th u rs d a y J u ly 2 6 .1 9 8 4 Three unpaid citations will get the boot Fall parking plans include p rice hikes, installation of com puterized gates By M.G. Khan Staff w riter A increase in fees, new enforcement policies and lot modifications characterize the parking plan for the 1984-85 school year. The new fee schedule establishes the following prices: • $350 for 24-hour reserved parking; Arizona State Universi V o l. 9 N o. 8^ ) Copyright, Stetti Pros, 1964 • $300 for 12-hour reserved parking; • $170 for B decal parking (available only to University vice presidents and college deans); • $70 for controlled access parking (interior lots); • $47.50 for open parking (outer lots within the campus pro­ per); • $43.50 for lim ited parking (lots 40 and 42); • $33.50 for perim eter parking (accross University D rive); • $33 for resident parking; • $26.50 for motorcycle parking; • $38.50 for disabled student parking; and • $55 for disabled faculty and staff parking. The price increases were based on an overall plan for­ m ulated last year which projected graduated rates for the following three years. This year’s prices do not reflect the original projected increase, however. ASU President J. Russell Nelson decided that because University employees will not receive salary increases unfit January, decals would be increased only by half the initial projection. While the fee schedule for citations will not change for the fall sem ester, collection efforts will be stepped up. The new collection policy establishes that a rhino boot will be put on vehicles that have three or m ore unpaid citations against them . The boots, designed to immobilize the car, will be removed by police only after paym ent has been made, in­ cluding a $50 fee to remove the rhino boots. We shouldn’t allow someone to accum ulate more than three tickets,” ASU D irector of Public Safety C. Russell Dun­ can said. “It shows a disregard of the system , a free ride off what others payfor and it builds up an indebtedness that will be an impassible financial impact. ” He said the most common violation is not having a decal. He said in an attem pt to remedy this problem his departm ent will forego the first citation if it is brought in the sam e day it is received and a decal is purchased a t the sam e time. Duncan said the intent of his departm ent is to register vehicles, not to ticket them. “We don’t want citations,” he said. “I t can be a good contkMMd pag« 2 High wind*, of lightning were the re­ sult of a m onsoon that hit Tem po last week. T h is photograph o f two large satellite dishes w » taken outside the studios of K A ET -T V , Channel 8. S tan p h o to by M ich aal C on nor ¡•v,V*,».1 Three ASU profs vying for Arizona Legislature posts B yJerryB row n Staff w riter Two ASU faculty m em bers have thrown their hats into the ring as candidates vying for two of the three seats iVpra m itiiig Tempe’s D istrict 27 in the Arizona State Legislature. > R ichard Dagger, political science professor, will run as a Democrat against Republican incumbents Doug Todd and Bev Herm an for one of the d istrict’s two seats in the Arizona ‘ E d u catio n needs to be im proved. The governor’s ta sk fo r c e . . . co n ce n tra te s on m ath and scie n ce . I th in k oth er areas need equal a tte n tio n .’ House of Representatives, while Victor Heller, director for study of Travel and Tourism, will oppose fellow Republican Juanita Harelsoa for the district’s lone Senate seat. A third faculty m ember, political science professor Heinz Hink, also wifi seek a seat in the House representing Scottsdale. Dagger said even though no one issue helped him decide to run for the seat, education is a high priority. “I have some ideas that I- would like to express as a m ember of the legislature,” Dagger said. “I have nothing personal against the people presently representing the district, b u t there are some differences of opinion. “Education needs to be improved,” Dagger said. “The governor’s force has been a move in the right direction, but it concentrates on m ath and science. I think other areas need equal attention;:" D a g g e r s a id h e is in f a v o r o f a lo n g e r s c h o o l y e a r . “Arizona has one of the shorter school years in the country,” Dagger said. “Extending the school year from nine to 10 months would make the state equal with most of the nation.” Teaching political science has helped Dagger keep up with m ajor issues. “I have always been fascinated with politics,” Dagger said. “Teaching keeps me interested in the movement of the political system .” Dagger said Tempe’s biggest problem in the future will be handlingits booming growth. “We have no striking m iners and except for the Fornoff m urder, crim e in the city has been controlled quite well,” Dagger said. “But handling the growth this city will encounter in the near future will be a huge task. “Tempe is fast becoming a city of subdivisions,” Dagger said. “ I would like to see more neighborhoods, the kind that Tempe used to have but are now disappearing. ’’ Heller said he decided to run because he was “side of seeing short-term m easures pass without thought to long­ term effects. < . . . “We need a plan for the future when changes are m ade,” Heller said. “Not enough thought goes into the planning stages. “The transportation system in Tempe is a disgrace. For a city that will grow as quickly as this one, m ajor changes are needed to prepare for file growth, ” Heller said. He said the legislators were “asleep a t the wheel” with regard to the state’s indigent health care plan and feels his' opponent’s ability to rem ain objective is suspect. “My opponent (Harelson) is on the Board of Directors for Desert Sam aritan Hospital,” Heller said. “How can she rem ain objective about the whole system? ” ‘The transportation system in Tem pe is a disgrace. Fo r a c ity that w ill grow as q u ick ly a s th is one, m ajor chang es are n e e d e d . . . ’ Birth Heller and Dagger plan to keep their jobs with the University if elected. nagger «aid there is both a positive and negative side to r u n n in g for office as a University faculty member. “ (I) may get some votes from people who work at ASU because they think I will give the University the benefit of the doubt on some m easures,” Dagger said. “But people outside the school will think that every tim e an appropriation for ASU comes to a vote, I will approve it.” Heller will run against Harelson in the September prim ary, while naggar is unopposed until the general election on Nov. Summer State Ptk m July 26,1984 Page 2 Parking RARE LION RESALE oonttmiMl front p«fi1 revenue base, but that’s not the purpose of parking. The pur­ pose is to assure a parking place.” Duncan added that, statistically, the new system is work­ ing. During the 1982-83 school year, 90,000 tickets were written. That num ber decreased by 18,000 during die 1983-84 year. The number of reserved parking spaces has been reduced significantly this year, according to D irector of Parking and Transit Ed Hickcox. He said it was decided that no new reserved stalls would be allotted, that only renewal applica­ tions from last year’s reserved parking buyers wougl be ac­ cepted. Only 136 of the 240 spaces reserved last year have been renewed. Hickcox saidthe reason for the reduction is two-fold, based both on consumer demands and on practical use of space, “There is a growing awareness that reserved stalls repre­ sent an inefficient use of space, space that is empty a good deal of the tim e,” he said. “Also, I think the new system , bas­ ed on lim itin g the number of decals, is working well. People are realizing a reserved decal is not necessary.” Hickcox said besides the elimination of die reserved stalls, few changes in lot designations will be made. The most notable of those changes will be the conversion of Lot 26 (immediately east of die Engineering Center) from a visitor lot into a controlled access lo t In addition, Lot 46 (east of the bridge on University D rive), which was completely controlled access will be modified so th at die west end will serve as a paid visitor lo t Alan b eg in n in g In the fall, electronic gates will be installed in all controlled access lots (1,8,12,13,26,41 and on Orange S treet). Hickcox said die equipment will be completely com-, puterized. A fine selection of retro-Vogue clothing costumes, jewelry and accessories. “Drivers will use electronic key cards in readers that will energize the electronic arm to move, ’’ he said. “This will be a beneficial arrangem ent. It will elim inate the need to watch gates with personnel. ” Duncan said each parking control gate would cost 16,000 and its life expectancy is figured a t 15 to 20 years. M aintenance cost for each gate is expected to be approx­ im ately $500. Duncan said die annual salary for a guard to monitor the controlled access for expanded day shifts would run approxim ately $8,900 per year. BUYING • SELLING TRADING 722 S. Mill A v e , Tempe 968-6074 Duncan added that die cards will be coded in the computer as each is sold. He said that cards reported lost or stolen would immediately be rejected by the system, eliminating il­ legal use. Hickcox said the only other changes will be some pay park­ ing m eters added to various interior areas, including Lot 44 (near the R itter Building) and Gammage lots. Lot 44 also will have some additional space in the fall because of the removal of some trailers, Hickcox said. Miscellaneous improvements, including paving and strip­ ing Lot 42 (across from the College of Law) and constructing designated tram stops in Lot 50 (near Sun Devil Stadium) also will be made. The tram schedule will not be affected. Decals will be available to students beginning August 1. Students whose last names begin with "A” through “L” should report to Room A-118 of the Physical Sciences BniMing to purchase decals, while students with last names beginning with “M” through “Z” can buy them in thé Classroom Office Building Room 205. Faculty and staff decals will be distributed beginning August I through University departm ents. All Party Occasiona Birthday. , Going Away Coatum* Surprise .CALL - STRIPPER 244-0575 “Male & Female Strippers 25% O F F WITH THIS AD . S t u r t delivers. Africans participate in English program In an effort to upgrade the teaching of E n g lish as a second language in other p arts of the world, the ASU American Language and C ulture Program (ALCP) is hosting 30 educators from two African countries as participants in the University’s first “English as a Foreign Language Summer Institute. ” During the 25-day program , which began July 16, English teachers, cur­ riculum sp ecialists an d teacher trainers from the countries of Rwanda and Togo participate in a series of sem inars, workshops, evaluations and cultural activities. The ASU institute is sponsored and funded by a $70,000 grant from the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Af- fairs of the U.S. Information Agency in Washington, D.C. Goals of the institute include ac­ quainting the African participants with practices and theories in teaching, training and supervision; enhancing the participants’ English speaking and listening abilities; presenting the direc­ tions of current and future teaching methods; and showing a part of the culture of the American Southwest. Workshops are being chaired by ASU faculty members and visiting lecturers. Cultural activities include visits to the Painted Desert, Grand Canyon, Montezuma’s Castle, Rawhide, Heard Museum and the State Capitol. Also in­ cluded in the itinerary are trips, to baseball games and weekend stays with Arizona host families. Participants in the institute also will visit the Navajo Indian Reservation near Holbrook, where they will observe teaching methods in native American schools and will have an opportunity to practice what they have learned there. Ruth Wineberg, faculty associate of ASU’s ALCP, is coordinator of the in­ stitute and is assisted by ASU staff members Montgomery Van W art, director of the ALCP; Frank Hull, director of the Office of International Progam s; and Mark Elder, director of the Division of Preaw ard Services. —ASU News Bureau DHANLAXM I R. MERCHANT. D.D.S. SIERRA DERITAL ASSOCIATES University Medical Cehcer . Suite S N orth 2 5 2 5 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 8 8 6 -9 9 3 8 Mon.-Fri. 8 am -5 p.m. e S at By Appointment •F ree Oral Exam & Treatm ent Plan •C osm etic Bonding •AD Crown-!! Bridge Work All in s u r a n c e W elcom e •P artial & Full Dentures •Periodontal Problems •Convenient to ASU, ’ L mm I M O f f to A B U S tu d e n ts 1 1 Bring this ad for additional 10% off on your first visit F ree 1 2 ” C h e e se P iz z a w ith purchase of Large Pizza Get a free 12” Cheese Pizza valued at $3.25 w hen you purchase a Large Pizza w ith this coupon. A dditional item s on Sm all Pizza .60 each. Not valid with any other coupon! Expires Aug. 15,1964. Open Moiu-Thurs. 4 p-mu-midnight Fri. 4 p.m.-2 a.m., Sat. noon-2 a.m .. Sun. noon-midnight OHIO'S PIZZA 966-4666 822 S. Mill Avenue We’ve been delivering in Tempe since 1970. ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF EDDCAT10N AFFIRMATIVE ACTION PLAN POLICY STATEMENT It is the policy of the Arizona Departm ent of Education (ADE) to conduct a personnel program built upon equality a n d fair­ ness to all, without regard to race, color, sex, religion, nationdl origin, age, disability status (except when any of these factors is an existing bona fide occupational qualification) or political affiliation, (except for certain specified em ployees in the u n ­ classified service). All m anagem ent personnel shall actively support recruit­ m ent and c a re e r developm ent program s to en su re equitable representation of minority, female and h an d icap p ed persons in all job categories. The ADE shall establish an d annually u pdate an affirmative action plan including reasonable goals and tim etables to a d ­ dress underutilization of minority, female a n d h an d icap p ed persons. The departm ent shall cooperate fully with the G over­ nor's Office of Affirmative Action in the preparation of the Equal Employment Opportunity annual report. Page 3 Thuraday.Jmyg6.1984 Summer State Press —Summer Specials— W ith coupon o n ly. Professor leaving ASU to take post in Alaska d ia rie s L. Eveland, professor and director of die ASU Center for Health Services Adm inistration since its inception in 1974, will leave his position next month to become ex­ ecutive director of the Medicaid R ate Commission for the State of Alaska, Anchorage. Before coining to ASU, Eveland was director and professor of the U.S. Army-Baylor University G raduate Program in' Health Care Administration from 1989 to 1974. A farewell reception in honor of Eveland, who has also served as assistant dean of the Baylor University, Waco, Texas, G raduate School, will be held from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Jil­ ly 27 in the MU alumni lounge. Four named to staff of ASU Computer Institute ASU’s off-campus Computer Institute in Tower Plaza welcomed four staff members when it becam e operational July 16. Gary B itter, acting director, said Norman G arrett of Glen­ dale, Delores Christensen of Tempe, Craig Blurton of Mesa and David Clough of Scottsdale will staff the facility. B itter said that O arrett has been appointed assistant direc­ tor, Christensen is adm inistrative assistant, Blurton will serve as assistant director and instructional specialist and Clough is the facility’s accounting elerk. For the past year and a half, G arrett has been employed as an academ ic computing specialist a t ASU. P rior ,to that, he worked as a program er-analyst for the Anchor National Life Insurance Company, and was a system s engineer for Elec­ tronic D ata Systems. Christensen, a certified secondary teacher, was form erly business m anager a t Pine, Arizona, Elem entary School, and worked two years as a self-employed travel agent. Blurton, a doctoral candidate in education, has been employed as a graduate teaching assistant since January 1981. P rior to that he taught at Lookout Mountain Elemen­ tary School in Phoenix and the-W ayne Highlands School D istrict in Honesdale, Pa. He also was residential director of the Project for the Study of Academic Precocity during toe sum m ers of 1981 and ’82. Since July 1981, Clough has been employed as an accoun­ ting clerk in ASU’s Hayden Library. From 1979-81 he worked as a library assistant. - < The new Computer Institute a t Tower Plaza is located in 10,000 square feet of computer-equipped classroom and office space leased from the from the Computer Showcase. More than 100 students are able to use individual com­ puters simultaneously and specialized sem inar rooms are available to m eet customized training demands. ' '•■■■ . . . y | i Prof salvages, transcribes 17th-century 'soap opera' A 17th-century novel of politics and love has been rescued from oblivion by an ASU professor arm ed with a personal computer. “Rivall Friendship,” a 700-page m anuscript by an anonymous English author, soon will be available (m floppy disks through two of toe nation’s top research libraries. The book is a kind of Renaissance soap opera starring two friends, Phasellus and Prince Diomed, both with a claim to the Roman Em pire and both in love with the sam e woman. The woman—Artabella, niece of Achemenes, King of Persia — really loves Phasellus, but her father has promised her to Diomed. The plot is complicated by A rtabella’s m ar­ riageable cousin, Princess Oriana, and by Phasellus’ bizarre suicide attem pt. Jeanie Brink, director of the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies a t ASU, found the m anuscript three years ago a t the Newberry Library in Chicago. After deter­ mini it was the only copy in existence, she decided it was worth preserving. “You think of all the tone it took to write, including the draft and final script, then realize all of that labor is lost if no one else sees the work,” she says. Brink brought a microfilm copy of the novel back to ASU, where with funds from the University and the National En­ dowment for the Humanities, she spent 1,200 hours editing and transcribing toe story onto two dozen floppy disks. Ar­ chaic handwriting and variant spellings made following the complex plot more difficult. Brink spent three weeks in Chicago last month checking her edited version against the original work. Computer edi­ tions of “Rivall Friendship” will be available early next year from the Newberry and from the Clark Library in Los Angeles. Brink hopes to publish a bode edition within a year. She considers the project a prim e example of how state-ofthe-art technology can aid researchers in the humanities. “We’re not just here to discover things,” she added. “We’re here to preserve culture, as well." The Yi OFF Haircuts First tim e clients only. i Focus 21 Perm $29.50 Sculptured Nails $19.50 I h a ir p e r f o r m e r s 9-9 Mon.-Fri. • Sat. 9-6 903 S. R u ral R d . • 894-0184 905 S. Mill Tempe Center Tempe, Arizona 85281 (802) 829-1743 SH O P Come into our present loca­ tion and look for us at the C ornerstone (Rural & Uni­ versity) August 1984. 9 6 6 -2 1 5 0 s u n t a n n in g Introducing Study indicates video games ^ are not on the way out Despite declines in video-game sales, an ASU researcher says electronic entertainm ent is here to stay. Rolf Wigand of ASU’s Center for Public Affaire surveyed last fall about'300 Valley teen-agers and young adults who answered more than 100 questions on their use of video games. “What I found is that all sorts of good social activity hap­ pens in video-game parlors,” according to Wigand, who presented his findings in May a t toe annual-convention of toe International Communications Association. “People do go there jo be with other people. ” , Wigand adm its those people are decreasing in num ber. In 1983 Americans spent about $3.5 billion in quarters to play video gam es, down from $6 billion in 1982. But industry reports show an increase in home video-game p la y in g , for the sam e reasons, Wigand said, that arcades becam es so popular. “Young and old placers alike are challenged by video gam es,” he said. “They give people a chance to live out fan­ tasies, and to act out aggressions that have no other outlet. Video gam es have a calming effect, and th at’s one of their biggest attractions.” NOTICE TO ASU STUDENTS The ASU com ptroller’s Office fs happy to assist present and form er students In obtaining financial credit w ith off-cam pus organizations. For those who have established a good paym ent history w ith ASU, we wiH prepare credit reference letters upon request. This can be usefuMn applying fo r a credit card or in the purchase o f a car or home. This is handled by the Accounts Receivable and Collections Office, Admin. Building 104,965-5220. Eligibility criteria fo r this program is available a t this office. To assist students in understanding our approaches to collecting am ounts owed ASU, we note, th a t our collection procedures include: •com pliance w ith a Regents' policy th a t prohibits a student from registering fo r classes, receiving a diploma, or transcript who is delinquent in paying am ounts owed ASU, • a $10 processing charge fo r bad checks, and if the check is not repaid w ithin 5 days, a second $10 charge; • a possible $10 late charge for receivable billings not paid by the due date, depending oh the am ount and number o f days past due, and if n ot paid w ithin 30 days o f this first charge, a second $ 10 charge,- and •possible assignment to a collection agency, w ith potential credit bureau reporting, fo r receivable billings significantly past due. The ASU Accounts Receivable and Collections Departm ent is able tO: •assist you in determ ining who to con tact if you receive a billing you believe may be in error; and ' •p ro vid e guidance and financial counseling t o those facing significant financial hardships in meeting paym ent obligations. 1 I I Gail Camelin, Manicurist A %%s B rin g in th is ad and receive five visits in o u r Klafsun T a n n in g B o o th s for $5. 43 E. Broadway &Broadway Tem pe, A z. Com er of Mill M -F 9-8 PM Sat. 9-6 PM J u s t ic e s t u d ie s FALL CLASSES AT MESA HIGH SCHOOL Only 15 m inutes from ASU No parking problem s Sm all classes CRJ 340 Juvenile Justice (SLN #73999) Thurs. 6:40-9:30 Mary Ann Legarski CRJ 462 Procedural Criminal Law (SLN #74040) Tues, 6:40-9:30 Gayle Shuman CRJ 494 Future issues In Justice (SLN #74079) wed. 6:40-9:30 Tom schade Cr j 494 ST: Domestic violence (SLN #74082) Mon. 6:40-9:30 Kathy Ferraro CRJ 494 ST: W hite Collar Crime (SLN #74107) Mon. 6:40-9:30 Paul Roshka « I II I P rm Thera are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance. — Hippocrates The shoo-in Reagan's chances depend on uninformed electorate Editor Ronald Reagan’s future hinges on the ignorance of his constituents. A vast m ajority of political observers expect him to be re-elected overwhelmingly, not because of what he’s done, but because of what it looks like he’s done. I m ust believe that those of the president’s supporters who are aw are of his shortcomings but who want him re-elected anyway are counting on this substantial “ignorance factor.” Because the American public is relatively content — they weren’t four years ago or eight years ago — they’ll reward the president for their contentment. This sense of well-being has translated into political inertia. Even a quick glance a t the Reagan Record belies the rosy picture painted by the adm inistration. One begins to realize that their greatest accomplishment is the positive perception by future voters of the president’s deeds and the aura of success surrounding him. The econom y. F irst let me say that I have never believed in a direct relationship between presidential policies and the health of the economy. I didn’t believe it when Jim m y C arter was tossed out of office in the m idst of double-digit inflation, etc., and I don’t believe it now that Ronald Reagan is soaking up credit for our “recovery.”-In fact, the “recovery” is due less to the president’s supply-side policy than to the m assive influx of capital into the economy via defense contracts and increased consumer spending by beneficiaries of the Reagan tax cuts (they were supposed to save, rem em ber?). Besides the fact that it hasn’t been given a real chance, the president’s trickle-down theory is simply unfair. People a t lower economic levels may fe d some positive effects when the rich are ¿v en big breaks by the government, but the poor’s benefits are disproportionate to those of the rich. And a study of Congressional Budget Office figures by U.S. News and World Report' showed that between cuts in taxes and benefits, lower income families have actually taken a net loss, while middle and upper income households have prospered. So we’re left with an economic plan that wasn’t followed, an accidental recovery and a $200 billion deficit which threatens disaster. This is the Reagan economy. Foreign policy. A recent gesture by the adm inistration is typical of its muddled world view. The president’s triumphal China trip, designed ostensibly to open wider that country’s doors to American products, should prove to have been a waste of time. There were no significant results, only vague assurances that every one of China’s one billion consumers would soon be downing Coca-Cola and munching on Kentucky Fried Chicken. This is not likely to happen. And Reagan’s at­ titude toward China, a communist dictatorship, inexplicably differs from his attitude toward the Soviet Union, another communist dictatorship. One is the focus of evil in the modern world, the other is simply out of focus. _ « ■ i l —■— n 44L « <■n — n unemployed, single mothers. W hatever the reasons, the gap exists and probably will persist right up to election day. The president’s only real accomplishments in foreign policy are by-products of his desire to see America "standing tall” once again; they come from the sam e impulse that resulted in our lavish defense budget. Don’t expect anything akin to President C arter’s Camp David achievements. Ronald Reagan is not interested unless America’s reputation as the prem ier world power is reinforced. The G ender Gap. Yes, Ron, there is a definite gap. Pollsters all during the president’s term have told us that more men than women, by percent, were Reagan fans. The reasons for this vary, perhaps even from person to person, but the gap is not insignificant. And while the adm inistration lately has acknowledged this, it offers no reasonable ex­ planations of its own. C ivil rights. The president’s entire civil rights record seems to revolve around misty recollections of his childhood, and how he learned early on that all men were equal. While some things have changed for m inorities since Ron Reagan was a lad, certain segments of society still lack full member­ ship status. But the president seems intent on pretending that the government is no longer needed to ensure full civil rights for all citizens; his adm inistration’s disgraceful attem pt at derailing the renewal of the Voting Rights Act is an example of this attitude. Perhaps Reagan’s female detractors sense that his homespun conservatism attracts folks who cling to the traditional perception of the woman’s place. Or perhaps they recognize that the president’s economic policies have swelled the ranks of “poor women,” populated prim arily by This is the record on which the president is running. His success or failure will depend upon how closely voters look at it. Do we really w ant to re-elect a president who looks and sounds good, but whose policies produce mixed results at best? I don’t —not when there's a viable alternative. SUM M ER STA TE PR ESS Hey, Sal, how about a job in the athletic department? Editor: Shades of Orwell and ’84: Big Brother (ASU) is going to take good care of us oldies — employees who have been fortunate enough to have reached or are approaching the end of their seventh decade of existence. ASU adm inistrators decided for us — no more employment a t ASU after the age of 70. In the Arizona Republic of Tuesday, June 18, 1964, R ichard M urra, then-ASU personnel director, is quoted regarding the new ruling, “It is more or less a benefit to the employees. They are no longer faced T iih the question of ‘Will I or can I? ’ Now they know they won’t.” Very considerate of the University to remove the strain of such a decision from our feeble minds. Come on, Richard! A benefit? In the sam e article, M urra is quoted as frying, “If you had to look for a reason for the. policy . . . it is the establishm ent of a policy, that allows for the rejuvenation of the work force.” An article in the State Press of June 21,1984, states that as of June 30,1984, 35 of ASU’s 5200 staff and faculty members will not be allowed to continue employment here. Let us examine the statistics: 100 X 35 + 5200 - 0.673077 A 0.673077 percent turnover constitutes a “rejuvenation of the work force”? Come on, Richard! A p rediction: Since th e fed eral government is doing everything it possibly can to encourage elder citizens to work longer and later in life, and is already advancing the retirem ent ages in order to bail out the troubled Social Security system — in the next year or tyro, Congress Will pass a law prohibiting forced retirem ent a t any age. , t Sal Mandarino, age 67 Lab stares clerk III Chemistry departm ent DO N SLU TES Editor REPO RTER S.................................................................................. Jerry Brown M.G. Khan PH O TO G R APH ER ................................................................... M ichael Conner SPORTS W R ITE R .....................................................................Tom Blodgett The Summer State Preea is published Thursdays during sum m er session s at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizona State University, Tem pe, A Z 85287, Newsroom: 985-2292. Advertising & Production 965-7572. The State Press Is the only newspaper exclusively published tor and circulated on the ASU cam pus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU adm inistration, faculty, staff or student body. EDITORIAL COLUMN AND LETTER POLICIES Signed editorial columns represent the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the State Press staff. We welcome opinion articles from members of the ASU community, and will publish responsible views when space allows. Give us a call a t 965-2292 if you’d like to submit an article. The State Press also encourages letters on aqy topic. Letters should include your full name, m ajor and class standing; we’d also like your phone number in case we have any questions. If for some reason you want your letter published anonymously, tell us. Letters should be typed to ensure the best chance for faithful reproduction. Letters will be subject to editing for gram m ar, newspaper style and length a t the discretion of the editor. Address letters to; Letters, State Press, Matthews Center, ASU, Tempe, AZ 85287. \ Page 5 Thursday, July 26,1984 Summer State Press LETTER PERFECT OPPORTUNITIES G o West Mulhollan named ASU West chief retain his eriaHng job as the University’s executive vice president. “I will be splitting my tim e between the two (jobs) for now,” Mulhollan said. “As tim e goes on, 1 will be increasing my involvement a t ASU West.” Nelson said M ulhollan’s adm inistrative skills, understanding of westside needs for higher education and established relationships with westside community “We will be enhancing the schedule of courses that the leaders made him the ideal choice for the position. University has offered in the past,” Mulhollan said. Many of the 289 courses offered this fall to westside “M etrocenter and Alhambra Elem entary School will residents are held in the late afternoon or evening. continue -to be main sites, but other places where M u lh o lla n said there are no plans for time change in the classroom space is available are possibilities. ” near future. “A good portion of the students taking those courses Mulhollan, who was named to the post by ASU President J. Russell Nelson a t a flag raising ceremony last Friday at . have jobs during the day,” Mulhollan said. “We will the 43rd Avehue and Thunderbird Road site, said he will continue to make those courses available. ” By Jerry Brown Staff w riter Although buildingB a t the site of the new ASU West cam­ pus will not be completed until 1988, program s aimed a t giving westsider residents- m ore subjects and more courses a t existing sites areva high priority, according to newly named ASU West Adm inistrator Paige MiilboUan. Dedication ends years of planning The creation of ASU West ends eight years of planning and propsals that began in May 1976 with a legislative com m itttee established to look into the pros and cons of an ASU branch campus to serve the west side of Maricopa County. The 10-member committee concluded that Arizona urgently needed m ore facilities for higher education in western Maricopa County to complement the community college system. Two years later, the University began its service to the west side community by leasing space a t M etrocenter, Alhambra and other west side locations in which to offer classes. The Arizona University System Mission and Scope Statem ents, published by the Board of Regents in 1960, gpecifiad “the development of a modified, upper-level, prim arily non-residential branch institution of Arizona State University in the urban area of Maricopa County.” In 1962, the Legislature set aside 300 acres between 43rd and 51st avenues, Sweetwater Avenue and Thunderbird Road as an ASU-West campus. A 1983 public opinion poll confirmed that West Valley residents have high regard for ASU and confidence in its program s. They overwhelmingly approved of an ASUWest campus. An internal survey of ASU colleges and departm ents revealed a wide range of academic program s which could be offered on the west side. That sam e year, University, officials asked the regents to present the Legislature with a $4.5 million budget request to establish the ASU-West campus. The regents cut the request to $l million, designated for developing services rather than facilities on the west side. The 1984 Legislature changed the state statutes to require the Board of Regents to fnaintain an ASU west campus in the western p art of Maricopa County. The Legislature then appropriated $1 million and approved spending an additional $900,000 from other sources for ASU-West stipulating that $400,000 of the appropriation, which becam e available on July 1, was to be used for facilities planning. Apply Monday — Thursday July 30 — August 2,1984 Our KROY Copy Canter has full-time and part-time opportunities for energetic and progressive contributors who are interested in entry level retail sales as a Copy Center Specialist in our Center near Southern and Extension in Mesa. / Qualified candidates will possess excellent communi­ cation skills, be assertive, and have a professional pre­ sentation and mustpe able to start immediately. Apply In person at oar Temflç location: KROY COPY CENTER 411 S. Mill Avenue _ Tem pe. AZ 85281 KROY Equal Opportunity Employer D E V IL H O U S E s T A R T S T O D A Y ATTENTION CLASSIFIED STAFF Researcher in Department of Educational Psychol-' ogy is studying how memory changes with age, and ways that age-related memory problems might be reduced. I WILL PAY PARTICIPAN TS $5.00 A T G AM M AG E CENTER: ••• CRITIC’S C H O IC E SER IES » They must be ages 18-32, 40-54, 62+. Non-college | graduates preferred. I Call John Vincent 969-4229, for more information. G a m m a g e C e n te r p re s e n ts th e 1984/85 C r it ic ’s C h o ic e S e rie s b e g in n in g O c to b e r 1. A ll p ro g ra m s b e g in at 8 p .m . at th e G a m m ag e C e n te r, w ith th e e x c e p tio n o f M a rth a G ra h a m w h ic h b e g in s at 2:30 p.m. Stars to Sin gs w/Jane Russell Great Moments in Theatre M a tte Graham Dance Company Chuck Mangione Arizona Dance Showcase "Hooked on Swing” w/Larry Elgart Mel Tonne & Peter Nero Ivo Pogerelich, piano Frankie Lame & Les Drown "D racu la" Artie Shaw Big Band "P e te r P an " Big Band Cavalcade Fred Waring Alvin Alley Dance Theater New Swingle Singers P h i. Symph. w/lou Rawls "Brighten Beach M em oirs" "Brighton Beach M em oirs" Kabuhi (Japanese musical] " G ig i" w/Louis Jordan THE ARMY - NURSING CHALLENGE. You’ve worked hard getting your degree, hard enough that you’d like to continue the challenge. T hats what Army Nursing offers. The challenge of professional practice, new study oppor­ tunities, continuing education ana travel are all part of Army Nursing. A nd you’ll have the respect and dignity accorded an officer in the UnitecfStates Army. If you’re working on your BSN or if you already have a BSN and are regis­ tered to practice in the United States or Puerto Rico, talk to our Army Nurse Corps Recruiter. Tem pe 967-6559 Tucson 298-3088 ARMYNURSC CORPS. b ea llyo u c a n b e. Monday. October 1.1984 Tuesday. October 2,1984 Sunday, October 14,1984 Sunday. October 21.1984 Friday, October 26.1984 Thursday, November 8,1984 Sunday. November 11,1984 Friday, November 16r 1984 Sunday. November 18,1984 Saturday. January 5.1985 Saturday. January 12,1985 Friday. February 1,1985 Friday. February 8,1985 Wed., February 20.1985 Tuesday, March 5,1985 Wednesday, March 6.1985 Friday. March 15,1985 Friday, April 5,1985 Sunday. April 7.1985 Sunday. April 14,1985 Sunday, April 28,1985 g le tic k e ts fo r th e e n tire se a so n w ill g o o n sa le o n T u e sd a y , item ber 4, 1984. fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n a b o u t G a m m ag e C e n te r, A S U A c tiv ity .1. . /-»---A C l I C fa u a n eM n i ica auontft r a il . V; NEW STUDENT TICKET POLICY: A S U stu den t* a re d is c o u n te d 50% o ff a ll lis te d p ric e s . Tw o d is c o u n t U ck ots m ay b e p u rc h a se d b y p re se n tin g s p h o to I.D . A N D punrant a c tiv ity c a rd , O n e p h o to I.D . a n d a ctiv ity c a rd m ay b o re q u ire d at th e d o o r. P a rt-tim e stu d e n ts m ay p u rc h a se a s p e c ia l G a m m ag e C e n te r a c tiv ity c a rd fo r $15. L GREAT BURGERS FOR 1 EVERY TUES.-FRIDAY 2-7 ALSO Pitchers 1/2 Litres Long Island Tea 2 5 0 D e v i l N I T E 1 75 H o u s e T I M E TH U R S D A Y C o lle g e C o u n td o w n $1 O ff A D M ISSION W /ASU PICTURE ID F R ID A Y $1 A D M I S S I O N & SA TU R D A Y 7-9 g pgg ] LONG ISLAND ICE TEAS 894-6779 DEVILHOUSE 894-0533 430 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. Summer State Press Survey finds recent graduates particular about career goals By the College Press Service BETHLEHEM, Penn. — Most collegians have “ exceedingly high” c a re e r expectations, but don’t expect “to sacrifice personal happiness, family, health or ethical principles” in order to achieve them, a survey of just-graduated students has found. The survey of 2,000 students, sponsored by the College Placem ent Council (CPC), also found that most students are willing to work long hours to achieve their ambitions. Nine of 10 students would willingly spend more than one night a month away from home for the sake of their jobs. Some 34 percent of the students were willing to stay away from home more than five nights a month. “To some extent, they may be setting themselves up for a fall,” said David Hopkins, a University of Denver business professor and co-author of the study. He noted many students want it all — job satisfaction, frequent feedback from their bosses, “a rich personal life” — although combining such qualities in real life is extremely difficult. “The student and employer will have to modify their perceptions of what they expect from each other,” said Linda Pengilly of the CPC. “It’s going to be a twoway stretch.” Asked to rank 20 different job attributes in order of importance, the 2,000 students from 50 different schools said having an interest in the nature of the work itself was the most essential ingredient of liking their jobs. The next most im portant attributes were the opportunity to use their skills and ab ilitie s, the chance for personal development, professional recognition and adequate wages, Hopkins said. Hopkins co-authored the study with the late Sandra E. LaM arre, also of the University of Denver. Th e Truth A b o u t P D 9 m . . . Anyone May Bacoma PD Most commonly men and women from 18-60. A short, simple physical can-determine PD. PD Has Virtually No Physical Effect« There is no pain involved. Monetarily the effects can be great. tH^urrence nets $10 for up to $100 a month. An additional $5 will be given first timers viith this advertisement. PD Only Lasts About 1%Hours Your first time may take slightly longer. It may occur twice a week in 72-hour intervals. It’s Easy To Become PD Just call 968-6139 for an appointment. PD is Plasma Donation Collage is a weekly listing of events -I ' "...... Friends of Doctor Who will meet from 3:30 p.m. 5 p.m. today in the MU C o co n in o Room 217 to d is c u s s preventing KAET, Channel 8, from canceling the “ Doctor Who” series . . . plus group activities. and meetings sponsored by clubs and o r g a n iz a t io n s in th e cam pu s community. To have your notice published, fill out a Collage form, available at the front desk in the basement of Matthews Center. Deadline for inclusion is noon Tuesday for the following Thursday’s edition. P r e g n a n t? ♦ JOHN’S w REPAIR SERVICE 8 9 9 -1 4 0 8 And the truth is students all over the country are finding it to be an important part of their income. Earning extra cash and studying at the same time. For more information about PD visit University Plasma Center 1015 South Rural Rd. 9?™6139 Monday. Tuesday........ ................................. ®:991° ® Wednesday through Friday...........................9;00 to 5.00 Saturday............... .............. • ■..................... 9:00 to 2.00 •Receive a S5 bonus fo r 8 donation* in a one-m onth period and be elig ib le fo r a $100 draw ing. T h in k in g o f A d o p tio n ? Open 7 Days T he S o u th w e s t A d o p tio n C e n te r has lo vin g couples w a itin g to adopt. The C e n te r m ay be able to help you w ith housing, medical* advice, and counseling. 1417 W. Rosal PI. Chandler Between Alma School &Dobson M. TYPEWRITERS Free Pick-up and Delivery Flat Service Rate Plus Parts • Quick Reasonable F o r co n fid e n tia l co n su lta tio n , phone 2 3 4 -2 2 2 9 . E ntertainm ent F ri & Sat. N ights Piano M usic N ightly Where You Can and Get a Little Crazy! Tuesday: T-N-.T SP EC IA L A ll th e Tostadas you can eat. fo r just $3.95. Plus all T e q u ila • D rin k s are 1/2 o ff all n ig h t long. Wednesday: 2 F O R 1 A n y tw o d in n e rs o f eq u al v a lu e fo r th e p ric e o f o n e all nigh t long. H A P P Y H O U R — D A I L Y 4 -7 $1 well drinks • 75 i 1 Tempos’ Great Mexican Food Experience. Arvid Munson, Keyboards and Vocals Improvisational jazz, blues ami contemporary sounds 5-1 Sat., July 28 HAPPY HOUR 3-7 NIGHTLY > ’ 60C draft / wine E N T E R T A IN M E N T : Fri., July 27 O PEN FO R LU N C H Gary Durston Electronic contemporary keyboards 7th St. (Old Town Tempt) Vi block 968-9935 W. of M ill on 7th St. - M 11:00' AM IM on.-Thurs. to 11:00 PM F ri. 11:00 AM to 1:00 AM S a t 5:00 PM to 1:00 AM T A K E O U T 967-1129 1120 E . A pache O ne B lo ck East o f Rural Rd. Page 7 Thursday, July 26,1984 Summer State Press CRUSTY’S PIZZA 1340 E. APACHE BLVD. 9 6 6 -0 8 0 8 F E A SMALL F R E E D ELIV ER Y G D O U B L E TO PPER™ SMALL 8 .8 0 E X T R A ! E X T R A !" 1 .1 5 .8 5 M E N U IT E M S ITALIAN SAUSAGE MUSHROOMS GREEN PEPPERS HOT PEPPERS EXTRA CHEESE THICK CRUST DOUBLE T O PPE R " W h e n O n e P iz z a Is B ay O ne G et O ne E n o u g h , W e G iv e Y ou O ne To R e m e m b e r . I t ’s N o t N o G im m ic k s , N o C oupons. J u s t A E X T R A ! E X T R A !" L o t o f D e lic io u s But I t la ... EXTRA-Ordinary. P iz z a . D E E P D IS H LARGE C h e e s e ........... .... 4 .7 5 6 .9 5 a d d itio n a l ite m s 1 .2 0 .9 0 LARGE C h e e s e ............4 .4 0 6 .6 0 a d d itio n a l ite m s . .. 1 .1 5 -8 5 SUB SANDWICHES I t a l i a n S u b .......................4 .5 0 Ham, cheese, salam i, tomatoes, lettuce, onions, peppers, and sauce. H a m N* C h e e s e ............. 4 .5 0 SUB SANDWICHES Try One Of Our Great Subs. Up To A Foot 0 r More Of Our Super, Fresh Ingredients, Served Hot Or Cold! D E E P D IS H SMALL I N Our G reat “ Buy One, Get One FREE” Offer. EXTRA! EXTRA! Is Twice As Nice Two G reat Pizzas, One Low Price! FREE. PEPPERON1 BEEF HAM ONIONS OLIVES ANCHOVIES R LARGE C h e e s e ........... ....5 .9 5 a d d itio n a l ite m s U EXTRA! EXTRA! Buy One, Get One FREE EXTRA! EXTRA! T Made And Baked The Traditional Sicilian W ay-Thick, Moist, And Square _ A Pizza Lovqr’s T reat Tasty ham, cheese, tomatoes, lettuce, and sauce. C ans 50 * H O U R S: S u n d ay-T h ursday Friday-Satu rdaÿ 4 :0 0 -1 2 :0 0 4 :0 0 -2 :0 0 Lim ite d D elivery Area EXTRA! 1. EXTRA! TM Buy O ne, G et One Free TW O L A R G E One Item Pizzas $9.95 •Vo* M utt Am far EXTRA! EXTRA! •Not Valid With O ther Coupon* •Expire*: Tpto Weeks W tfff EXTRA! EXTRA!™ EXTRA! 4 ^ / . EXTRA!, Buy O ne G et O ne Free TW O LA R G E One Item Pizzas Buy O ne Get One Free TW O S M A LL Three Item Pizzas OFF ; LARGE I Two O r More Item D O U B LE TO P P ER tm I 'N o t VuUd With O ther Coupons •Expiras: Two Weeks _ i_ _ |_____ J $9.95 $ 8 .5 0 •Yo* Must Ask For E strai Cetra! •Not Valid With O ther Coupon* •Expiras: Tate Week* $ 2 .0 0 L__ •You M utt Ask For Extra! Extra! •Not Valid W ith O ther Coupons •Expires: Two Weeks Summer State Press p o lic e TERlYrtKI I r e p o r t OFiMMN • An ASU employee reported the theft of a Kodak carousel slide projector from Life Sciences Center Room 106. The projector was valuedat$172. . . , • Two female juveniles received neck injuries while doing cheerleading exercises. Tempe param edics responded and both girls were later transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. J |||y 20 • An ASU employee reported the theft of a black IBM Selectric II typew riter from the officials dressing room at Sun Devil Stadium. The room was secure and nobody had permission to use the typewriter, which was valued a t $500. • An ASU employee reported the theft of her purse from the locker at Physical Education East. The purse, made of white crochet m aterial and containing a rust-colored w allet with $2 cash, identification and credit cards, was valued a t$25. * • Two bicycles were found a t the bottom of the swimming pool a t 201 Alpha Drive. • An ASU student received injury to his nose while playing basketball in the Physical Education West gym. The subject was transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. July 21 •A man reported that, ch i July 20, his daughter returned to her car parked in Lot 41 to find it damaged. Left on the windshield was a note The ASU Police Department reported the following activity between July 18 and 23: July 18 . . • A man was apprehended a t Hayden Library as a result of a stakeout initiated because of outstanding fugitive w arrants from Louisiana, Scottsdale and Phoenix. • An ASU employee was found carrying a pellet gun at the east practice fields area. The employee said the gun was used to shoot rats. He was advised that activity was discontinued one year ago. . • An ASU student reported the theft of his brown 1976 Pontiac Sunbird from Lot 42. • A woman reported the theft of her men’s blue five-speed bike from the racks at the College of Law. The bike was valued a t $25. C R I T I C ’S C H O IC E BEST FAST JAPANESE RESTAURANT NEW TIMES BEST OF PHOENIX ’84 1314 E. A P A C H E • 894-6883 July 19 • An ASU employee reported that someone entered his room a t Palo Verde West. Nothing was found missing or disturbed. • An ASU employee reported an unknown vehicle hit the driver’s side of his vehicle parked in Lot 46. Damage was estim ated a t $150. • An ASU student reported the theft of her burgundy Laribou backpack from outside a racquetball court east of Physical Education W est. The pack contained $15 cash, identification, credit cards and a light brown wallet. The total loss was valued a t $91. C(—i oTf~ —¡ " ■ — Mens & »m ere Her 9tyira — L- - - - - - - — Summer Perm Speciali I rag. 45" (Includes: C u t & Sham poo) H a ir C u ts $7 00 C ellophanes.^?..” 1 5 00 Eyelash & Brow Tinting.....$ 5 95 A void the need for mascara. Look great this summer around the pool. 9 3 3 E. University Tempe Tow ne Plaza _ Texas college caters curriculum to needs of university, careers 9 66 -6111 Cal ForAppointment ms*. 9-9sun. 1u* from the lot attendant listing information on t suspected vehicle. July 22 •Two wallets wfth a total of $130 cash wc stolen from the floor of a locked vehicle park in Lot 41. July 23 •An ASU student was arrested on b outstanding warrants out of the Tempe Poli Departm ent. He was booked into the Tempe js • A woman reported the loss of her $f engagement ring at the University Activj Cento: during the Rod Stewart concert. • An ASU student was arrested after adm itti that he initiated a false fire alarm at Palo Ver West. He was later released on his ort recognizance. • An ASU student reported the theft of a Can AE-135 m illim eter zoom lens, a Canon flash a a Canon vinyl “soft sided” from his 1964 Hon while it was parked in Lot 40. The total loss w valued a t $400. • An ASU student reported the theft of a Hewli Packard 41CV with the initials M.V.A. inscrib on the back from the Physical Sciences Room 101. The calculator was valued at $210.. • An ASU employee reported the theft of t beige vinyl bookbag and contents from her U Subaru parked in Lot 17. The loss was valued $50. CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (AP) — This is one Texas city where higher education is not afraid to get its hands dirty. Breaking from the traditional pattern of many colleges, Corpus Christi Del M ar Community College and Corpus Christi State University have recognized the difference between “higher” education an d a “college” education and team ed up to do something about it. “We’re kind of like a grocery store,” said Jean Richardson, president of Del M ar, speaking of his two-year college. “If somone wants to buy beans — and doesn’t want Shakespeare then I sell him beans.” The school is determ ined to teach skills and trades which are m artketable even if they don’t result in college degrees. Del M ar assures that m arketability by keeping its hand on the local economic pulse through a Program Advisory Committee, composed of representatives of the “real world.” J tf. B IR T H D EFECTS 9 1 9 E. APACHE Summer! As a result, pro economic deman« “For example classes several til school president the m arket is sab need arises to stai Often, the rela closer. Richards« was started durin Roughnecks d( extremely dangei “A Texas farm a few days he mig In response to t up a training pro| «VETO KILL TEM PE 966-7770 T o n ig h t ! A t D ie t C e n te r, y o u h a ve n o t h in g t o lo s e b u t w e ig h t . •Lose weight fast «Keep it off forever »Private, daily counseling »Low prices, no contracts L a d ie s N i g h t G irls A d m itted Free A ll N ig h t and D rink l"hitk»n of works by artists from Woman Im age Now, an ASU student a rt organization, will reside in the lobby of Gammage Center through Aug. 31. The exhibition can be seen during regularly scheduled tours of the building from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m ., Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, or by attending perform ances in the Center. FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE • The ASU Stevens House is hosting an exhibition of prints by Karen StiIckeJungerm an, sponsored by Women Im age Now, through Aug. 81; glass works from the Arizona Depression Glass Club, through m id Septem ber; and an exhibition on the International Halley W atch from the ASU physics departm ent, through September. The ASU Stevens House is located in Heritage Square a t Seventh and Monroe streets and is open from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. • “Sign, Symbol, Script,” an exhibit of artifacts representing the evolution of writing, can be found through Sept. 9 a t the Arizona Museum of Science and Technology in Phoenix. W O M EN’S H EALTH CAR E • C EN TER AN aanricetpenonalaridconfidentM bya owing O B . Free Pregnancy Testing with immediate remits Pre-Marital Blood Testing $15 with same day results • Abortion Services • Contraceptive Care Clinic - Counseling avadabte •Q B/G YN physicians Evening hours »Saturday appointments now eve ilO o TEMPE aBS-7471 2525S Rural Rd:. Ste. SC PHOENIX ssr-74éa 9100N. 2nd Street • The Boulton Collection of m usical instrum ents from aroUnd the world can be viewed from 11 a.m . to 4 p.m., Monday though Friday on the fifth floor of the Music Building. A S p e cia l O ffe r From Your C am pus H air Care C enter 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe N orth o f University • Behind the Chuck Box • In O xfo rd Square 968-5946 $3 00 O F F Wi th This A d E x p ire s A u g u s t 30 . 1984 . A S U S tu d e n ts . •• If you’re over 18 you can rent an Escort or other fine car at SPECIAL LOW WEEKEND RATES starting at $*| C Q ft w I U$ v v ADAY no m ileage (2 Day Min.) REG ULAR PRICES 967-1611 The V illage B outique 3 2 Ongoing exhibits • “A Gallery of Beauties” is the result when the University Art Collections presents an exhibition of prints by 12 m aster printm akers depicting beautiful women, in the Matthews Center Gallery through July 29. YOU’LLLEARN1HMGS IN OCS.THEYNEVER HEARD OFIN ENGINEERING SCHOOL Army Officer Candidate School (O.C.S.) It’s a 14-week challenge to your mental and physical toughness. It isn’t easy. But you’ll learn what’s deep inside you. T hat you have what it takes. You’ll come out strong, sure in your ability to lead, and in great shape. You’ll be a commissioned officer in the Army, ready to exercise leadership skills civilian companies p u t a prem ium on. If you’re about to get your degree in engineering, die O.C.S. challenge, could be just w hat you’re seeking. Call your local Army Recruiter. shoes and much more. it i H o w — DEEI • Some tim es you ju st gotta say, “What the, uh, heckThat’s apparently what the Valley Art Theatre did when it scheduled “Footloose” and “Risky Business” for Aug. 3 and 4 “Footloose,” featuring new heartthrob Kevin Bacon, plays at 7:50 p.m. and m idnight; “ Risky Business,” featuring notso-new heartthrob Tom Cruise in a delighful tribute to Bob Seger, plays a t 6 p.m . and 10 p.m. •S h a m p o o • Precision Cut «Condition »Blow Dry (Rates subject to change without notice) /For Y o u r C a r, C a ll Y o u r A S U Representative M E N $12 » W O M E N $14 968-4072 OPEN MONDAY THRO UGH SATURDAY. O ffic e located at Rural & U niversity Summer Stete Pwss Page 13 Thursday, July «6,1984 Stanford tops WCAA; McDowell signs contract; Devila end up fourth to join Rangers’ AA team Tom Blodgett f Sports w riter Stanford University dominated the com­ petition in the W estern Collegiate Athletic Association and would win a conference overall sports title if one existeo By Cardinal women won four conference titles and finished second in two other sports to easily place first in a ranking. Stanford competes in eight of the nine conference sports. The ranking is based on a point system in which a conference champion receives eight Rentals oowMnued p>g# 14 Do Your Computer Work At Home! Sales Aarons ArizonaTUxShops Mon.-Fri. IOn.rn.-9 p.m. Sat. IOa.m.-6 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m. 217 W. University Dr. Tempe C R T with co u p le r or P rin te r with co u p le r SUMMER SPECIALS Matrix Minking Weaving So-color Hint-of-Tlnt $20 $30 $ 12.50 (Your choice of 1 or a Hair colors) $509° BUS LEASING, INC. 944-7235 3914 E. M cD o w e ll • 277-3282 Over 30 Styles to Choose From ‘ Rentals / Service / Sales Oddibe McDowell C.C. CUTTERS & CO. Save Time and Effort Style for style, we guarantee the lo w e s t prices in the valley!! quired to use in the pros. Amateur team s most often use aluminum bats. McDowell finished his collegiate career with a .380 batting average, 30 home runs, 124 runs batted in and 72 stolen bases in 77 attem pts. Last year, McDowell batted .405 with 23 homers, 74 RBI and 36 stolen bases in 38 attem pts. For his efforts, McDowell was named Pac-10 Southern Division co­ player of the year and to the The Sporting News’ All-American team. Oddibe McDowell, conisdered by some the best baseball player ever to perform in an ASU uniform, signed a contract with the Texas Rangers, the team which made him its No. 1 draft choice in the m ajor league draft this year. McDowell was the 12th pick overall in the draft. McDowell, who passed up an offer last year from the Minnesota Twins in favor of playing his senior year at ASU, reportedly signed for an annual salary of over $100,000 for three years. He will report to the Rangers’ AA farm club in Tulsa, Okla., following the Olym­ pics. The team there plays on artificial turf, which is also used in four American League cities. The Rangers hope he will adjust to the surface while playing in Tulsa. McDowell, who was one of eight players unanimously selected to the first U.S. Olympic baseball team , bats lead off for the Americans. McDowell has been using a wooden bat during exhibitions with the Olympic team this sum m er, and will continue to do so throughout the games. He has told reporters it is because he wants to get used to the bat he will be re­ points, the second place team gets seven, etc. ASU came out on the short end of a threeway scram ble for second ¡dace. The Sun Devils finished fourth, just behind UCLA and USC. The Lady Devils’. arch rivals, U of A, cam e in a t fifth. ASU finished ahead of the Wildcats in six of the nine conference sports. However, ASU won just one conference championship, golf. The Devils finished sec­ ond in gymnastics and track and field. Stanford’s four championships cam e in swimming and diving, track and field, ten­ nis and cross country. The Cardinals fin­ ished sec (Hid in volleyball and golf. UCLA won WCAA honors in volleyball and tied with Cal State-Fullerton for first in softball. USC tied with Cal State-Long Beach for the conference basketball crown. Cal State-Fullerton won the r e m a in i n g ti­ tle, gymnastics. But the Titans, despite be­ ing one of only three schools to finish first in more than one sport, coultj only m anage a sixth place ranking. The Titans finished dead last in tennis and volleyball. Fullerton State also competes in the least amount of sports in the conference, six. CALL US TO D A Y FOR YOUR FREE M ATRIX SO COLOR CONSULTATION AND FOR OUR NEW CUSTO M ERS. . . ( w ith t h is ad ) Haircuts Perms $6 $ 22.50 * Deep Conditioners $6 H o u rs: M on . & S a t. 10-5, T u e s .-F ri. 10-7 A d d re ss: 1036 S . T e rra c e o n th e C o m e r o f Le m o n & T e rra ce P h o n e: 968-6685 M UM M aaaaM M aamaHM a -M u Any Large Pizza a l M e d iu m P iz z a P ric e . IS TODAY AND EVERY DAY W ITH LOVE P resen t th is co u p o n at a n y p a rtic ­ ip a tin g P iz z a H u t* re sta u ra n t a n d Yes, we’re up to our delighted noses in lovely roses. A nd that means good news for YOU— o r that special person you choose to delight w ith a dozen. g et a n y la rg e p izza at m edium p izza p ric e . O n e c o u p o n p e r cu sto m e r p e r v isit at a ll p a rtic ip a tin g P iz z a H a t* A SPECIAL IN VITATIO N From Rick Howard Restaurant Manager and Crew Members OFF ANY LA R G E PIZZA or *2.00oil any medium pizza Present this coupon, at any partic­ ipating Pizza Hut* restaurant and get $3.00 oH any large pizza or $2.00 °N any medium pizza. One coupon par customer per visit a t all partic­ ipating Pizza Hut« restaurants. Not valid with other coupons, discounts, or promotions. Offer good through 12-31-84, Z 1/20 cant cu lt fdwwpMon value. re sta u ra n ts. N o t v a lid w ith o th e r c o u p o n s, d is c o u n ts , o r p ro m o tio ns. O ffe r g o o d th ro u g h P iy Y S I 1/20 cent cash redem ption value. Pizza Hut 1030 E . Apache Tem po, Az. 85281 Eat-in o r Carry-O ut Phone 829-8907 FREE DELIVERY Phone 8 2 9 - 8 8 0 0 Banquet Rôom Available FREE of charge $19*50 a d o z e n b o x e d & d e liv e re d OFF AN Y LA R G E PIZZA or *2.00 oH any medium pizza Present this coupon at any partic­ ipating Pizza Hut* restaurant and get $3.00 oH any large pizza or $2.09 Off any medium pizza. O r» coupon per customer per visit at aii partic­ ipating Pizza Hut* restaurants. Not valid with other coupons, discounts, or promotions. Offer good through : 12-31-84. 1/20 cent cash redem ption value. T e m p e F lo r is t 715 S. Forest Dr. 966-4515 (Behind Cbuckbox) Express your thoughts with Special •Registered Trademark of Florists' Transworld Delivery Association Care" Thi Page 14 NCAA declares moratorium Ex-ASU sprinter thinks on TV bans during probation he made right decision GOLETA, Calif. (AP) — Sprinter Ron Brown, the form er ASU trade and foot­ ball star, fed s even m ore strongly now O at he m ade the right choice when he turned down a professional football con­ tract last year to rem ain eligible to com­ pete in the Olympics. It ir«*»"* a delay in his lifelong ambi­ tion, but a gold m edal stands as his im­ mediate goal. When the Games end, he hopes to become a member of the Los Angeles Rams, who play in Anaheim, not too far from his hometown of Baldwin Park. In 1983, Brown was drafted by the Cleveland Browns in the second round, the 41st player chosen overall. Willie Gault of Tennessee, also a star in both football and track, was drafted by the Chicago Bears on the first round and decided to turn pro. But not Brown, who had played three seasons as a defensive back and one as a wide receiver a t ASU. “I’ve always wanted to play profes­ sional football ever since I was playing Brown: ‘I feel pretty relaxed and the running is coming along.’ Pop W arner,” Brown explained. “That’s always been my lifelong dream and goal. The track is a more recent thing. “It started going through my mind a couple of years ago. It became a possibility that I might be one of the best sprinters in the world. If so, I wanted a chance at the Olympic team . It is a once in a lifetim e thing and personal fulfill­ m ent.” Last April, the Rams traded their No. 2 draft choice this year to the Browns for the right to negotiate with Ron. “So it worked out well for everybody,” he observed recently after a workout with the U.S. track and field team a t the University of California-Santa Barbara. Brown was third in the Olympic Trials in the 100-meter dash last month, thus making the team in that individual event and also the 400-meter relay team . His qualifying tim e was 10.23 seconds, compared with 10.06 for winner Carl Lewis and 10.21 for runner-up Sam Graddy. Calvin Smith, the world record holder who placed fourth, joins the 4x100 relay to televise Pac-10 and Big 10 gam es, also confirmed that a m oratorium will be in ef­ fect this year. “F ar this year, it (die m oratorium ) will apply,” CBS spokesman Mark Carlson said. “ They (NCAA officials) m ay re-establish the policy next year.” . * • The Pac-10 is particularly involved because two of its m ember schools, USC and Arizona, are on probation and banned from television appearances. But officials a t both schools said they were making plans to put tagge r an individual television package. The entire issue of television bans as a probationary tool was placed in question following the Supreme Court’s recent deci­ sion forcing the NCAA out of the business of controlling college football television broadcasts. The high court did not specifically bring up the use of television bans in its opinion, but did say a lower court would have to determ ine the legality of such bans. Southwest Conference officials said they don’t expect any drasitic change in their at­ titude. A • lt_ “It’s not something we’ve really dis­ cussed,” said commissioner Fred Jacoby. “We’ve been always under the impression that the NCAA could assess television restrictions in its enforcement procedure. We haven’t really heard anything different­ ly. But so much has changed hi the past few weeks, anything is possible, I guess.” DALLAS (AP) — The NCAA is expected to declare a year’s m oratorium on its policy of harming schools on probation from mak­ ing college football television appearances, the Dallas Morning News reported yester­ day. “The situation in the past is that schools have voluntarily accepted television sanc­ tions,” said David Cawood, NCAA assistant executive director of communications. “The The Pac-10 is particularly involved because two of its member schools, USC and Arizona, are on probation •— Ron Brown loam which is favored to win the goldand challenge the world record of 37.86. “I’m not really too concerned with the tim es right now,” Brown said. “I run for places m ore or less now. You can break the world record and take fourth place and nobody cares. I feel pretty relaxed and the running is coming along. I figure to get better than the 10.23 in the Games.” After that the Rams should welcome the speed of the 5-foot-ll, 185-pound Brown a t wide receiver to augm ent that of second-year speedster Henry Ellard. Of the Browns’ reaction to his decisimi to try for the Olympics, the sprinter said: “They»were pretty understanding. Of course nobody wants to lose a draft p ick , when they could havè drafted somebody else who would play for them immediate­ ly. i understand their position and they understand my position. I am sure they were a little unhappy. “In other circum stances it would have been great to have started my pro career last year. But I chose track andlam bap-y py with the choice. “I hope I will have a long enough foot­ ball career coming up to compensate for one year’s loss of salary. I felt that once I got into football that I would never be able to come back to track because of the rules. “I have no agreem ent with the Rams, but I definitely plan to play professional football as soon as the Olympics are over. I’d tike to play for the Ram s.” Committee on Infractions should release a clarification of its policy in the next few days.” Cawood would not elaborate on the clarifiratinng But officials from the Pac-10 Conference said it was their understanding the NCAA would declare the moratorium, waiting for a court to decide what powers the NCAA has regarding television bans. “We’ve heard the NCAA has told USC that it would put a year’s m oratorium on televi­ sion bans until things get straigtened up,” a spokesman for Pac-10 executive director Tom Hansen told the News. Officials a t CBS, which has an agreem ent W CAA oonHmwd Irani pag* 13 ference team s were invited to the 32-team NCAA volleyball tournament. That list included ASU, despite the fact the Sun Devils were only 17-16 on the year and sUb-.500 in conference play (6-8). ASU’s highest national finishes came in golf and gymnastics. The golf team finished second in the nation and the gymnastics team , ranked second most of the year, ended up fourth at the NCAA meet. ASU women also won national titles in archery and badminton, although neither is a conference sport. The WCAA will have only one m ore year to show its dominance however. Five universities announced last May they are p u llin g out of the conference a t the end of the 1964-85 school year. The five are ASU, Arizona, Stanford, UCLA and USC. No reason has been cited publicly, nor has any alternative plan been set forth. Diego State finished seventh in the ranking. The Aztecs best finish in any sport was tbiM, which they did three times. RdOnding out the ranking was Long Beach S tater Outside of their first {dace tie in basketball,-49er team s finished last or sec­ ond from die bottom in all conference sports: ,■ The WCAA proved once again to be a powerful conférence on the national level. Three conference team s won national titles. USC, behind the already legendary Cheryl M iller, repeated as champions in basket­ ball. Stanford won the crown in tennis, never dropping a m atch all year. UCLA, ranked second all year behind conference foe Cal State-Fullerton, won the softball ti­ tle. . WCAA team s also finished second or third, in four other sports. In some sports, WCAA dominance was nearly complete. For example, six conSan RmutVlitbton Pizza Restaurants w V iPRICE — wSKBm TUESDAY & THURSDAY! EH j 3 E a s t S H I'S * . M P/vepctAatíúK/& P G /u & a tF e Æ tu f! ASU Students , Faculty a n d S ta ff . . • Every Tuesday & Thursday EDUCATIONAL CENTER Call Days. Eves &Weekends Present your ASU .I.D. and receive a 50% D iscount, w ith purchase o f any drink, on any Large Pizza. (C ou n try Style Included) Offer valid on sit-down meals only. 967-2967 1849 N. Scottsdale Rd. (Alpha Beta Center) 5 9 4 7 -4 3 9 6 n English find American football to their liking Tom Blodgett Sports writer Ju st imagine the scenario far a moment. All kinds of people have been waiting for the showdown. It’s finally here on a foggy November day, 1984. The Birmingham Bulls and the Newark V ukans will clash for the AFL title. Oh no, not another pro football league. We already have two, and a lot of people think that’s one too many. Sorry, it’s all too true. But I doubt you’ll be seeing any of these games on the networks or cable. H ie above cities are in England, not the U.S. And the league is really the AFL (UK) — American Foot­ ball League (United Kingdom). It seems American football has caught on in England. Ac­ cording to league president Gerald D. Hartm an, more than 1.8 million people watch NFL gam es every Sunday on televi­ sion. Additionally, m ore than seven million watched live broad­ casts of the Super Bowl, Rose Bowl and Orange Bowl. Exhibtions featuring American team s have also been well received. Th e Minnesota Vikings and S t Louis Cardinals The Henley Hoggs, Colchester Gladiators and Nottingham Hoods better not show up for an exhibition stateside. played in front of 37,000 a t Wembley in a pre-season game last year. More recently, the USFL champion Philadelphia Stars downed the Tampa Bay Bandits 24-21 just one week after their league’s title gam e. Some 21,000 fans were on hand a t Wembley to see that match. (I suppose the dropoff in attendance m eans the English have already developed an American-type snobbery over the quality of play). Now towns all over England are organizing team s, and the AFL (UK) is molding them into a league. At last count, 19 teams were m em bers with five m ore waiting “appoint­ ment.” „ Birmingham and Newark are ju st two. The nicknames range from the creative to NFL-typee. A couple are even puns — the Pool Sharks and the Heathrow Jets'. In addition to the Jets, the Scunthorpe Steelers, War­ wickshire Bears, Fyled Falcons and Wandsworth Ram s all borrowed NFL names. Some of the nicknames can be found in the college ranks or in other American leagues, though not necessarily football. These include the Miltin Keynes Bucks, Leeds Cougars, Devon Generate, North Kent Mustangs, Greenwich Bay M ariners and Portsm outh P irates. • ‘ One even borrowed a Canadian Football League moniker, the Cannock Stam peders. But some of these nicknam es ju st would not'do on this side of the Atlantic. The Henley Hoggs, Colchester Gladiators and the Nottingham Hoods b etter not show up for an exhibition stateside. , Hartman has put out his personal plea for Americans to ' help the B rits organize the league. They are looking for donations of equipment, practice uniforms, hlnriring dummies, sleds, cheerleader supplies or ‘‘anything relating to football. ” • Even operating cash is requested. An a ir freight company has agreed to fly all donated goods to England for free. The cities of Birm ingham , Ala., and Northhampton, M ass., will be helping out their nam esakes in England. The league’s appreciation for Am erica’s help will be shown at the T^wgiie Cup m atch in November (regardless of whether Birm ingham and Newark are there). Hartm an said the proceeds from the gam e will go to an American charity. Golfers Carter, Bietz eliminated in third round of Public Links ASU golfers 5im C arter and Rich Bietz each reached the third round of play in the United States Amateur Public Links Championship, held last week in Spokane, Wash. C arter was the top qualifier for the tourney, with a record two-round score of 132, two strokes better than the previous medalist record. But the 1983 NCAA champion was upset in third round hy Steven Johnson of Elks River, Minn., 1-up. Bietz, a-nativi of Tempe, was elim inated by Bryan Ten­ nyson of Evansville, Ind., 1-up, after winning his first two matches. Page 15 Thursday, July 86,1984 SumrtièrSâié Preti A S U reaches settlement in stadium suit A $1.85 million settle­ ment has been reached with two of the three re­ maining defendants in the lawsuit over costs of repairs to the north end of ASU’s Sun Devil Stadium, ASU President J . Russell Nelson announced Tues­ day. According to the term s of the settlem ent, a total of $1.85 million w ill be paid im mediately to ASU by the insurers of defend­ an ts M agadini-A lagia A ssociates, 's tru c tu ra l engineers, and Engineer­ in g C o rp o ra tio n of A m erica, now doing business as Wadsworth Jensen and Associates, architects on the project. The M agadini-Alagia portion of the settlem ent amounts to $1 million and will be paid hy its in­ surance carrier, Califor­ nia Union Insurance Co. The ECA portion of the settlem ent, amounting to $850,000, udii be paid by its insurance carrier, American M otorists In­ surance Co. ECA and MagadiniAlagia continue to deny any liability for problem s at Sun Devil Stadium. The Board of Regents settled with M ardian Con­ struction Co., the general contractor of the project, on April 5 for a total of $3.65 million deferred over eight years. The only rem aining defendant in the lawsuit is E ngineers Testing Laboratories, now known as W estern Technologies, Inc., which served as the soils engineer on the proj­ ect. The claim s assarted by tiie board against W estern Technologies, Inc. witi be the subject of a jury trial scheduled to commence in February. TO THE JEWISH COMMUNITY WITH LOVE (recorded message) PLEASE CALL 941-9268 IDRES SHAH: c la s s if ie d s f ttS IIC L -IM O ctagon Press $7.95 Available at: CHANGINGHANDS BOOKSTORE H P mal tram ke.Dept C-l los / Alov CA «022 p o to i t7b to$ 8 5 2 5 1 . _______________ EDITING TERM papers, dissertations, ate. You write draft. I perfect grammar, word choice, sentence clarity and flow, paragraph construction, ate., for most effective expression of your Ideas. Professional, Inexpensive. Susan, 834 8038. _ _ _ ____________________ _ Typing Instruction ^ Support the r m mMiMarch of Dimes m m «nets kwnomiombbm Announcements G AV CHRISTIANS! Chriat died to taka away your sk is, not your aexualltyl Be you real! at Caaa da Crtato, an evangelleal church whet» gay and non-gay Chriatlarta worship Christ together. Sunday services, prayer m eetings and m oral For mot» Inform * tlon ca ll 285-2931._________ SKYDIVING, the sport of the aga. Com plete training. For Into ca ll Tom at _________________ 892-5797. "WORDSTAR" H ands-on training o n ly C.P.T.A., an authorized e d u ca­ tional center from MICROPRO MFG. In t e r n in Senator Dannie DeC on clnl's o ffice this tall for credit. Apply at A 8A SU by August 1 on call 261-5756.____________________ For Rent Lease or D ELU X E 2 bedroom , 2 bath, tow nhouse. F ire p la c e , p o o lsid e , washer-dryer connections. W alking distance ASU. $550. m onthly. 967-0082 evenings._____ ■ ___________ ELEVEN APARTM EN TS. Seven m iles from ASU, central Phoenix, $125 m onthly, $75 deposit. 2543520 be* twaan 1:00 and 10:00 p.m. -______ __ LO S. PORTICOS Apartm ents o l Scotts­ dale, brand new. apartm ents. C lose ASU. 1221 N. 85th Placa (two blocks south of McDow ell on 85th Placa. 85th Place Is one block east of Granite Real). Available: taro bedroom, two bath and one bedroom, one bath apartm ents. Pool, spa, and m uch more. Starting at $350. C a ll W ill H allar of HaUetmark Realty. «085426, «94-4733. ROOM S AN D houses tor rant In tall, naaatva now to avoid the rush. Room s $150— 9200, home» $000— 8800. Close to A8U .5299228 Dean. __________ TH R EE B E D R O O M , tw o b ath townhouas, partially furnished, on» m ile trem ASU. « 9104 7.________ ' TW O M ASTER suite townhousa. Each aulla with bath plu s extra to bath. G a n g s plus a ll am enities o f the Lakes. CaH «95-1439. ______________ For Sale________ OW N YOUR own m ini com puter. $750. C a ll Pow ell, Trinity Com puter Leasing, 2594774. __________ S o u th w e s t F u to n Factory Direct s/2 H elp Wanted A G G R E S S IV E B U SIN ES S m ajor needed to aaslet local stock brokers with telephone marketing cam paign. C a ll Rich or Brad at «645804. GO VERN M EN T JO BS. $16,55« — $50,553/ year. Now hiring. Your area. C a ll 1-605-887-5000 »xtenatonft-9634. INTERNS W ANTED. Fortune 500 com ­ pany looking tor aggressive In­ dividual». h eaponelM lltl»» include telephonic», proposal creation, demonstratlona, paperwork. Keith, 284 4»71. 9 6 6 -7 9 3 8 _________ PART-TIME aarvica station attendant. Muat be neat, claan and w illing to work. Apply In .paraon. 7555 E. Cam alback.______ ' _________ A-1 RESUM ES and repetitive letters. Malta that Important first Impression with profaaalonal typeset appearance. Cynthia Grant, 9093827.____________ ACADEM IC TYPING. W ill adit spalling, punctuation, and grammar. Fast return/ accuracy guaranteed. Joan 6390772. ACCU R ATE. FAST, experienced typist. IBM Satoctrlc *1.25 par page. Dis­ sertations, theses, legal briefs. Call Sharon 8335887 or Tem aa052-0079. A LL PAPER8 typed to your com plete satisfaction. IBM Sslactrlc. Near ASU. Raasonabto. M rs. Oakley, 997-0802. A LL TYPING done fast and accurate. 1.00 a page. W ord processing availa­ ble. C lose to ASU. Call Carlo or Bobbl 968-9166.__________________ _ ALW AYS AVAILABLE for typing at 51.25 per pege. CaH Susan at 833-0373. ANY TYPING? Fast, accurate, pro­ fessional typing— word processing. Excellent quality. $1.25— page. Call ACCOUNTING MAJORS EMPLOYABILITY is enhanced by 10-key and CR T. KEYBOARDING LAB 23 W. 7th S t, Suite 104 Tempe, AZ 85281 Just across M ill from ASU Fr«« resume with classes 966-7111 7/26 MlBWtllflMQUg PAIR OF Boston acoustics AlSO'a. Natural oak cabinets In excellent condition. 9300 060.9995999- M otorcycles 1992 H AR LEY DAVIDSON FXRS. New Dunlop lira s. Great cruiser. Q uick In traffic. $3600080. «96 8999._________ Real Estate CUL-DE-SAC STR EET of faculty and proteesJonaia. Five m iles from ASU. Low m aintenance landscaping, energy saving construction, floor plan lo r privacy, contem porary design. $5,000 lialOW ■lUjr a j^ ^ yOS.OOO. 8390287. Roommate Furniture 277-7175 IO PART-TIME doorman/barback, 2— 4 night» weekly, T fn p< bar, 968-0243. W E AR E looking for men and woman to loin our marketing team. Earn $1,000 to $5,000 par month. Profaaalonal train­ ing. Succaaa oriented. Flexible hour». Full and part-time. C a ll Bittersweet, Inc. 837-1133 or see Collage Jo b Placem ent O ffice. ______, . , Open evenings, days, weeken d». R eflections Services DO CTORAL STUD EN T from Nebraska Interested In house sitting lo r 1984/85 academ ic year. Contact: « 9758 8 or write 6 8 « 4th Street. Scottsdale, T a m p a .________________________ A il wood convertibles, couch platforms, bed frames. Knowledge is something which you can use. .Belief is something which uses you. H elp Wanted W ANTED: DAY food servers, M-F, apply In person, Ninth & Ash, 850 S. Aah, Kings $139 Queens $109 Fulls $89 Twins $89 Cot Sizes $89 BELEF AND KNOWLEDGE The STATE PRESS disclaim s all respon­ sibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. Linda, 9625075.___________________ AT YOUR service, University and Mill area. Q uality typing to your Specs. Keyboarding Lab, 9597111.__________ ' C A LL CAROLINE lor your typing needs, reasonable rates, quality work, near Rural- Southern 967-9226._______ DISSERTATIONS TYPED. Experienced in legal, m edical, statistical. Pickup and delivery available. Call Norma, 9645494._________________ ______ EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Feat, pro­ fessional work, IBM Sslactrlc. $1.00 par page. Chari, 907-3747 evenings._______ FAST, ACCU R ATE typing, $1.25/paga. C a ll Teresa at 902-0079 or Linda at 9096775, allto typing avallabla._______ LETTER QUALITY word processing. $1.25 par page (double apace), spelling edited, draft copy avallabla. M ust be legible. Dobson Ranch area (Baseline, Price). Triad, « 3 9 1 9 6 1 .__________ NEW MOON Secretarial, 414 South M ill 8205. Q uick, quality, accurate typing. C a ll 0916711 Graphics/ resum es. naaaonablarataa._______________ _ N O R TH W ES T PH O EN IX, q u ality typing. Theeea. dissertations, research protect». «393397._________________ PRO FESSIO NAL W ORD processing, typing, m ailings, theses, papers, let­ ters, reports, ate. Rush lobs okay. 9465066evening»._____________ ___ PRO FESSIO NAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing. w ill adit and co m et spalling. Carolina Douglaa, 830-0659. PRO FESSIO NAL TYPING. CIO»» to ASU. C a ll Brand», 9940273._________ FEM A LE NON-SM OKER to ehara - QUALITY W ORD processing. Reansonable prices. Econom ical re­ townhome with pool three m iles from visions. Can com m unicate with ASU ASU. Contact Bonnla, 897-7930, 869 oomputora. Pamela Polom , 438-1178. 7807.___________ ;_______________ FEM A LE TO sham townhousa at Lakes beginning August 1st. 2to m iles ASU. $189.4 to. Sharon 985-7298 or Kathy 8976184.__________________ RESUM ES TYPED o r typeset. Close to cam pus. $5 per page and up. Call 894-52«, New Moon Secretarial and Graphic». ~ _________________ ___ FEM A LE W ANTED to sham three bedroom furnished home, 8200 plus to utilities, carport, pool. Lynn or Lana altar 760 p.m., 962-4841 or Lynn days, STATE-OF-THE-ART W ORD process­ ing. Quality guaranteed. Term papers, theses, letters, resumes. 990-1558, 2392079._____________ _ _ _______ STUD EN T DISCOUNT for fast, accur­ ate, high quality typing. W ill adit gram m ar, pu nctuation, sp a llin g . ROOM M ATE W ANTED to share three bedroom townhousa. 8200 plus to utilities. Carport, pool. Nlnah attar 060, 8942113. ROOM WITH own bath In large house In Scottsdale. P o d , claan. fum iahsd. $200. u tilities. 947-7378. ___________ SH AR E FURNISHED three bedroom house. 1to m iles to ASU, 8210 Include» utllltlea. 907-4000. Bob._____________ Services BABYSITTING. R e sp o n sib le 14 year old a v a ila b le day» during summer. Vicinity Rural and Guadalupe. Jennifer 839 '3603. _________________ _ CA R S AVAILABLE - 21 or older. A ll State» Dtlw-away, 992-6200._________ CO M PUTER TERM INALS to r rant with modem. 2465172._________________ FEM ALE TO share house with two others. $150 »m onth plus to utilities. Tam pa location. 967-7770, « 92410. 2441359.____________ ____________ Christina, 8391092.________ __ TM C SECRETARIAL. Typing, word processing, students, business, re­ sum es. 7 days a week. 9875905 or 897-1596.________________________ WORD PROCESSING PROFESSIONAL, FAST AND ACCURATE $1.25 per page with notte* Just 5 min. from ASU Library THE COMPUTER TERMINAL 122 E. University Dr. 967-0900 Exp. 8-20-84. 8/9 Summer State Press giiissig iiiwromen'iiiiiiiiiii iM im iiiieieiii...... Wl&m sP — isH i ges sSs- § ■•.. ;.,, / v ^ . ...‘ ';. 'I 4«P Hi =1!« 1 ^ 'W ;JI ¡9% sE §1? it** am pt. * 1 1 Sp Hg&r--- 5®jw TO1. «P& i i S© J *P wLo fcf H WS :S I S slii is? lllg jg i ■V*- S a te . *.,. sar jsaaaaaa wti. M§ S L J f ' 111 m l VfSS |» |||| Wm& H «■ §S^ H Kmgrms* m g§rkffiy gi jsgf y™**fe a M l . §§ m IHB |||||' f™«tL jp |if W* ^ 1¡j — m a sk m FOR THE WILDEST ■ 7 to i : , ; 5 50$ D rafts 7 to 10 m. B rin g a date, S N U G G L E U P fo r a c o o l d rin k on o u r s p a c io u s patio and d a n c e y o u r ^ out! Never A Cover • Rock Videos • Just A Walk Away! DONNY O’BRIENS • 222 S. Mill, Tempe • 968-0527 Wx>