Wednesday perform ance featured a calypso tune, a
song
“Once I Loved,” by Antonio Carlos Jobim, and an
original piece previously perform ed only by the composer.
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W INDOW
State Pre»»
Thursday,
Jersey group rocks with style
However, Barone said Rex has not influ
enced them any more than any other band.
B y Barbara Love
Contributing writer
The Bongos.
The nam e alone is great. But the rock
quartet that goes by that name is even bet
ter, and it proved its ability Monday night at
A fter the Gold Rush in Tempe.
The Bongos are rem arkably original and
their sound belongs exclusively to them. The
New Jersey-based group expertly weaves
rock, folk, Latin and occasional strains of
psychedelia. R ich ard B arone, lead
vocalist/guitarist and lyricist for The
Bongos, even gives a few “jungle calls.”
During their song “Tiger Nights” — from
the new mini LP “Numbers with Wings”
Barone played his guitar with a drumstick
and later with a m araca, creating a unique
sound.
M emorable is their rendition of Marc
Bolan’s (a.k.a. T. Rex) “Mambo Sun.”
"Every band has influenced us in one way
or another, even bad bands,” he said.
One group The Bongos adm ire, but accor
ding to Barone, do not im itate, is Bow Wow
Wow.
“The lead guitarist (for Bow Wow Wow)
broke his arm last sum m er so we hung
around with them ,” he said. “We like their
company and their music, but we are cer
tainly not influenced by them .”
The Bongos said their image does not in
clude wild haircuts or unusual dress. And,
indeed, on stage they looked m ore like a
group of “preppies” than anything else.
Barone said a group should be sold based
on their music and not their image. He is
critical of groups that have m ade it because
“they are good looking,” and accuses Duran
Duran of that crim e
1 0 .1 9 8 3
Friday, Novem ber
11 a t 8:30 p.m.
Elaine Barkln Macks M em orial Lecture
"THE STRATEGIC BALANCE IN THE
MIDDLE EAST: AN ANALYSIS OF THE
PRESENT AND A PEEP AT THE FUTURE"
Delivered by
Hirsh Goodm an
Defense correspondent o f the Jerusalem P ost
The com m unity is cordially invited to join students and
faculty a t Hillel fo r both th e Shabbat Evening Service and
Mr. Goodman's lecture.
S h a b b a t se rv ic e s
a re a t 7:30 p.m .
Hillel:
1012 S. Mill Ave.
© 1983 Miller Brewing Co., MUwaukae, W1
In e nona«»
B U N D L E ’S
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PLAYBOY Used Magazines
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967-9079
PIANO & ORGAN
RENTALS
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M E M B E R A M E R IC A N G E M SO C IE T Y
C u sto m P rin te d
T -S h irts
o n tr a c k
F A C T O R Y D IR E C T
The J a m “ S n ap ! ’’PolyOram
Energy tab»"* and a working-class image have had The
jam flTTr ^ —Hnf the B ritish charts and capturing the praise
of rock critics for six years.
Yet the trio has hardly dented the American m arketplace.
The group’s new LP, “ Snap,” obviously is an attem pt to
break in to the lucrative U.S. m usical promised land.
Side one features the band’s earliest m aterial. These songs
out the band in the lim elight of the new-music movement
along with The Clash and The Sex Pistols.
The m°lnriip beat of traditional rock music is shoved aside
and replaced with a continuous stream of rapid-fire guitar
chords sporadic drum beats and grinding bass notes. This
style combined with lyrics that reflect the social unrest of
modern-day B ritain, form the nucleus of the Jam ’s music.
“We don’t need anyone to tell us what is right and what is
«rone ” is the m essage repeated throughout “The Modern
World ” and epitomizes the band’s lyrical style. “In the City”
and “Mr. Clean” w ere both early hits for the band and are
worthy of a thorough listen.
A slow love ballad entitled “English Rose” is the only flaw
in an otherwise strong first side. The Jam playing a love song
comes off as well as Sinatra singing Nugent.
The second side features songs still influenced by a London
with inflation, unemployment and riots. “A Bomb in
Wardour Street” and “Strange Town” are performed with an
intensity few bands are able to equal.
“The Butterfly Collector” foreshadows the trio’s craning
change in m usical style. A movement toward psychedelic
overtones and polished production is captured in this song,
yet the heart of The Jam ’s m usic is maintained.
The third side of the record reflects a new surge in The
Jam due in p art to P aul Weller’s return after a “leave of
absence.” Drawing from the album s “Setting Sons” and
“Sound Affects,” the songs on this side represent The Jam a t
theirbest.
It was during this period that the group placed more
singles in the English Top Fifty than anyone since the
Beatles whose record they tied. “Going Underground,” a
s o n g powerful enough to transcend the barrier between hard-
J K E S S - 967 *1 *7
•C lu b s
S C R E E N
PRINT
O f f i c i a l S u p p l i e r C r e a k W e e k *83
i
I
I
I
The Jam ’s members: Paul W eller, R ick Buckley ana
Foxton
nosed British punk and naive American ears, draws you into
side three.
The final cuts on the LP bring to the forefront a new Jam
sound. Keyboards, saxophones and back-up singers are
brought in to broaden the band’s m usical scope.
This turns out to be a mixed blessing. “Absolute Begin
ners,” “Town Called M alice” and “Beat Surrender” are
enhanced with a new snappy sound while m aintaining a punk
core. Other songs on the last side, “Precious and The Bit
terest P ill,” become bogged down with a frivolous sound and
sentim ental lyrics.
. _
,
— Christopher Frawley
------ C O U P O N -----—
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8 LOCATIONS
PHOENIX
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6011 N. 7th Ave.
7th Ave. & Bethany Home
19th & Thunderbird
28th St. & Indian School
Fiesta Village Shp. Ctr.
Alma School & Southern
35th Ave. & Northern
Phone 841-2951
Phone 866-1690
Phone 955-7804
Paradise Hills Shp. Ctr.
32nd 8 Shea
McDowell Plaza
7750 E. McDowell
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Phone 835-9089
Phone 265-4760
Phone 867-2964
Phone 949-8087
Phone 966-4987
M ESA
R E G U L A R S T O R E H O U RS: Mon. through Fri. 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sat. 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m. • Sun. 12 noon-5 p.m.
Thursday, November 10,1983
bolt face >
•
’
B e a v e rs, D e v ils lo o k in g to tu rn s e a s o n s a ro u n d
have goals to accomplish,” Rogers said. “All we can do is
keep working with die players, keep helping them gain the
experience they need, and keep helping them to w ant to get
better.”
. _
,,
In all three losses, as well as the UCLA tie, the Devils could
have em erged victorious, .but their lack .of defensive ex
perience hurt in the cloeingm inutes. t
“We’ve played exciting football the last two weeks,
Rogers said. “The biggest disappointm ent is we’ve played
well enough to win in our last two gam es. The sam e goes for
the UCLA gam e.”
At the beginning of the season, the young and inexperi
enced defense was supposedly the weak link of the team .
Replacing the eight starters lost to the. National Football
League draft and graduation seem ed to be a tough task.
■By Dean Obenauer
Imports w riter
I When the Oregon State Beavers and the ASU Sun Devils
■take the field Saturday night, it will be a struggle of two
Iteams trying to get on the winning track.
I The Sun Devils (4-3-1 overall, 2-2-1 in the Pac-10) have
■forgotten how to win in their last three outings, while the
leavers (2-7,1-5) a re trying to learn how.
Although the Sun Devils m ay be heading to the Sun Bowl,
„either t»«»" is very happy with their season thus far, and
sach team has a lot to prove to itself.
■ with the Devils in their w orst losing streak since 1976, when
■they finished 4-7 overall, head coach D arryl Rogers is trying
»turn things around.
,, ,
, J
,
“We will point out th at there is pnde involved and that we
Oregon State tailback Randy H olm e, .w e e p , right end a g .in .t Arizona, n o im e . am , m .
team m ate, have won only
But die defense played well in the season opener. They
didn’t hit a snag until the second gam e of the season, when
they fell ap a rt in the smog-filled Rose Bowl. Since then, the
defense has played well a t tim es, but their inexperience has
shown up a t all the wrong moments.
.
„
“They are young kids. We are asking quite a lew IB- and 19year-olds to play Pac-10 football.” Rogers said. “But they’re
going to get stronger, bigger, and more physical as they play.
“Stop and think about it, Some of them have only been here
2 % m onths,” he said. “It usually take* m ore tim e than that
to play championship-caliber football. ”
..
No one play or player has lost a gam e for the Devils. It has
been a problem of self-destruction near the end of the fourth
quarter.
...
“Our players’ viewpoint is the sam e as ours (tne
coaches),” Rogers said. “The opportunity has been there,
but things just haven’t fallen our way. We can’t point out in
dividuals because it isn’t that kind of gam e. If it were we
could do some things to correct it.”
The Devils are heavily favored to turn their fortunes
around against Oregon State, although the Beavers are the
m ost effective big-play team in the Pac-10.
One of the gam e’s biggest matchups will be ASU tailback
D arryl Clack versus Beaver running sensation Bryce
°O g teb y is presently the conference leader in n ish iifc ^ rd ^ rith C la c k a close second. Clack has played spannglym
two games while not seeing action in one due to injuries .T he
S o E d pose quite a few problems for the opposition s
rushing defense.
,
Both runners are in pursuit of 1,000-yard seasons. For the
Sun Devils it would be the first tim e the feat had been ac
complished since 1975, when Fred Williams posted 1,316
yards. Oglesby would be the first Beaver to rush for over
1,000 yards since Dave Schilling in 1970. ’
v
In last year’s head-to-head meeting, Oglesby rushed for 117
yards and one touchdown in 23 carries. Clack tallied only 27
yards on eight carries while sharing tim e with seniors Alvin
Moore and Willie Gittens.
At the quarterback position, Todd Hons has been given the
starting nod despite being replaced by Sandy Osiecki with
9:59 left in the fourth quarter against California.
••
Osiecki cam e in to rally the Devils to a 24-23 lead with the
help of some big plays by the defense. The question in many
fans’ ™indg is whether Osiecki will see action this weekend if
Hems doesn’t move the club. '
“We will evaluate things this week, but Todd is still the
quarterback,” Rogers said. “We’re fortunate to have a guy
like Sandy to go to.”
. „ . . , . , . J - ...
If Sun Devil place kicker Luis Zendejas kicks two field
goals, he will break the NCAA record for m ost field goals in
three years. He would then be only one short of the NCAA
career m ark with over a season still to play.
four gam e, in the last four year».
—
m
_m
—
"
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O ld Tow n Tem pe
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NEWNOURS.-Hot.TMl.nws.tFn t u.-7p.oi
Federally Inspected
SP.19 III,
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Thursday, November 1Q 1983
jconser’s second-place finish
leads golfers to championship
I By Tom Blodgett
ASU^nen’s golf team did just what
anv coach would w ant it to do: improved
each tournament until they wou.
I The tf” " 1 has com e home from the
Southwestern Invitational in Westlake
Village Calif-, as the champion, wrapping
up a fall season in which it improved its
finish each tourney.
Coach George Boutell said be wanted to
build during the fall, and peak during the
spring. The outcome of this sem ester’s tour-
Boutell: “To see six guys
like that work together
as a unit is really special."
foments would seem to indicate he has
I achieved that goal.
| The Devils opened the year a t the Louisiflna state Invitational, finishing seventh
1 o u t o f fifteen team s.
Next cam e the the Stanford Invitational,
with the team coming in sixth out of 18
I teams.
Two days after the Stanford tourney, the
I team traveled to the University of the
Pacific for that school’s competition, and
I the Devils finished second out of 15 team s.
I The Southwestern tournam ent was the
final one, with 12 team s competing.
I “This was the best field,” Boutell said.
Pac-10 opponents USC, UCLA, Stanford and
Washington State w ere in attendance, as
I was Brigham Young.
[ The Devils were paced by B arry Conser,
I who placed second in the tournam ent with a
total of 212, one under par.
I
I
I
I
I
I
The champion was Ken E arle of the
University of the Pacific. E arle finished
with a five under p ar 208.
Led by Conser, the team held off by BYU
by six strokes. H ie Devils finished with a
1089 to the Cougars’ 1096.
The field was tight throughout. UCLA
finished in 1100 strokes and USC in 1104.
Three team s — Washington State, Fresno
State, and P acific—were within four stokes
of each other for fifth place.
The Devils’ individual performances wore
all strong. No one let the team down.
Defending NCAA champion Jim C arter
fired a 217, as did Hank Gardner.
Roger Thorne finished a t 218, with Tom
Brightfeller (226) and Don Leisy (226)
rounding out the team.
“It’s a credit to the players,” Boutell said.
“They have worked a lot of the sum m er and
worked their tails off.
“To see six guys like that work together as
a unit is really special.”
The experience of the six will help when
the team starts play in the spring.
Of the six players who competed a t the
Southwestern Invitational, the top four ASU
finishers are seniors, and the other two are
juniors.
“They’re a pretty m ature bunch,” Boutell
said.
That no doubt helps the team compete
together instead of as a collection of in
dividuals.
“They really have molded them selves in
to a unit,” Boutell said.
The spring season opens January 23 a t the
UCLA Invitational. There will be 11 tour
naments before the NCAA, including the
Arizona Collegiate in Tempe and the Sun
Devil Intercollegiate in Scottsdale.
YOUR BSNISWORTHAN
OFFICER'SCOMMISSION
INTHEARMY.
Your BSN means you’re a professional. In the Army, It also
means you’re an officer. \o u start as a full-fledged member of our
medical team. Write: Army Nurse Opportunities,
P.O. Box 7713, Burbank, CA 91510.
L
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BEALLYOUCANBE.
ASU
Football
Sp ectacu lar!
Com e join us for our Twilight Dinners
or Steak For Two on all ASU home
games and receive com plimentary
transportation to and from the game.
Bus leaves at 6:30 p.m. with complimentary
liquid refreshments served on board.
ASU vs. OREGON STATE
S A T U R D A Y , N O V EM B ER 12
T H E lN N
jw TUc C o r m ic k ’R a n c h
T W IL IG H T D IN N ER S
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Potato Wedge Garnie
$4.95
TOSSED SALAD Of SOUP D U JOUR
EGGS BENEDICT
(2 Poached Eggs on English M uffin)
and Canadian Bacon,
Potato Wedge, Garnie
O n target for fall.
$4.95
SPINACH SALAD
SEAFO O D SOUP
(A blend of Fish — Clams, M ussels
C ooked with Julienne o f Vegetable)
Served with Home Made Croutons
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EMINCES O F B E ff FORESTIERE
(Slice o f Tenderloin
Sauteed with M ushroom s)
Baked Potato - Vegetable
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(Filet of Sole Sauteed in Butter)
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T O M A T O SALAD Of SO U P D U JOUR
FULL BREAST O F CHICKEN
CORDON-BLEU
(Breast of C hicken Stuffed with Ham * Swiss
‘ cheese. Breaded. C ooked Colder, Brow n)
Baked Potato - Vegetable
$5.95
For Reservations Call 948-5050
D in n e r C lu b & I'm A Rancher Discounts D o N ot Apply
Dax’s cotton flannel shooting patch shirt
and wide wale corduroy slacks for the
country gentleman look.
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".
HOMECOMING 19*3
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TODAY — On the Mall
THURSDAY — November 10 — 11:30
•SOCIETY FOR CREATIVE ANACHRONISMS
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•HOM ECOM ING PARADE • 10 a m
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•5 K FUN RUN • 9 a.m.
IF YOU SUN DEVILS DON’T DESERVE IT, WHO DOES?
Page 27
ac-10 race heating up
The Pac-10 football race is down to the
inal two games, and the resurgent UCLA
ruins are still leading the race. If the
ruins win their last two gam es, they will
Ite a second consecutive trip to Pasadena
Here is a brief preview of Uns w eeks
Carton State a t ASU — The Devils (4-3-1
erail, 2-2-1 Pac-10) could still m ake it to
the Rose Bowl, but it would take a m iracle to
out them there after three consecutive
tosses Both Washington and UCLA would
have to lose th eir final two gam es and
Washington State would have to lose once
for the Devils to be playing in Pasadena in
January.
.
The Beavers (2-7, 1-0) aren’t going
anywhere, but have been playing better
football of late. Joe Avezzano’s club would
like nothing better than to m athem atically
eliminate ASU from the Pac-10 title chase.
UCLA at Arizona—The Bruins (5-3-1,5-01 ) have been one of the nation’s better team s
since their 0-3-1 sta rt. Rick Neuheisel has
blossomed and is now the nation’s thirdranked passer. His 25 of 27 perform ance
against Washington set an NCAA record for
highest completion percentage in one game.
The Wildcats (5-3-1,2-3-1) have been slippng, lo«ing three in a row. The Cats’ offense
=s still one of the country’s m ost potent, so
thére should be plenty of fireworks in
Arizona Stadium Saturday.
USC a t Washington—The Huskies (7-2,4t) are in second place in the conference. The
Washington offense is the Pac-10’s m ost pro
active and its young defense has improved
weekly.
The Trojam (44-1, 4-1) have not played
well in their non-conference gam es, but
have been solid in Pac-10 contests. Injuries
have hurt their defense badly, but they are
starting to mend. USC could win the con
ference title even though it is on probation.
California at Washington State — Both of
these team s have been slig h tly
schizophrenic this season. The Bears (4-4-1,
2-3-1) beat ASU and tied the U of A, but lost
to San Diego State and Oregon. Gale Gilbert
directs the powerful Cal offense and stand
out linebacker Ron Rivera is making a habit
of ruining opponents’ offenses.
The Cougars (5-4, 34) are a better team
than their record indicates. They played
Michigan, USC and UCLA tough before los
ing and have plenty of offensive weapons.
A key in this gam e will be whether
lightning-quick Cougar quarterback Ricky
Turner can avoid the omnipresent Rivera.
Oregon at Stanford — Rich Brooks has
started to get some respect for the Ducks (23, 3-6). Once a Pac-10 doormat, they have
become a competitive team this year and a t
m e tim e were contenders for the conference
crown. They have since come back to earth,
but team s don’t look a t a gam e with the
Ducks as an autom atic win anymore.
The Cardinal (1-8,1-5) has fallen on hard
times this year, and is ninth in the Pac-10.
Stanford’s lone victory was a 31-22 upset of
theU of A.
Freshm an quarterback John Paye has
done a good job filling the extrem ely large
shoes of John Elway, but the defense has
been the best facet of the Stanford team this
year.
Cardinal coach Paul Wiggin’s job may be
in jeopardy since the fans in the Bay Area
are not accustomed to Stanford team s win
ning only one game per year.
ASU SNOWpresents:
DEVIL SKI CLUB
SKI FEVER
SKI BEAUTIFUL VAIL & BEAVER CREEK
$ 2 6 9 ° ° January 7 -1 4 a
For m o re info jo in u s a t 7 p.m ., N ov. 15 a t C la n c e y s
(R ural & A p ach e) o r call M ary Ellen, 9 9 6 -3 1 0 3 .
M eeting: U tah trip for T h an k sg iv in g d isc u sse d ,
m ovie, d e p o sit & full p re se n ta tio n of V ail trip.
Papa Jay’s New York Pizza
FAST.
..FREE. . . DELIVERY
(Limited free delivery area)
NEW
YORK
Serving ASU & TEMPE for nearly 13 years
---------------- .------------- ,
$3 O F F any large j £ j Sun Devil Com bo
¡Sicilian* Style Pizza! u ! Anv ,ar9®pizza with y6uf
Iwith two o r m ore to p p in g s,
j p jchoice o f u p t0 4 to p p ing s.
Y $5.95
G ood on delivery, take-out o r dine-in.
E xpires 12-30-83.
| N I G ood on delivery, take-out o r dine-in.
‘Extra Thick C ru st
________ Expires 12-30-83.
J s[
|
We Deliver Beer & Soft Drinks
Video Arcade!
ASU STUDENTS
UVE IN LUXURY!
r - --------- -------- ■--------- -
10 tokens for $1 Every Day
804 S. A S H (Miii&univ.) 966-10030966-4292#967-9689]
Research a great investment.
BROADMOR H TOWNHOMES
Located on Mill Avenue ju s t south of B roadw ay
DUTCH JOHN'S
FOOD & SPIRITS
O F SCO TTSD ALE
9 6 8 -5 5 9 1 o r 9 6 7 *6 4 2 0
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O p e n Daily 11-6
£ 1" TH E
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Tempe Center
829-1743
’SHOP
----- The U Shop------- |
T h e U Shop*
E xp ires
11-15-83.
*5offojiarw
b«
•/
50$ a d r i n k
from 7 p.m.-l a.m.
905 S. M ill
9-6 Sat.
12-6 Sun.
Open evenings
Tonight's Specials:
Hawaiian Punch
\
*
Happy hour 4-7 p.m.
5 0 $ Drafts
$ 1 Well Drinks
Also
Vzlb. burgers
and appetizers
§ B S §
Ä
P
v n ir o Q
Expires
11-15-83.
[w ith
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with
this
coupon
r Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z - T h i u S h o p --------------'
ip
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purchase o f
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v
U A R N E T S andjhiscoupon^
7320 E. Stetson Dr.
Scottsdale, Arizona
^ ^ ¿^ ^ ^ ^ ■ a« « « « ^ sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss^ (
Thursday. November 1Q. 1963
i.Minnnni i
* a so 900 00 0°
WORLD
FAMOUS
DANCERS
Bartley’s Bikes
10 S p e e d s • Mountain
Bikes • Cruisers
Raleigh • KHS
One Day Repair
AH Brands
2051 S. D obson, Mesa
MON. 9-1
TUES. 9-1
2 for 1 Bud Longnecks
WED. 9-1
$100 Kamlkaz,s
TH U R S.
A m ateur G0G0 C ontest
1 1-7
9-1
$2.00 32-oz. P itch ers of
Well D rinks
50« Bloody M arys
, $1.00 B ottled H eineken
1 $ Draft with ASU Ticket Stub
(limit 1)
■
South o! Baseline
820-2982
HAPPY HOUR
.
11 a.m .-7p.m . Mon. through FrL
2 for 1 d raft 9? well drinks.
Surprise drink speciala No
minimum. Serving top of the
line premium liquors.
VICTORY NOLL
SISTERS
Home Missionaries called
to serve the poor through
pastoral ministry,
religious education,
social service and health
care programs.
H»*»-F*kferStud«
H ours:
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M onday-Saturday 11 a.m.-i a.m.
9 6 8 -6 8 9 9
3400 S . M ill A venue
in D aneU e P la ta
.
Vocation Counselor
Box 109U Victory No»
Huntington, IN 44750
SOUTHERN
2 FOR 1
HAPPY HOUR!
LEE'S TMLORMG
»Fashion Designing
for Ladies
»Custom Su its for
Gentlemen
»Alterations
894-1055
BroadwaySMcCliotodi
Alpha Beta Shopping Center
I l M
Add passion to
your punch with
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Wm?
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I 75