W e d n e s d a y F e b r u a r y 2 2 ,1 9 8 4 stale press Tempe, Arizona A rizona S ta te U niversity V o i. 6 6 N o . 7 8 it) C o p y rig h t, S t a t e P r e s s , 1984 Com m ittee to review contribution amount to retirem ent plans Stan photo Altered streets utom obilea appear to ra ce u p an d dow n U n iversity D rive a t d u sk, aa p h o to Q r.p h e d from the padeatrjan overpass linking the By Robert S. Beamesderfer Staff w riter The House Education Committee will consider legislation today reinstating the 7 percent contribution level to optional university retirem ent plans which was lowered last month. Employer and employee contributions to the plans were lowered to 6.27 percent as part of a prison revenue package passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Bruce Babbitt . last month. , * , A reduction in the level of contribution to the option plans has a direct effect on the amount of benefits an employee receives, while benefits under the state-adm inistered plan are not dependent on contribution levels. Faculty and employee groups lobbied heavily against the reduction of contributions last month. According to the ASU Faculty Association, USOUniversity faculty participate in optional program s. About 3 000 employees participate in the option plans a t the three stat __ _ . ., .. universities. Committee Chairman Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, has said the bill will “probably pass because it lives up to a commitment we have” to the faculty in the option plans. Another m easure before the committee stipulates that students with delinquent accounts who receive veterans benefits would not be eligible for a tuition deferment. There are about 1,200 ASU students receiving veterans benefits this year, according to figures supplied by the veterans’ office. About 75 percent of the eligible students sign up for the deferm ent, which allows those receiving veterans benefits to delay paym ent until they have received their money from the Veterans Administration. ASU policy does not allow a student who defaults on paying back a deferm ent loan to obtain another o n e .......... The Board of Regents voted to oppose the bill last weekend a t its meeting in Tucson. . The Committee will discuss Monday a m easure which would set minimum tuition levels to be charged by the Arizona Board of Regents. House Bill 2410, sponsored by Cooper, would require the regents to charge resident students 25 percent of the cost of education and non-resident students the total cost. Also on the com m ittee’s agenda for Monday is a bill pro­ viding $2.5 million in funding for an ASU west side campus. The m easure would require the Board of Regents to maintain a campus in western Maricopa County and specifically ■la V e rd e residen ce h a lls w ith Palm W alk. ASU microscopy facility receives national recognition ... By Ttsa Striegler Staff w riter ASU’s Facility for High Resolution Electron Microscopy in the Center for Solid State Science has been granted national status by the National Science Foundation, according to the facility’s director. “We have been operating as a national facility for the past four years, but we’ve just been given official recognition for our work,” said John Cawley, physics professpr and director of the facility, who received of­ ficial notification last week. “This (recognition) will attract more in­ terest and more people,” Cowley added. The facility already attracts scientists from around the world and is used regularly by ASU researchers, including a team of physicists, chem ists,, geologists and engineers who make up the university s solid state science research group. The facility recently received a $980,000 grant frein the National Science Foundation for two electron microscopes that will allow tjwwitirf« a better view of atom s and their arrangem ents. “We w ill be obtaining this country’s first ultra-high resolution electron microscope this sum m er,” Cowley said. “ This microscope gives better resolution than any other microscope. ” it will give scientists a direct view of the arrangem ents of atom s in solids, and a bet­ ter understanding of how atom s interact, Cowley said. The microscope will be pur­ chased from a m anufacturer in Japan and installed in the basem ent of the Physical Sciences Center B-wing som etim e in July or August of this year, Cowley added. The second microscope, an ultra-high vacuum electron microscope, will be custom-built for ASU. The decision on which «»nmpany will be awarded the contract will be made shortly, Cowley said. “This microscope will be installed sometime early next year,” he added. The ultra-high vacuum microscope will offer resolution comparable to the Japanese microscope, and will elim inate air and other contaminants that obscure the viewing of sam ples. “It will create a very clean sur­ face and enable us to lode a t it without foreign m atter interfering with the view,” Cowley said. Scientists will get the closest view possi­ ble of solid surfaces, and more information , about how the atomic structure of a solid changes when the m aterial is heated or cool­ ed, or when it combines with liquids or gases, Cowley said. The microscopes will join eight other elec- _ ______ in k a fo nîltH l him iron _ microscopes, in fthe facility, two rtf of which w ere built by ASU researchers. Each microscope will stand approxim ately seven to eight feet and take up about 180 square feet of floor space. Professor Cowley and the facility are a m ajor p art of ASU’s bid for research prom­ inence. Cowley is ASU’s Galvin Professor of Physics, holding the appointment honoring the founder of Motorola. He also became one of the first scientists ever to view the atomic structure of a crystal in 1971. The first was Sumio Iijim a, a postdoctoral fellow then working in Cowley’s laboratory. Members of the research facility study such things as dust particles that contain clues to the origin of the solar system, m ineral formations and. catalysts used in fuel production. They also work with local industrial scientists to improve semiconduc­ tor devices. State P r o Wednesday, February n a t io n / w o r ld M arines begin Beirut w ithdraw al 1984 date Get the press I ls o n H a rt who attracted 15 percent of Iowa Democratscom pared S S l S l l e ? 45 p e r^ itG le n n had 5 percent for a six th place tinigh — behind four other candidates and an uncom­ mitted slate. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - £ * • M arines f r o m their base a t B eirut’s airport to jw rtip a to tt* M editerranean on Tuesday as the M anne withdrawal from Reagan pledges to support B eirut officially got under w a y . „ - it in n s in Israeli jets, meanwhile, bombed and strafed positions in m ost o f Arizona w ilderness bill the Syrian-controlled mountains east of the capita . WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan adm inistration said ‘• S a y the support people have gone and we the com bat gear,” said M a n n e ^ ^ n Mai- Denms Tuesday it would support m ost of an Arizona w ddem essbi Udall, D - A r iz .^ a n U d jo m e Brooks “Today is the first day of the relocation ofthei.w w S ^ s r f . ! & combat troops standing by since President Reagan announc­ c h a n g ^ — including dropping of four proposed wilderness areas from the package. . . . Q - opest Service, ed Feb.7 his plan to withdraw them. Chem ical w eapons not used in Afghanistan, report says " S i S E r l i « C dans propreal lor WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States said Tuesday it resolving wilderness disputes within the state. had no solid evidence th at the Soviets used chem ical wea{»ns ■i in Afghanistan in the past year, and that toxic chem icals kill­ ed fewer people in Cambodia and Laos than^inl9«2. G od, breakfast and socks The State Departm ent report contrasted sharply previous U.S. assertions that m ore than 10,000 p eo ^eh av e pacify escaped murderer been killed by chemical weapons in A fg h a m s ta n ^ re a BRADEN Tenn. (AP) — A starving escaped m urderer Cambodia, where rebel forces are opposing communist totim ta shotgun was disarm ed and persuaded to surrender . 18 ^°ThereTOrt which gave no reason for the apparent decline, Tuesday by a 73-year-old grandmother who fixed w 2 T ^ S S u n a s e r ie s subm itted to the United N ations® breakfast, prayed with him and p r o v e d “I said ‘God loves you. You done wrong but God loves you. support of U S. allegations of use of Soviet chemical weapons in ^foreign conflicts. A U.N.-sponsored investigation two T h i « and my hi4 and took him by U* arm sm ri w ^ked with him down the steps and over to the trooper, sana years ago found that the evidence was inconclusive. ^ t o ^ ^ A r a e n e a u x , 26, of Memphis, su rre n d e r^ to the Highway P atrol, officers acting on a “gut feeling beef«* “P Hart to w age 'guerrilla cam paign' them anhunt in the area for oneofthe dangerous” inm ates who escaped from F ort Pillow State in New Ham pshire WASHINGTON .(AP) — Democratic presidential can­ Prison on Saturday. didate Sen. Gary H art plans to exploit his second in the Iowa caucuses by working hard m New ^m pslure^and then waging a “guerrilla campaign to nibble away at W alter F Mondale’s big lead and well-financed organization^ “We are not going to play by Mondale s rules, Henkel, H art’s campaign m anager, said m an interview newsroom at 965-2292 to let us know. All corrections will ap­ Tuesday. “We are going to go our own way. „ pear on this page. “ I think this will be a two-person race and 1 11win it, saio edge Student D isco u n ts ON P R O C E S S IN G A N D D A R K RO O M S U P P LIE S Custom Processing Available We use Kodak for a good look Com plete Selection of te le sco p e s & A ccessories Rentals ASU TEMPE 2 0 4 E . U n iv e r s it y 894-8337 (Behind the Checkbox) CORRECTION POLICY ^COLONIAL CLIPPER 1 Introductory Offer 718 Mill A venue, T em po ('h block from N. University) i/i P r ic e $ 8 . 5 0 W e t C u t $ 4 .2 5 $ 4 0 P e rm s $ 2 0 Zulu • Rdaxrr • J/irn Curl S c u lp tu r e d N a ils $ 4 5 - $ 2 2 .5 0 F ill-in s a lw a y s $ 1 2 . 5 0 We guarantee all work A ll o ld c u s t o m e r s b r i n g in 2 c u t s g e t 1 f r e e . 7 4 3 W . U n iv e r s it y iBrtuwh Mill if. Hanlyl " " O H N ’S S H O E R E P A I R A n n xL y O Q -lW P 967-9101 .» M t * Let Us Do Your Repairing We Know How To Do It Right £ ****# **** ’f r e e h e e l s a v e r s $2.00 value with $5.00 repair. Limit one pair. C oupon expires 3-30-84. If T h e S h o e Fits, R epelr It A t J o h n ’el Arty’s is nowservingbreakfastA real croissantbreakfastIkenooneetsdb. We haveauthentic Frenchcroissants, made fromfoldedlayersofsoft, Sg/ht, buttery pastry. Warm, flakyandmeltin-themouthgood Ifyou’dlikeacroissant filled withyourchoiceoffresheggs, sizzing bacon, ham fresttysautdeomushrooms andcheese... C 1964 Arty's, Inc. withoj a Arby’s® Ham & Cheese or ■ SausageS Egg Croissant Offer expires March 4,1984. Validatall participatingArby'sincluding Broadway&Roosevelt inTempe. Not valid with any. other offer. One coupon per customer. Pase 3 Wednesday. February « . 1984 SUrte Pie«» PLAYTH E^M ZO N A Student teaching program at ASU ranked in top 11 of recent survey student teaching program,’’ Johnson said. The report that seems to differw ith Johnsw is By Jim McCleary S*A m îentsurvey rates certain program s a t ASU’s Collegeof EdweHnn in the top 11 among 902 colleges ^ *** ” ” ”* ? ’ despite the findings of a previous study giving the college an “* National i m S E & S S & S & S SS5S «*. < * * * TeacWiig," was conducted by aew raIr««archa»jA dh*4tog Jam es Johnson, an education professor a t Northern Illinois U T hesuivey’8 conclusions were drawn from the results of a 24-point criteria analysis. ASU m et 20 of the M critw ta. Included among the 24 criteria were a œ ^ ito tiM ib y na tional and regional agencies, academ ic ^ k g ro u n c b of toe faculty, student entrance requirem ents and the rigor of the - M C -W said Gourman did not disclose any speed*« ab w t was studying, and to make a comparison between the two **?SSSt,"c£S -b n t Ih . d c t. b ro . TO I f . herd b. m^ieC onege(rfE ducation conduct, it. own study “ teaching perform ances and, according to Snyder, the results C°Seven other education colleges in the country tied with ASU, m eeting all but four of the 24 criteria. Only four colleges ^ K S S S iS S S S S ^ S L m only the student teaching program s which involve on-the-job eX^n'm yopinion ASU has ^an excellent ----“In my opinion and my colleagues', colleagues , aou *** StT ^eFaculty Senate Tuesday approved by a « -II. m a rjn a bachelor of arts/science degree in Women s Studies a t its ^ ^ " a v a ir a ia n Evans accepted the request of several senate m em bers for a secret ballot on the proposal, which now faces Board of Regents approval. Rose Weitz, Women’s Studies program directorywlw has worked a year and a half on the proposal, was pleased with the im plications of the outcome. ,■ . . „ w _it2 “Women’s Studies is nolonger a seayg-claM fieWj We ig «aid “We are certainly happy with the Senate s decision. About 30 faculty and students from the departm ent were on hand for toe vote, and applauded when senators cam e out in fa^ U am P W ^ p sjp ro fesso r of history, was strongly infavor of the degree and did not understand why there was debate a I“l a i ? t believe that there is a discussion on this m atter,” P hillips said. “This is an idea whose tim ehas come. _. Rosemary R ader, religious stqdies prcfessor, said tout m* t e E ^ H s U ? W om eX Studies program s by topum versities around the nation shows th at it is deserving of m ajor « •_ a M in iH a A e n v in e they had made in the Academic Affairs riA Committee saying the proposal did not seem ready. , . . .. .. Johnson said the Senate should not look a t the entire Women’s Studies program , but only at whether it m entsm ajo r status, and if given, w hatother program s also would want a m ajor. “If we give the degree to Women’s Studies, how many other program s will also w ant toe sam e recopution? Johnsonsaid. Johnson also had re s e c tio n s about whetoer the ew e courses from another m ajor were sufficient to “polish up an undergraduate degree.” Vanwagenen said the proposal w*s “void of rationale” and lacked the needed substance' to m erit m ajor status. “I feel degrees of this kind have a short life span, and they might he reaching that point now,” Vanwagenen said. Togo into a laborious project is not advantageous to the women who enter into i t ... . . . ___ “l have daughters, and I don’t feel they would benefitfrom this p ro jec t” »» said. “If this University says it is looking afipjiri, this would not b e a good step.”; ' , . M S t Lillian Webb, professor of e d u e rte n a la d m inistrative supervision, said all the argum ents agains the proposal did not refute its m erit. “I have not heard anyone in the S eM teearn»UP legitim ate argum ent against the degree, Webb said. This St?‘to the past two or three years, the Min­ nesota, Stafford and other colleges have been ASU’s program for ideas mi how to set up their own pro­ gram s ” R ader said. “The national and internatonal interest f The Survival Game is chess in the woods. It’s a team sport played with men and women from all walks of life . . . each carrying a CO2 pistol that shoots paintfilled pellets. The object is for your team to find the enemy’s flag, hidden somewhere in the woods, and return it to your own fla g station — while stopping the enemy from doing the same. And you can stop the enemy with a squeeze of a trigger and a splatter of paint. A r iz o n a S u rv iv a l G am es, Inc* “A D a y o f A d v e n t u r e ” of education coUeges, was aw arded by toe Board of Regents on Sunday the Center for Excellence in Education. S t o u t , dean of the ASU C o B e g ^ M u a to n ^ M in Flagstaff Tuesday and could not be reached for comment. * “ “"— - - 7 ' Degree in W omen’s Studies endorsed By Jerry Brown GAME «»i p * “ ® i M V n m n T O TOitronttd «.Filer com m *® 998-8910 O L Y M P IC S P E C I A L IShampoo £ ^3> 0 0 Cut _ _ EVERY day O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K & E V E N IN G S S U N D A Y 12-5 P.M .’N O A P P O IN TM E N T N E C E S S A R Y C O U P O N G O O D T H R O U G H 3-28-84. OLYMPIC HAIRCUTTERS 6 W. 7th Street-Tempe 966-2679 « I “ 15W eU zsai^toT toe degree would help e q u a te s land jobs S ip c te b u n be realty for the 1984« school year. It would not be available fw pre-registration this spring. B e n F ra n k lin P r e s s WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AND STATIONERY een A 1 0 % Grand Canyon National Fade Lodge* D iscount on any order of $200 or more (Item o rd e re d from sam e book) .W ith this A d csA HO U RS M - F 8:30 - 5:00 W ed til 8:00 its«» 104 W . University 968-7959 TRY OUR NEW EXPANDED SALAD BAR 99 LUNCH What a deal for lunch. A trip to our (with this ad) We have m any entry-level jobs avail­ able In our hotels and reatau ran ta begin­ ning at $3.50 p er hour. D orm itories for em ployees are located w ithin th e Park and room ch arges are autom atically deducted from wage«. Cooking la not allowed in the dorm itories, but m eals are available a t Em ployee C afeterias at a m inim al charge. We prom ote from w ithin, but you m ust b ew illin g to work at the Job you accepted for at least 90 days before being eligible for tran sfer to another departm ent. If you are a hard-w orking individual, at least 19 y ears old. we invite you to apply. M arried couples are welcome, but unfortunately, housing for children is not available. IN T E R V IE W S All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bär for a mere $1.99. M refuse. Now that’s a deal you can’t G od fath er^ Early Spring & Summer Job Opportunities i® 1pizza you can't refuse d T h u rsd a y , M arch 1 A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e r s it y C o ntact Y our C areer S e rv ic e s Office F o r A n A ppointm ent, 965-6318, o r A 8B 201G Walk-Ins Only No Phone Calls Accepted. GRAND CANYON “ N a tio n a l P a rk L odges P.O . B ox 899, c /o P e rso n n el G ran d C an y o n , AZ 88023 ual o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r M /F /H GOOD ONLY AT CORNER OF 10th ST. & MILL AVE. * 894-1234 1 Slate P m M/»rtn«day. February 9 8 ,1984_ Pase 4 o p i n i o n A ‘ natural journalistic flair’ I pray you, in your letters, sp eak of m e as I am . —William S hakespeare, King Lear After reading Calvin M oms le tte rto tf* editor published Feb. 16, we would like to recommend Morris be named editor of the State P res, for the 1984-85 school year. Never mind the fact he is not a jouimlism m ajor; his letter indicates be has the natural journalistic flair of a Jay Heiler or a Tracy Fletcher. In his letter, Morris objects to the ASU Student Experim ental Theatre production of “Saints,” which he deems unworthy of presentation because it fails to meet his _ definition of patriotic. > As M orris writes, “In one part of the play, one of the main characters consistently badmouths this country. When will the state press Editor: . I tend to agree with Mr. Dean Obenauer on his column th at appeared in the Feb. 16 edition of the State Pres* dealing with the m issing bat girls. It seems to be a sad mo­ ment in history and a piece of lost tradition for ASU. Those girls did more than just pick up bats; they carried with them support that went all the way to Omaha. It is ju st hard to believe that now it is all gone and forgotten. This is to me like a Cracker Jadfc box without the prize. I guess I’ll have to buy a program and become a lucky Sun Devil prize winner. No m atter how the outcome is in this situation I still would like to give my support for the team by wishing them the ___ _ . best of luck in ’84. Russell M. Hollenbeck III Junior, Advertising Senior Games a success Editor: On Feb. 4 and 5, ASU hosted the F irst Arizona Senior Olympic Games. I don’t know if your university paper printed any news of the first event for the state of Arizona or not — but many people were very hsppy thdt this event finelly becam e a reality. In 1962 (November), the City erf Phoenix got its first Senior Olympics Games “on the m ap,” so to speak. Then in 1983 they held their second Olym­ pics. I played senjtgr women’s tennis singles both years and won the bronze medal for the city in my age bracket of 60-65. This year, the state held its own Olympics. When ASU hosted this event two weeks ago, I participated and had to piny the 65-70 bracket as I had stepped up a yew . I am proud to say th at I went for the “Gold. I played a consummate player, a Sylvia M arett from Green Valley who looked fifty and played like thirty. She won a 6-0 - 6-0 from me. I did m anage three aces and a few other good shots, taking the silver m edal for the state. I was very pleased and this gives me a goal for next year. We thank ASU t o its hosting this event and t o the use of its facilities. Mary F. Crass M asters, English Writing ^ in re g a rd to Calvin M orris’ letter “The critic’s choice in Moscow. F irst of all, I have no idea what Calvin’s current standing is in the political science departm ent, other than that he is a junior. should realize that understanding both sides of an issue leads to a great«- ability to make a rational choice regarding i t —something I am sure is rare in Mr. M orris case. Next, Mr. M orris should know that telling people you have done something which you haven’t done is wrong. He most certainly has not read a copy “Saints,” since it is an original script and the only copies available are t o myself, the cast and the author. My understanding is that Mr. Morris overheard the author discussing the play with a pro­ fessor and has drawn his conclusions from this. I can only conclude that he has not read “Das Kapital” either, and launches into tirades against it based on other conversa­ tions that he has overheard. Had Mr. M orris actually read the script of “Saints” he would know that the political statem ent of the play is against political malcontents of this university realize they live in the greatest country in the world? my fueling is, if you don’t like this country, if you’ve got a problem with free enterprise, you ought to go to R ussia.” Our feeling is, if you don’t like freedom of speech or artistic expression, if you have a problem with viewpoints which conflict with your own, and you hate Communists with all your heart and soul, you ought to join the staff of the Staff Press. Sharon Van Epps Sopnomore, Political Science June Brashares Sophomore, Political Science apathy rath er than supporting one view over another. H this gives the play a leftist tinge it is because political apathy among the common people is one of the greatest weapons of a conservative movement. Cen­ sorship is the second greatest, and if Mr. Morris wishes to practice it blindly, I sug­ gest that he go to Russia, where he can cen­ sor to his h eart’s content. The purpose of theatre in this society or any other, is to entertain and to educate. Where would we be today if the Calvin Mor­ rises of Elizabethan England had attacked Shakespeare’s Henry IV or Richard II. Ibsen, Chekhov and Ja rre, to nam e a few, have prevailed over this so rt of narrow­ mindedness and ignorance in the past. Modem playwrights continue to do so, and will no m atter how repressive their societies become. The world is better off for it. Finally, I extend an invitation to Mr. Mor­ ris to attend “Saints,” but I encourage him to read “Das K apital” first - it’s better written. _ Kevin D. Brown 1 D irecto , “Saints” M unsil right on liquor issue, wrong on guns E A fto reading Len Munsil’s editorial I m ust say I both agree and disagree with him. On the liquor issue it is onlyjust th at those old enough to vote be allowed to buy hquor; w l agree with. Perhaps Mr. Munsil’s logic on handguns should blfapplied to liquor: one may buy (own) them, but not use tb e m /it Would th at solve the liquor problem? On the handgun issue, Mr. Munsil seems to be against own­ ing guns as well as carrying them. He states that the gun is w as likely to be turned against an inexperienced woman. This is false. The gun m ay be turned against a person who is C lu b profiles welcome I was pl«n«»nHy surprised when I read the informative full-page profile of M aranatha Christian Center in F riday’s edition of the State Press. I nm ginH the State Press has become interested in student groups and is willing to devote the time, space and energy Necessary to inform the ASU community of their activities. I am to read future full-page profiles of the many other fine student organizations here at ASU. When will the next one be published? „. . indecisive or not determined to use it. Such people should not carry or own guns for defense. It is also true that a person who buys a gun m ust seek training and become competent m its use; tins does not mean the skills are all that difficult to acquire. One of the chief fallacies of the anti-gun movement is the belief that safe firearm usage is beyond the abilities of the average citizen, but that the undisciplined scumballs are all past m asters at firearm handling. What should be illegal is theim proper use of the artifact, not the carrying of it; my Pen tel pencil is not a weapon — until I push it in the nose or ear and shove with the palm of my hand. That is the crime, not the carrying. People have rights and freedom s; just en­ force the responsibilities which accompany them. I would further suggest Mr. Munsil and others from his wimp consider that handgun ownership is up, yet violent crim e is down. Handgun Control, Inc. is slow to mention facts that show the truth: crim inals fear citizens who are armed, they prefer helpltss victims. Visiting Professor, Chemistry Cheaters will face final accounting This is a letter to those in the Business College who stole the ACC 211 (Elem entary Accounting) test and those who cheated by studying from the stolen test. Thank you from the m ajority of the 1600 ACC 211 students who wasted their time preparing for the test without the aid of the stolen test. I hope those who stole it and those who cheated from it are caught and expelled from school with their records destroyed. If this University is to upgrade its im age, it c a n ^ to to ate such low-lifes who ruin the efforts of the m ajority of tte s tu d e " ^ The test should not be counted and another test shmrfd w taken in its place to prevent cheaters from benefittmg the stolen test. M artin Martens Senior, Graphic Communications . Please consider my group to be a candidate t o this valuable service. . .. David P. Wright Past-president, Golden Key National Honor Society HKT M / m v m , r n o o i m m Equal time Regarding your full-page article on the M aranatha church: (me of the greatest responsibilities of a newspaper, any newspaper, is to rem ain im partial. However, judging from the slant of your article I would guess that either you and your staff have just been “born again” or you forgot to place the word “advertisem ent” on the top of the page. I am sure you wish to keep the integrity of your newspaper in ta c t Therefore, in the interests of providing equal tune to other religious groups I will expect to see an article m this F riday’s paper covering a Catholic student service, the week aftw ttiat a n a rtic le covering a Methodist service, tee week afte r that Moslem, then Jewish, Episcopalian. . . I think you g et my point. Leave the Bible-thumping to the preachers on them aB. DavidGreen Sophomore, Computer Information Systems X?S5% Page 5 Wedr Stal» P ros . February gg, 1984 •COUPON1 Regents endorse College of Law addition, request funding details DOUBLE BURGER i$ p L AAA«m fliAIlt hhurting u rtin f . . .be .trim • ___ the center could med1 to $100,000 without the By Wayne Baker ‘" iS S n g the board there is a “drastic need for n ^ r c h of Board of Regents granted ASU U* a u t h ^ this kind in law,” Kinsinger said the center could be initiated to establish an addition to the College of Law but requested a t several lower funding levels. ____ in rn additional funding information before proceeding with the He said monies for the three full-time faculty quired for the center would be funded by funds Prta 3 b e r action a t the board’s February meeting at Oie the state legislature for an additional 71 faculty members at U of A the regents approved a contract between ASU a n d a California corporation to license the University s logo and t**AS^Prestoent J . Russell Nelson said the University ad­ m inistration would prepare a revised budget request tor,toe ^ n 'a d d itio n , the board beard a report on the ^ ecut^ board’s approval a t the March meeting. The request will in­ Budget Office and Joint Legislative Budget Committee staff clude allowances for private funding, he said. recommendations on the state university ^ When established, the center will encourage legal and in­ In considering ASU’s request to establish the proposed terdisciplinary research into technologically related issues Center for the Study of Law, Science and T £hnok*y, toe and add new courses relating to law and technology. regents voted to endorse the concept but called funding the In its contract with International Collegiate E n terp rise, program “ troublesome.” . ' I ■, Inc., approved by the regents, ASU will retain the authority Regent Thomas Chandler, who cast the only dissenting to approve all m erchandise m arketed using any of the vote, said the regents were being asked to sign on to a costly proKram a t a tim e when resourees are not available. U'T h eto re^y ear agreem ent requires ICE to pay ASU on an ^C handler, a Tucson attorney, said he did not support pro­ anniifli basis 60 percent of the first $90,000 collected, 66% per­ ceeding with the motion “when we’re fighting for resources cent of the next $50,000 and 70 percent of all revenue in excess tocontinue existing program s,” and before m ore details The JLBC staff and EBO budget recomendations heard by W^ t h ^ v « S y s o r S a l proposal, the funds to ^ ta b h sh the board are based on yearly tuition an dfrelevelsof $950fw the center would have come from a provision included in tne residents and $3,700 for non-residents at ASU and the U rfA . The regents will determ ine the 1384-85 tuition levels at their board both toe EBO and JLBC staff recommended not to fund the package under the Engineering Excellence program . Jack Kinsinger, ASU vice president for Academic Affairs, said theorigiM l request of »44,000 to initiate the operation of $ 1 .9 9 : CHAR: BROILED; Lookwhatyouget!Anall-beef burger A small order ofcrispygplden fries.tout favorite softdrink. HH cool an dsmall cream y 5otOAIWQUEEN Soft | __m-mfnr Serve Sundae. H ead foryour participating n rsm gf DAIRYQUEEN• BRAZIER• store,to get me ■»* Burger FullMeal Deal - - ^ b e stjo g ^ . intown. AMDOCorp 1983 MThe JLBc'recom m ended a $143.4 million budget for ASU for 1984-85, a 4.6 jum p over current levels, but 10.8 percent less than the University requested. G o o d th ro u g h 2-27-84. William J. Weisz, vice chairm an of the board and nhipf operating officer for Motorola, will speak a t ASU Exec from Motorola to lecture on successful business growth MEAL DEAL ONLY AT: ^ T l ^ lecture is part of a Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Forum Series sponsored by the M asters of Business Association, an organization established by ASU business graduate students. Weisz will discuss “Key Issues in Successful Business Growth” a t 3:30 p.m. in the MU Cochise Room. The lecture is free and open to the public.______ ____ 1389 E. APACHE (Between Rural & McClintockt .C O U P O N . 9» C C a s h l o t h f o i n r V-"“* >fT§HT C L l^ N presents. g at Buffalo Exchange Every Wednesday, It s PENNY NIGHT from 7 :3 0 -1 2 1would “o lo n g ^ be restricted access to the Architecture Building. He told police they would receive a w ritten notice Tuesday regarding open door procedures. , ,„ , _ •A set of keys, including an ASU key, was found s t M ariposa HaB and impounded for safekeeping early TuesttejN •Police observed a transient loitering near O eotdtaH all eariy Monday and warned him about trespassing violations. •An ASU employee was cited for not having currentregis Ra­ tion early Tuesday on McAllister Avenue near Lot 48. Police alsoissued a sim ilar citation to an ASUstudent e&!r^ I ^ ^ ay a t the intersection of College Avenue and University Dnve. •Police cited another ASU student early M ondayfor failure to obey a stoplight. A non-student was cited early Tuesday for X S U c l e w it!« » t. p o m « a t .bo i n t o « « .« of UniversityJDrive and McAllister Avenue. •An ASU student was cited Monday morning for failure to stop a t a stop sign at Lemon Street and Fore^ ^ e™*eil . Reinhart police dispatchers early Tuesday there was a fire burning in BIRTH BIRTH MAIM C all For Appointment 12 M inutes From Campus DR. BRIAN D. FOW, D.D.S. 7 5 5 5 O sborn Rd., Suite 201 S co ttsdale, A Z • 9 4 9 - 1 2 3 4 Do Your Com puter W ork At Hom e! S a v e T im e a n d E ffo rt CRT with coupler °r Printer with coupler BRS b ir t h d e f e c t s PR EVEN T B IR TH D E F E C T S KILL March of Dimes RETAMI . — w# LEASING, INC. 3914 E. M cD o w e ll • 277-3282 :! R e n ta ls t S e rv ic e / S a le s \ jyp«Vv»gMjffliiaaeoo00ori0<*000|0 0 00C1~>^ ^ ^ ATLAS MUFFLERS 2332 E. APACHE BLVD., TEMPE CALL US FORA SPRING BREAK! 894-6381. 10% DISCOUNT S P R IN G BREAK M a r c h 10-18 894-1329 ON ANY PURCHASE WITH ASU I.D. 7 17 M I L L A V E WE ALSO HAVE COMPLETE CUSTOM WELDL ^ J J ;* V J^ S u irrH F S • WROUGHT IRON * CATES 4 FENCES, ETC. ■ Jh a v e p o r t a b l e t r u c k mo u n t e d EQUIPMENT TEM PE d o u b le P l A Y ! S 1 a , Eniov ASU baseball & basketball V |W V (or the price of the baseball ticket plus... B B A SEB A LL ASU vs Texas T h u rs d a y 5:30 p .m . 23 ASU vs Texas S a tu rd a y 4:00 p .m . F e b r u a r y 25 5t in F R E E t o W o m e n 's T e n n is o n S a t u r d a y a t 1:00i U s e y o u r t ic k e t t o j ASU vs M onday O k la h o m a S t a t e F e b r u a r y 27 6:00 p.m. «4» B ASKETBALL A S U v s O r e g o n S ta te 7:30 p m _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ A S U v s U n iv . o f O r e g o n 7:30 p .m . A S U v s U C L A B ru in s 9:00 p .r h . Stete Pr Stele Pues» Boa buddy union cinema - ■ a k e s s tra n g e “Where The Stars Gather” FR O M H ER E T O ETER N ITY FEB R U AR Y 21-22 N A TIO N A L LAM PO O N ’S “V A C A TIO N ” 23-26 LA C O M B E LU CIEN (Franc*) (No Charge) 27 SO M ETH IN G W ICKED TH IS W AV C O M ES 28-29 SNOW W HITE M A R CH 1-4 LIN US PAULIN G: Crusading Scientist (No Charge) S 6-9 H ISTO RY O F FILM: Conscience o f Man T H R O U G H T H E G liA S S D A R KLY (Sweden) 19 (No Charge) 20-21 BA TM AN D EA D ZO N E R E B E C C A (USA) (No Charge) EVER Y TH IN G YO U ALW AYS W AN TED TO KN O W A B O U T SEX B U T W ER E AFRAID T O ASK ZELIG 22-25 26 29-31 < n ZELIG LO V E STO R Y N EVER SAY N EVER AGAIN TH E TH IN G (New Version) U N D ER FIRE MR. M O M ED U C A TIN G RITA T H E BIG CH ILL APRIL 1 3-4 5-8 R O C K Y III (No Charge) M AY 1-2 10-11 12-15 17-20 24-25 26-29 UNION CINEMA - LOWER LEVEL OF M.U. $1.50 ASU I.D. $2.00 Without Monday, 5:30 p.m. only Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 5:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 7:00 p,m. and 9:30 P-mSunday 5:30 p.m. only A PRESENTATIO N O F M UAB FILM CO M M ITTEE an A d d is, a |unlor R u ssian m ajor, dem on strates how co m torta oie n o b e d fe llo w By Asha Nathan Staff w riter ASU junior Don Addis has a roommate called Chester. That’s it — no last name — just Chester. And Chester prefers the bathroom to any other room in the apartm ent. Sound strange? Not really^ Not for a 7%-foot, 25-pound, Burmese python. With most of his long, pliant body draped over the shower-curtain rod and the rest extending above so his head rest on the cabinet above the sink, Chester seemed completely at peace with the world. Addis said he i3 “fascinated by snakes,” which was evident as he removed the python from its elevated perch in the bathroom and wrapped it around his neck and shoulders. The form er M arine added that before he acquired Chester, his pets were usual­ ly either dogs or cats. The reptile sheds his skin, avocado green dotted with dark greenish brown patches, once a month, according to Ad­ dis, after which its skin is “soft as a baby’s.” He added that Chester’s diet consists of a live rabbit or chicken the size of a medium-sized cat about once every nine days. The rabbits are reared by a man in Phoenix who sells those that are crippled or have to be put to death. Addis, who bought the python for $100 about nine months ago, is now a member of the Arizona Herpetological Associa­ tion, devoted to the study of reptiles. He is w i.n .... said the association, which has a ASU STUDENTS SAVINGS AT GREAT EXPECTATIONS STUDY ABROAD - SUMMER 1984 GREECE GREAT BRITAIN J u n e 4 -J u ly 5 21-J u n e 10 M ay THE JUSTICE SYSTEM OF GREATBRITAIN CLASSICALGREECE ATHENS - THESSALONIKI CORFU - OLYMPIA AEGEAN CRUISE LONDON - HARLAXTON LINCOLN - EDINBURGH OFFERED BY OFFERED BY THE CENTS? FOR THE STUDY OF JUSTICE THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY 3 SEM ESTER H O U R S O F C R ED IT 6 S E M E S T E R H O U R S O F C R ED IT DIRECTED BYs MEXICO OR. THOMAS V. SCHADE PROGRAM FEE: DIRECTED BY. OR. KEVIN K. CARROLL J u ly 9 -A u g u s t i o $1,679 INCLUDES TUITION AIR BORA PROGRAM FEE: INTEGRATINGLITERACY GUANAJUATO - LIMIT 20 $2,138 INCLUDES TUITION AND AIR MEXICO CITY LIM IT 3 0 OFFERED BY the I rK tt SH AM PO O / w it h P e r m ¡ S a v e *16°° I $12°° ¥ C o m p le t e S e r v ic e o n l y $29°° I M u st b rin g c o u p o n . E x p ire s M arch 2 ,1 9 8 4 OPEN — ^ 7 D A Y S ^ Q n ’ C U T T I N G & STY LIN G s a v e $4°° C h ild r e n 12 & U n d e r PRECISION HAFCUTTERS 6 S E M E S T E R H O U R S O F CRED IT ITALY J u n e 30 -J u ly 2 3 DIRECTED BY: OR. BARBARA FIORES J u n e 2 3 -J u ly 28 4 LIM IT 30 MOSCOW — KIEV — LENINGRAD - HELSINKI ITALIAN HISTORY - ART FLORENCE, ITALY OFFERED B Y OFFERED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF HOME ECONOMICS S a m e S e r v ic e $8°° Regularly *1600 3 S E M E S T E R H O U R S. O F C R ED IT 7 S E M E S T E R H O U R S O F C R ED IT M ust b rin g c o u p o n . E xpires M arch 2 ,1 9 8 4 . DIRECTED BY: DR. GEORGE A HUGHSTON DIRECTED BY: OR. PIER R. BALDH* PROGRAM FEE. $2,573 INCLUDES PROGRAM FEE: $850 INCLUDES TUITION TUITION AND AM FROM CHICAGO AIR AND BOARD EXTRA LIM IT 2 5 LIM IT 35 Coupon good at 4 locations. Ç/GftCflT EHPCGTunans RUSSIA TT€ DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES a p p o in t m e n t NEEDED carra fo r biling ual ed ucatio n GERONTOLOGY INTHE USSR P R EC IS IO N H A IR P r e c is io n H a ir c u t CO LO N N AD E A M ALL FIESTA M ALL 274-2765 964-6661 PARK CENTRAL W ESTR ID G E M ALL M ALL 266-0376 849-0406 fo r A S FOR PROGRAM INFORMATION A N D APPUCATIO N FORMS CO N TA CT T H E OFFICE OF SU M M ER SESSIONS - ACADEM IC SERVICES BUILDING, ROOM 110 , OR TELEPH O N E 965 -6563 . REGISTRATION N O W IN PROGRESS - DON’T DELAY - ENROLL TO DAY. membership c amateur herp month at the periences. He said thei tile shows. Chest«-, wb venomous mei cording to Add He said the | 20 feet and live “They grow and continue ti He added thi on live animal that has been I that it doesn’t live rabbit or ( Since the n climate, Addii and closes tlx Chester sm lk A ffo rd a.pi*b. ■le Cleaners Wtg&t ... v j A S U SP EC IA L ommate — just room to Burmese nt body rod and iis head the sink, it peace ated by -as-he elevated apped it AMY G A R M EN T C leaned & Pressed membership of a little m ore than 200 amateur herpetologists, m eets once a month at the Phoenix Zoo to share ex­ periences. , ... He said the association also holds rep­ tile shows. Chest«-, who is 3 years old, is a nonvenomous m em ber of the boa fam ily, ac­ cording to Addis. He said the python could get as long as 20 feet and live up to 30 years. “They grow as long as they are living a n d continue to be fed,’’Addis said. He added that although pythons are fed on live anim als or birds, he knows of one that has been fed on carcasses for so long that it doesn’t quite know how to trea t a live rabbit or chicken. Since the reptile is used to a tropical climate, Addis fills the tub with hot w ater and closes the bathroom door when the 847 W. University ( S E C o rn e r o f U n iv. & H a rd y ) (EXPIRES FEB . 29, 1984.) TAKE A BREAK All Round Trips L A S V E G A S .............................. $ 78.00 78.0fr L O S A N G E L E S ........................ 78.00 S A N D I E G O ............... S A N F R A N C I S C O -------------130.00 D E N V E R .................................... 130.00 200.00 K A N S A S C I T Y .......................... D E S M O I N E S .......................... 250.00 O M A H A ...................................... 200.00 A L B U Q U E R Q U E .................... 90.00 E L P A S O .................................... 70.00 avocado sh brown ng to Adsoft as a :onsists of size of a very nine All fares have restrictions and are subject to availability. BO OK YOUR FLIGHTS NOW! C h ester w raps him self arou n d the show er cu rta in rod In the bathroom w here he lives. a man in e crippled Chester sm iles fo r th e cam era weather is not hot or humid enough for Chester. When he lets Chester outside the ap art­ ment once in a while, he said the neighbors have shown interest, curiosity and fascination for the m ost part. “The only people who are afraid are those who have never been around 'Snakes,’’ he said, adding that a number of people ask if they can hold Chester. And, for the most part, Addis is more than happy to comply. GREffT STUFF! SONS BASKETBALL San Antonio Spur vs^HRhoenix Suns S a tu rd a y , M a rch 3 See “T h e I c e m a n , " G e o r g e G e r v in “ Pennant Night” — the first 3,000 fans * receive Phoenix Suns pennants! *1* Special ASU Discount * * * *8®° seats just M00 ES * * ☆ Note: There is a small handling charge for each transaction and final day of ticket sales is Thursday. March 1. r ON OF INE ea. limit no E x c lu d in g su ede & leather; e x c lu d in g w ed d in g dresses. C o u p o n m ust be presented w hen garm ents are bro u g h t in. at before ;re usual- n for $100 i member 1 Associaiptiles. He !i has a 890 D ry : . Discount tickets available only at the mem ASU Intramural Sports Office W p.E. West Lobby ' 9a.m .-4 p.m . Hours: In S c o ttsd a le TRflVEUUORHJ LOS ARCOS MALL M-F 10-9 S a t . 1 0 -6 Sun. 12-5 945-1010 Prati Study indicates unlikelihood of teacher shortage in future of the students said they were ‘somewhat in­ terested.’ But if some of those kids enter the profession, we may well have an adequate supply of teachers.” Of the people currently in college, only one in 20 plans to become a teacher. A March 1983 study by the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Educa­ tion predicted schools will be able to fill only 96 percent of their vacancies by 1985, and on­ ly 80 percent by 1990. Mangieri contended the m ost im portant factor in attracting more students to the profession is offerii^ higher starting salaries. The current average starting teacher salary is $13,000 to $14,000 a year. Mangieri is designing a study now to find out just how much schools would have to of­ fer to attract m ore teachers. “My guesstim ate to get some of the brightest and best students involved in teaching would be to offer starting salaries of $20,000 to $25,000;” he said. the College Pres» Service FORT WORTH, Texas — The muchanticipated teacher shortage of the future m ay not come to pass, according to a justreleased study. About one in 10 of the nation’s collegebound high school juniors and seniors is con­ sidering entering the teaching profession, the survey of some 4,300 students found. Given enrollm ent projections and estim ates of how many teachers will be leaving the field, “we’re going to have to have 12 to 14 percent of the high school population enter teaching,” said John M angieri, dean of Texas Christian Univer­ sity’s education school and co-author of the study. The study, which Mangieri conducted with University of South Carolina Professor R ichard Kemper, found only about 9 percent of the high schoolers were “very interested in becoming teachers. “Where the study gets somewhat op­ tim istic,” Mangieri said, “is that 24 percent By The Last Ward in Entertainment News PRESENTS A FREE T Advertising S e rv ice T o R e a d e rs O f CityLife Classified ads in CityLife offer you the chance to talkA*° a ’r'e^ ; ‘ind a roommate, trade a skill or post a community notice. And, the price is right — the cost of a stamp. CityLife, the Valley's fast-growing entertainment weekly is delivered to 50 000 Phoenix homes and distributed free from more than ¿au newsstands at ASU, other college campuses, shopping malls, galleries, nightclubs and other selected locations. CATEGORIES AVAILABLE TO USE: P roe X o YOU You can’t buy or sell things here, but you can give away. A kitten. A couch to haul away. A marketplace for freebies. P e rs o n T o P e rs o n A birthday wish. A friend to meet or greet. Wise counsel. Thought for the day. Your way to get into print. C o m m u n ity N o tice « a bulletin board for non-profit organizations. Post your notice here tor CityLife followers. And Week at 2:30 p.m. Thursday In MU Room Student Health (PIES) will present “The Significance of Ritual" featuring Rabbi Barton Lee, Robert Preston, J.J. M cCarthy and John W ilson, at 1:30 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel. 210. Quantitative Systems Club will hear guest speaker Jo hn G arg lulo of M anagem ent C o n s u ltin g S e rv ice s d iscu ss “ Defining User Needs” today at 4 p.m. In College of Business,?Ad­ ministration Building Room 401.'*Nonmembers are welcome. National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences w ill host a speaker at 6:30 tonight in Stauffer Hall Room A132. Native American Student Association w ill begin preparations for Cultural EUROPE " CAR RENT or BUY LOWEST PRICES FOR STUDENTS, TEACHERS EUROPE BY CAR 9000 Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, Calif. 90069 Phone: (213) 272-042« ( Mail Vila ad lo t Spacial Studant/Taachar Tariti. Women’s Services w ill meet for Minority Women’s Day lectures at 1:30, 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. Friday In the MU. Topics include “ Choosing a Major," “ Making a Career D e cisio n ” and “ Women and Stress." For more informa­ tion call 965-1253. Collage is published every Tuesday and Friday. To be included, one must obtain a collage form at-the State Press reception desk in the basement of Mat­ thews Center. For Tuesday’s paper the insert must be filed by 10 a.m. Monday and for Friday’s paper the deadline is 10 a.m. Thursday. One item per event will be accepted. MIGUEL’SMUSICCENTER T ic k e t E x c h a n g e Bought tickets for the.coneeri. but now piust leave town? Need your money back more than the front row seat LIMIT HERE IS 4 tickets, not over $20 each. W o rk W a n te d state your skills and background. Someone may be looking juSl for you. Not for commercial purposes. R o o m m a te s W a n te d A place to share your space. Tell what vou’ve got, where and how much. You can state your sex your -preference for a roommate's sex, but not both. And, let s keep it «clean S w a p You can trade items here, a car for a truck, tapes and records, books, but NO CASH TRANSACTIONS. B a rte r Be part of the cashless society. Trade your sewing skills for someone else’s painting. Yard work for car work. This is a service exchange: NO CASH TRANSACTIONS. HERE ARE THE REST OF THE RULES 1. 2. (In The Arches) For All Your Musical Needs Sheet M u sic • Lessons • A ll Instrum ents Repairs • Am ps • Etc. 122 E. UNIVERSITY DRIVE T E M P E, ARIZO NA • 968-2310 3. 4. 5. CityLife reserves the right to edit, properly classify or decline any advertisement. NO PHONE MESSAGES ACCEPTED, NO PHONED CHANGES ACCEPTED. All ads must be mailed in or brought to the drop box in the lobby of The Arizona Republic/The Phoenix Gazette. 120 E. Van Buren, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. — 5 p.m. All messages will be run for two consecutive )*••**• unless otherwise noted on the message form. COMMUNITY NOTICES MAY RUN UNTIL THE REOUESTED DATE ON THE MESSAGE FORM. > _ , DEADLINES. Ads must be received by 5 p.m. Friday tor publication the following Wednesday. Space limitations may cause publication to be delayed. You Get Up To 4 Lines (Approximately 30 words) FREE. □ RENTAL □ LEASE □ PURCHASE] MUST PRINT OR TYPE CAMPUS CLEANERS Name. U t t e iç -Phone. must be included for verification -Zip C ity___ & C0IN-0P LAUNDRY _Apt. Address. Starting Date.------------------ . Two Weeks. Ad Should Run: One Week- IF COMMUNITY NOTICE, Ad Should Run Until (Date)— .----------- 3 'D ry C le a n in g 3*O n e Day Service ^ F in is h e d S h irts 3 'D ro p -O ff Laundry ¿^Alterations g 'S u e d e & Leather [3'PiHow R enovation S 'N ig h t C lo th e s C h u te S 'W e Clean Hats 827 S. RURAL Your C a m p u s Hair Care Center 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe North of University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square 968-5946 *3°° O F F With This Ad E x p ire s M a y 31, 1984. REGULAR PRICES •Sham poo • P r e c is io n C u t e C o n d it io n » B lo w D ry UNIVERSITY & RURAL M E N $12 • W O M E N $1 4 967-9650 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY. O PEN 7 g.m.-10:30 p.m T U E S . , W ED. & T H U R S . T I L L 9 P.M. M ESSAGE (30 Words Or Less) Print or Type Only 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 14 15 16 17 18 ----- 5Ö— 21 2Ì 23 24 ----- 2S— 27 ¿8 29 3Ö 1 ------------- 7-----13 “ T§ 25 CHECK CATEGORY: □ Person to Person □ Community Notices □ Ticket Exchange □ Roommates Wanted □ Free to You □ Work Wanted MAIL TO: CityLife Classifieds P.O. Box 1950 t Phoenix, AZ 85001 Or drop in box in lobby 120 E. Van Buren, Phoenix Weekdays 8 a.m. to 5 p m □ Swap □ Barter Ouch Last-second layup propels Wildcats past ASU By Ja y T aylor Sports editor . . . .. The prelim inary scenes were different, but the end result for the ASU basketball team was just as disappointing as it' was in its earlier contest against the U of A. Last time, the Devils were blown out of the gym in the se­ cond half in Tucson and fell to the Wildcats 71-49. This tim e the scene was quite a bit different. The Cats got a layup from forward Eddie Smith with no time remaining on the dock to defeat ASU 65-64, in front of 6,716 fans in the Ac­ tivity Center Friday night. The Devils had a 62-57 lead and the ball with two and a half «»nainiM? in the eam e. but were unable to hold the ball over and Steve K err gave the U of A its first lead of the half with only 12 seconds left. The Devils cam e right back and Bobby Thompson dished off to Steve Beck, who nailed a 12-footer from the baseline with five seconds left to put ASU back on top. It was Beck’s first basket of the game after six misses. The Cats called tim e out, and the Devils followed with one of their own to make sure of their assignments. Beck was to pressure Brunkhorst, not allowing him to get a lane upcourt and Jim Deines and Eric Holloway were to deny their men the ball. But according to Weinhauer, two things went wrong. “In making them work to get the ball up the flow, Steve and scored most of his 14 points. . „ “They shot a little unconsciously from the perim eter, Weinhauer said. “Especially (David) Haskin, who is not usually a tremendous perim eter shooter. We did a good job of m a k in g them go to the people we wanted them to, but those people just had the hot hands.” Weinhauer said that he credited the Cats with playing a fine game underneath. They out-rebounded ASU, the Pac10’s best team in rebounding m argin, 31-23. The Devils were led by Chris Beasley’s 19 points. Holloway came off the bench to add 15 on seven for eight shooting and Thompson chipped in 13. For box score, see p. 14 A crucial moment in the game came only two minutes into the contest. ASU fans were called for a technical foul after stream ers were thrown onto the court when Thompson scored the Devils’first bucket of the night. 'A The fans had initially thrown the stream ers when the ASU players came onto the court. But a few more threw them after the first basket, and Weinhauer was not happy a t the of­ ficials’ decision to call the technical. “I defy the referees to prove that those were ASU fans tnat threw the stream ers the second tim e,” he said. “The officials should use some common sense and think that when there are that few thrown, it could very well have been opposing fans doing it.” M i A S U ’, E ric H ollow ay « id A lte o n .’, p*te WIIHam» .9*** t o f .w b o u n d d u r l n . Friday n l ^ i f » g a m , w on by M i. W ildcat* 6S-64. T h . Devils’ Jim D ein es and the C a ts’ K eith Ja ckso n look on. lunged and let Brunkhorst get a step on him and get a clear ball or the lead. t . , . lane up the middle of the flow",’ he said. “We should Have been able either hold or pad the lead at “Then they ran a criss-cross with their big guys, and Eric that point,” ASU coach Bob W einhauer said. “ But we turned got behind Smith instead of being in front of him in a denial it over and missed the front of a one-and-one, and it costus. “But we’re not the first team ever to lose a game in the last ^ n c e S m ith got the ball, he drove to the hoop and put the second, and we’re not going to be the last. We learned some things from (this gam e.” . . . •«. ^TV o^ulls hurt the Devils badly, according to Weinhauer. The W ildcats’ Brock Brunkhorst hit a jum per with 4» They had an eight-point lead, 38-30, with 2:20 left seconds left to narrow the ASU lead to three points, 62-59. half and let the U of A close to within two at the half, 36-36. Then with 34 seconds left, the Devils’ Kenny Vaughns was Then t h e r e was the dry spell a t the end erf the game. ■fouled and went to the line to shoot one-and-one. The Cats hurt the Sun Devils with their outside shooting, V aug h n s missed the front end of the pair and the Cats con­ particularly in the second half when Michael Tait came alive verted it and trailed by a single point. ASU then turned the P E R M S P EC IA L Fo u r p layers try to lay a hand on a lo ose basketball during Friday’s gam e. From left are A S U ’s Steve B eck , A rizo n a s Pete W illiam s, A rizo n a ’s D avid H askin and A S U ’s P h il M cK inn ey. THE WAREHiWSE DELI "Good Food and Drink" Estab. 1975 IA P P Y h o u r R e g u la r $ 4 Q LUNCH 5 DINNER MON.-FRI. 10:3CP7p.m. N o w * 2 9 50 S c u l p t u r e d N a ils S p e c ia l Regular $45 / Now $35 with coupon •walk-ins vyelcome Sandwich with Homemade Fries Small Drink or Beer ONLY MOLSON 8 HEINEKEN form erly Darlene's Hair Fashions ^ 1820 E. S o u t h e r n P a t M c C l i n t o c k • C o w b o y 's P la za 1838-0622 BREAKFAST 61**: IMPORTS Mon.-Thurs. 6 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Mon.-FH. 9 9 $ - SUPER SPECIAL — 9 9 f Also Featuring "THE LITE WAIT’ One Egg. 2 Bacon o r Sausage. Toast, Butter & Jam Coffee Included WE U S E R E D K I N A N D N E X U S P R O D U C T S IMPORTS — 9 4 9 DRAFT BEER *1.99 B etw een Us Designs in Hair MON.-FRI. 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m. 0490 ▼ Pitclwr Glass $1.99 499 WINE % liter Glass $1.99 494 WINE COOLER Pitclwr Glass $2.75 654 UKEHTERTMNMEHTMUHT (No Cover, No Min.) 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. A T FOREST 966-7788 — TEMPE, AZ Your Hoslsi " The Family State Press Softball team opens with road wins By Vicki Serna 8*The LadyD evil softball team returned from a successful weekend in California, where it opened its season by winning four of its six games. _ _ , ... ,, tfrnd coach Mary Littlewood appeared satisfied with the perform ance of her young team. . . ... . . . “I was pleased that we came out of the weekend with a 4-2 record,” she said. _, . _ . The first game of the outing cam e on Friday against caigflnin B arbara. The Devils, behind the arm s of sophomore Pam White and junior Laura Houle, shut out their opponents in both gam es. The scores were 2-0 and 1-0. , White allowed three hits and struck out three in the first go»«, while Houle finished it off in the second game with a two-hitter. . .. „ ... “The pitchers performed as we expected them to, Ijiitlewoodsaid. , .. “Pitching and hitting goes hand in hand, she said. You don’t really know what’s going to happen.” y. On Saturday ASU went the distance with Cal StateNorthridge, the two-time defending Division II champions. The gam«» went 11 innings until Sun Devil frosh Cathy faynrgga ended the tension with a home run, giving the Devils a 14) win. ASU’s Kim Bickford, a senior, had a successful day on die mound, allowing only five hits and striking out six Northndge ^ “Kim looked stronger than the other pitchers,” Littlewood said.“ She did very well.” _ .. Bickford, who transferred to ASU from Mesa Community College in 1983, received All-America honors while attending MCC in 1982. . ,. . In game two against Northridge the Devils weren t as powerful, as they fell 2-0 to the defending champs. “In the defense we were strong,” Littlewood said. “We had some errors, but I was still pleased with the team . ” On the final day of play ASU faced a tough team , Chapman College. In the first game Chapman closed the game down with a 8-1 victory over the Devils. But ASU made a comeback that sam e night and blanked Chapman 4-0 in White’s second shutout of the year. “All three team s are good team s,’’ Littlewood said. Ac­ ___ tually, any team in California is good.” Littlewood said the team played as well as she had ex­ pected and noted that on Friday’s game “everybody was nervous.” 'T h e team (ASU) is fairly young,” she said. “They'Vf™ anxious to get started. They were more loose on Saturday and Sunday.” . ... .. There only has been one national ranking for softball ana that was before the season got under way. The Devils are cur­ rently ranked 14th in the nation. Littlewood painted out that one of the problems the team had was a t the ¡gate. “We couldn’t get hits when we had runners in scoring posi­ tions,” she said. “It would have been pleasant if we would have hit better. But it’s early in the season.” Defensively, the Devils are perform ing exceptionally well. “On defense we were strong,” she said. “We hadsom e errors and we m ade some m istakes, but that’s expected.^ “Our defense is among the strongest in the country. The Devils ended the 1983 season with a record of 22-19-1 and took third place in the WCAA. One of ASU’s hot prospects is senior Kelly Fiehler, who was on the 1983 Canadian softball team that won the gold m edal at the Pan American Games. ASU will travel to Tucson to take on the U of A in a doubleheader Feb. 23. Littlewood commented on that “It will be a close game. I don’t know what the U of A has (in players). I know last year m ost of their players were returning.” ■. Any full-time student who would like to try out for the ASU football team should sign up in the football office, Room 186 in the Activity Center, by Monday, Feb. 27,1984. Any pertinent inform ation concerning practice will be given out a t that time. PERM SALE — 50% O FF Now $15-$30 irpd House •SHCCPSKIN -COTTON •ICRTHCR -VCIOUR «MOTORCVCLC SCATS •TRUCK SCOTS •TRCC RIDC TO 0SU DORMS, APTS., VANS ALL SIZES USED ROOM SIZES *10 à UP THE SCAT SURGCON A L L H A I R C U T S $10 (Includes cut, shampoo and conditioner only) S c u lp tu re d N ails $19.50 hair performers 1885 6. Apache, Tempe NEW CARPET TOOI NEW SUNDAY HOUES 12 p.m.-6 p.m . 1516 E. Van Buren Phoenix 903 S. Rural Rd. • 894-0184 1 'iB W 1 I/, -M & m SALE PRICE $0095 SIL A W U M *C O L L E G E R IN G S VburcoltoflortnQ te now more affordable than ever. Saveonanincredfeie varietyof Stadium ring styles with custom features that express your taste and achievements. Each Siladkim ring is custom made, with careful atten­ tion to detaH. And every ArtCarved ring is backed by a FuH lifetime War­ ranty Dont miss exit. It’s the perfect time to get a beautiful buy on a great oolege ring. See your ArtCarved representative soon. M OFFER. Oapostflae**-* J'a ring ^ KM RVED CLASS RINGS.INC FEBRUARY 21 THRU 24 ASU BOOKSTORE rCardor Visa AocapMd f S c h io t z s H y ^ ) TEM PE CEN TER 18 E. 10th S t * Mill OPEN 11 to« »69-0056 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23 inthknahoiuu . STUDINT SOLIDARITY DAY FOR SOVIET JEWRY Participate in a Service like those the Jew s secretly h o ld in th e Soviet Union. Leam a b o u t the suffering and see w hat y o u can d o t o help. 7:30 p.m. at Hlllel » 1012 S. MiH Ave. Friday, February 24 “ New Directions for Jewish Life C WM ArtCarved0 8 8 8 Wnfli. »*. » 8:30 p.m. Rabbi Wayne Dosick of Congregation Beth Am The 1-1/2 blks. C of McClintock 966-1199 any U K NEW! d e licio u s T U N A S c h lo tzs k y W alk-on tryouts set TAILOR MAD€ AUTO SCUT COVERS " Shabbat Services at 7:30 p.m. Shabbat Dinner at 6 p.m. Call for Reservations • 967-7563 HILLEL • 1012 S. M ill Ave. Wednesday, February 29,1984 State Pr«*» How would you like to be thin? ' ’ 4 ,/ f‘ J There is so much more to enjoy in life when you are free of excess weight. f ^ At the Diet Center, you can lose 17 to 25 pounds in just 6 weeks. There are no shots, no drugs and no contracts. It’s fast, , it’s safe and it’s inexpensive, call tot»0O. »47-9029. ____________ Weary. 9693414.__________ s________ . DUAL 003 turntable Including Stanton attend an informational meeting on lifts and rentals.________ ___________. ment.” cartridge, 9105 or b est otter, good Thursday, February 23 at 3:00 p.m. In TEMPE TOWNHOUSE. Two story, three THE DELTA Sigma Phi department of Four Sun Devil tracksters B ooks condition. Call 966-9119. ____________ BA341. ___________ _________ ■ bedroom, 1 V? baths, breakfast bar, Traw l and Tourism presents: The traveled to the invitational, community pool, tennis. *64,900, OWC THE NEW York Timas Is available on Ultimata Vacation, Friday, February where they represented ASU with *3,095down. Martha. 831-7032. cam pus between 6:30 - 8:30 a.m., 24th. ________ ’_____ BUY/« SELL • TRADE well while tuning up for this M onday- Friday. Price (20.00 for 12 Typing your book* at Changing Hands. For JED SMOCK says: “It's a night In sin." weeks. Call, *050963- _____________ quality cloth and paperbacks (no weekend’s TAC stint in New ... But who cares? Doha Sigma PW *1.25 PER page. Accurate, feet. Pick-up textbooks, please) wo pay 30 » ot our flo Q tW T T U ltf t wanted Ultimate Vacation approaches._______ York. and delivery on cam pus. Judl, 969-6856. re-sale prios in cash or 50% in tradeH elp Wanted Sun Devil m iler Treg Scott in credit which may be used to JULES VERNE say*: "It took me 80 A-1 PROFICIENT typist, IBM Selectrlc. FEMALE ROOMMATE urgently needed. purchase anything In the store. started the team ’s m eet off days to do w hat the Delta Sigs will do Two bedroom/ bath apartment. *110 Pam. 9692006. ___________________ AIRLINES HIRING! Stew ardesses, Re(Sorry, no trade-ins on S a t or Sun.) In on# night" _ H aw the passports by capturing the 1,000 m eter ssmationlsM l *14-*39,000. Worldw­ (utilities Included). Please call. Holly Browse through our hire# floors of: AAAAH. FORMER secretary desires all wady. Ultimate Vocation to near. ide! Call for Directory, Guide, Nowslot' «New a Used Books race in 2:00.8, while team ­ 967-3754._____________________ - types of typing. Location Southern and ler. 1-<916)O4*-*440x Arizona S tate Air. •Art Prints A Posters TO MY sick worm: Hope you had a mate Eddie Davis finished Rural. Fran. 8398027._______________ FURNISHED TWO bedroom. Share with •Calendars A Cards wonderful birthday! I to w you so much. two others, *124.50 includes utilities. CAMP STAFF w anted for M innesota fifth with a tim e of 2:10.0. •Hsndbound Journals ACCURATE TYPING, University and Low always, snake poop. _________ Non-smoker. Slncity. Call, Victor, Camp Uneeln/ Camp Lake Hubert. “It was a big win for him M-F 19-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 Dobson area. 9643784. ___________ Counselors & Activity Specialists. 9697028.______________________ ___ WHOLEWHEAT: LOVE you more each CHAN OtNO HANDS and Arizona State,"” M iller ALL PAPERS typed to your complete Skills. In sailing, riding, campcraft day. T w in k le s .________ ____________ LARGE ROOM In large furnished house BOOKSTORE satisfaction. IBM Soleclric. Near ASU. said. “That kind of win is Instructor, NRA Rfflery, archery, trip­ in Scottsdale, pool, responsible adult 414 IMS Avenu* I N 0291 Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley, 967-0802. ping, to n g tending. Interviews February awesome.” Old Town Temp* 2/22 share with two males and one tomato, 24th. C ontact Career Services. ASB. Kenny Robinson, la s t ALL TYPING done fast and accurate. Scott, Bex, 947-7376.________________ . H elp Wanted room 202,9996318 ___________ 1.00 a page. Word processing availa­ year’s Pac-10 champion in ROOMMATE WANTED, large two ble. Close to ASU. Call Carlo or Bobbl CAMP STAFF, mate and tamale, 8 WATER RESOURCES Department of the 100 m eters, opened his C lothing bedroom apartment. Have own room 9699166. __________________ weeks In PraecotL Summer salary *560 Agricultural Corporation. Local and within walking dista n ce of ASU. Only season by posting a strong to *720, plus Mom and board. Camp state level administration and en­ ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing at $190 Includes utilities. 8393499.______ 60-yard dash tim e qualifying LADIES PANTIES: All sizes, colore,'and Fire. 2 0 9 7 7 2 5 . __________________ gineering. Civil Engineering Degree. $1.26 per papa. Call Susan at 8390373. SHARE TWO bedroom furnished apar­ himself few the TAC Cham­ styles. Only *1.00 each. Call, 9691270. Som a experience preferred. Extensive CRUISESHIPS HIRIHGI *19*30.000! A-PLUS Typing. Term Papers, Re­ tment. Close to ASU. *170 plus electric. O. J.T. Excellent salary and benefits. WONDERFUL VINTAGE Clothing: 50s pionship. Carribean, Hawaii, World. Call for sum es', securities and finance papers 8296911 evenings._____________ _ resum e to/ or call: W.A. Case, Pac-10 long jum p champ and earlier! And costum e rental! Guide, Directory. N ewsletter -<916)944- Sand a specialty. Papers completed on P. O. Box 877,’ Corcoran, CA. 93212. S w e e te s t Charity (formerly Electronic memorywrlter. Call Judy Kenny F ra z ie r finished Dynabelle’e) 3704 N. Scottsdale Road, <4406x1 Artlone 8 ta te Cruise.________ 209-992-5011.____________ __________ 8 3 9 0 4 0 1 . ______________ _________ EASY MONEY! Part-time work can earn fourth in the invitational, 941-2960:137W. McDowell. 2596620. Services full tim e salary.JEam » 5 - *10 an hour A TOP-NOTCH secretarial service. posting a 24-foot 10V4-mch marketing. Bay or evenings. Call Doug ADOPTIONS ARRANGED. No medical Quality typing or word processing- IBM leap. . , noon to I D * «04-9063. __________ or legal expense to mother. Call equipm ent. 20 years experience. SUMMER STAFF Both F razier and triple McKellips/ Scottsdale Roads. Dana attorney, Robinson. 9495344. ______ GRAND CANYON sum m er job oppor­ WANTED r - T H E JOYNT— 5 tunities. Complete, confidential daju m p All-American Deon 941-5111. ____________ ___________ , CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All from 2-10 p.m . c . t a i l s - *2.00. W rite: C anyon, lor Mayfield will represent ASU * AT YOUR service, University and Mill States Drtw-away. 992-5200.__________ * BOX-3Q444T. Tucaon, Arizona85751. at the TAC Championships. area. Quality typing to your Specs. Camp Akela/ COLOR DRAPING for le ss and look u 2 Dinners for u Keyboarding Lab, 9 6 9 7 1 1 1 . ______ In addition, the Devils will HOUSE CLEANER w anted. H ones! Shadow Valley Ranch your best. Color Connection. Kathy. Q dependable, experienced, re fe re n c e , be sending two relay team s £ $5.49 Reg. W .50 CLOSE TO campus. 414 S. Mill #205, 8395640. _________________ ____ A children's transportation. Pay 15 per hour. Call 394-5234. Graduate, undergraduate to the national champion­ N C h o ic e of: !j GOOD STUOENS save 25% on auto resident camp Bonnie.9 0 7 9 6 7 2 . ________ ______ typing, graphics. Professional work, Insurance. Qualified non-smokers save ■ GLasagna ships. reasonable r a t e s . _____ _ ______ Prescott, AZ JANITOR 9UPPLY a n d san itary 18%. Call S tew , 831-012,1- Farmers Timothy Woods, McArthur A « C h e e se o r w chem ical salesm an tor local territory. CONVENIENT TO cam pus. F ast, ASU representative.____________ ____ Interviews during first week Osborne, Kent Gapen and £ Spinach E Drawing account and profit sharing friendly, fair, professional typing and In March. Contact Career h a v e UNWANTED facial or body hair w ith field training. Territory available Bernard M athis will be M a n icotti q graphics. Call 24 hours, 894-5234 Services for applications. removed permanently by electrolysis. immedtetehrM ust h a w chem leal and represent the one-mile relay g «Baked Ziti £ EXPERIENCED, ACCURATE, cheerful Fro# consultation. Located In Temp*. janitor supply sateo experience. Per­ team. Mike Stahr, P ete L Includes 2 dinner salads Call Sharon, Desert Electrolysis Canter typist near Southern end Rural. *1.50 a L m anent position. Grain Chemical Richardson, Scott and Davis I page. 831-7337.____________ ________ 8391886. _____________________ and garlic breads ■ Company. FOB 20E73. DeHas, TX » 75220. Phone, 214^093301■ ____ :___ will make up the two-mile Vg 75« ex tra for carry o u ts FAST, ACCURATE typing, *1.25/page. RESIDENCY SERVICE helps cut red £ BUSINESS AND Call Teresa at 962-0079 or Linda at tape. No fee until In state status relay team. MARKETING COMPANY near cam pus granted. References. Ask for Las, 9895775, elite typing available,_______ ! TECHNICAL MAJORS outgoing people who can work The TAC is not lim ited to " THE JOYNT " needs 0 6 9 0 2 7 3 . ________________ evening hoars and an)oy dealing with FORMER LEGAL secretary types term J Highly responsible positions for cdNCAA affiliation. Many of f 606 S. Mill l the public. N o experience la necessary papers, m anuscripts, letters, resumes, ! leg* seniors and graduates (through the athletes that compete in to a sm a realistic *200 to *400 par takas dictation. Minor editing. Margie, 1 ags 34) in financial and logistic sups 967-7926 % . week. the meets are international­ o Call «296987. ___________ y ■j port. The Navy Supply Corps needs 994-3759._____________ _ _ __________ • E x p ires M arch 1 9 ,1 9 8 4 . ■ ly acclaimed. • highly qualified, dynamic individuals MCDONALD’S NOW Wring part-time HAVE YOUR papers, theses, man­ After the TAC m eet, the in­ I m m C O U P O N « " days. FlexM e hours. Apply a t stores. • to lead and manage large inventor) uscripts typed professionally with • and financial networks. Salary *18,59 Baseline A Rural and Ahwatuhee. See door track team will prepare word processor on letter quality 1 'to start. *34.000 alter tour years. Excel •DISCREET DRIVERS manager for Spotleal ion. ------' printer. Ten years experience. Call Mrs. for the NCAA indoor cham ­ ! lent benefits package. Need BA/BS walker, 8991624, M esa area._________ •BEST RATES IN TOWN OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, year pionships. ! U.S. citizenship. Call Naval ManageINTERNATIONAL round. Europe, S o u th A m erica, LIMOUSINE SERVICE CAREER? Australia, A da, All fields. * 9 0 0 - *2000 month. Sightseeing- Free information, -w rite MCi fO -bo* t o * 23 Corona Del Mar. CA 9 2 6 * 6 ._______________ 2--- : STUDENTS 2 - 3 HOURS a day. Earn good pay In your own business. We train you to succeed. Call Curt Wiese, 967-3848. ( — Get rich slow A rep resen tative w ill b e on th e campus WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2 9 , 1 9 8 4 to discuss qualifications for advanced study a t AM M UCAN GRADUATE s c h o o l an d job opportunities In th e field of INTM NATIONAL M ANAGEMENT DRIVE CARS FREE Cars Avallato# Many Pointe U .S .A . Wa ara I.C.C. licen sed and insured. M ust b e 21 year* or mors. WAITERS/ WAITRESSES, fountain persons, cashiers, and experienced cooks needed tor Immediate day and night full and part-time employment at Swenson's/ Mesa. Applicants m ust be available for employment through the summer. Interviews W ednesday- Fri­ day 3 :0 0 - 4:30 p.m. a t 1150 E. Main at Stanley. N Qfhone calls please._______ WANTED: GREEK person to rep. for party favor designer. Excellent pay. Work own h o u re tra in in g available cyll Oreo collect (213)747-9316.___________ ! ment Programs. 2597632 collect be1 tween 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Wed. • 2/22 SENOR NURSE STUDENTS ADVENTURE... CHALLENGE ...PROFESSIONALISM! An exciting job with opportuni­ ties tor workl-wide travel, career development, p r o t o c o l» ; growth, excellent benefits. BSN graduates or senior students are eligible, it you’re going to be someone, s p e c ia l. . . Be a Navy Nurse! For more information, call collect (602) 256-7632 between 9 a.m 5p.nL Mon.-Wed. W9 HELP WANTED: PART-TIME EVENINGS •BAR-TVSET-DPS •BOAT RENTALS FOR ALL SPECIAL OCCASIONS 901-2150 JUST YOUR Type academ ic typing. Will adit spelling, punctuation. Fast return. ■- Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, 8390772. NORTHEAST MESA, Professional word processing; L atter' quality printer. C assette, ■franecrtptton. Experienced ... editor. Reasonable, rifles. 98t-3531 ARZONA SCHOOL OF PROFESSIONAL BARTENDING eFIexible Hours •Start Any Day •Terms Available •Job Placement Assistance 2 7 5 -M IX X 4035 E. MCDOWELL, PHX. ■Earn M oney In Two Weeks 2/22 Interview s may b e scheduled at CAREER SER VICES 108 ACADEMIC SERVICES y building S C H EM I DRIVEAW AY AMIIICAN GflAbUAW JCMOOl Of INTONATIONAl MANA04MINT 991-5633 (Mandate, Arlases *5*05 Thundetbird Campus on the evening and weekend shifts. Our sales people * madam comfortable business environment established customers on long d is ta n t WATS lines. Earnings, which Include salary and bonus, average *4-16 per houivpaid weekly These are permanent positions with no seasonal * f f y w i haves good, clear spqeklng voice, p ro ^ rgroOTtog fora w— .J L . office; enthusiasm and competitive spin*. «W exoerienced management team will train you to sell <3ur nationally recognized |products (while being P ^ B . of coureel Our Tempe officeis located approximately «ve minutes from campus. P le a se c a ll DIALAMERICA for d etails. 829-1140 »2» Travel AFFORDABLE FLORiOA *31* roundtrip. C a r- »40 "weakly? free mileage! Can't beat that! Fantastic deals everywhere. J im — Holiday Travel. 9480090. CHINA- HONGKONG- Japan; 22 days. Ot- Roger Axford, 8393255. July 15— A ugusts, 1964,32995.___________ ■NORTHWEST: WtOENtX. quality typIng.'theses. djsserteHons, research protect»; 939339?. ' ___ PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing. WlH edit end correct spelling. Carolyn Douglas, 8 3 9 0 9 5 9 . ______ _ TYPING BY Paper Impressions resumes, reports.lettere etc. Electronic memory typewriter, cassette trans­ cription. Reliable, last accurate. Pick­ up / delivery on cam pus. Call Darlene 831-2060._____________ _____________ WORD PROCESSING, typing. Can type anything. Guaranteed word perfect. Located In Tempe. 6393412. ________ WORD PROCESSING: Dissertations, -theses, research papers, resum es and cover letters. Rosemary. 9898368. X-CELLENT QUALITY o n correcting typewriter: editing, d isse rta tio n s, theses, etc- Begin *1.35. Northwest Meao. Lash. 962-1069. _________ W anted CIS230 TUTOR needed. Please C e ll 965-9634, ask tor Buddy, anytim e. . PAYING CASH for gold, ellw r and diamonds, class rings. Mill Avenue .law tere. 414 S. Mill Avenue.________ r AT GAMMAGE CENTER: ••• "THE B IBLE LA N D S” Narrated by Or. Charles Forbes Taylor Sunday, February 26 • 8 p.m. Dr. Taylor personally narrates his filmed educational journey and cultural adventure to some of the most famous landmarks of our western civilization: from Bethlehem to Armageddon. Tickets: $4 in advance; $5 at the door • • • A L V IN A ILE Y American Dance Theater Wednesday, February 29 • 8 p.m. 'Thursday, March 1*8 p.m. The music is jazz, symphonic, blues, spirituals. The dancing by this multi-racial company is ecstatic, dramatic, and vital. The whole experience is total “dance theater." Tickets: $14, $13, $12 (‘ This performance is part of the Critic's Choice/Student Series. Also, University discount available until 6 p.m., evening of performance.) PREMIERE OF A NEW CENTURY A Gala Evening Celebration Arizona State University’s Centennial Year Saturday, March 3 • 7:30 p.m. This performance will feature Steve Allen, The ASU College of Fine Arts, and special guests at Gammage Center. This Weekend Try The "New" O'Tooles! Tickets: $12.50, $10 Never A Cover RANSOM WILSON, flute Sunday, March 4*8 p.m. Acclaimed as a brilliant virtuoso and an artist of astounding musi­ cianship, Ransom Wilson is one of today’s foremost flutists. His distinguished reputation has been established equally in concert triumphs thr^ghout the world and in his best-selling recordings. Tickets: $9, $8, $7 (University discount available until 6 p.m., evening of performance.) ••• AT THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER: • • • Wild Wednesday is back! ASASU/UAC Present TH E P R E T E N D E R S Monday, March 12 • 8:30 p.m. Join Chrissie Hynde, Martin Chambers, Rob McIntosh, and Malcom Foster for an unforgettable evening of rock and roll! Tickets: $12.50, $11.50 • •• AT THE KERR CULTURAL CENTER: GV^ the V alley's W ildest ^0^ N ig h t re tu rn s to th e “N ew O 'T oole's Pub" Open Bar CHILDSPLAY Children's Theatre “Montana Molly and the Peppermint Kid” Saturday, February 25 • 2 p.m. Bring the entire family to this performance by Arizona’s only pro­ fessional theatre company devoted to performing for young audi­ ences. Tickets: $2.50 ($1 for A SU students with I.D.) GUYS — $ 4 .0 0 GIRLS — $ 3 .0 0 8:00 to 11:30 p.m. ••• CHUCK IMROHMC Jazz Piano Sunday, February 28 • 4 p.m. "M arohnic’s playing is marked by h is clarity of voicing and musical purpose. H is respect fo r both tradition and his own vision may just p lace him near the forefront Of contemporary pianists." — Jo h n Balleras, Downbeat M agazine (A van will leave the parking lot of the School of Music at 3:30 p.m. to escort. ASU students to the concert. There is a 25-cent charge per person to ride the van. First coma, first serve seating. Recital credit will be given for ASU music students.) Tickats: $5 ($1 for A SU students with I.D.) ••• For information about Gammage Center, ASU Activity Center, Kerr Center, and ASU Stevens House events, call 965-3434. Student Series events are available to full-tim e A S U students? One ticket may be purchased for $1 to Student Seriee events by presenting a photo I.D. and activity card. A maximum of two $1 tickets may be purchased by presenting two photo I.D. cards and two activity cards. O ne guest ticket, st full pries, may be purchased with a student ticket. O'Toole's is playing the hot hits and the greatest video 1123 South R ural Road Tempe, Arizona