S e a rch for d e a n of liberal arts co lle g e narrow ed to four By Tisa Striegler Staff writer The list of candidates for dean of the College of Liberal Arts has been narrowed to four, according to the ASU vice presi­ dent for academ ic affairs. Jack Kinsinger said the faculty search com m ittee com­ pleted its work last week and recommended three can­ didates. “Since they did not include one candidate that I thought was outstanding, I informed them that I was considering (a fourth) candidate too,” Kinsinger said. The candidates are David Cox from Kansas State Universi­ ty, Samuel Kirkpatrick from Texas A & M, Herman Bleibtreu from the U of A and Lois DeFleur from Washington State University. DeFleur was added to the list of recommendations by Kinsinger. The selection of a candidate to fill the position will be made within 10 days, Kinsinger said. Cox is a professor and chairman of the department of biochemistry at KSU. He received his doctorate in biochemistry from the University of Pennsylvania and his bachelor’s degree in chem istry from West Wesleyan Univer­ sity in Middletown, Conn. Kirkpatrick is a professor and chairman of the department of political science at Texas A & M. He received his doc­ torate and m aster’s degree in political science from Penn­ sylvania State University, and his bachelor’s degree in political science and history from Shippensburg State Col­ lage. Bleibtreu is a professor of anthropology at U of A. He received his doctorate and his bachelor’s degree in an­ thropology from Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. DeFleur is dean of the College of Sciences and Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences at WSU. She received her doctorate in sociology from the University of Illinois and her m aster's degree from Indiana University. Guido Weigend, the College of Liberal Arts’ previous dean, resigned last fall to go on sabbatical this sem ester. Current­ ly, he is conducting research in South Africa, according to Linda Krigers, secretary to the dean, College of Liberal Arts. He will teach in Florence, Italy, during the 1984 fall sem ester and will return to ASU as professor of geography during the 1985 spring sem ester, she added. tu e sd a y April 24,1984 Vol. 66 No. 109 Arizona State University s ta te p re s s Tempe, Arizona © C o p y rig h t, S ta te P re s s , 1984 Merit pay proposition debated, approved by faculty senators TO MAIL A PARCEL FROM THIS LOCATION S taff photo by Tina Q ftfton Post guard John Eby, Junior business major, finds a shady nook in the U.8. Post Office substation while waiting for the tram Monday. By Jerry Brown Staff writer The Faculty Senate voted unanimously Monday in a special session to accept all faculty m erit pay proposals as recommend­ ed by the merit com m ittee, despite more than two hours of arguments from in­ structors objecting to portions of the plan. A proposal recommended by the commit­ tee, making essential a minimum 60 percent cost-of-living adjustment, was attacked by several members of the senate for a variety of reasons. Psychology professor Nancy Eisenberg said younger professors are in favor of m erit pay and added that it may keep some disgruntled faculty members from leaving the university. “A young faculty member receiving $20,000 a year is som etim es working four tim es as hard as another professor making $50,000 a year,” Eisenberg said. “The merit pay would be incentive for people to work hard and keep some of the young faculty here. Many of them are talking of going elsewhere.*’ Larry N o r t h , nursing professor, said the legislature should address the isssue instead of leaving the matter up to the individual departments. “Our department is 100 percent opposed to that issue,” North said. “There is no reason why the faculty can’t get COLA and merit pay. We all have the sam e hikes in electric and grocery bills and we all know cost-of-living adjustments haven’t come close to covering them .” Albert McHenry, professor of electronic technology, agreed. “Sixty percent of nothing is still nothing,” McHenry said. “The legislature will con­ tinue to use education as a whipping boy whenever money is needed for prisons and other things.” Engineering professor C.E. Wallace said the proposal is forcing the departments to make a decision that should be determined by its authors. “This plan would be better if the decision was on a university-to-university or a college-to-college level,” Wallace said. “The people who cam e up with this plan are the ones who should implement it.” Lyndon Searfoss, reading education pro­ fessor, had reservations about how the Board of Regents would act on Senate recommendations. “The relationship between the Regents and the Legislature is tenuous even at the best of tim es,” Searfoss said. “So what’s to keep them from tossing any proposals on the scrap heap. We have made fair propositions and have no reassurances they will do the sam e.” Gary Anderson, professor of elementary education, said it was important the Senate make some sort of proposal to the Regents. “Not making a decision would be flat-out wrong,” Anderson said. “It would make us look fuzzy-headed and unable to make up our minds.” A motion by English professor Alan Johnson to include the Senate’s disagree­ ment in a portion of the proposal was defeated before the body voted on the full plan. After discussion on the 1984-85 parking fees, the Senate adjourned when a head count showed there was no quorum for a vote. Senate committee OKs U of A law student for regents post By Robert S. Beamesderfer Staff writer A first-year U of A law student easily won recommenda­ tion for full Senate confirmation to the student position on the Arizona Board of Regents from the Senate Committee on Education Monday. By an 8-0 vote, Paul D. Julien, who has earned a doctorate in education from NAU, would becom e the seventh student regent Julien’s confirmation hearing lacked the grilling that appointees for the full eight-year term have faced. The 30-year-old Tucson resident is m arried and the father of two daughters, ages 8 and 6. His w ife teaches high school English in Tucson. Julien told m embers of the com m ittee despite being older and better educated than his predecessors, he was concerned with students and their interests. Julien said he realizes die problem his age and education create, but said he would keep an office at U of A andjdnnsto attend student functions at all three universities monthly. “Anybody who listens or cares is m ore approachable and I don’t think age should be a determining factor” for selecting a student regent, he said. “The only qualification is that I be a full-tim e, tuition-paying student and I have the sam e con­ cerns as any student. ” Committee Chairman Anne Lindeman, R-Phoenix, remarked that the student regent position ‘ ‘was a little shaky last w eek,” referrii« to problems legislative renewal of the one-year, non-voting position ran into last week when Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, sponsor of the bill, threatened to kin it. The position was in question last Thursday until the Senate Republican Majority Caucus conceded to Cooper’s demand to agree on the Mil’s original language. The Senate had amended Cooper’s Mil to make the student regent position p e rm a nent, rather than have it reviewed in three years. The regents are “in a critical position” because of the decisions they make regarding expenditures and policies affecting students. Julien said his “motivation for seeking the position comes from a long-time desife to be involved in the decision-making process affecting the universities.” Lindeman called Julien’s background “remarkable,” citing his graduation from the University of Utah at age 19. Phoenix Democrat Lela Alston said, “I only wish we were eonfirm iig Mm for a permanent appointm ent. or at least a voting position for one year.” In response to a question from Sen. Jacque Steiner, RPhoenix, about how the position fits in with his long-range goals, Julien said the regents are “in a critical position" because of the decisions they make regarding expenditures and policies affecting students. While he agrees that changes need to be made in the col­ leges of education, he said favoring research programs in­ stead of teacher training would be a mistake. “I don’t think you should develop a graduate research pro­ gram at the expense of training people to teach 7-and 8-yearolds,” be said. “It would be a m istake to leave undergraduate teaching behind." It was recently suggested the ASU College of Education shift away from-teacher training to a research-only program. Julien said although the cost of education is rising, tuition increases should provide some tangible benefit for students. “When you pay $100 mare, you com e back and classes are larger than before. . . it’s rather frustrating,” he said. He supports m erit pay, but said the criteria used is the most important aspect. “It really has to be objective, The faculty really have to have input and the students certainly should have input,” he said. He also said “it is essential thé administrators be accoun­ table to their faculty.” Currently, the regents’ merit pay plan does not include faculty evaluation of administrators. Stet» Presi Tuesday, April 24, 1984_ Page 2 ' state press nation/world •'•Vl.v A tte n tio n : F o re ig n C a r O w n e rs S A V E U P T O 70% O N R E C Y C L E D F O R E IG N A U T O P A R T S M G . T R IU M P H . H O N D A . D A T S U N . T O Y O T A . V W a n d O T H E R S U S. officials optimistic for Chinese nuke agreement HONOLULU (AP) — U.S. officials are optim istic that President Reagan and Chinese leaders will be able to sign an interim agreement on commercial nuclear cooperation between their two nations when the president visits China later this week. But there would “have to be a firm commitment from the Chinese to work out differences over the handling of nuclear w aste products, said a senior administration official travel­ ing with Reagan. . The president was conferring Monday with aides and receiving a briefing on the Soviet m ilitary buildup in the Pacific region, in preparation for his m eetings in Peking. “The Soviet capability and Soviet threat is of concern to us, the Japanese, and probably the Chinese,” said one senior of­ ficial accompanying Reagan. London police deport Libyan " X ' S “ “cte .r assurance Im n Libya ¡ha. « » * holed up inside the mission would come out peacefully. Britain broke diplomatic ties with Libya Sunday nigh a fruitless effort to draw out of the em bassy the gimmani who fired from the building at a crowd of Libyan * ssldenff 17, killing the policewoman and wounding 11 demonstrators. Salvadoran government hoping for big runoff turnout SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — ^ g o v er n m e n t is hoping for another big turnout for the presidential elation runoff May 6 between moderate Jose Napoleon Duarte and ultra-conservative Roberto d’Aubuisson. In the two other elections since El Salvador s civil war started in 1979, voters lined up by the tens of thousands. A big turnout for the March 1982 election for a Constituent Assembly was considered a propaganda victory for the government, which promoted voting a s a way to show thei desire for peace. LONDON (AP) — Police investigating the shooting at the Libyan Embassy deported a Libyan student on Monday, say­ ing he was involved in “covert activity.” The day after Bri­ tain severed relations with Libya, diplomats in the capitals of both countries prepared to evacuate their em bassies. Libyan personnel at the besieged em bassy in London, who have until midnight Sunday to leave the country, cabled their leader Col. Moammar Khadafy pledging “to defend our prin­ ciples and aim s. . . or die in the process, ” the official Libyan '0 R o £ TEMPE CENTER J E W E L E R S FOR ALL YOUR JEW ELRY NEEDS Diamonds. W atches 14k Chains, Pendants 5Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry? ¡(Watch & Jewelry Repairing^ 966-7587 TO THE JEWISH COMMUNITY WITH LOVE CORRECTION POLICY HAIRCUTS $6.00 PERMS $22.50 HENNAS $12.50 < io . (~& . (recorded message) ^ o <• Hair styles for young men & women. 1036 S. T errace PLEASE CALL (ComerofLemon&Terrace) Tem pe • 968-6685 9 4 1 -9 2 6 8 437-0185 •Mention this ad & get an additio n a l 5% off! SUMMER STORAGE GRAND OPENING STUDENT DISCOUNT! 30% OFF 1st MONTH’S RENTAL OF A N Y U N IT (ADDITIONAL DISCOUNT ON 6 MONTH OR 1 YEAR LEASES) 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., in t r o d u c t o r y o f f e r A l l M o d els F o re ig n 3024 So. 40th Stroot, Ph*. (n ^ 4 0 » h à UnNordt») ALL SIZES 5'x5' TO 12'x25' EASY ACCESS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ LIGHTED FULLY SEC U R ED -24 HRS. W ON SITE MANAGEMENT U-LOCK ★ U-KEEP KEY MONTHLY-YEARLY RATES Baseline Self Storage 5333 South 56th St., Tempo (South ot Baseline on 50th St Behind Western Machinery) HOURS 7 AM-6 PM DAILY CR AW FO R D 820-0070 Manager Developed by Markham, S e le rs , Mony & Kienitz TRAVELING? U P TO FO U R PEO P LE . ‘X fM Deliver a car for us for cost of gas only. No rental charge. Connections for 32 years through 80 offices In U.S. and Canada. For complota In­ formation call m mm m The M i l l s t o n e A p a r tm e n ts m 952-0339 NEW A U T O D R IV E A W A Y COM PANY ONE BLOCK TO ASU READY IN AUGUST ’84 C a ll N o w F o r Y o u r v \ D oes th e E n d o f th e T e rm m e a n th e E n d o f y o u r In s u ra n c e P r o te c tio n ? If your insurance ends when you leave school, you are unpro­ tected against illness or acci­ dent. Short Term protection from Time Insurance provides medical coverage for a variety of periods at reasonable rates. And the plan can be signed and issued on the spot, with cover­ age beginning immediately. Of course, there's no coverage for pre-existing conditions. You may need this necessary protection! Let me tell you about it. •2 Bedroom /2 Bath •Swimming Pool •Jacuzzi •Barbeques R e s e r v a t io n s 263-5444 03 ★ Only *43500 Per M onth* M cC lin to ck Dr. 968-6165 Since 1X 7 1270 E. B ro a d w a y , S u it e 110, T e m p e M EDICAL • GROUP MORTGAGE • LIFE TIME INSURANCE COMPANY & R u r a l) l■ ) 1005 EAST UNIVERSITY TEM PE, ARIZONA 85281 ( U n iv e r s it y Rural Rd. ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Royce Insurance Agency M ill Ave. T h e M illN ton«» A p a rtm e n t« /*' A SU cautioned about illicit firm business specials,” Brown said. Purchasers, especially secretaries, should be aware of anyone claim ing to be acquainted with University officials as a ploy to make the sale, he said. Such distributors try to sell office supplies such as ballpoint pens, markers, pencils and paper clips. Norman Peck, assistant police chief at ASU, said these companies know the law. “What they do is make a person think they are buying quality merchandise when, in fact, they are just buying a cheap im itation.” Peck said these business practices are only illegal if they promise something that is never delivered. When the ASU purchasing office buys supplies over the phone from a seem ingly legitim ate distributor, one should use caution, Brown said. Brown said callers attempting to sell office supplies to departments on campus should be referred to the purchasing office. By Deanna McCormick Staff writer The ASU purchasing office has been informed by officials at Columbia University that an illegitim ate distributing com­ pany may be beaded to the Valley, according to a purchasing official. Ted Brown said the sam e or sim ilar distributor who con­ tacted officials at Columbia University may be returning to the Valley in the future, Columbia University officials have told him. Such distributors called som e ASU secretaries several years ago and tried to sell them office supplies, he said. He said the outfit travels around the country and changes its name as it relocates. According to Brown, purchasers should be aware of distributors claim ing to represent “government agencies,” “minority programs” and “distribution centers.’ Some use such gimmicks as “once-in-a-lifetime sa le” and “going out of On-line drop/add begins today at 9 a.m . at the four registrar sites. The department stamp is required, with the ex cep tio n ^ undergraduate students in the College of Business Administration and all students in the College of Liberal Arts. Approvals are not required for drops and changing sections of courses already scheduled or approved. On-line registration begins Wednesday for eligible students. The department stam p is required, with the sam e exceptions. All fees to be paid by m ail must be postmarked by Aug. 1,1984. All fees to be paid in person must be paid by Aug. 8. _______________ - ____________ Drop/add begins today at all four registrar sites —> ENGINEERING AND SCIEN CE M AJORS We have openings for qualified personnel in three distinct areas: O P E R A T IN G E N G IN E E R — primary responsibility includes supervision of operating nuclear propul­ sion systems. D E S IG N /R E S E A R C H E N G IN E E R — working in the planning, testing and design aspects of engineer­ ing. P R O F E S S IO N A L IN S T R U C T O R — teaching math, chemistry, physics and engineering to highly motivated, intelligent students on both the graduate and undergraduate levels. Salaries start in excess of $24,000 and rise to $50,000 in five years. Scholarships of $1,000 per month are available to exceptional students in their junior and senior years. Q U A LIFICA TIO N S: Male or Female, U.S. Citizen Ages 19 to 29 College Graduates or Seniors/Juniors BS/MS preferred Good health For more inform ation call M o n d a y - W e d n e s d a y , 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . 256-7632 ___________________ - — ------------------------------------ — ' 3rd ANNIVERSARY PARTY!!! GET YOUR FACE IN SHAPE FOR LIFE With cm Acme Treatment Program that really works.______ Missing out on all the fun... the dates, the parties the good jobs —all because ol acne? Then d o something about it, something that really works! Call Acne Skin Kare right now 967-8097. Acne Skin Kare is a unique total acne control program devel­ oped by a doctor, administered by a nurse. It's a program that shows you step-by-step how to control acne once and for all. t — — — 4 G R E A T N IG H T S Acne Skin Kare Is not expen­ sive. In fact, it is very affordable and very effective. You'll love what it does for your face, your personality your whole life. So stop feeling sorry for your­ self because you have acne, and start living. u c l c d k a OF i i u n ::: APRIL 25th — 29th 400 Free T - S H IR T S c l S 967-8097 A c n e S m n Kare FRIDAY WEDNESDAY 2525 S. Rural Road, Suite 6C • Tempe, AZ 85282 A L L N EW T E M P E T E A P A R T Y S P O N S O R E D BY KURD & B U D W EISER 5-7 Happy Hour 7-11 YOUR LOCAL D A T S U N DEALER $ 2 .0 0 P itc h e r s of B u d SERVICE SPECIAL P 'c $ 1 . 0 0 D r in k s $ 1 .7 5 T e a s 15% DISCOUNT 3 for 1 100 Fre e T -S h irts 100 more T-Shirts On Service W ork and C ounter Parts (except new air conditioning unit) | G o o d through M ay 15,1984. ! YourLocal AUtORIOtiVB ACCBSSOrleS— / A ‘R ' A \ Distributor for »Sound Systems »Air Conditioning »Speed Controls »Alarm Systems »Computers Service & Sales •Clocks ®R6pl3Q6IT16flt PällS DEVILHOUSE C O L L E G E COUNTDOW N I D R IN K S or D R A F T 9 - 10 1701 W. BROADWAY, MESA • 834-3366 Special M onday Hours: 7:30 a.m .-9 p.m. Parts Open Sat. 8 30 a m -12:30 p.m. SATURDAY THURSDAY 8- MESA DATSUN Shot specials every hour ladies with mini skirts FREE FOR ANY DATSUN SERVICE TO ALL ASU STUDENTS. FACULTY. STAFF WITH ASU 1.0. CARD TO RE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE. S 2 .0 0 P itc h e r s of B u d 2 fo r 1 d r in k s 7 - 9 T e m p e T e a P arty 1 ;2 litr e s U I c e T e a 10 -1 1 11-12 9 V " 5 for 1 4 for 1 3 fo ri 2 for X J 100 more T-Shirts 7 -9 3 fo r 1 Long Island Iced Tea Shot specials of Cuervo Gold all nite Cuervo Gold Party after Volley Ball Game 100 more T-Shirts Com e and see Miss Cuervo live and a Miss Penthouse Storte Prêts Tuesday, April 84,1984 F e m in is m : a cau se w ith o u t a rea so n opinion A fanatic is one who can’t change his mind and won't change the subject. — W inston S. Churchill state press Be prep ared Editor: In the police report section of the State Press last week, a m an’s death on campus was reported. It stated, “Despite at­ tempts at mouth-to-mouth and cardiopulmonary resuscita­ tion by ASU police officers, a Phoenix man died of coronary failure at noon . . . ” This gentleman was a client of the ASU Speech and Hearing Clinic and had just finished a visit with me before leaving the clinic and walking to meet his nephew for transportation. I am not writing this letter to criticize the ASU policemen involved, since laryngectomized and other tracheostomizec persons are not common. The paramedics, I understand, im­ m ediately recognized the need for air through the stoma, not the mouth. Rather, I am writing to utilize the tragedy of Mr. Young’s death to help all of us recognize this unique dif­ ference in some persons, and should an emergency arise when we arrive on the scene and notice the presence of a tracheostomy tube, or a Medic Alert bracelet indicating laryngectomy (neck breather), we w ill know what should not be done (mouth-to-mouth) and do what should be done (mouth-to-stoma). . _ Janies L. Case, Ph.D. Department of Speech and Hearing Science “ t a » , until now, uuyed » t / • . [ cerning fem in ists’ m otivations and behavior. I also derive som e gratification in watching the radicals fum ble their defense after discrediting them selves via jour­ nalistic irresponsibility and name-calling during the past two decades. The State Press is like a breath of fresh air in the melieu of worn out, ultra-liberal student publications. And I sincerely hope that the new editor of the State P ress continues to pursue the sam e courageous editorial policy regardless of the hostile and innaccurate criticism s emanating from the radical few. John B. Murdock Sophomore, Fine Arts A hack scien tist Editor: Professor Robert S. Dietz refuses to publicly debate only scientific issues in the evolution/creation controversy (State Press, April 20). He prefers using public forums to criticize fundamentalist religion. Professor Dietz resem bles the bigots who avoid nutritional issues concerning pork by ridiculing Jews and Moslems. He differs little from ancient psuedo-scientific hacks who rejected the heliocentric theory by dism issing its adherents as sun worshippers. Science and ethics require that we judge theories by their m erits, never by irrelevant references to religion, race, or personal characteristics. R aym ond A. Beck College of Law <33n«rfWtNir d O T P .,.. / LETTER POLICY The State Press encourages letters on any topic. Letters should be typed, double-spaced. Include your full name, class standing, major and phone number. All letters are subject to editing a t the discreti«» of the opinion page editor. Address letters to: Letters, S ta te Prese, Matthews Center, ASU, Tempe, AZ 86287. Tuesday, April 8 4 .1 9 8 4 more letters B ikepaths and letter o f th e law Editor: I am a member of a sm all group commit­ tee ( Never-or-a-Sunday ) for Communica­ tion 230.1 am writing to inform the students of a problem that w e wish to try to solve. That problem is that pedestrians who walk on the bikepath should be aware that they are violating the law. In order to make sure there is such a problem, each of us took different turns at observing different parts of campus during one week. The results of these observations are as follows: four of the observed sites yielded between 18 to 30 people walking on the bike path (crossing the bike path did not count). The paths in front of Old Main had the highest number of illegal path walkers, a staggering figure of 87 in less than half an hour. One of our members spoke to the campus p olice about the ru les concerning pedestrians on the bike path. According to the Vehicle Code of Arizona, under section 815(d): “a bicycle path. . . shall be deemed for the exclusive use of bicycles.” The only exceptions are for an emergen­ cy, or “for use in crossing such path or lane to gain access to any public or private road or driveway.” Also, according to Lt. Hydro, the fine for violating this law is $18. When asked about the number of tickets given to offenders, the police said that they do give tickets. However, they feel that it is important to determine an offender’s at­ titude before issuing a ticket because of the possible lade of awareness of the law. Most importantly, the biggest constraint is that there are not enough officers to patrol the campus. One of the other issues our group thought of was the lack of communication on the bikepaths them selves to warn pedestrians of this law. One of our members spoke with Paul Feedler, the adm inistrative architect STATE PRESS at the F acilities, Management and Plant Department. According to Mr. Feedler, his department has been working very hard to try to solve the traffic problem at ASU. A possible solution is to build an outer loop, ac­ cording to Mr. Feedler. However, this will take som e tim e to implement. Our group feels that this is a definite safe­ ty hazard that must be responded to now. We realize that it will take tim e to imple­ ment the correct solution, but in the mean­ tim e, something must be done to warn pedestrians of this problem. . Darrill Batte so.ïourê a comnefc T R A C Y FLE T C H ER siu p eH T .eH ’ v M efS D o Y o ü O D M M u ie n w ? DO N S U IT E S M anaging E d itor C3MPUS I C ity E d ito r CH R W C O PPO LA A n t. C ity E d ito r M IC H A E L H U M PH R EYS Sport* E d ito r JA Y TA YLO R _______ . Aeat. Sport» E d ito r TO M BLOOQETT O pin ion E d ito r M ATTHEW S C U LLY Entertainm ent E d ito r M A H V P A T W O Y N ew s E d ito r LE N M U N 8 IL A a a t E n larla lnrna tit E d ito r M AW A K H A M Ph oto E d ito r B O S M ILES C op y C h W INORtO TU U U H Q f m iN Q c . ne REPO RTERS: Wayn# Bakar, B ob Baam aadartar, Ja try Brow n, Roaann* Dupree, Ju lia n n a H olroyd, Jim M oC laaty. Daanna M cC orm ick, A a lw Nathan, Llaa P h illip * . M ary K ay Reinhart, T laa S trla g la r PH O TO G R APH ER S: T in a Q araon, J a m n M oaar, David P etklew lcz S PO R TS W RITERS: P a tti Bondy, Oaan O banauar, Stavan Rlchm an, V ic k i S tm i C O P Y EDITORS: W andy D unlap. Taranoa W alah, S lav* W ataratiat CARTO O NISTS: Jb n Pattaraon, C h ip H J . Shaaan ARTIST: M yra M aaalek S tyar S T A F F A ID E P a trick Kuoara \ « rr* * * '. W O R K IN G * \ space... Tha S tate Praaa I* pu b lish ed Tuaaday through Frid ay during the academ ic vaar except holiday* and axam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 16, A rizo n aS ttateU n N w alty,T am p * .A Z 86287.N ew sroom :*»-2292 A dvertisin g & P roduction: 966-7572. The S tate P re ss Is th e o n ly new spaper e x clu siv e ly pu b lish ed lo r and^cir­ cu lated on the ASU cam pus. Th* now s and view * p u b lish ed In tM » "ow spapar are not n ece ssarily th ose o f the ASU adm inistration , facu lty, sta ff o r student H ilgat^ body. SUMMER SPECIAL Terrace R oad Apartm ents To A SU Students and Faculty S T O R E A L L YO U R B ELO N G IN G S DURING SU M M ER B R EA K Total Price for 4 months: Size WALK TO SCHOOL! Regular Special $60.00 $45.00 $76.00 $59.00 $96.00 $72.00 $120.00 $95.00 5x5 5x10 5x15 10x10 / S i 1964 East University Dr. Tem pe, A Z 65281 OUT KNOH 966-9071 Reserve Early. Bring th is ad or your ID. V6 block from Campus. Huge, well furnished 1-bedroom, 1-bath, and 2-bedroom, 2-baths, all utilities included, plus many amenities. 950 S. Terrace Rd. 966-8540 C o n g r a tu la tio n s G r a d u a te s « from THE C L A R IO N IN N AT M c C O R M IC K RA N C H Scottsdale's luxury resort, located on the shores o f Cam elback Lake A s a special offer to A SU graduates and families, THE IN N extends a rate of $ too singleldouble occupancy space available basis M a y 13. Lim ited num ber o f 2- and 3-bedroom condos available at the Shores Villas. A sk fo r rate. ’ ______ 4 w n M O V IE C L U B Get Sudden Impact with any of our 2,300 movies. It will make your day! For R eservations, Call 9 4 8 -5 0 5 0 (Ext. 7419) A D V A N C E D E P O S IT R E Q U IR E D T O G U A R A N T E E R O O M . R A T E S U B IE C T T O 6.75% SALES TAX. T H E P IA R IO N IN N " A T M rO O R M IC K R A N C H VHS & BETA Recorder Rentals From $ 5 .9 5 T hrough M ay 15, 1 9 8 4 , rent a record er a n d o n e m ovie and r e c e iv e th e se c o n d m o v ie FREE! (P lea se p resen t ad & A SU I.D.) 3 1 1 8 S. MILL (Smitty's Center), TEMPE • 9 6 6 - 6 7 2 2 Buying your leased phone now saves you time and money next term. This year, don’t leave for home without your phone. Buy it before sum­ mer and save yourself some tim e and money. Buying your AT&T leased phone now m eans you’ll have your A phone with you the very first day back to class. To buy the phone you’re leasing, just call AT&T Consumer Sales & © 1984. AT&T Information Systems Service’s toll-free number. It’s th at easy. So call us before you say goodbye. Then unplug your phone and take it with you. And have a nice summer. 1-800-555-8111 Call this toll-freé number 24 hours a day: Tuesday, April 8 4 .1 9 8 4 Stale Press Gouncil president: candidates should list ad as contribution tion over whether state-generated funds could be used to pay for the ad. Longstaff said the ad was then placed by the P.V. West Council without the knowledge of the can­ didates. However, Phil Terry, State P ress adver­ tising manager, said the ad was placed by the P.V. West Hall Council, but the paper’s production department dropped the “Hall” from the title. According to Stumpf, the candidates did know about the ad. He claim ed Longstaff’s letter was unauthorized and the Hall Council did not want the letter sent. Stumpf said be told the candidates, informally, that the ad would run. The West Council, formed as a lobbying group for P.V. West, funded the Hall Coun­ c il’s ad through its privately raised funds because the Hall Council could not use state­ generated monies. Norton said the placing of the P.V. West Hall Council ad followed the sam e principle as the ads placed by Students for Jam es Norton, except that the candidates were ful­ ly aware of the ad and had consented to it. “The reason the ad (endorsing the can­ didates) was allowed was because that group did not have any political bias con­ cerning the candidates,” Longstaff said. Longstaff said it was strange that Norton did not know about the ad, because Norton’s campaign manager, Alex Vakula, had placed it. Norton said Vakula was not his campaign manager and that he had never appointed one. By JuUaaae Holroyd Staff writer The Associated Students’ candidates en­ dorsed in the April 4 issue of the State Press should be required to include the advertise­ ment in their financial statem ents, said Joe Stumpf, president of the Palo Verde West Hall Council. “If they’re going to require Jam es Norton to count the ads on his financial statem ent, then all the candidates should have counted ours,” Stumpf said, referring to the ad placed by the P .V. West Hall Council. Norton, the newly elected activities vice president, was charged with breaking elec­ tion code rules by allegedly accepting more than $so from one organization and then fail­ ing to report it on his financial statem ent. Norton was endorsed by the Students for Jam es Norton. The ad ran two days and cost the club $100.49. The ad endorsing Nancy Parks, Brian LaCorte, Ray Burnell and Norton w as plac­ ed by the P.V. W est Hall Council and co6t $78.76, according to Stumpf. However, Derek Longstaff, vice president of the P.V. W est Hall Council, claim ed the ad was placed by the P.V. West Council, a separate organization formed by its presi­ dent, Dan Chuckry. The ad was originally going to be placed by the Hall Council, Longstaff said, adding that Elections Coordinator Mike McCoy told the candidates the ad would not have to be claim ed on their financial statem ents. Longstaff said he wrote a letter to the en­ dorsed candidates informing them the ad would not appear in the paper due to a ques­ ,TS*™ar C om plim ents òf /GRE-DAT-GMAT /ACHEVEMENTS PSAT-SAT-MAT GRE 110'TOEFL GREPSYCHPCAT ACT-SSAT-VAT OCflTMR 1-2-3 U N B E L IE V A B L E S to r e a n d lo c k y o u r ite m s fo r th e SUM M ER R e s e rv e y o u r D i s c o u n t w h ile th e y last. P r e p a y fo r th re e m o n th s a n d g e t th e fo u rth FREE Tem pe S e lf S to ra g e 242 W. Southern Tempe, AZ 85282 9 6 6 -9 6 6 5 4 '0 , , “ Papa Jay’s New York Pizza | F A ST . . . FREE . . . 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Q I O N L Y $5.95 ( p lu s tax) | ■ I I I I $ 8 . 8 8 ( p lu s tax) I m } Good on delivery, take-out or dine-in. | I Expires 8 - 1 5 - 8 4 .___ j S [.____ ^ ^ - 1 5 - 8 4 ._________ | " W e Deliver Beer & Soft Drinks Video Arcade! 10 tokens for $1 Every Day SUPER B O N U S : 60 tokens for $5 Every Day 804 S A S H (Mm&umv.) 966-1003 • 966-4292 • 967-9689 K APLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER HKHB'CSFK ■cniciEJ-np 967-2967 SPEEDREADMG-NCB-l ESI REÏ1EW-FIE* 1-2-3 HfniO TOLAWSCHOOL No-1 PREPARATION WOMEN’S SERVICES OF ASSOCIATED STUDENTS ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY P in a l exam s and WOMEN NETWORKING cordially invite y o u to attend a presentation by NATASHA JOSEFOWITZ A uthor o f PATHS TO POWER and VERSES FOR WOMEN IN THE MIDST OF LIFE “IS THIS WHERE I WAS GOING?” i Speaking on Earn Extra M oney W hile You Stu dy For Finals! 'PATH S TO POWER: BARRIERS A N D STRATEGIES’ B e co m e a plasm a donor! It’s e asy and ta ke s o n ly a b o u t an hour. B rin g y o u r b o o k s and ca tch up on yo u r reading. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1984 • 7:30 P M. A r i z o n a Ro o m , m e m o r i a l u n i o n ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY r e c e p t io n im m e d ia t e l y f o l l o w in g p r e s e n t a t io n $10 is paid per d o n a tio n and y o u ca n don ate tw ice w eekly (but please w ait 72 hours between donations). T h a t’s u p to $100 a m onth! A n d that ca n buy a lot of N o-S nooze! New d o n o rs bring th is ad for a $2 b o n u s fo r y o u r first donation. C a ll now fo r an appointm ent. FOR RESERVATIONS/TICKETS OR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: WOMEN’S SERVICES 965-1253 STUDENT I.D. $2 WOMEN NETWORKING 965-1241 GENERAL PUBLIC $5 I I I 968-6139 University Plasma Center 1015 S. R ural Rd. ■ O p e ri: M o n d a y - F r id a y 8 a.m .-7 p.m . W e d . & S at. 9 a .m .-6 p.m. Federally I n s p e c t e d ________ I I J Stete f t « Tu—d ar. April 84> H 8 4 -------------------- P a tte 8 L ib ra ry w o rk c a u s e s lo b b y p ile u p ■__» __ Hu. bids Ki/ie bock h ark and a n d have h a v e signed » « n e d a contract co n tr a ct for “We hist got. the the work*” Bober said. “The construction company h a s a totd ttn eto S S T l think they w ill m eet it without any pro­ B y J e lie K nap p C H ^ ^ n U b r a ^ ris moving into its final P »»* ing the second-floor circulation and reference a r e ^ w ta c h has left the main floor jumbled with desks and other fur ^ A sa result, the circulation desks have been moved only a few feet inside the entrance to the library __ “ We realize it occurred at an awful tune ofyear, Ann Boteer, library administrative assistant. But we had to get i t d o n e b e f o r e the end of the fiscal year.’ n but the hours when they w ill train have not been officially se t According to Herman Frazier, assistant athletic director, the Aquatic Center is ade­ quate for Olympic training. “We have a good facility. H ie weather is warm and w e’re right along the way to Los Angeles, he said. student reported. The motorcycle was locked and the amount of loss is unknown. __ ___ An ASU student reported her blue 1979 Toyota Corolla sedan stolen from Lot 37 between 6 a m and 10 p m . Thursday. The student said she would aid in prosecution, but the vehicle was recovered Friday morning near An ASU student was arrested in connection witn charges of endangerment after another student told police he saw him shooting a pellet gun out of the window of Palo Verde West Friday evening. . ^ A PV West resident told police Allan Barry Abraham was shooting towards the PV West parking lot Abraham later told police he shot the pellet gun from the window. ASU Police said no injuries or damages resulted from tne incident. The case is pending investigation by the county attorney’s office or the Office of Student Life. A black 1981 Yamaha motorcycle was stolen from Lot 33 between Thursday evening and Friday morning, an^ASU^ D O N N Y 222 S. ^ A fire alann at Cholla Apartments w as activated early Sunday. The alarm had apparently been set off by smoke coming out of a washing machine on the seventh flow . The alarm again went off later that afternoon for unknown A n o th er activity, University Police reported the follow­ ing incidents in the 24-hour period ending at 1 p m . Mon•Dam age to a drinking fountain on the 10th flow of Manzatata Hall was estim ated at $528, the Office of Residence Life told police Monday morning. T h ejou n tam ^ va^ O ’B R I E N ’S M ill, Tempe Kpo 968-0527 e S T H * ? '” ' -• M \|eU & F e a .U r i" 9 * '° r A n d Serving D e lic io u s 7 5 S ° F R E E H ors D ’oeuvres Every D ay M f iN D A Y TUESDAY WEDNESDAY IT A L IA N C H IC K E N P IZZA SAUSAGE W IN G S THURSDAY TACO • BAR FRIDAY SUPER SELEC TIO N o riginally, 20 team s had expressed in­ in in tpainin0 e tat ASU. accordinsi toto Wft terest training ASU, according Ward O’Connell, director of the Aquatic Center and diving coach. Most of those countries declined due to the costs involved. The U.S. diving team had stated the possibility of training at ASU but has since decided to train in Mission Viejo, Calif., O’Connell said. destroyed, police said. . . •An ASU student’s vehicle was damaged in Lot 51 e £ e i S during the wrekeud he told afternoon. The side mirrors and antenna had been torn off, and numerous scratches and dents were found. The damage estim ate is unknown. . •Police reported a sm all fire on the fifth floor of the Business Annex Sunday afternoon. The Phoenix Fire Department was dispatched, but dam ages w ere minima _ ASU Central Plant was notified because the alarm would •A^ portable radar detector, valued at $245, was stolen from an ASU student’s Sahauro Hall room Sunday m pit. •Clothing was removed from two dryers on the second and sixth floors of Cholla Apartments D-Wing Sunday mght, an ASU student told police. The clothing was valued at *100' — Rosanne Dupras Page 13 “T H E N U M B E R O N E S P E A K E R IN T H E C O U N T R Y .’’t h e n e w y o u k t im e s G . G O R D O N LID D Y PIES sponsors m usic meditation at 3 p m every Tuesday and silent medita­ tion every Thursday at 2 p.m. in Student Health Services Room A-158. Everyone welcome. PIES w ill present Dr. Edward L Silker speaking on “ Sports Dentistry” from 7:40 to 8:30 a m . W ednesday in the Student Health Service Room A-158. Everyone is welcome. Society of University Math Students will hear Dr. John B. Kelly of the ASU math department speak about the Put­ nam Math Test and w ill d iscu ss club goals at 4:15 p.m. today in Physical Sciences A-wing Room 206. Student A sso cia tio n fo r G eron ­ tological Education w ill hold a May Day for seniors at 4:30 p.m today in the MU Santa Cruz Room. Black Student Union w ill meet at 6:45 tonight in the BSU office in MU Room 210. The group will hear final campaign speeches and w ill vote. N ational In tern ation al S tu d e n ts Association w ill hold a sym posium on “Intercultural Com m unication for a Global Age” from 1:30 to 3 p.m. W ednes­ day in the MU Navajo Room. A free seminar on “ Managing Cultural Differences” w ill be held from 2:30 to 4 p.m. in the MU South Pinal Room. Another seminar on “ W riting the Com ­ plete Message” w ill be presented at 4 to 5 p.m. in the same room. Amnesty International w ill discuss organization of “ special action on Paraguay” at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the MU Rendezvous Lounge. A S U College Republicans w ill elect club officers at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the MU Navajo Room. International Student O ffice and Stu­ dent Health w ill meet to discuss "S ex­ uality and Birth Control” at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the MU Pima Room. The Students of Sign C lub will meet from 4:15 to 5:15 p.m. Thursday in the MU Yuma Room. Student Alum ni A ssociation will hold a board of directors meeting at 4:40 p.m. Thursday in the MU Greenlee Room. University Toastm asters w ill meet at 5:15 p.m. on Thursdays through the summer in the MU Coconino Room. The organization provides a means to prac­ tice sk ills of speaking, leadership and organization. Students for O rigins Research will hear British scientist Dr. A.E. WilderSmith speak on “The Natural Sciences Know Nothing of Evolution” at 7 p.m. Thursday in Life Sciences Room 191. The public is invited. Students for Cooperative Alternatives j p from 2-10 p.m. c 2 D in n e rs fo r u (Expires May 11.1984.) g $ 5 .4 9 ■ 3 R eg. $8.50 Choice of: «Lasagna •Cheese or Spinach Manicotti •Baked Ziti g'v l | ■ Includes 2 d in n e r salads I V and g a rlic breads V ■ THE JOYNT 606 S. Mill A l 967-7926 CARRY OUTS 75c ADDITIONAL O L m m iCOUPONi m » I “Lid d y w as the triggerman of the greatest journalism earthquake of ou r times." — New Tim es STUDENT TICKETS $5— ONTHE MALLTUES.& WED. ONLY! announces the JO S E CUERVO A R IZ O N A O P E N TH E o d JL s H ( . STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS Total H o c k e y & B a s e b a l l C o v e r a g e o n S a t e l l i t e TV D a i l y B a s e lin e an d Mill, T e m p e • 8 3 1 -W O O D « A 0 N * £ g 8 :0 0 P-M . mittee meeting at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in the MU Yavapai Room. < 0 ^ P h o e n ta 3 A ria o n a S 5 0 1 0 Delta Sigm a Pi Professional B usiness Fraternity w ill hold an executive com ­ .JL, p "H is theatrical presentations are drawing rave reviews.” — New Tim es 4 4 0 N o rth 3 2 n d S tre e t w ill show the film “ Sandino: Hoy y Siem pre,” a lo o k at ag ricu ltu ral cooperatives’ contribution to land reform in Nicaragua after the revolution at 7 p.m. Thursday in the MU South Pinal Room. Pre-Law C lub w ill hold a sem inar on introduction to basic legal research at 3:35 p.m. W ednesday in the rotunda of the College of Law. The group w ill meet to nominate and elect officers at 5 p.m. Thursday at Crackers. |— THE J O Y N T -1 SAT. C e le b rity APRIL 28 s RmmVfcMeH Pizza Restaurants w THE REAL SCIENCE O F O C S.IS TO HELP YOU DISCO VER THE LEADER IN T O IL Army Officer Candidate School (O.C.S.)is a 14week challenge that will make you dig deep inside yourself for mental and phys­ ical toughness For stamina and courage. It isn't easy. But you'll discover what’s inside you. You11know you have what it takes to lead. Youll come out a trim, fit commissioned of­ ficer in the Army, ready to exercise leadership skills civilian companies put a premium on. If you're about to get your degree in engineering or science, it could be your next science should be O.C.S. Call yotir Army Recruiter. 967-1611 ARMI BEALLYOUCANBE. 1/2 P R I C E TUESDAY! APRIL 28, 29 • SCOTTSDALE Saturday, Sunday • Indian School Park ST A R T S AT 9 A M. • ADM ISSIO N IS F R E E A S U S tu d e n ts , sponsored by F a c u lty a n d S t a f f . • • E very T u esd a y J o s e C u e r v o T e q u ila ' Present your ASU LD. and receive a 50% D iscount, w ith purchase o f any drink, on any Large Pizza. hosted by co-sponsored by mpWY (Country Style Included) Offer valid on sit-down meals only. Coppertone suntan prod ucts — 2 Valley L o ca tio n s — TEM PE 1849 N. Scottsdale Rd. (A lp h a B eta C enter) 947-4396 / P H O E N IX 5515 N. 7th St. ( a t M isso u ri) 279-0924 SOUTHWEST A l rights reserved. fnteoBcncif j YOLLCVMU. I met Take a break before finals and get out in the Arizona sunshine! Shadow Creek is a brand-new apart­ ment community, and to introduce ourselves, w ere having a party on Saturday, April 28, from 10-5 (Music from 1-3)- We’re renting now —and w ell be glad to hold an apartment for you until you return in August. New renters will have a chance to win a free microwave oven on Saturday . FREE H O T D O G S PO PC O R N • SOF • H ELIUM BALLOONS DRAW INGS FO R FREE DINNERS A T H OULIH AN’S, BENNIGANS, B O B B YM cG E E ’S AN D LU N T AVENUE M ARBLE CLUB M USIC B Y D O VER G REY • ALL O N SATURDAY, A PRIL 2 8 Dishwashers/pantries Covered parking Patios balconies Tennis court/ clubhouse Free cable telev ision lust minutes from the campus Exclusive apartment community Brand new Spacious one and two bedrooms Furnished and unfurnished BBQ's heated pools Jacuzzi GS Shadow Creek 2345 West University Drive, Mesa (betw een Price and Dobson) A Page 15 Tuesday, April g4 ,1984 NM Leaders Devils down Cal twice, increase Six-Pac margin By Tom Blodgett Sports editor It failed to gain a sw eep, but the ASU baseball team accom plished what it needed to in its weekend series with California, tak­ ing two of three gam es from die Golden Beans and increasing its lead in the Six-Pac with the help of arch rival Arizona. The Sun D evils (38-14 overall, 17-4 divi­ sion) stretched their lead to four gam es over USC with nine to play as the Trojans were swept in Tucson by the Wildcats. As has been the case throughout the season, the ASU offense carried the team in the series. The D evils scored 30 runs in the three gam es, including double figures in the first and third gam es. In fact, the D evils reached double figures in one inning of the first gam e, tallying 10 runs in the fifth inning. That big inning offset an earlier eight-run outburst in the fourth inning by Cal and led the D evils to a 14-9 win. The Sun D evils held a 4-0 lead going into the top half of the fourth and starter Kendall Carter had sailed through the first three in­ nings. 4 , But the Bears knocked the ASU ace out of the box with five runs, highlighted by a tworun triple by designated hitter Jeff Weiss. Dave Graybill entered the gam e in relief of Carter with one out. But he also had problems, allowing three additional runs to cross the plate before getting out of the in­ ning. Graybill settled down the rest of the way, allowing just one more run in picking up his seventh win of the year against no losses. The Devils ignited in the fifth inning, starting with an Oddibe McDowell home run. That was followed by three ground balls to shortstop Greg McClain, who booted each of them, and the D evils were on their way. Cal starter Andy Wortham was yanked with one out, but reliever Bren Conner would be the real victim of the errors. He was tagged for the loss after allowing six runs — none of them earned — without get­ ting an out. The Devils scored 30 runs in the three games, including double figures in the first and third games. The Bears’ third pitcher of the inning, Dave Kloser, recorded the final two outs and then kept the ASU bats quiet the rest of the way. A big inning could not help the D evils to get by the Bears in the second contest, which Cal won 7-6. McDowell opened the gam e with a solo home run and the D evils put together three runs in the third, highlighted by a two-run single by Bob Grandstaff, for a 4-2 lead. But the lead was short-lived. The Bears Romy Cuc|en, left, and Don Wakamatsu celebrate Wakamatsu’s home run In Satur­ day’s game with some high-five forearm Jive. touched ASU pitcher Doug Henry, making his first start since last year’s College World Series, for three runs in the fifth inning. The D evils tied the score in the bottom half of th$ inning when Todd Brown doubled and Luis Medina hit an RBI single. The Golden Bears did the final damage with a run each in the eighth and ninth in­ ning on Mike Zahn’s RBI single and W eiss’ post his second im pressive win over Califor­ nia this season. ASU coach Jim Brock and latching coach Tim Kelly had decided to start Mike Thorpe. The idea w as to allow Thorpe to pitch through Cal’s lineup once and then bring on Randy Rector. “We wanted to try to screw up their order and then bring in Rector,” Brock said. “ (Hitting coach Jeff) Pentland gets the credit for coming up with the right pitcher.” Brock never even had to bring in Rector as Roberts sailed through the Cal order, get­ ting into trouble only in the fourth and ninth innings. The D evils’ offense had quickly estab­ lished a lead for Roberts to work with Romy Cucjen hit a two-run triple and Don Wakamatsu drove in two runs with a single in the first inning. Cal put its first run on the board on two walks and an RBI single by Bob Liebzit. But ASU methodically put the game out of reach, scoring two runs each in the fourth, fifth and seventh innings. A solo homer by Cucjen in the fifth and a two-run shot by Wakamatsu in the seventh highlighted the bursts. Roberts gave up only two hits through eight innings. Jose Rodiles finished up the Roberts: ‘They have a lot of lefties . . . but the ball tails away from them and you can get a lot of ground balls.’ S tall photo* by Bob MHot ■ of the ball In Saturday’s 10-2 victory over California. The Sun Todd Brown follows the flight with the Golden Bears and Increased their Six-Pac lead to four Devils won two of three games games. ------- C O U P O N -------- rr| WE’LL PAY YOUR STUDENT LOAN! I V iÎORIiD täm pu S P IZZA I SPECIALci c o u p 0 N • 1 I i c 0 u I o ■'4 p.m .-10 p.m . u p Two 14” , o C heese Pizzas N0 *5,s 1 I A d d ’l. Item s Extra W ith C o u p o n O n ly è N o D elivery o n Specials u Carry O u t O n ly 967-7926 n n iZ O N H A Regular Paycheck n n i£ u n n O p p 0 d N N I 1 E x p ire s 5 -1 1 -8 4 . I I____ ‘ - C O U P O N - — — 606 S. M ill Ave. The Arizona Army National Guard can help pay o ff your student loan. The Guard pays $500 pier year, or 15% of the balance, ^whichever is greater. (Max-$10,000). in addition, there's education assistance!! NATIONAL Gives you Extra income, Too. CALL 273-0801 solo home run. ASU threatened in the ninth when Barry Bonds led off with a home run. One out later, Grandstaff singled and was lifted for pinchrunner Mike Devereaux. Thè critical play cam e when Devereaux stumbled in an attempted steal of second base. He was thrown out in a rundown, eras­ ing the potential tying run. Cal reliever Buddy Watts fanned Henry to mid the gam e. He earned the victory and evened his record at 3-3. With the loss, Henry fell to 9-2. . If the first two games of the series held som e suspense for the fans at Packard Stadium, Saturday’s rubber game hardly did at all. ASU jumped on Cal starter Ross Sakamoto for four runs in the first inning and coasted to a 10-2 victory. ASU starter Jeff Roberts was the story for ASU. Almost overlooked for the starting assignment, Roberts went eight and onethird innings and allowed only four hits to Jeff Roberts job for him aft«- Roberts allowed two singles and a run in the ninth. “Coach Kelly’s philosophy is when you get behind a batter to change speeds,” Roberts said. “They have a lot of lefties in the lineup which can cause some problems, but the ball tails away from them and you can get a lot of ground balls.” Brock said, “It’s almost impossible to get any wood on the ball when that pitch is working. It was a great pitch today.” The Sun D evils close a two-game non­ conference series with Laverne tonight at 7 p.m. in Packard Stadium. This weekend ASU travels to Los Angeles for a three-game series with UCLA, while Stanford travels to Palo Alto. THE WAREHOUSE DELI ‘Good Food and D rin k E*l*b. 1975 H A PPY HOUR M0N.-FRI. 10:30a.m.-7 p.m. S P E C IA L S LUNCH a DINNER M0N.-FRI. 10:30-7p.m. IMPORTS - 94$ DRAFT BEER Pitcher Sandwich with Homemade Fries Small Drink or Beer %liter 6 a.m.-l0:30a.m. Mon.-Frl. - S U P E R SPECIAL A lso Featuring "THE LITE W AIT ' Coffee Included Glass $1.99 494 W INE COOLER *1.99 One Egg. 2 Bacon or Sausage, Toast, Butter & Jam Glass $1.99 49$ W INE ONLY BREAKFAST ' t . _Q * | Pitcher Glass $2.75 654 INE ENTERTAINMENTNIGHTLY (N o Cover, No-Min.) 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. A T PO R EST 966-7788 — TEMPE, AZ Your Hosts: "The Family" SM * S m s Pane 16 ' ■ Tuesday. April 24,1964 fl 1 1 G o lfe rs fin ish sixth at to u rn a m e n ts that win, the Devito defeated No. 1 ranked BYU and beat both By Dean Obenauer Sports writer The ASU men’s golf team has been busy. In preparation for hosting this week’s Sun Devil-Phoenix Thunderbird Collegiate Golf Tournament, the Devils have made appearances in both the Fresno State Classic and the Far Western Intercollegiate back to bade in the last two weeks In the 18-team Fresno State Classic, ASU finished in sixth pin™. Senior and defending NCAA individual champion Jim ­ my carter led all D evils, finishing 12 strokes off the leader with a 218 total over the Sunnyside Country Chib layout. In addition, winding out the D evils’ low three-day tourna­ ment scores were Barry Conser at 219 and Rich Bietz at 220. “It was important that we beat the team s we beat,” Coach George Boutell said. “Beating those teams helps us qualify in USC and UCLA on their own home corns«. s,nce the team has not been able to obtain that sam e all-around production. “It has not jelled since then like it did that said. “All we need is for it to jell again and we will win again.” The D evils will get another chance this mick Ranch. A good showing at home could give the team the momentum to carry on to the Pac-10 tournament. M ÉÉRR NEW , LOCATION " L a sfw eek , the Sun Devils again traveled to Northern California for the Far Western tourney in Santa Cruz. » g a in they finished sixth posting a 1,157 total, but tins tim e it was against a larger field of 24 team s over a difficult Pasatiem po golf course. Carter led all team m ates as he finished one stroke behind the tournament champion shooting 220 over 54 holes. Bietz was second for ASU with 227, Conser was third at 233 and R o g e r Thom was next with a 238 total. A 6 now detoer yotr tonale fxzza. JUST CALL 829-MOO "•« ■ — ***» “The golf course was awfully hard,” Boutell^said. “We beat the team s that we needed to beat once again.” The biggest surprise of the tournament was not that San Jose State won, but how it won. The Spartans finished 33 strokes in front of the second-place team. With the D evils hosting the Sun Devil-Phoenix Thunderbird tourney this weekend and the Pac-10 Championships coming up two days later, ASU has to peak in order to make it to the NCAA Championship this year as a team. “We still have a bad taste in our mouth about not making it to the championship last year,” Boutell said. “We are going to have to jell like we did in the Southwestern.” In early November of last year, the Sun Devils won the Southwestern Intercollegiate in Westlake Village, Calif. In FREE D ELIVERY FR E E DELIVERY » • three dollars off ary d j g $ 0 LARDEDEUVEKO PIZZA. $ 0 $2 j a n a a s s i $2 ~— Q 0 0 d o n ly th ro u g h S u n d a y , M a y 1 3 ,1 9 8 4 . IW 'Hut* 1030 E- Apache Blvd. 8 2 8 -8 8 8 0 P le a s e m e n tio n c o u p o n w h e n o rd e rin g . L im ite d d e liv e ry a re a . N o t v a lid w ith a n y o th e r P iz z a H u t» o ffe r. N o d e liv e ry o f a lc o h o lic b eve ra g e s. • 1863 P iz z a H u t Inc. 1/20 O n t C a s h R e d e m p tio n V alue. Jim Carter Dentistry S t u d e n t S p e c ia l $11 E X A M & X -R A Y Call For Appointment 12 Minutes From Campus DR. BRIAN D. FOW , D.D.S. 7555 Osborn Rd., Suite 201 Scottsdale, AZ • 9 4 9 - 1 2 3 4 PA R TY B A LC O N Y 4th & M ILL 2nd level of the M ILL AV E. S H O P S above the S PA G H ET T I CO . Formerly Upstairs Pub "QUARTER BEER NIGHT” ton/gfit *3 for 1 Happy Hour 3:30-7:30 everyday* FAM ILY PLAN N IN G IN STITU TE WOMENS HEALTHCARE CENTER A ll services personal and confidential by a caring staff. Free Pregnancy Testing with im m ediate m u tts Pre-Mantal Blood Testing $15 with aam e day m u lta •Abortion S ervices • C ontraceptive C ere Clinic • C ounertinQevaiN blo •O B /O Y N physiciens Evening hours» Saturday appointm ents how evi u ble TEM PE 086-7471 ■• 2SZ8S. Rural M :,S te .4 C PH O EN IX T U E S D A Y S F R O M 8 :3 0 T O 1 1 : 3 0 GUYS $4 • GIRLS $2 Be There For The Wildest Night in Town DONNY O’BRIENS 2 2 2 S . Mill • 9 6 8 - 0 5 2 7 Never A Cover, Rock Videos, & Just A Walk Away COME WATCH THE NHL & NBA PLAYOFFS 907-7493 9100 N 2nd Street ij bL i i m m m m w sm v/ ¿* Í w h m m m w w ím b n n n m h i 17 T u e sd a y , A p r il 8 4 ,1 9 8 4 State P r o » , Injury-riddled softball team faces NAU in important twin bill today By Steve Richman S,The women’s softball team , despite an apparent thirdnlace finish in the WCAA with a conference record of 6-4, travels to Flagstaff today to face the Lumberjacks in what Coach Mary Littlewood calls an important series. ASU (28-13) is coming off a frustrating 3-0 loss at the hands of the San Diego State Aztecs. In that gam e the D evils left 10 runners on base including the bases loaded in the fourth and sixthinnings. . .__ “ Although these gam es against NAU are non-conference games they are still very important,” Littlewood said. “We are fighting the U of Ar in won-loss record and two losses could be very dam aging.” .. .. Currently the D evils have three fewer losses than the Wildcats (28-16). The Lumberjacks traveled to ASU s Sun Angel Club Stadium on March 24 and w ere handily defeated by the Lady Devils 8-1 and 10-2. • m In that series, the D evils’ offense w as-paced by Tami Brown and Kathy Escarcega. Brown went three-for-six with six RBI, while Escarcega went four-for-six with five RBI. Escarcega’s four-for-six performance included going fourfor-four in the second gam e. In the pitching department, the D evils’ got good per­ formances from all three of their pitchers._______________ _ be Brown’s replacement until regionals. To fill the hole left in the outfield by Fiehler’s move to shortstop, Littlewood has opted to put Houle in right field. With Houle in right field, the starting pitching ditties will be shared by Bickford (13-5) and White (9-4). “We are down to 11 available players,” Littlewood said. “It will be important for us to be able to minimize our errors. With players in relatively unfamiliar positions errors are in­ evitable; however, minimizing the critical errors is a prime objective.” As of the m ost recent coaches poll (April 23), ASU has moved up to No. 6, due largely to its victories over top-ranked Cal State-Fullerton and No. 2 UCLA. Rounding out the topfive spots are Cal Poly-Pomona, Pacific and Oklahoma State. After today’s doublehedder with NAU, the D evils will await the regionals which begin May 18-19. RENTALS/SALES j , - A a ro n s Over 30 Styles to Choose From ! A rizo n a T u x Sh op s FANTASTIC SELECTION! F r o m $29.95 t o $39.95 RESERVE NOW!! For All Your Formalwear Needs 217 W. UNIVERSITY TEMPE . . “ 6 6 -7 Z 3 5 M o n .-tri: !(W Sat. 10-6 sa t. iu -n Sun. | s N tH in -S j union cinema ‘Where The Stars Gather1 ED U CA TIN G RITA T H E BIG CH ILL APRIL 24-25 26-29 M AY 1-2 R O C K Y III (No Charge) U N IO N C IN E M A - LO W E R L E V E L O F M .U . $1.50 A S U I.D. $2.00 W ithout Littlewood: ‘I talked to my players on Thursday and I think they realize the im portance of this series.’ 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.m. Sunday 5:30 p.m. only A PRESENTATIO N O F M UAB FILM CO M M ITTEE Senior Kim Bickford recorded the victory in the first game as she yielded only one run on four hits. In the second game, Pam White went the first four innings to earn the victory while giving up the two Lumberjack runs. Laura Houle got the save as she went the final three innings without giving up a run or hit. Despite defeating NAU very easily, Littlewood is still a lit­ tle worried about today’s doubleheader. “Our offense needs to be more aggressive,” Littlewood said. ‘‘We cannot have hitters taking called third strikes with the bases loaded.” Littlewood is making reference to last Wednesday s second game against San Diego State as Kelli Pendergrass took a called third strike in the sixth inning with the bases loaded. This was partly responsible for halting a potential ASU rally. “We didn’t have the intensity against the Aztecs,” Lit­ tlewood said. “I talked to m y players on Thursday and I think they realize the importance of this series.” With the knee injuries of Brown and Cheryl Persinger, Lit­ tlewood has been forced to shuffle her defensive alignment Because Kelly Fiehler has played shortstop before, she will 3456 l * Affordable Cleaners A S U S P E C IA L ANY G A R M E N T 890ea. Dry Cleaned & Pressed Pam White will see more starting duty this weekend with Laura Houle moving to the outfield. White has already beaten NAU, this weekend’s opponents, once this season. If ever you see a s u s p ic io u s character — som e guy hanging around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm — call the University P o lic e at 3456, N o nam es necessary. And no v ictim le ss crim es, please.__________________ E x c lu d in g s u e d e & leather; e x c lu d in g w e d d in g d re s s e s . C o u p o n m u st be p re s e n te d w h e n g a rm e n ts are b ro u g h t in. 847 W. University (SE Corner of Univ. & Hardy) (EXPIRES MAY 10. 1984.) YOUR CAR CAN BE YOUR BEST FRIEND Arizona State U niversity DANCE THEATRE in Concert No limit U8 GAMMAGE CENTER APRIL 26 & 27 8:00 P.M. .. or a real dog! Dodoe believes that the more you know about car buying, the better chance you have of choosing right for you. T his Wednedsay from Noon to3:30, test your Auto¿Q. Look for the Dodge banner outeide the South M.U. entrance, ta k e o u r test, talk to experts about financing, insurance and car buying tips. PRIZES FOR ALL PARTICIPANTS. Admission: $5 General $4 ASU Faculty and Staff $3 Students & Senior Citizens T ick e ts on sale at Gam m age Box O ffic e and D iam ond’s O u tlets. FOR INFORMATION CALL M 5 -3 4 3 4 O N THE AUTO 1.0. TEST WEDNESDAY NOON-3:30 C A M PU S-SO U T H SIDE OF M.U. Sponsored by: C hrysler D odge, Earnhardt D odge, and th e ASU MBA A ^ociM ioo Tuesday, April 84, 1W 4 _ L a d y tr s c k s te r s d o w n C o ts , rn©n ©dQ©d Cats’ Barksdale ruins Devil men By Vicki Serna Sports writer The spectators who were on hand at sun Angel Stadium last Saturday for the U of AASU track m eet watched one of the better Huai m eets held there in a long time. The men’s track team s put on a show that Sun Devil coach Len Miller called, 'one of the great dual m eets,” as the Wildcats ^goH the Sun D evils 86-77 in the final dual m eet of the year for both squads. The Cats ended the year with a 4-0 dual meet record, while the D evils wound up 4-3. “The reason we didn’t win Saturday had nothing to do with the people who com­ peted,” Miller said. “It was because of the people who couldn’t compete that we lost. ” ASU’s Ken Frazier won the long jump and broke the school record that had stood since 1981 . t “There was no aiding wind for that tail push,” Miller said. “It was also a new stadium record.” Frazier beat out U ofA’s Vance Johnson, the 1982 NCAA champ in the long jump. Frazier’s jump was 26-8% and, “is the third best jump in the world, I’m not talking col­ legiate, I’m talking in the world,” Miller said. _ Coming in third in the long jump was Sun Devil Deon Mayfield, who jumped his lifetim e best of 25-9% and put him self in the fifth spot on the all-tim e Sun Devil list. In the 800 m eters, Wildcat Andre Woods finished fourth with a time of 1:49.57 and broke his school’s record in that event. “Andre broke the school record but he did not net a point,” Miller said. “Rod Barksdale broke our back with the fastest tim e in the world (in the 200) of 20.25 which is a stadium record as w ell,” M iller said. “And we’ve had some great sprinters run in our stadium .” Sun Devil freshman Mark Boyd placed second in the 110 high hurdles in 14.06 and grabbed the freshman record in that event. He also took second in the 400 intermediate hurdles with a tim e of 52.19, setting another freshman record. Darryl Clack took third place in the 100 .Head . . _j coach Dntfor as mu Roger Kf>rr Kerr w was unable to witness the win because of an urgent m eters behind No. 1 Robinson and No. 2 recruiting meeting. However, a s Aguayo Johnson. _ „ points out, “his being here would have been “Darryl had a big third-place fmish. nice but he really wasn’t needed. His job is Miller said. “Every point was a hard-fought done on Friday. He conferred with the team and told them what he wanted them to do P .... . ... Kaaiawahia also won the discus throw f o v Jr . with 171-4. “She’s throwing at a consistent level and she’s hoping to break her season’s best of 179,” he said. Julie Seleine also was a double winner lairing first in the 1,500 and 3,000 m eters and is .7 seconds away from qualifying for the NCAA’s. Sandy Beach, who holds the school record in the 800-meter run, is only .6 seconds from the NCAA qualifying tim e and Aguayo hopes she’ll qualify next week. Lynn Nelson won the 5,000 with a tim e of 17:20.03. “Lynn did an excellant job,” Aguayo said. ___ . r t n r m . r , in a s u ’s meet on Saturday with Arizona included, clockwise from top left, “She held the pace and ran very comfor­ V - J S tw . T u iy. T il. Sun O m i wwiwn w w . Klctora, tably. She controlled the race.” Lady Sun Devils still undefeated while the men came out on the shortalde of the meoL KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA CELEBRATES b«rtS3a?9LmrS i“onhTkapKpa GamnST^vSre pflnnSSS b irth d ay celebration o f th e ir ow n. , „ , nft The Epsilon D elta Chapter o f Kappa Kappa Gam ma c o lo r e d a t ASU on April 24,1959. in itial plans fo r developing th e chap ter began in 1947: how ever, a few setbacks extended th e d a te to 1959. si. __ T h a t chapter, w hich w as established 25 years ago. has ^ ^ bu lt on consisten t years o f excellence. This year alone, th e Kappas sc h o i» tlc achievem ents placed them firs t am ong all o th er sororities^ hold th e highest overall grade p o in t average, highest active highest pledge class GPA. in fa ct, th e ir average even to p p ed th e overall fem ale undergraduate GPA o f th e en tire university. , _u„ lin r jn r Aside fro m th e ir academ ic aw ards, th e Kappas w ere also a significant p a rt o f th e firs t place Greek Sing team . Earlier this year, th e y to o k firs t place in th e Sigma Nu Coors Relays. _ Th rough th e ir philanthropic e ffo rts this year, o v a - $550 have been d on ated t o various ch a rity organizations. Because o f th e ir work. Good Sam aritan Hospital. ASU Disabled stu d en ts, D esert valley Rehabilitation Center and various nursing hom es have been u p lifte d by visits, holiday tre a ts o r donations. __ ______ O ver th e years, Kappas have proven to be stro n g leaders, yvitnin tn e o a s t fiv e years, tw o Kappas w ere elected president o f th e Associated stu d e n ts o f ASU. various Kappas have also been honored ^ th e ASU w om an o f th e Year. Also w ithin this tim e, th e Kappas received firs t place in b o th scholarship and philanthropy. The title o f Miss Arizona was aw arded to a Kappa im 981. A Kappa was also crow ned Fiesta Bowl Queen in 1982. since th e chapter's establishm ent. Kappas have been im pressively in vo lved a t ASU. Kappa has been consisten tly represented in Associated Students, stu d e n t Foundation, Devils' Advocates, Panheilenic, Greek w eek Chairm en and com m ittees. Greek A ctivities Review P an e l th e Leadership scholarship program , Regents scholars, and various Dean s L P a p p a s have also served as Residents Assistants, Cheer and Pom Pon Girls, in r o t c , Fra te rn ity Little Sisters and m any m ore. N ationally, Kappa Kappa Gam ma has developed 113 chapters since its founding on O ctober 13,1870. Career Awareness Day Sponsored b y Public Programs College Council Wednesday April 25, 1984 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. At Stauffer Hall Patio Find out about Public Programs organizations on campus and cafeer opportunities off-campus: ► Department of Correction ►City of Phoenix Police ►International Business Opportunities ►Bristol Labs ►KPNXTV 12 And Many More Page 19 Tuesday. April 24,1984 STATE P R B S WANNADS* ARE THE CAT’S MEOW! An advertiser had five kittens for whom she needed to find a home. She happily reported that after running a classified for just two days, all five kittens were placed in five individual, cat lovin' homes. Pur-r-r-r. STATE PRESS WANNADS* REALLY WORK visit Room T5 Matthews center or call Announcements Books RENTERS INSURANCE— Protect your personal belongings lo r as little as $43 per year. For information call Steve at gee-3494.___________ _______________ BUY • S E LL • TR A D E SENATOR DENNIS DeConcInl is currently accepting applications for ASU Credit Internships In his Phoenix and Mesa o ffices for the Summer and F a ll 19S4 sem esters. Interested students may obtain an application th is week at the ASASU office In the M.U. _____________________ THE MEN of Delta Sigma Phi wish to congratulate their new officers: prési­ dant, Dean Obenauer; administrative vice-president, B ill Grzesiak; activities vice-president K ris Thoren; and treasurer, Richard G riffin._________ CHANGING HAMOS BOOKSTORE 1974 VW BUG. GoocHsondltion, orange, AM/FM cassette, 73,000 m iles. $2,200 or beet offer. 839-4772._____________ •Amerlcanese fo r waht Ads or Classified 1981 HONDA CIVIC 1500GL. À/C, AM/FM cassette, 45,000 miles. $5,700. Days only, 998-5602. ,______________ 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, house with pool, refrigeration, lovely view of city from South Mountain, com pletely furnished. From May 15 until September 1, possibly until October 1. $350 monthly, security deposit, plus utilities. References required. Call 276-9445.______ FOUR BEDROOM townhouse, two baths. Lease to four students. Com­ munity pool, unfurnished. $600. Call $831-7337. ______________ A QUICK Camera 1974 with fresh 396 Hookers Holly. Auto needs paint, <2,800 or best, 437-2625.________ ... ROOMS IN beautiful residential homes available for summer and fall. Some with pools. Special summer rates. Temps Roommate Services, no fee. 897-7030 or 966-5237. ___________ INSURANCE at low com petitive rates, lower then Farmer», State Farm, Allstate. Call Steve at 96G3494.______ _ FOR SALE 1969 Volkswagon Bug. New paint, velour interior, excellent condi­ tion. $1,500 negotiable. 'C a ll Tim 437*1716. ________________ FRIENDS MEETING Unprogrammed Quaker Service. 9:30 a m Sundays Dantorth Chapel, ASU. (967-6040). Babysitters Wanted SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES this summer. Ken Schwartz. 988-3318 or 965-3319._____________________ __ EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER lor four children. 2:30 p.m. to early evening, 2— 3 deys weekly. 897-8569.____________ a u to EXTRA NICE townhouse. Three be­ drooms, two baths. Bike to ASU. A ll appliances, community pool, w ill lease to four students. Unfurnished, $525. Furnished, $575. Call Ruth 831-1300 or 897-8196. ______ ^ aG O O SO O O O O CO O O O O O O CO CCO O O O CO O O CO CO CCl state pies S F a ll s e m e s t e r i PRODUCTION DEPT. STUDENT HOURLY JOBS (1) Mon., Tues., w ed., Thurs., Fri. 1:30 p.m. till ap p ro xim ately 4 p.m. NEWS PACE PASTE-UP GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,559— $50, 553/ year. Now hiring. Your area. Call 1-905-687-8000, extension R-9624. Motorcycles LIQUOR SALES clerk 25- 35 hours weekly, hours flexible. Must be mature and well groomed specializing in wine sales. No experience necessary. Nice North East Phoenix shopping center. 5031 N. 16th St. Apply lOflO- 4:00 Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. 10:0012:00 Monday and Wednesday._______ MARKETING / SALES requires market­ ing background or student currently enrolled or Interested In a marketing program. Com m ission only. C ell 2567960 ask tor J.C. Straus._____________ OPINION POLL, friendly person who enjoys phone work. Permanent parttime, evenings, Sundays. 274-8200, Melody alter 3 « ) p.m._______ ,______ SUMMER WORK openings— $1.340 month. Excellent experience, college credit and travel. Celt 829-2997._______ 1978 JE E P C-JS, $5,000. A lso a Brother E M 100 Typewriter Printer com patible $500.831-8065.____________ HOT POINT microwave. Auto probe, rack, recipe program, delay start. Used only four months. $489 new, asking $350.996-5602. days o n ly .___________ OLIN MARK IV com petitive skis with Solomon 626 bindings, 170cm, $100. Felicia, 829Q72B evenings.__________ ! You should have class o r job paste-up skills and be able to assem ble all th e elem ents o f an ad: copy, j artw ork and borders; and produce camera-ready ; mechanicals. M ust be a tte n tiv e to detail, be extrem ely neat, reliable, precise, and be able to follow w ritte n directions. DAYS & HOURS SUMMER JOBS. Recreation leaders: gymnastics, dance, drama, camping, cheer, homemaking, art, modeling, karate. Scottsdale G irls Club. 948-6020. PorSale 1984 AD PASTE-UP GENERAL CONTRACTOR, property management firm has part-time cleri­ cal position open. Flexible hours, must have transportation. Contact Jackie, 2720801.;: ’’ :v JOB OPENING. Telephone Interviewers tor telephone survey. $4.00 hourly. Contact Tom Borris weekdays before 3:00 p.m. 8040728,907-4441._________ 414 MM A nn as 999-0203 Old Town Temp« $/, Automobiles H e lp W an ted HEY GALS, guys. Lots of money, best phone room in valley. New promotion, we pay hourly or com m ission or both. Flexlbls hours. C all B ill, 9664)629. P o r R en t o r L e a se _ 965-7572 (You can be tutted) Announcements your book, at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, ptaeae) we p«y 30% ot our w-aale price In cash or 60% In tradein credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no tiade-fne on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •New 6 Ustd Books •Art Prints A Posters •Calendars 8 Cards •Handbound Journals M -F10-9 8 A T 10-6 SUN 12-« Help W an ted TWO TICKETS anywhere Eastern Airlines flie s for 20% less than you can purchase. C e il after 5:00,839-61S2. WAYLON JENNINGS and W illy Nelson concert tickets. Good sssts. 945-8868. KUNDALINI YOGA/ MEDITATION fo r strength e n d ¡o y You m ust have class o r job experience in paste-up techniques. You .will assem ble and paste-up all o f the news page elements: te xt, headlines, cutlines and photos. M ust be accurate and have th e ability to follow w ritte n direction s and be extrem ely reliable. DAYS & HOURS w e d .4 p .m .-7 p .m . Thurs. 6 p.m.-9 p.m. Friday 1 p.m.-5 p.m Sunday 2 p.m.-9 p.m. PROCESS CAMERAPERSON Will operate an A c t 20x24 horizontal camera. W ork will corisist o f sh o o tin g PMT’s, line and halftone negatives, and sh ooting & opaquing S ta te Press negatives. DAYS & HOURS M on-Thurs. 4:30-7:30 p.m Fri. 1 1 a.in .-5 p.m. Sun. 2 p.m.-4 p.m. ADVENTURE... CHALLENGE . .. PROFESSIONALISM! 4/24 morning and evening classes SUMMER WORK 968-3274 Enjoy beautiful A rizona summer T H E Y O G A C LU B NO RELOCATION!!! LEARN TO TYPE Basic Math skills required <$150 to $400 per week) 30 words a minute possible in four (4) weeks A sk for “A SU Special" when you call Call Tempe 966-1847 Phoenix 955-1658 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. only 966-7111 Keyboarding Lab 23 W. 7th St., Suite 104 Tempe, AZ 85281 NEW TIMES Has Immediate Openings Just acro ss M ill from A SU Visa/Mastercard Accepted 5/1 H e lp W an ted BARTENDERS, COCKTAIL and day food waitresses, cooks needed. Apply 9th and Ash Restaurant, after 6:00. CRUISESHIPS HIRING, $ 1 6 - $30,0001 Carribean, Hawaii, World. Call fpr G u id e , D ire c to ry , N e w sle tte r. 14916)944-4444 x Arizona State Cruise. Part-time RECEPTIONIST, noon to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Experience preferred. Call Michelle Con­ nell at 271-0040. Part-time CLERK/TYPIST (Full-time available for sum­ mer). Call. Michelle Connell for information, 271-0040. HERE FOR SUMMER? IKED COM COMFORTABLE WORK? EVEMHSS MID WEEKENDS: PART-TIME PLEASE DO NOT APPLY IF YOU CANNOT WORK THESE PUBLISHED HOURS. Applicants m u st pick up a re fe rra l fo rm from Student E m p lo ym en t in M atth ew s center, and a sta te Press p ro d u ctio n job application from th e re ce p tio n desk a t th e S ta te Press office, basem ent o f M a tth ew s center. Persons selected fo r inter- view w ill be called for interview during th e w eek o f M ay 1. SENIOR NURSE STUDENTS r r r Ä following pm f — T r “ “ '' 1:3oSa1urday. 8:00 to 1:00 Sunday Our sales people w ^ . ln a Ä o“ « is t o c a t e d o n e b lo c k n o rth w e s t o f U n iv e rs it y a n d M m PLEASE CALL DIALAMERICA FOR OETAILS. _______ . wmw&iw SHARE DRIVING and gas to Oes Molnea-Chicago area. Depart ap­ proximately May 11th. C all Jim , 9884)822. ______________ ______ Travel_________ 1981 HONDA EXPRESS motorcycle. 130 mpg, baskets Included, excellent condition. C ell F e licia 8290728, $250. AIRLINE COUPONS, buy or aell. Hawaii $325, Alaska $380. Vtt price New York, Chicago, Atlanta, alao many other savlnga. Round trip or one way. Art, 968-7283._______________________ _ P e r s o n a l__________ GIRLS WHO like to travel. Young businessman, 27, goes from Phoenix to Colorado Springs often. WoultJ like company. Lots of fun. Howard; 2435300,966-2451._______ INCREASE YOUR chances to win the Commodore 64 Computer. Bring this add to the ASU Bookstore and we’ll give you 5 entry forms. One ad per customer. Good only April 24.'________ OUTRAGEOUS! You don’t have to pay outrageous premiums for auto or cycle insu rance)! To decrease your premiums $$$ substantially call Apollo Insurance. Don’t wait, time la $$$! 951-2255.______ ^_________________ "YOUNG, ATTRACTIVE, educated, and rich young man seeks attractive blond or redhead. Photo appreciated. P.O. Bek 97152, Phoenix, 85069."_________ ALMOST NOTHING down. Beautiful Lakes two bedroom condominium. 20% below appraisal, assume existing loan. Must aell! 894-5306, keep ttylng. BY OWNER near ASU. Large home four bedroom, three baths. $88,500. Call 967-8307 attar 8:00 p.m._____________ FOR SALE, sm all, Immaculate, two bedroom home. 514 W. 12th. Tempe. Call owner 438-2433. $52,900.________ Roommate wanted CHRISTIAN ROOMMATE wanted mid May, $195/ month plus Vk utilities. Lets talk. 835-5528,949-5635 keep trying. An exciting job with opportuni­ ties for world-wide travel, career development, professional growth, excellent benefits. BSN graduates or senior students are eligible. If you're going to be someone, sp ecial. . . Be a Navy Nurse! For more information, call collect (602) 256-7632 between 9 a.m 5 p.m. Mon.-Wed. Instruction (1) Highly responsible positions lor col­ lege seniors and graduates (through age 34) in financial and logistic sup­ port. The Navy Supply Corps needs highly qualified, dynamic individuals to lead and manage large inventory and financial networks. Salary $18.500 to start. $34.000 after tour years. Excel­ lent benefits package. Need BA/BS. U.S. citizenship. Call Naval Manage­ ment Programs, 256-7632 collect be­ tween 9 a.m-5 p.m. Mon.-Wed. LOOKING FOR rider to share driving and coat to Beat coast May 11— 12. CaH. 988-7727.____________________ 1979 KAWASAKI 750 Twin. Must sell! Leaving town. Best offer. C all Cart at 965-7572 Of 947-5521 now!___________ R e a l E sta te BUSINESS AND TECHNICAL MAJORS Transportation CONDO FOR rent. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 m iles from ASU. Pool, Jaccuzzi, $600. month, fully lum lshed. University and Price. For summer months. 829-0770 Matt or Lett. •___________ ;________ FEMALE ASU summer school student needed to share spacious two bedroom apartment. Dishwasher, pool, tennis courts, $190 monthly plus deposit including utilities. Near Southern and M ill. C all April, 966-3589.__________ HOUSEMATES WANTED, two rooms completely furnished but w ill remove. $125 a month plus Vk utilities, $225 deposit. Non-smokers, lightweight partiers only. Nice secure place. 946-3499. _______________ MALE NON-SMOKING graduate stu­ dent for room In lour bedroom house at University and Priest. $200/ month in summer, $150/ month In winter. Call Brad or Baback at 6:00 p.m. 829-9413. NEED A roommate to share apartment from mid- May to mid- August. $1501 month plus Vk utilities. Call, 968-7727. RESPONSIBLE FEMALE. Furnished private room. N ice house, good neighborhood, 2Vk m iles ASU. $150 Includes utilities, non-smoker. 831-5599 Or831-8578. ______________ _ SUMMER TO share two bedroom condominium. Includes own bedroom, washer, dryer, dishwasher, carport, arid pool. $265 plus electric. Close ASU at Papago Park. 9664)160 Phil, anytime after 6:00 P.m. ______ 1 THIRD ROOMMATE for three bedroom condominium. Location M cClintock and University. $190 plus vk utilities. 96843748, ask tor Lori. ________ TWO FEM ALES to share room In apartment. $107 monthly plus Vk utilities. Broadway and College, dlshwasher. 829-9334 alter 5:00. Annette. S e r v ic e s CARS AVAILABLE • 21 or older. A ll States Drive-away, 992-5200._________ COMPUTER TERMINALS with modem tor rent. $35.00 per month. 2464)172. GOING AIJVAY for the summer? Need a safe place to store your possessions? Try Sentinel Storage, Rural Road and .G ilbert Dr. Over Tempe bridge 4x4 to 12x12 8 967-0022. _________ ' GOOD STUDENTS save 25% on auto *' insurance. Q ualified non-smokers save 18%. Call Steve, 8314)121. Farmers ASU representative. ______ f______ GRADUATION PORTRAITS, clubs, groups, model portfolios, architectural portfolios, etc. Very reasonable. C elt 835-0843, keep trying. _________ ; TIRED OF being ripped off on auto repair? Guaranteed, expert work done by professionals. ASU area- Dennis. FREE CARS available lo r all major cities. C all us now, AAA Con Auto Transport. 2644)201._______________ Tÿping A-1 PROFICIENT typist, IBM Selectric. Resumes, theses, term papers, dlssertetions. Pam, 969-2098. ________ A-1 PROFICIENT typing, IBM Selectric. Loraine, 833-8365. University and Dobson In M esa " _____ ADVANCED WORD Processing Center: Offers the most advanced word processing applications (not Just a home computer), with a letter quality printer. Prices com petitive or better than typing services (as low as .50 per pagel), tree pick-up and document storage. Legal background and 115 WPM. Profit from these advantages. call 829-2314._____________________ ALL TYPING done fast and accurate. 1.00 a page. Word processing availa­ ble. Close to ASU. C all Carlo or Bobbl 968-9166._______________________ _ ALWAYS DEPENDABLE, typing edit­ ing, term papers, books, dissertations, resumes. Excellent skills. Shirley’s Typing Service 838-5099.____________ ANNIE'S SECRETARIAL Service- 8388804. Term papers, reports, theses, manuscripts, etc. A ll typed and proofed.________ ___ A-PLÙS Typing. Term Papers, Re­ sumes', securities and finance papers a specialty. Papers completed on Electronic memorywriter. C all Judy 8 3 9 4 )4 0 1 .______________________ CLOSE TO campus. 414 S. M ill #205, 894-5234. Graduate, undergraduate typing, graphics. Professional work, reasonable rates.____ ___________ CONVENIENT TO campus. Fast, friendly, fair, professional typing and graphics. Call 24 hours, 694-5234. CUSTOM TYPING. Correcting Selec­ tric. Near College Avenue between Broadway andSouthern. 966-0961____ EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Fast, pro­ fessional work, IBM Selectric. $1.00 per page. Chert. 967-3747 evenings.______ FAST, ACCURATE typing on IBM, editing, corrections. $1.00 a page. Nancy, 264-1955 days.______________ FORMER LEGAL secretary types term papers, manuscripts, letters, resumes, takes dictation. Minor editing. Margie, 994-3759. _______ ______________ HIGH QUALITY, great prices. Word processing and typing. Call J & P Enterprises. 894-9607.______________ Ml CASA Secretarial. Fast and re­ asonable typing, word processor. 831-8218._______ _ _ NORTHW EST PHOENIX, q uality typing. Theses, dissertations, research projects. 936-3397_________________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Close to ASU. C all Brenda, 9644)273.__________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING, word pro­ cessing, resumes, reports, etc. Call Carol, 834-3056 or leave message 964-2693. ______________________ QUALITY WORD processing. Be­ an sonable prices. Economical re­ visions. Can communicate with ASU computers. Pamela Polom, 438-1178. ST A T E- O F- Tb«- A rt- w ord processing tor papers, resum es, theses, dissertations. Quality guarantaed. 990-1556,244-1259.____________ TERM PAPERS, theses, word process­ ing, $1.75 page. Ten years experience. Resumes: North Central Phoenix, 277-8182._______________________ _ TMC SECRETARIAL Typing/ Word processing. Students, business, re­ sumes. Seven days a week. Call. 967-6965.897-1595. _______________ TYPING, EDITING class papers, re­ sumes. letters. Twenty years ex­ perience. Scottsdale- Tempe area. 945-7430, Barbara Andersen. _______ TYPING SERVICE! Fast return, re­ asonable rates. Theses, Term Papers, Resum es. F lyin g Fingers. Lori 8204)732. * . *?, • X-CELLENT QUALITY on correcting typewriter, editing, d issertation s, theses, etc. Begin $1.35. Northwest Mesa. Leah. 962-1059.________ W anted PAYING CASH for gold, silver and diamonds, class rings. M ill Avenue a trifl) Avenue.. .v s ra L ’ t April 24,1984 Page 20 THE RICHNESS OF DARK BEER. THE SMOOTHNESS OF MICHEIOB. Michelob* invites you to enjoy an exceptional dark beer. Michelob Classic Dark.” Its a rare combination of the robust Savor of dark beer w ith the classic smooth and mellow taste that comes from one beer alone. Michelob. MICHEIOBCLASSIC SOME THINGS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES» Know when to say when, enjoy in moderation. ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC BREWERS OF MICHELOB CLASSIC DARK • BEER • ST LOUIS- MO USA fC *>£VcYi V' , «Vtf-V eV.*" ' *''**-■ »>Vi . •****** £