Sergeant has np complaints about football game ByW. TtMAHL surf Writer Not everybody was upset after the ASU Sun Devils lost to Oklahoma SUte University Saturday in the opening game the 1984-85 football season. ‘2 f ”,akes my i<* ■ lot easier when fans leave early,” said Robert Jones, an ASU Police sergeant in charge of security operations at ASU football games. Many fans began to leave the stadium late in the third quart«- when it became evident that ASU’s chances for vic­ tory were slim. This eliminated much of the traffic congestion and other problems that usually occur when everyone leaves the stadium at once, Jones said. “All in all, the game went pretty well. I was kind of surpris­ ed, because it was one of the better opening games I have seen (from a security standpoint),” he said. This is the first year Jones has headed security operations at the stadium, but the seventh year he has worked for ASU Police. No arrests were made by police inside the stadium, Jones said, but several persons were asked to leave the premises for drunkenness and disorderly conduct. The heat inside the stadium took its toll on sev«-al fans, who passed out in the stands, Jones said. A few others had the same problem while waiting in lines before the game, he said. “People don’t realize how crowded it can get around the stadium (hiring the first couple games of the season, but that is typical every year,” he said. Jones said stadium ushers and police confiscated a huge amount of liquor, but had no way to determine exactly how much. He added that some alcohol probably slipped by members of his force. “Where there is a will, there is always a way," he said. The Tempe Police Department reported a busier than usual evening. “All I can tell you is that we had a very busy night in the jail, but it’s impossible to tell how much of that is a result of the game,” said Landon Barden, a civilian supervisor for the Tempe Police. Jones said the mood of the departing fans was one of “pure and total disgust,” and the most eventful part of his evening was several fans offering to sell their season tickets at a dis­ count. monday September 10,1984 Voi. 67 No. 9 Arizona State University p re s s Tampa, Arizona © Copyright, State Press. 1964 Cyprus Gardens, Palm Villa apartments targeted by ASU By MARY ANNE PEREZ Staff Writer An abandoned refrigerator, loose wires, paint peeling from the tops of balconies and a garbage-strewn laundry room were observed Saturday at Cypress Gardens Apartments, 1015 S. Stanley Place. Cypress Gardens is being investigated by ASU’s Tenants/C om m uter Students Association for safety and health violations, A1 Pina, director of die association, said Saturday. According to Steve Roninger, battalion chief for die Tempe Fire Department, the abandoned refrigerator is “definitely a violation” of local safety codes. He said the loose wires and garbage in the laundry room might also be considered Are and health violations. The kind of wire being used and the type of garbage in the laundry room determine what possible safety and health rules are be­ ing violated, Roninger said. “If there is an accumulation of garbage in the laundry room, which is a public place, there are two potential hazards (fire and health),” he said. Dryers operating in a littered laundry room could pose a fire hazard, and if the garbage includes food, it could attract bugs and mice, creating a health hazard, Ron­ inger said. Repeated attempts to contact the manager of Cypress Gardens Apartments were unsuccessful. Cypress Gardens and Bali Lanai Apart­ ments, 1137 E. Orange Street, were reported Friday to be under investigation by the tenants association. The office is a branch of Associated Students that helps students find off-campus housing and mediates disputes between tenants and landlords. According to earlier State Press reports, Pina's office was investigating Bali Lanai and Cypress Gardens for safety and health violations. Although Pina had earlier named Bali Lanai as one of the targeted buildings, he said Saturday, that Palm Villa, 1140 E. Orange Street, is the other complex bring investigated. He said he considers Palm Villa and Bali Lanai to be the same complex because they are owned and operated by the same people. Bali Lanai, however, is bring investigated for reasons other than safety and health violations, Pina said. Bali Lanai manager Dan Steenhoek said Pina told him his complex was not under in­ vestigation, and had in fact called Bali Lanai a “ model” apartment complex. Pina denied calling Bali Lanai a “model” complex. He said his office has received numerous complaints from students who live in Bali Lanai and Palm Villa. Complaints include slow or no response from the management when confronted by students about problems, Pina said. At least one resident of Palm Villa is unhappy with the living conditions there. Steve Nerio, a junior business major, moved in Aug. 27 after signing a nine-month lease. He said the apartment he moved into was not the one he had been shown when he made his decision to live there. Nerio, 27, said he has complained to the managers five times about various pro­ blems with his apartment, and because the management has been unresponsive, has fil­ ed a form al com plaint with the Tenants/Commuter Students Association. He said his living room and bedroom carpets have large stains and there is a twoinch space between die carpet and the walls in the living room, exposing nails and rocks. He pulled back the carpet in his living room to reveal another stained carpet underneath. “Aren't they supposed to shampoo the carpet before someone moves in? Well, they mire didn’t clean this one,” Nerio said. oontlniMd pig* 2 Bell probes campuses for fraud By SANAA AL-MARAYAT1 Staff Writer Mountain Bell officials are investigating a credit card telephone number they believe was obtained illegally by a college student, ASU detective-Alan Zell said. The telephone company contacted several university police stations around the coun­ try last week to warn students about the in­ vestigation, he said. “It is still unknown if anyone from ASU is involved with the crime," Zell said. “However. Mountain Bell is still in­ vestigating and will prosecute any time. ’' Bob Meldrum, a Mountain Bell represen­ tative, said this type of fraud occurs often. “People are always stealing credit card numbers, but I am not aware of anyone from ASU bring involved," Meldrum said. There may be students who are purchas­ ing this number from someone other than Mountain Bell under the impression that it is legal, Zell said. He said that would still be handled as a crime. Zell recommended anyone from ASU who might be involved with the crime should “contact me now or I will contact them later.” The penalty for committing the crime is a minimum of six months in jail and/or a $100 fine, or a maximum of 1.9 years in the state penitentiary and/or a $150,000 fine. Zell said he will receive information early this week from Mountain Bell on whether any ASU student is involved. Defeat A SU football coach Darryl Rogers reacts to an in|ured Jeff Van Raaphorst. The injury sidelined the starting quarterback late In the third quarter of Saturday's season opener against Oklahom a State. In what Rogers called “the longest game I've ever been associated with," O SU trounced the Sun Devils 45-3 — the school's worst loss In 38 years. Page g Statt Prêt» September 10,1984 n a t i o n X w o r l d McKElLIPS & SCOTTSDALE RDS. «alpha betashopping ctri C o u rt c le a rs w a y fo r e x e c u tio n WASHINGTON (AP) — The U S. Supreme Court on Sun­ day cleared the way for the execution of Timothy Baldwin, a Louisiana inmate, rejecting his request for a stay of execu­ tion by a 7-2 vote. Justices William T. Brennan and Thurgood Marshall, who oppose the death penalty, dissented from the court's order denying the stay, said court spokeswoman Kathy Arberg Baldwin, who was convicted of murdering an 85-year-old blind woman in 1978, was scheduled to be electrocuted at Louisiana State Prison in Angola. La . before 3 a m. Monday STUDENT DISCOUNT 2 5 V O F F D R V C lE A H IN G SHOW 1.0. CARD WITH INCOMING ORDER A p a rtm e n ts — continued from pagg 1 He said he had a loveseat that “reeked of urine," so he put it on the balcony to air out. According to Nerio. the manager took it away, then called the owner of the com­ plex who said it would not be returned to Nerio. Steenhoek and his wife Pamela, co-manager of Palm Villa and Bali Lanai, said Nerio’s loveseat was taken away because “he violated all the rules" when he put it on the veranda. Although the loveseat is being cleaned, it is up to their supervisor to decide if it will be returned to Nerio, they said. In another complaint, Nerio said he requested a single bed because all he has are single-bed sheets, but has not been given one. Nerio said he has also complained to the managers about roaches in his apartment. “They’re just running around all over the place,” he said. Steenhoek said anyone who has a complaint or maintenance request should submit it in writing. Accor­ ding to his wife, they manage 110 apartments and it is dif­ ficult to remember requests not written down. In a letter sent Thursday to Tempe Mayor Harry Mit­ chell, Pina said two apartment complexes in Sun Devil Village have “grossly ignored safety and health stan­ dards.” ARIZONA'S #1 Steenhoek met with Pina Friday to discuss accusations made by Pina concerning possible safety and health viola­ tions. According to Pina, his office has tried to contact Bali Lanai managers for two semesters about students’ com­ plaints, but Friday was the first time the calls were answered. “ I’ve left calls and have never gotten a response," Pina said. “It took this newspaper article to finally get them to respond." Pina said he has not been able to reach managers at Cypress Gardens. Although the three apartment complexes mentioned are “prime targets” of an investigation by his office, Pina said others will be considered. “We will also make a sweep of the area,” he said. Results of the investigation will be sent to ASU and Tempe officials, Pina said. The investigation was launched as a result of numerous complaints from students living in these apartment com­ plexes, he said. Pina said numerous complaints should not be necessary to force managers and owners to maintain their apart­ ment complexes. “They’re receiving student revenues, so they should serve the students who are living there and providing those revenues,” he said. SO U R C E. th io g gaiag h r i t S e w Ether w rit la g . S pecialty designed H ager fart. carbide ball chelee af adH aa ar flat kwt beet af all...yea’ll aevar threw it eaL jM t fO K FA N TASY-C O M !C * • 9 C IÊ N C B FIC TIO N • OVER 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 COMICS FOR COLLECTORS • ALL THE MEW MARVEL, P C , ANO IN tW P E N D G N T S • COMIC BOOK. R E S E R V A T IO N Y o u r C a m p u s H air C a re C e n te r >COMIC B A & e , B O X ES . AND INDEXES 7 0 9 S, F o re st A v e ., Tem pe I A R IZ O N A 'S M O ST CO M PLETE SE L E C T IO N O F MEIN A N D 968-5946 o>. University • Be nmd the . 80 * • in-Oxford Square - $3 ° ° O F F • SAMES, P O R T F O L IO S . POSTERS • COMPLETE UNE OF O R. W H O M E R C H A N P tS E TH E O N E B O O K . S W O P ‘ ■“ W S « * T U S T /» B L O C K . N O R T H O P TH E A S U C A M P U S With This A d R E G U L A R P R IC E S • S ham poo • P re c isio n Cut TUES W ednesday, Septem ber 26 8 p.m. • Arizona Room H ille l: Jewish Student Center 1012 S. M ill Ave. • 967-7563 «5995 CAN M WOHN UP TO M DAYS Nearsighted Prescription Only Up To 6 00 One pair per customer No Olhe« Discounte Apply WED. & THURS. TILL 9 P.M. EREV ROSH HASHANAH To assure adequate seating for the campus community, entrance to High Holiday Services will be by admission card only. Admission cards are available at Hillel. FDA A P P R O V i t •C o n d itio n •Blow Dry OPEN M OND AY TH R O U G H SATURDAY. SERVICES Paym ent due September 20 EXTENDED WEAR SOFT CONTACT LENSES M E N $13 • W O M E N $15 Join us fo r dinner After Septem ber 20, $6 and $10 FROM ARIZONA’S LEADING CONTACT LENS/EYEGLASS & NEARING CENTERS TOP QUALITY EYE CARE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY AT LOW TOTAL COST Expires Dec 31.1984 H A P P Y NEW Y E A R L ’S H A N A T O V A W ednesday, Septem ber 26 5 p.m. at Hillel Students $4 N on-students $7 CRAMP OPENING SPECIALS ( K id d a sh to fo llo w a t H ille l) Thursday, Septem ber 27 9:30 a.m. • Arizona Room Friday, Septem ber 28 9:30 a.m. • Alumni Lounge 10% Discount to: S S MS CUSTOMS« SMT CONTACT LKflSCS m CONTACT UMSC8 byDowCornilo •Tlw te n e Th at RER TAC SPECIAL m iu w M CLASH ! i s BAIACH A tOMfl. HVOBOCUM. OBAMVOBOKOCWAC ftCflNCfSUMStt too* to gw- OmPw ooty* PorCustom*» EYE EXAMS ARRANGED • M e r C - e h NATIONAL £ Y £ & £ A R 3153 S. M I L L (M I L L A S O U T H E R N ) H U N T IN G T O N S Q U A R E P L A Z A T E M P E , A Z C A L L O R C O M E IN P H O N E M7-3197 tYBOLASS A CONTACT LINS CXAM $ 3 0 BO. M JL GARDSNIft A ASSOC. OPTOMITRISVS »131 S. HULL, TIM M H 7 - 7 I S 1 State Pres* M n r v it v ^#nf»m h#r 10 1084 Incumbent legislators claim strong support of ASU By SANAA AL-MARAYATI Staff Writer The Legislature has been more supportive of ASU because “ex­ perienced Republicans have been d o in g s o m e th in g ” a b o u t establishing more funds for the University, according to House Rep. Doug Todd, R-Tempe. Republican incumbents Todd and Bev Hermon, each holding a seat in the House representing Tetnpe's district 27, said they are running for another term because Doug Todd their opponents from ASU are not qualified. Todd and Hermon are running against ASU Political Science Pro­ fessor Richard Dagger and Steve Ponton, who now works as an assistant at the ASU Science Library. Dagger and Ponton are both Democrats. Republican incumbent Juanita Harelson, also running against an ASU staff member, is opposing Victor Heller, director of Travel and Tourism, for the only Senate seat representing Tempe’s district 27. Todd, a 1951 ASU alumnus, has served in the House for six years. “ASU is the main reason I went into the Legislature," he said. “When I first went into politics, I noticed that ASU was getting the short end of the stick in funds, but some of us went in there and did something about it.” ASU was low in funds four years ago, according to Todd. He and Hermon persuaded the Legislature that ASU was in need police report; Police said a man told them he was walking past Lot 17 Friday morning when the driver of a maroon vehicle almost hit him. The pedestrian knocked on the vehicle to indicate he had almost been hit. The driver then got out of his vehicle and poked the pedestrian in the chest with a nightstick. Police said the pedestrian hit the driver, who returned the punch. The pedestrian was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital for injuries, then released. He refused to aid in prosecuting the driver, police said. In other incidents, a Pioneer stereo and speakers, valued at $450, were removed from an ASU student’s vehi­ cle in Lot 60 between Sept. 4-7. police said. of money to expand programs because of its rapid annual enroll­ ment increase, he said. In 1983, the Legislature granted ASU's Center for Engineering Ex­ cellence $2.4 million. Hermon, who has served eight years on the Tempe City Council and two years in the House, said it has been difficult persuading the Legislature to give more support to ASU because most of the legislators are U of A graduates. “The Board of Regents has also been more supportive of the U of A,” she said. “The governor is aware of this, and I am trying to get the governor to select members on a geographical level to avoid this biased attitude.'' Todd said none of the ASU staff members have enough experience to run for public office. He said his opponents. Dagger and Ponton, have not lived in Arizona long enough to understand what is happening in the communi­ ty Todd also said Heller, who has never held public office, is not qualified to represent Tempe. “All that guy is after is publici­ ty,” Todd said. Harelson, who has 10 years ex­ perience in the House and two years in the Senate, said Heller is not familiar with the legislative process. “Heller is a nice guy, but his naivete gets in the way in understanding practical politics,” she said. “ He doesn’t know how difficult it is to persuade the Legislature.” Harelson said her main goal is to establish more funds to ac­ comodate the University's growth. According to Harelson, the Legislature grants money depen­ ding on the number of students enrolled. Harelson will run against Heller in Tuesday’3 primary. Todd and Hermon will run against Dagger and Ponton in the general election Nov. 6. Juanita Harelson Police said an ASU student told them someone removed her white cloth wallet from her backpack in a locker at Physical Education East. Various I.D. cards, $120 cash, credit cards and three checkbooks were taken. Two bicyclists, both ASU students, collided Thursday afternoon on Orange Street. One student was riding his bicycle on the south side of the street, but not on the bike path. The other student, who was using the bike path, in­ jured her right ankle in the collision. She was treated by Tempe Fire Department paramedics and transported to the Student Health Center. Police said the male student was cited for riding on the roadway instead of the bike path. A women’s red California cruiser, valued at $185, was taken from a bike rack at Manzanita Hall between mid­ night Wednesday and Thursday afternoon, police said. The bicycle had been locked. A women’s red Schwinn Varsity 10-speed with front and tail lights, valued at $80, was locked to a bicycle rack at Manzanita Hall and was taken between late Wednesday night and noon Thursday, according to police reports. A J.C. Penney stereo cassette player, valued at $100, was taken from an ASU student’s room in Sahuaro Hall Thursday, police said. In other activity, University Police reported the follow­ ing incidents in the 24-hour period ending a t 3 a.m. Satur­ day: •An ASU student received a cut on his right eyebrow dur­ ing a fight with an unidentified male, police said. The inci­ dent occurred during a large party at the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house early Saturday morning. •An ASU student reported someone removed a Kodak pro­ jection zoom Ektana lens, valued at $150, from a Kodak slide projector in the Life Sciences Center Thursday, police said. — ROSANNE DUPRAS PERM SPECIAL Perm .......25 (Reg $4 5 00) (Includes: C u l S Shampoo) Hair C u t s _______7m Eyelash A Brow Tinting ...*5M Certified Color & Cosmetic Consultant (Why not find out M IL L A V E N U E TRAVEL AGENCY Complete Travel Services •Airline Tickets •ftmtrak Tickets Cruises, Tours S H otels infer Mans&Hamr HarStyW lj 966-6300 968-8111 p s lé iiiiiiii CaM Per ap p o intm ent MS« 1)9Su» 11-4 »E Mean* tape tan Mae IU.flaw*al«aaa 4 1 4 S . M ill # 1 1 0 A rrange next year^ school loan now Avoid the rush... and m aybe th e long wait. Get your First Federal governm ent-sponsored school loan now. (35 First Federal TEJM K 1005 E. Broadw ay 2 4 8 -3 5 6 9 SOUTH T C M K 1745 E. G uadalupe 2 4 8 -2 7 9 2 O r ceN the office nearest you. 10%Discount to ASU Students Spoghetc. Co. P ap a Jay’s New York Pizza and V id eo Arcade Over 25 videos 10 for $1 everyday FAST FREE DELIVERY! L im ite d fre e d e liv e ry area [ #1 Sun Devil Combo "j f~ #2&OOIR ] Large pizza w ith your ! ch o ice of up to 4 toppings. | ■w ith two or m ore toppings, i ¡O N L Y | 'Extra thick pizza $ 6 . 9 5 (plus tax) Large Sicilian Pizza* G ood on delivery, take-out or dine-in. Expires 9-30-84. T e m p e : 804 S. A s h 9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 • G ood on delivery, take-out or dine-in. Expires -9-30-84. (University & Mill) 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 I Page 4 Stet* P u ts Monday, Septem ber 10,1984 o p in io n A m atter o f n a tio n a l id e a ls Mmm Steve Waterstrat We are mad, not only Individually, but nationally. We check manslaughter and Isolated murders; but what of war and the much vaunted crime of slaughtering whole peoples? —Seneca dale press New era begins for campus newspaper Today’s paper marks the start of a new era for the State Pres«. For the first time ever at ASU, the campus newspaper has published a Monday edition. Today’s effort is the culmination of years of planning and hard work by former manager of student publications, the late Edward H. Peplow, Production Manager Robert S. Szoradi and Advertising Director Phil Terry. Those three led the State Press from $35,000 in debt to the financial success it has become today, enabling the paper to make the jump from four-day to five-day-a-week publication. What began as a page donated to ASU students by the Tempe newspaper in 1892 has grown into a publication read by more than 40,000 each day. The name of the paper was changed several times from its beginn­ ing as a four-page newsletter in 1906, and became the State Press 47 years ago. In 1926 the paper established its editorial independence, and was “at all times careful to continue, not under the domination of any particular clique or student organization,” and to remain a “watchdog of the student body.” On this historic first Monday edition we repeat those vows, and remind the campus community that our area of coverage ex­ tends not only to students, but to faculty, ad­ ministration and staff members. We thank those who came before and made this effort possible, while pledging to continue as the one source of news, sports, entertainment and advertising for the cam­ pus of Arizona State University, now publishing five days each week. Manasing Editor One of the safest assumptions 1 could make this year is that most Americans are strongly opposed to the practice of wiping out an entire race of people. As ineptly simplistic as that may sound, Congress has lagged for 35 years to con­ demn the concept officially. The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide originally met in reaction to the Nazi Holocaust that took six million Jewish lives. President Harry Truman signed the resulting treaty, and every president since has unsuccessfully tried to convince Con­ gress to ratify it. The treaty makes the annihilation of a racial, ethnic, political or cultural group a crime. That’s not too difficult to swallow, as 96 nations have. But when elite and powerful lobbyists get in on the action, sound decisions often go to hell. There they join the John Birch Society, the Liberty Lobby and certain conservative politicians who, under the guise of na­ tionalism, have somehow blocked ratifica­ tion of a treaty that should have no opposi­ tion. President Reagan managed to come out strongly in favor of the treaty in time to ad­ dress the annual convention of the large Jewish organization B’nai B’rith. Of course the president’s support for the treaty has nothing to do with the re-election campaign. State Department officials assure us that Reagan’s waiting until now to bring it up is the culmination of three years of review. Good to know that three years was long enough for the administration to decide genocide is not a good thing and should be strongly denounced. State Department officials said a major concern was that some countries who have signed the treaty have shown a certain lack of respect for human rights. That really isn’t relevant. The integrity of the resolution itself is unaffected by the lack of humanitarianism displayed by nations who signed the Genocide Convention as a PR stunt. The Soviet Union and Vietnam, who both signed the treaty, have been known to sharpen their genocidic skills in chemical warfare at the expense of the Marxistresisting peoples of Laos and Cambodia. This activity, hardly an argument against ratification of the Genocide Convention, on­ ly makes these violating countries guilty of what they on paper have defined as criminal activity. The opposition extrem ists offer arguments that the treaty — merely by criminalizing mass murder — trespasses on national sovereignty or could lead to some sort of world government. You really have to be groping to come up with reasoning like that. Treaties that are more specific have been ratified by the United States, like the Geneva Convention outlawing chemical warfare. Sovereign na­ tions gained rather than lost on that one. It is now up to the Senate to cut the nonsense and ratify the Genocide Conven­ tion, ending two generations of diplomatic embarrassment for this country. The only remaining argument against putting the U.S. signature on the treaty is that without enforcement capability it is simply an idealistic statement — which makes the issue a simple matter of whether this is a nation of ideals. le tte rs Foreign policy scam D ire c to r finds e d ito ria l m isle a d in g Editor: Asking the Soviet Union to agree to a verifiable nuclear freeze makes about as much sense as asking a Communist to quit being a Communist. Anyone who seriously believes a verifiable nuclear freeze agreement is even remotely possi­ ble is either naive, ignorant or a Jane Fonda Patriot. The key word is VERIFIABLE! The critical unanswerable question is: Why do so many of our people seem to buy the fiction that a nuclear freeze agreement is verifiable? Is it because of the truth of a state­ ment made by a well-known Soviet dissident that: “There are more dedicated Marxists in the United States today than in the Soviet Union”? If this is the reason our people seem to be buying this treasonous foreign policy scam, then we can be sure personal freedom, national prosperity and greatness are in real and serious jeopardy right here in the United States! W.P. Shofstall ASU professor emeritus Editor: not reported but seen by my office staff and the affected This letter is in response to the editorial titled “What’s apartment owners. There have been great strides to make in a name?” (Friday, Sept. 7, 1984). I believe you have improvements, but we must remain realistic. I will be the raised several points which are very misleading. I have first to admit that conditions are not optimal. But then overseen personally numerous improvements in Sun again, that’s the reason why Operation Beautification will Devil Village. go on. Students with pessimistic attitudes such as WHERE WERE YOU: When the Hispanic Business yourselves do nothing but hinder and de motivate other Students Association, Tempe sanitation and our office students residing in the “Village. ” If you expect us to undo spent an entire Saturday picking up trash and rubbish in years of neglect and decay overnight, you really have the “Village.” When our office had to find alternative your head in the clouds. Your editorial did nothing but parking for 200 residents while more than $10,000 worth of prove that with the lack of factual basis. repairs were made on their apartment parking lot. When I One last remark bugs me: you indicated "Sin City” spent three Sundays inspecting $250,000 of improvements received its name from excessive partying and lifestyles. made on one apartment. When my staff spent an entire WRONG. “Sin City” received its name when women were day walking “Village” sidewalks handing out 1,500 books allowed to live off campus and started living in that area on manager responsibilities. When your own State Press So please, next time you need facts about the area, come (Oct. 25,1983) in an investigative article revealed “Sin Ci­ taBctome. ty” had indeed mellowed. Albert R. Pina This list can go on and on with improvements that are Director, Tenants/Commuter Students Association Bicyclist fights back Editor: This is to Wayne Baker, who finds bicyclists to be such a hazard. Some of us do not have the luxury of living close to campus or driving a car to school. Since I don’t exactly enjoy a threemile walk, I bike to school. On my way, I must dodge: large construction signs that construction workers have thrown carelessly on the sidewalk; mud and/or piled dirt on sidewalks near construction sites; numerous potholes; motorists who make a game out of who can run my bicycle off the road; and high curt». That's before I even hit campus To me, nothing is more infuriating than to be riding on a bike path, only to come upon people walking on the path, chatting away, oblivious to the fact that they stand a good chance of getting run over. For someone who complains against bicyclists as you did in your column, you’re probably one of those people who walk dmvn the center of the bike path with a Walkman blaring away. In spite of these obstacles, I try to be a courteous bicyclist and think that it's high time pedestrians start o b e y i n g rules as well. If bicyclists get fined $18 for riding on Cady Mall, there should be a similar penalty for the morons who walk to class via bike paths. Yes, there are kamikaze bikers on campus who like to sweep down on unsuspecting pedestrians. However, the ma­ jority of us do follow safety rules, stay off Cady Mall and try to give pedestrians the right of way — if not the benefit of the doubt. Mary A. Russell Junior, Theatre U r t i P re ti Page 5 Monday, Septem ber 1 0 ,1 9 8 4 Vanessa controversy 'revealing' Tom Blodgett Sports Editor The Vanessa Williams controversy has reappeared, thanks to an announcement by Penthouse magazine publisher Bob Guccione that he would be publishing more photographs of the former Miss America. Guccione claims the photos, which will be published in the January issue of the porn mag, will be even more explicit than the first pictorial. That is a fairly grandiose claim, considering the first pic­ tures were so explicit they forced her to abdicate her crown as Miss America and caused a session of finger pointing un­ paralleled by any non-political issue in recent memory. Though the whole incident is unfortunate, it does have a, ah, revealing side to it. Not physically so much, although it obviously was that. But it was even more revealing of the character of the two prin­ cipals involved in the incident, Williams and Guccione. In Guccione’s case, we learned the man is a siimeball — if there was any doubt about that beforehand. When the first set of photos was published, Guccione claim­ ed the “newsworthiness” of the photographs justified their publication. Guccione’s critics were not sold. Noted feminist author Susan Brownmiller charged on the ABC program “Nightline,” that Guccione was out to destroy Williams’ bud­ ding career. That accusation did not wash well. From Guccione's stand­ point, the photos would be of interest to the readers of his magazine. His explanation seemed a reasonable, if repug­ nant, one. But now with another set of photos to come, it appears PSST... HAVE 'YÖU WEARP Brownmiller may have been correct. Guccione now compares Williams to President Nixon and calls the affair “ Pagaentgate." He has accused her of being a fraud on the American people. Such absurd accusations only serve to betray his own motives. It seems Guccione is out to ruin one woman’s career — and profit handsomely from it. If Guccione had any moral fiber, any feeling for the woman, he would have balked at the publication of the photographs. At the very least he could have waited until after her reign as Miss America had ended. Damage might have been held to a minimum at that point. But Guccione has no morals. He laughs at such a concept, opting instead to operate in the sleaze mode 24 hours a day. In his twisted manner, he points out the fame he has brought to Williams by publishing the photos More like infamy, Bob. They’re not the same thing. It may seem foolhardy to condemn Guccione without also casting Williams in the boat with him. She did, after all, con­ sent to pose nude with another woman. But Williams was a victim of her own naivete. She commit­ ted an indiscretion and is willing to admit it. And therein lies the difference between Williams and Guc­ cione. Both committed errors in judgment. Only one knows it. Indeed Williams has displayed a certain mettle in her character. She has resolved to overcome these incidents, and is making every effort to come clean. She made a sm art public relations move by telling her side of the story to People magazine. She even stole some of Guc­ cione’s thunder by revealing what kinds of shots we can ex­ pect in the second pictorial. That may take out half the fun for most people. Williams has been the object of much scorn because of this affair. Some say she deserved it. But how many of us can say we did not commit an indiscre­ tion at a similar age (19), even if it was not of such a serious nature. In Vanessa Williams' case, she committed a mistake of youth. She should be given the chance to right her wrong. STATE PRESS City Editor JIM McCLEARY Asst. City Editor W AYNE BAKER Asst. City Editor M.K. REINMART Opinion Editor INGRID TUUtiNG News Editor MICHAEL HUMPHREYS Editor STEVEW ATERSTRAT Managing Editor ABOUTItfE „.""■BEST P6AÌ. iW W y ONTHEBEST HAMBURGER INUMI? [•It IP Sports Editor TOM BLODGETT •Asst. Sports Editor JERRY BROWN Arts Editor MARIA KHAN Photo Editor MICHAEL CONNER Copy CMOt PAMI KOWAL iZ A Z jm M sM sm Q U A L IT Y C A R E . WE CARE • • IT T A K E S T W O T O B E . . . H onest P u n ctu a l I n f o r m a t iv e P e r s is t a n t F r ie n d l y H e lp f u l U n d e r s t a n d in g C o o p e r a t iv e C o n f id e n t i a l A v a ila b le R e s p o n s iv e C o m p e te n t F le x ib le C o n s id e r a t e M e d ic a l Care + Self Care = O p tim a l H e a lth S T U D E N T H E A L T H m a k e s a n p a rtn e r in y o u r h e a lth rig h ts a n d re c o g n iz e e x c e lle n t care. E x e rc ise ■ p a l M M K m i H H m m m K m M y o u r y o u r re sp o n sib ilitie s. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. M T F / 9 a.m.-5 p.m. W T h , PITCHERS OF BEER P U R IN 6 6A M E U rgent Care 5-6 p.m. M -F / 9-N oon Sat. For after-hours phone advice, c a ll 965-3456. V Page 6 Slate Preti Monday, September 10.1984 R O T C enrollm ent jum ps unexpectedly [~AnENTI0N CLASSIFIED STAFF*! the population of the college-age group. Fleig said freshmen and sophomores sign up for the pro­ gram by adding it to their class schedule. “You register for our class just like a regular class, ’ he said. The program is two semester hours for freshman and sophomores and three credit hours for juniors and seniors, Fleig said, adding that juniors and seniors must be accepted into the program. Students entering the program are required to attend classes as well as work part- and full-time jobs connected with the ROTC. According to Fleig, the increase in the number of ROTC students may be due to a conservative swing in America. “You might say there is more patriotism in the country to­ day,” Fleig said. He said the increase also may be the result of the benefits the program offers as well as ROTC recruiting efforts on the University campus and 43 Valley high schools. Fleig said the program offers a monthly $100 tax-free allowance for each student and full payment for tuition, books and required fees for those students who are awarded scholarships. Upon receiving a degree, each ROTC student is guaranteed entrance into the Air Force as a second lieutenant. Fleig said the ROTC program is open to all students. “You can be in the program with any major,” he said. But the Air Force is particularily interested in students with ma­ jors in engineering, physics, math, computer science, ar­ chitecture or meteorology, he said. By PATRICK J. KUCERA Staff Writer The number of students joining the U.S. Air Force ROTC program has exceeded the anticipated figure, says an assis­ tant professor of aerospace studies. “It is quite a bit more than we expected this year," Maj. Bernard Fleig said. Fleig said the increase in the ROTC enrollment is due to a large rise in freshmen applicants. “The sophomore, junior and senior classes have not in­ creased that much at all," Fleig said. “ It’s the new freshmen coming into the University." Fleig said the ROTC program was unprepared for the ex­ cessive number of students entering the classes. "We ran out of textbooks and materials for some of the students,” he said, adding that the problem has been rec­ tified. Fleig said the number of cadets in the officer training pro­ gram has increased steadily over the past few years. Last year, the program had 215 students. Figures released Friday showed the Air Force ROTC alone had 238 members for the fall 1984 semester, an 11 percent increase from 1983. According to Fleig, the figures include members in the Air Force ROTC at ASU, local community colleges and Grand Canyon College, a private Baptist school in West Phoenix. However, Fleig said the program may not sustain the large increases it has had. “We will be lucky if we keep the numbers at the levels (they are at)," Fleig said. He attributed a possible future decline to the decrease in Researcher in Department of Educational PsyV chology is studying how memory changes with age. A and ways thatage-related memory problems might ; be reduced. I Requires only one hour, at your convenience. I Must be ages 40-54, 62+. Non-college graduates | preferred. j I j , V | Call John Vincent, 969-4229, for more information, t L_____________________ » I WANT TO HAVE YOUR OWN CONDO? we canshow you how. DARTMOUTH TRACE 602 N. May fjust N. of university, E. of Price) 969-1928 U.S. HOME Equal Housing Opportunity r Mill & Baseline j 8 3 1 -W O O D C o m m u t e r s t o p a r t ic i p a t e in r i d e - s h a r e p r o g r a m By VICKIE CHACHERE Staff Writer ASU students have the opportunity to join in a computerized ride-share pro­ gram on campus, says the director of the Tenants/Commuter Student Association. The program is being offered by the ASU Tenants/Commuter Student Association in conjunction with the Maricopa County Ride-Share Program. A1 Pina said. “It’s free, and basically open to ail students, faculty and staff of A SU ,” Pina said. According to Pina, information con- M M cerning where the commuter lives, if they own a car and if they are willing to drive is fed into a computer. The information is sent to the main ride-share office in Phoenix where “the computer matches up the person’s name with others with similar data and a list is mailed to them within two days,” Pina said. "The most important piece of infor­ mation is what time the person is available to leave and what time they ha veto be here. "Pina said. The purpose of the ride-share pro­ gram is to ease the congestion in the r a iM parking lots, he said. “They are working on getting special parking permits for ride-share pro­ gram commuters," Pina said, adding that more information on the permits would be available in the future. Response to the program has been good, even though there has been little publicity in the two weeks of its ex­ istence at ASU, Pina said. Funding for the ride-share program is provided by the county office. “We provide the personnel up here, and they provide the computer and the mailing service,” he said. ir Printshops Of The Future “ FOR THE PROFESSIONAL LO O K IN TERM PAPERS” ■" I I I I I T o ta l S p o r ts C o v e r a g e o n Satellite TV •Big Screen TV • 3 Televisions •Best Wine Burgers •Best Bar T-shirts •H appy Hour 2 Drafts 80Ol08 By H e h M iCOWNW Th# Woom of • begonia plant la a rich red in color. sprays. But the bugs build a resistance to it. Now we hand clean,” she said. The majority of plants in the greenhouse were donated. While the students do bring in several varieties of plants, very few are purchased. I bought some plants to be cut up for microscope labs and some onion bulbs (for the Botany 100 classes). That will be all the plants I will buy this year,” Herman said. “We are not allowed to sell plants,’* she’said. “It competes with private business, and we are not allowed to give them away because that is showing preferential treatment.” Herman said the excess plants are thrown away. “It’s a real shame. Plants just can’t stop growing. You are always going to have an excess.” The greenhouse s activities are not limited to research and laboratories. A film studies class on campus recently filmed a movie in the greenhouse and “a lot of grammar school kids come here towards the end of the semester,” Herman said. Outside of those directly involved in the botany program, the greenhouse is almost unknown to ASU students, Herman said. “ You walk by and you don’t even see it,” Herman said, adding that a few people occasionally stop in to see the plants. “ (If peo­ ple) are interested, I let them in. I don’t want to curb their in­ terests.” ¡hris Herman LUNCH B A C K TO SCHOOL STU D EN T SPEC IA LS FEA TURING FOUR NEW 10-SPEEDS A T REDUCED PRICES! R A LE IG H 149 n«*9 eynv PEUGEOT a ASAH I it. HORN ¿-tom 1 In tro d u cto ry O ffe r Haircuts $6 Socolor Weavings Perms $30 $25 Choice o f / o r J co lo rs Specializing in Hair Designs fo r Young Adults 968-6685 C orner o f Lemon & Terrace Hours: Mon. 10-6 Tucs.-Fri. 10-7 Sat. 10-5 EA S T ER N ISPROUD 7 0 INTR0DUŒ A NEWCAMPUS RESOURCE. 0 ., * * * * * a>qpfa y id j—oyroonyMM wteckon etfcw M tafr faw-prtod bicycfes 0 f a CRk M Lock t e a 2B95 29.95 «“ “ Ta* 1032 S. Terrace Tempe. A Z 9 6 7 -7700 Now eastern has an on-campus representative who can give you vm iabie travel information. Anything from group trips and convention pfenning to your own special travel needs. Whatever your travel questions, ask them on campus firs t Then for specific tares and reservations, call your local Eastern reservations office. • a / K R YPTONTTE i 3099 M bvO W - i 2500 : Now Reduced 6% Ut. V . 52 it tin■Ink»- to «I lim uig »«■ . uttmg Ik ON- $0 MTAOOUOIG EASTERNSON-CAMPUSREPNESENUJIVE. EDFIBVIF •*tant*H»I 4*«ihai. M M l*« C UMBr (jOOll 0 T O M W ILSO N Nam _ Storm“ ASU Campus Representative Reservations: 271-0878 Catte ft Lock S«< Office: 273-3755 Home: 965-9311 High QuaUty, o*r Hours: Sunday............11-4 Mon.. Wed I Fn .. 9-6 Toes 4 Thors____ 9-8 Saturday...........9-5 _ T E R IM We earn ou r w ings every day State Press Monday. September 10,1984 Page 10 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o cpo o o oo oo oo o oo c Tenants recover money from complex By MARY ANNE PEREZ Staff Writer When Doug Llewellyn of “The Peo­ ple's Court," a television series of ac­ tual court cases, advises the viewing audience not to take the law into its own hands, he may be offering good advice. Dave Varaell, for one, is glad he took Ms case to court. Although it took six months to get a court date, and he didn’t get as much money as he was asking, he said it was “definitely worth my time and effort. “ He and roommate Mike Nichols sued Terrace Road Apartments, 950 S. Ter­ race Rd., for $495, three times the amount of their security deposit, because none of the deposit was return­ ed within 14 days of their moving out. The judge awarded them $84.55, When they moved out of Terrace Road Apartments last December, the landlord found the apartment in disorderly condition with a cracked window and a ruined mattress. Vamell told the landlord the window was cracked when they moved in and said they left the apartment “spotless." But the roommates did not receive any of the $165 security deposit or an ex­ planation why, Vamell said. When they contacted the Tenants Association on campus, they were referred to Legal Services, a free legal aid for students operated through the ASU Associated Students. After getting legal advice and mak­ ing many attempts to reach a com­ promise, the roommates took the apart­ ment complex to court, Vamell said. Their case was brought to court in June before a hearing officer, Vamell said. Three weeks ago, a court decision ordered the apartment complex to pay Vamell and Nichols $84.55, more than half the security deposit. Vamell said the Tenants Association and Legal Services were helpful in get­ ting the settlement. A1 Pina, director of the Tenants/Commuter Students Association, said, “We're willing to go to court for anybody." Vamell advised students in the same situation not to accept a complete loss of a security deposit. Although he acknowledges the amount awarded was not nearly what the tenants wanted, Vamell said he is glad he didn't let it go by. “It's a matter of principle," he said. Career Services matches ASU students with jobs By KIM SERTICH Copy Editor Career Services mighthave a job for you if you’re a scor­ pion milker, official air sniffer, Polynesian dancer or cotton ball tester. However, if you are looking for a job that requires more conventional qualifications, there definitely are plenty on the bulletin boards at Career Services. According to Raymond Castillo, assistant director of Career Services, his office has been inundated with requests for part-time student employment. “We’re getting a tremendous amount of activity. Right now we have 500 employers asking for help." he said. "We are getting up to 25 calls a day." Employers contact the Career Services office with their part-time needs and the jobs are posted on a bulletin board on the first floor of the Academic Services Building. The job information cards are dated so students will know how long the position has been available. DENTISTRY a t th e UNIVERSITY O P CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO Find out from a University of Arizona student now attending UCSF Medical Center what it is like to enter the health professions. Plan to meet u s at: Social Science Building, Room 111 Tuesday, September 11, 1984, 7 p.m. Phone 965-2365 for more information. A Career Services staff member contacts the employers weekly to check if the position is still open or if it was filled by an ASU student. “Because we have so many students, employers come to the school for help,” Castillo said. “The public at large realizes there is a wealth of knowledge on campus " Some employers hire students on a temporary basis, such as a one-day cleaning job, he said. “However, some students are such good employees that after graduation they are hired permanently," Castillo said. Job openings are located all over the Valley, but Castillo said local employers will be the most successful in recruiting students for work. “We're not just talking about mama and papa shops, we're talking about large retailers too." he said. Interested students can register for the referral service at the Career Services office. When the requested job becomes available, the student is notified by the department or the prospective employer. w J 1 You H aven ’t B een T o U arad ise Until Y ou H ave T ried P W H IR L A W H IR ! fti Come Celebrate With Us At '• N m * . £ S K V ^ r n m x m to in n s a i a J U N IV E R S IT Y CO M M O N S (215 E. 7th St. I ( lita r la W h ip ^ CANDY BARS Salteen Heath Bar ■Meet Nettarli Craach FRUITS Strawberry Statai Rte tai«tem r Blueberry ■tate Cherry Piariyylr NITS Aha— ta Citam i Perte» Petenti Mach «Meute Crape Nate Do YourselfA Flavor! COOKIES A ETC. Oree» Peaeet Setter MyrikMM Cacone! Ch»retate Chip» Cartate Cinger Seapi Checae Cabe Crani» CANDY N A N 't Ptpgennte Petty Chip Starille MM Catte Introductory Coupon—Clip Here 20% O F F EDUCATIONAL C EN TER C all Days. Eves & Weekends P re se n t th is c o u p o n to any p a rticip a tin g W h irla-W h ip m e rchan t and with the p u rc h a s e of any regu lar size W h irla -W h ip or yo gurt w ith o n e ingred ien t, you II receive 20% O F F Lim it on© c o u p o n per cu sto m e r per visit. N ot go o d with any oth er offer Redeemable at W h in 552 967-2967 * M VKRSITY COM M ONS Do YourselfA Flavor! ' HUM (Ahirlg-14 hi| hitliith Iru A V A W m .W I-H 2 2 Ô E x p ire s 10-31-84 A W ," ," State Press sp o rts stale press Sun Devils humiliated by Oklahoma State By BRAD HALVOR8EN Sports Writer Led by four interceptions and a pair of 100yard rushing performances, Oklahoma State roiled ovmr ASU 45-3 before a crowd of 70,244 in Sun Devil Stadium Saturday night, handing the Devils their worst defeat in 37 years. record with the Devils, almost matches ASU’s total point deficit in losses from the last three years. Since 1981, ASU has lost eight games by a combined total of 44 points. “ I don’t think there’s any question we were totally dominated by Oklahoma State.” Rogers said. "That’s the first ti SUN photo by MichM l Connor A SU quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst is Jarred by an Oklahoma Incompletion. Van Raaphorst com pleted only 10 of 29 passes. The Cowboy defense, which led the nation with 28 interceptions last year, picked off three Jeff Van Raaphorst passes and one Tim Salem to6s en route to holding the Devils to their lowest single-game point total since 1980. Sophomore running back Charles Crawford, listed as a third stringer, broke the 100-yard rushing barrier by halftime and finished the game with 13 carries for 137 yards — twice as many yards as he gained all last season. All-Big Eight running back Shawn Jones added 101 yards an 15 carries to help the Cowboys’rushing attack outgain the Devils’ 337 yards to97. The 42-point defeat, which ruined coach Darryl Rogers’ perfect opening-night State defender, causing an we’ve been dominated like that since I’ve been here. We had no spark, no consisten­ cy.” The Cowfoqys struck early and never look­ ed bade. With ASU driving into Cowboy ter­ ritory on the game’s first possession, defen­ sive tackle Leslie O’Neal nailed Van Raaphorst from behind. The ball floated into the hands of Rodney Harding, another defensive tackle, who scampered 36 yards into the end zone to give the Cowboys a 6-0 lead. Larry Roach’s con­ version made it 7-0. While OSU added nine more points to its lead with a 32-yard Roach Add goal and a 44-yard touchdown run by Crawford, the Devils’ next five possessions ended in punts. Van Raaphorst then unloaded his second interception into the hands of strong safety Rod Brown at the ASU 49. Six plays later, Cowboy quarterback Rusty Hilger threw an U-yard TD strike to flanker Bobby Riley to extend the lead to 23-0 with 7:35 left in the half. Van Raaphorst’s final interception came in the third quarter when comert>ack Mark Moore pulled down an errant pass at the ASU 40. The Cowboys turned three Van Raaphorst interceptions into 16 points. “I have to keep looking at the game and learn from it and just keep going from there," said Van Raaphorst, who completed 10 of 29 passes for 115 yards in his debut. “It’s just building blocks. I’m on square one right now and I’m going up, but tonight there was nowhere to go. “I’d like to work on the whole game. I’d like to take it all back. They played like we thought they’d play. They screwed us up a couple of times and I missed some defensive secondary reads,” he said. Van Raaphorst left the game late in the third quarter with a strained knee, after receiving a devastating blow from no6e guard Marvin Hawkins. “He may be back Monday or Tuesday,” Rogers said. “Who knows? We’d certainly like to be able to play him. A young man in his college quarterback debut, it’s not what he wanted or what we wanted. “Some things happened that don't always happen to first-time starters. But he will learn from it and down the road he’ll pro­ bably build on it.” ASU mounted its wily scoring drive at the end of the first half. The Devils used a 19yard pass to split end Doug Allen and two OSU penalties to move the ball to the Cowboy io. Van Raaphorst then threw three incomplete passes into the end zone. Luis Zendejas booted a 27-yard Held goal, his only attempt of the night, to pull the Devils within 20 points at the half. With the game still in reach at halftime, the ASU defense broke down on OSU's first possession of the second half, allowing the Cowboys to drive 80 yards in 35 seconds. Crawford opened the drive with a 30-yard run off-tackle. Hilger fo llo w ed with a swing pass to flanker Jam ie Harris at the ASU 45. Harris put a move on cornerback Mario Montgomery, sending him to the ground, and raced 44 yards before being dragged down by safety Darrin Willis at the 1. Hilger lunged into the end zone on a quarterback sneak to give OSU a 30-3 lead after Roach’s conversion. “The game went pretty much as I ex­ pected it,” said Hilger, who completed nine of 17 passes for 138 yards. “I knew if we were patient good things would happen to us. “They got down on themselves because of a few bad breaks.” Roach went on to kick field goals of 27 and 47 yards to extend the lead to 364 before Van Raaphorst left the game with 4:13 left in the third quarter. Senior Tim Salem took over at quarter­ back and engineered a 34-yard drive before landing his first-ever ASU pass into the hands of linebacker Matt Monger at the OSU 31. After a Joe Miller one-yard Cowboy touchdown run boosted the lead to 43-3 late in the fourth quarter, freshman John Walker saw his first action as an ASU quarterback. In his third play, Walker was called for in­ tentional grounding in the end zone, giving the Cowboys a safety and a 45-3 margin. “To tell you the truth, 1 would like to play them another time — not to get revenge but because they’re a good team to work with,” said safety David Fulcher. “ I’ve run up against some guys that w o e fast, but these guys — the whole team was fast. “We expected them to have a strong runn­ ing game. But we expected them to come out and pass. On film they run, run, run maybe five plays. Then they’ll throw the pass to Harris. “But they didn’t do that,” he said. “They just ran, ran, ran and every now and then, maybe 20 (days, then they’d throw a pass.” The Sun Devil offense averaged only 2.5 yards per rush, converted on three of 17 third-down situations, and was outgained 475 yards to 212. “I wouldn’t say it was the offensive linemen’s fault,” said tailback Darryl Clack, who led ASU with 81 yards on 19 car­ ries. “ I’m part of it too. I made a lot of mistakes and I wasn’t mentally prepared. The blame cannot be put on the offensive line, just the team itself.” The Cowbqy victory starts off the Pat Jones era with a bang. Jones took over the team’s coaching duties last June. “ I don't know if we're that good or they’re that bad,” Jones said. “ Rodney Harding’s interception return set the tempo of the game. “I just tried to stay out of the way and let the assistants do their thing. ” And the assistants did their thing. ASU hasn’t had 45 points scored on it since 1972. “The defense called very good defenses, but we didn’t execute properly,” Rogers said. “We called good plays offensively, but they didn't get executed even remotely :lose. We got flat destroyed. C o w b o y s celebrate big win in co a ch in g debut of J o n e s By JERRY BROWN Assistant Sports Editor Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones leaned against a soda dispenser in the locker room, lit up a cigarette and took a deep breath. “I never thought the game would turn out like this,” Jones said, after his Cowboys humiliated the 12th-ranked ASU Sun Devils 45-3 Saturday night in Tempe “I was ready for a tight contest, but I tpld the kids if we didn’t give away the big play, we would be all right. “I don't know if were that good or they’re that bad.” The victory came in Jones’ first game as OSU coach and tod tom to declare it “ his greatest victory as head coach ” “I guess I'm the wmmngeat coach in col­ lege football,” Janes said. “We’re 1-0 and rolling. If you can hold ASU to three paints, you’re going**be all right.” The Cowboys rolled up 337 yards rushing against the highly-touted Sun Devil defense, 138 by third-string running back Charles Crawford. They dominated every phase of the game from start to finish. Jones said be knew Crawford was coming around as early as last season's Bluebonnet Bowl win over Baylor. “Crawford was no tog secret to us, we knew he could play,” Jones said. “ But I wasn’t going to shoot my mouth off about him, either.” Crawford, who scored on a 44-yard run in the second quarter to up the Cowboy lead to 16-0, said he was just happy to get a chance. “All you can ask for is a chance. I got a chance,” Crawford said. “ I was nervous on the first play, but after that I just kept hustl­ ing. Jones: 1 don't know if we’re that good or if they’re that bad.’ “Our line blocked well. My little sister could have run through those holes,” he said. Crawford said his performance capped off a two-year struggle of “getting my head straight.” “Everything came real easy to me in high school,” Crawford said. “The last two years have been frustrating.” Cowboy quarterback Rusty Higler, who Oklahom a State running Pack Shawn Jon es Onda som* room to the outside. Jo n es rushed f o r is i yards. completed nine of 17 passes for 138 yards and one touchdown, said the Devils got down on themselves and lost a lot of their intensity as early as the second quarter. “They lo6t a lot of intensity before halftime,” Higler said. “ But we were wor­ ried about ourselves. We didn’t worry about ASU. “I played this game in my mind a hundred times before tonight,” Higler said. “ I even predicted we would win, 38-14. “The personality of this team is a winner. We knew we could do it, but a lot of people didn’t ” Page 12 Monday, September 10.1984 C a r e y ’s re a c tio n to v ic to ry h u rts Steve Rich man Sports Writer It’s true that the Olympics are long over. However, many different performances remain in my head. While most of the memories are extremely positive, I am finding it very dif­ ficult to forget Rick Carey’s self-centered reaction to his first gold medal. For those people who don’t know or remembeF what I am alluding to, I will explain the situation. The United States swimming team was very successful in its quest for numerous medals. The team won 21 out of a possible 28 gold medals, which by Olympic standards is in­ credible. It is true that the Soviet-led boycott hurt the com­ petition in many events, however the results would not have been that different on the men's side. Carey, a gold medal winner in the 200-meter backstroke, became visibly upset with his time after winning the race, which is understandable. However, winning a gold medal is a goal that all Olympic athletes try their hardest to achieve. While watching the race with some of my friends, we all were very shocked to see his reaction after the race. One of the main focuses of the Olympics is definitely personal ac­ complishment, but the athletes are competing for their coun­ tries as well. America really wanted to celebrate along with Carey, but he was too caught up in his own personal hang-ups to realize that he had indeed won an Olympic gold medal not only for himself, but also for his country. ASU assistant swimming Coach Alan Voisard agrees that Carey's actions were not befitting a gold medal winner. “It’s true that he (Carey) didn't achieve his goal of break­ ing the world record," Voisard said. “ However, the major essence of the Olympic Games is to wina gold medal.” Carey will have to live with the fact that in his biggest mo­ ment of glory, he was more concerned with how he did than what he had just accomplished. In 20 years, will he remember the medal or the fact that he won with a time that he found to be undeserving of the victory? In an interview a few days after the race, Carey apologized to the American people as well as to the rest of the world for his actions. While I do respect him for that, I also feel sorry for him. In the later years of his life he will regret that he will not be able to bring back that one moment when he was the focus of the world's attention. Another disappointment on a lesser scale was the secondplace finish of the water polo team. I find it very hard to accept that a team can go undefeated through a tournament and not win the gold medal solely on the basis of scoring fewer goals. The American team did not lose a game; however, in the championship game they blew a 5-2 lead over Yugoslavia and had to settle for a 5-5 tie and the silver medal. Voisard: T h e major essence of the Olym pic Gam es is to win a gold medal/ These men have been together for the better part of eight years, and the disappointment of not winning the gold medal carried over from 1980. At that time, they could not compete in the Moscow Summer Olympic Games because of the American boycott. While high school and college water polo have the sudden death rule for tie games, I cannot believe that sudden death or at least overtime would not be used in the Olympics. Inter­ national rules are almost always different, but the athletes are still fighting for the same goals, which, in the Olympics, is to win a gold medal. Both Carey’s victory in the 200-meter backstroke and the silver medal performance of the water polo team provide an ironic twist. Carey won a gold medal and was upset because he didn’t live up to his own expectations, while the water polo team did play up to their expectations (going undefeated) and had to settle for the silver medal. “ Professional Therapy Can Help Millions Of Headache Sufferers” H e a d a ch e s are the most common health complaint in America today. And we should not assume that chronic or recurring headaches are normal. If you have headaches, call Dr. Thomas Berndt for an im­ mediate examination. Dr. Thomas Berndt accepts group, union, auto, and industrial insurance — Con­ centrating his concern with Headache Problems. D r. T h o m a s B e rn d t Chiropractic Physician LET'S W O R K TO G ETH ER T O PR O TECT THE U N B O R N A N D THE J U . m A R C H O f D im e s ...D o n ’t miss our 20-20 offer! Internationally Famous Pocket Billiard & Trick Shot Artist JACK WHITE FEE PRIZES Sfvd. Suite I1B7, T e n p * C19M STUDENTS MEMORIAL UNION RECREATION CENTER ENTRY I B M E. NEWBORN ( O ) Help prevent birth defects NO 9 6 6 -0 7 7 7 Avt, architecture, engineering Sr design students: FOR 1**, 2 n d . 3 rd Shop for your art supplies from The Valley's most complete selection by SEPTEMBER 20, and save a big 20%. Shop any other time and you'll receive our standard 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT. Fine arts materials Canvas, paints, stretcher bars, brushes, frames, paper, etc. Drafting supplies Pool C lin ic—Tournam ent— E x h ib itio n Monday, Sept* 1 0 ----- F rid a y , Sep t. 1 4 SCH ED U LE OF EVENTS Parallel rules, triangles, templates, leads, drawing boards, technical pens (all brands) and more. ALSO Airbrush equipm ent & supplies, graphic arts m aterials an d books. •B IL LIA R D C L IN IC /C L A S S E S FO R M EN A N D W OM EN ON M O N D AY AN D TU ESD A Y • T O U R N A M E N T FO R B O T H M EN A N D W O M EN O N W E D N E S D A Y , T H U R S D A Y A N D FRID AY • J A C K ’S T R IC K S H O T EXH IBITIO N O N FRID AY FO R M O R E IN FO R M A T IO N , C A L L T H E M E M O R IA L UN IO N R E C R E A T IO N C E N T E R A T 965-3642! I Jeüerson FLA X in £ I53 S <0 Maricopa Freeway c o , INC 10th Street & Jeäerson • 254-0840 • Lots of tree paridftg Hours: Mon -Frt 8:30-5:30 S at 9-5 flax SMM Awgp Page 13 Monday, September 10,1984 Defense will tell tale for Huskies By BRAD HALVORSEN Sport! Writer The most consistent Pac-10 team in the last seven years with three conference championships and four runner-up seasons, the Washington Huskies once again should tie in the Rose Bowl hunt come November. The Husky defense appears to be solid despite the team’s loss of five starters. Last year, the Huskies held five op­ ponents to 10 points or less, including shutouts against North­ western and USC. Although the defensive line will endure a rebuilding year, senior tackle Ron Holmes, who racked tip 100 stops and 13 sacks in his all-Pac-10 1983 season, should be an AllAmerican candidate this year. Talented and experienced linebackers could make up for the deficit at defensive line. Veterans Joe Krakdski, Tim Meamber and Joe Kelly joined for 350 tackles last year. The trio has a combined total of eight years experience with the Huskies. Washington’s inexperienced secondary gave up 2,064 yards through the air last year, but yielded only seven touchdown passes, the best in the Pac-10. Starting cornerbacks Vestee Jackson and J.C. Pearson are returning, and will be joined by strong safety Jim Rodgers and sophomore free safety Tim Peoples. Offensively, Coach Don James feels the Huskies need a stronger ground game, despite leading the conference last year with a 192-yard-per-game average. “Yes, we have to change our offensive philosophy a bit,” James said. “First of all, we won’t be able to do as much of­ fensively. We’re going to need a stronger running game. Don't Buy That Futon til You’ve Seen Ours Hopefully, we can also take some pressure off the quarter­ back by playing better defense.” Jam es must find a replacement for quarterback Steve Pelluer, the Huskies’ No. 2 all-time passer and total offensive leader. Pelluer threw for 2,212 yards last year with an in­ credible 67 percent completion ratio and led the Huskies to an 8-4 bowl season. Top prospects to fill the position are Paul Sicuro, last year’s back-up, and Chris Chandler, a high school AllAmerican who redshirted last year as a freshman. In the backfield, the Huskies return a pair of 1,000 career yard rushers in senior tailbacks Jacque Robinson and Ron “Cookie” Jackson. Robinson, Washington’s No. 7 all-time rusher, led the team in rushing yards in 1982 while Jackson headed the club in 1981. Neither, however, could win the starting job last year from Sterling Hinds, who has since graduated. The offensive line appears stable, although three starters have graduated. Center Dan Eemissee and tackle Dennis Maher return as honorable mention all-Pac-10 players, while several seniors are fighting for the remaining three spots. The receiving corps, perhaps the strongest area on offense, will be headed by senior split ends Mark Pattis on and Danny Greene. Doubling as a kick returner, Greene returned a punt 57 yards for Washington’s lone touchdown in last year’s 13-10 loss to Penn State in the Aloha Bowl. The Huskies’ Rose Bowl chances once again may be decid­ ed in the regular season finale against arch rival Washington State. The Cougars have ruined Washington’s Rose Bowl hopes two years in a row. OFF ñll Futons 10% OFF fill Frames (UJITH THIS HD) W S U ’s football future finally looks ‘rosy’ By ANDREA HE1SLER Sports Writer No longer is Washington State simply a Pac-10 spoiler. With a 7-4 record and a third place finish in 1983. the Cougars’ mid-season loss to UCLA turned out to be the only thing keeping them out of the Rose Bowl. That’s quite an improvement from the 3-7-1 record they posted in 1962, and a 2-4 start last season. Unfortunately, these impressive statistics may not be enough to pull a repeat performance. Without the conference's No. 2 quarterback in 1983, Ricky Turner, Pac-10 “Coach of the Year” Jim Walden is relying on junior Mark Ryprien to put the ball up. Ryprien and his backup, sophomore Ed Blount, haven’t had much playing time. However, the running game, one of the youngest in the Pac10, is still solid. Kerry Porter, a 6-foot-2, 207-pound junior, rushed for a conference-leading 1,000 yards last year, and his 90.9 yardper-game average placed him second in the Pac-10 behind ASU’s Darryl Clack. Joining Porter in the Cougar backfield is junior Rueben Mayes, who is returning after a shoulder separation suffered against UCLA last year. Don LaBomme, also a junior, was considered to be a strong force in the ground attack, but will sit the season out for disciplinary reasons. Senior wid? receiver John Marshall, who led the Cougars with 21 catches for 328 yards, will be back, along with junior Sammy Burris, if his progress after knee surgery continues. Tight end Vince Leighton and flanker John Breland also will catch passes for the Cougars. The offensive line has some holes in it, however. Despite the fact all-Pac-10 and District 8 all-academic left guard Dan Lynch is returning, thanks to an NCAA rule change, injuries to key players have weakened the line. Pili Tutuvanu and Curt Ladines will fight for the center spot, while veteran guard Mike Palumbo remains ques­ tionable, following knee surgery in mid-June. A knee injury last year to tackle Jam ie White and the shoulder ailment of tackle Mike Schuster are further worries. Senior right guard Kirk Samuelson is returning, and junior Mike Dreyer will become swing man if he doesn't win a tackle spot. The kicking game remains strong with the experience of 1963’s top Pac-10 punter, Glenn Harper, and place-kick«* JohnTraut. 2121 S. Priest Dr. 966-7237 continued peg* 1 4 Pro-M aster CABR ETTA G LO VES - jp i ÏÏO ÛVShO P Safe 1 fo r $5.00 2 fo r $8.95 Valid o n ly with this c o u p o n . E x p ire s 9-15-84 Cimimi FNM OaN Fqutpment and Quality OoN MordiMMftM ¿I RwSucod Prion W E O F F E R A C LU B M EM BERSHIP FO R G R E A T S A V IN G S AN D E X T R A S ! Pro-M aster A LL W EATHER G LO VE A Bodybuilding Gym for Men and Women Sale 1835 E. University Tem pe, A Z . 85281 (602)968-7122 1 for $4.50 2 for $7.95 •BODYBUILDING •BO DYSH APING •POW ERLIFTING Valid o n ly with this c o u p o n . E x p ire s 9-15-84 ASM Amene Ï i SURfRSTiTONFWY AT DIET CENTER 1 YOU HAVE NOTHING , TO LOSE BUT WEIGHT. , I •ASCMNf Counselor Juan Shwarts (L u ti SS lbs ) Featuring Cindy Narduccl Nutrition/Training Consultant T e m p e • 9 6 7 -1 3 7 1 University Medical Center 2525 S. Rural Rd., Suite 6-N 820-1819 2602W. Baseline Rd. gust one Mock E . of Price) •Open 7 days a week •Three months — $55 •No contracts •Free instruction available •Over 7,000 lbs. of free weights •Separate locker and shower facilities for men & women TOGETHER WE CAN MAKE IT HAPPEN! •Natural program based on sound nutrition •Private, daily counseling »No shots, drugs or prepackaged foods •Lifetime maintenance jr $ i •Individual programs •Sensible approach diet •Com petitive bodybuilding Page 14 Monday, September 10, 1984 Slate P p m » Grad student devotes time to martial arts By MICHAEL KONZ Sports Writer The most important use of martial arts is self-defense. Each style approaches this goal in a different way. The followers of wing tsun, a form of the Chinese kung fu, believe that simplicity and practicality are the keys to the ef­ fectiveness of a martial art. "The goal of wing tsun is simplicity. The best wing tsun is the simplest. We don’t make a big thing out of complicated theories,” said Steve Frerichs, a leading advocate of the art in Phoenix. Frerichs is a graduate student in fine arts (sculpture) at ASU, but he is devoting a great deal of his time to teaching the art of Wing tsun. “ I had been practicing kung fu since 1976,” Frerichs said. “ In the late 70s I focused in on wing tsun.” Frerichs has the fortune of studying under Grandmaster Leung Ting, who is the highest ranking wing tsun master in the world. “A group of us got together and called Leung in Hong Kong,” Frerichs said. “It turned out that it was the very time he was going to give an instructional seminar in Phoenix. ” Since then, Leung has come to America three times a year to hold seminars. Each year he has returned to Phoenix. According to legend, wing tsun originated with a Buddhist nun, Ng Mui, after the fall of the Shaolin monastery more than 250 years ago. Her first student was a woman who was in need of selfdefense from a village bully. Using wing tsun, the woman defeated the man in combat and won the following of her husband, who became her disci­ ple and named the martial art in her honor. Wing tsun gained prominence with the teachings of Grand­ master Yip Man, the renowned teacher of Bruce Lee. Cougs nonMnutd from page 13 BUY • S E LL • TR A D E your book* at Changing Hand* For quality doth and paperbacks (no taxtbooks. ptaaaa) we pay 30%of our re-sale price In each or SO« in tradein cradit which may ba uaad to purchaaa anything in tha Itora (Sorry, no trada-ina on Sat or Sun.) Browaa through our thraa hoori of' •New 4 Uaad Booka •Art Pnnta 4 Poatera •Calendar» 4 Carda •Handbound Journal! SAT 10-6 •OOK8TORC HflPPV BOUIl SAMURAI Teriyaki Chicken • Happy Bowl Katsu • Tempura • C urry • Samurai Steak 7 Days A UJeek 530 UJ. University • 966*2211 Steve Frerich, left, dem onstrates Wing Tsun, a form of Kung Fu. Frerichs teaches a course of the martial art at A SU . O -P -P -O O O 'O O O O O O Q B O O Q O B B B O B B O Q O O Q O O e k I I I I I I I I I I I Ji HEYASU STUDENTS Jim's Auto Supply average discount on all parts and accessories, except tools 0 and special priced items. HOURS: 8-7 Dally (Mon.-Frl.); 8-5 Sat. Dress Your Ears Fashionably at Dollar’$ for the bare minimum Earrings $ l 00 p er p air or 3 pr. for $2 S0 1828 E UNIVERSITY 968-5888 lO B B B B flB B B B B B B B B B O B O B HB B B B B B I Hundreds of styles & colors We aJso have a complete selection of belts for $ l 00 ea . Beads, Bandanas, Bracelets, Satin Ties Dollar'S Fashion Xcessories avons DOWEL SC R U B ! 4 1 4 S. Mill # 2 0 7 ( A b o v e S p a g h e tti C o ) 8 2 9 -1 1 2 7 SUN 12-5 CHANGING HANDS 414 MM Avenue FREE DRINK C O U P O N Japanese Fooii To G o The Cougars are solid defensively, with WSU’s top tackier over the past three years, senior Lee Blakeney, leading the inside linebackers. Blakeney, who has 371 tackles and an average of 124 per season, will be joined on the outside by Jim Krakoski, Junior Tupuola and Brad Har­ rington. Ben Carillo, the Cougars’ No. 31983 defender, will reds hirt this season. Completing the secondary are third-year returnee Jerald Waters at free safety and senior Jeff Dullum at strong safety. At the corners will be Cedrick Brown and Erwin Chappel, with Ricky Reynolds and Kevin Thomasson backing them up. M-F 10-» "He (Yip Man) had no intention of making Wing Tsun public,” Frerichs said. “After the communist revolution in China, he was forced to move to Hong Kong. For a job, he fell back on teaching martial arts to Orientals. “He became known by teaching Bruce Lee,” Frerichs said. ' “He had a score of disciples, and a handful learned the entire system. One of the last close instructors was Leung Ting.” Ting is now planning on immigrating to the United States in two years because of the planned takeover of Hong Kong by China. This will allow him expand his teaching in the United States. “He’ll definitely have a (martial arts) center in San An­ tonio,” Frerich said. Frerichs is trying to build a following in the Phoenix area. Frerichs teaches at The Center for Body Awareness, and he also rents space in order to conduct classes on his own. He also will teach a shorter class on the ASU campus. So far, Frerichs has been pleased with the turnout for his classes at ASU. “ We had out first meeting Thursday night. We will have to meet in a larger place if the same number of people show up.” Frerichs will hold another meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday in front of the MU. “Wing tsun is scarce in this country,” Frerichs said. “That’s why I’m working here to get people interested in it. The only way to do it is to take an active role. ” Frerichs believes that wing tsun will catch on. “I feel wing tsun will become a fairly popular martial art because it is so simple. ” Frerichs doesn’t devote all his time to the art. “This is more avocation than vocation. Between my sculpturing and teaching, I have a full schedule.” t i l 0101 Old Town Tampa Grand Opening Sale! ATTENTION JEWISH STUDENTS ATTENTION COLLEGE STUOENTS FUTONS AVAILABLE (recorded message) PLEASE CALL 941-9268 Brood New 5-pc. Dinette Set Reguioriy $! 50 Noui Only *99** -B E D SALE Twin set $85 Full set $95 Queen set $139.95 Hmg set $169.95 Oak stereo, VCR cabinets $199.95 4-drawer Desk $59.95 D O R M S , A P T S ., V A N S A L L S IZES U S E D R O O M S IZ E S *10 E UP MEW CAM PET TOO! T em p e (New) 2077 E. U n iv ersity 966-6252 666 E. S o u th e rn M esa • 898-3124 FURNITURE ■ % PLU SyV ^ 1516 E . V an B uren P h oen ix / ! 10% O F F STARTING A T $85 DOW EL SC R EEN $35 SLING CHAIR $40 TEXTILES in BELL SQUARE next to MOTHER TUCKER'S BM-F 10-8 , SAT 10-6 1457 W. Southern Ave., Suite 7 • Mesa • 890-9197 foci State Press Mets rookie sets new mark for strikeouts New York (AP) — Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets broke the 71-year-old rookie strikeout of 227 by Grover Cleveland Alexander Friday night against the Chicago Cubs. Gooden, a hard-throwing right-hander, struck out his fourth batter of the game and 228th pf the season, in the second inning when he got Ron Cey on a 3-2 count. Alexander set the NL mark in 1911 with the Philadelphia Phillies. The major league mark, well within striking distance for Gooden, is 245, set in 1955 by Herb Score of the Cleveland Indians. Gooden came into the game having struck out 10 or more batters in 12 outings. Currently leading the major leagues in strikeouts, the 19year old Gooden is the youngest player in the major leagues and could become the first teen-age rookie ever to lead the NL in this depart­ ment. Gooden started the power parade by striking out two batters in the first inning. After he walked lea doff hit­ ter Bob Dernier on a 3-2 pit­ ch, Ryne Sandberg came to bat. Gooden got the count to 2-2 on Sandberg, who looked a ta fastball fora called third strike. Gary Matthews, the next hitter, went 1-2 against Gooden before swinging futiley at a high-outside fastball for strike three: The young right-hander tied the record when Keith Moreland swung a t a 2-2 pitch and missed. Then, Cey the former Los Angeles Dodger, stepped into the bat­ ters’ box. Gooden got two quick strikes on him, then threw three straight balls before Cey swung at a fastball bn the outside corner for the record-breaking strike. C o a c h ’s lu n ch open to p u b lic on T hu rsd ays Weekly luncheons with ASU football Coach Darryl Rogers have been scheduled for the public each Thursday at the Kiva Club, 100 West Clarendon, 19th floor. At each of the 12 lun­ cheons, Rogers will review the previous week’s game and discuss the Sun Devils’ next opponent. The luncheons are spon­ sored by the G reater Phoenix Chapter of the ASU Alumni Association in con­ junction with the Sun Angel Foundation and the Sun Devil Club. Co6t of each luncheon is $9, including parking. For addi­ tional information, call the ASU Alumni Association, 965-3568. classifieds The STATE pOESS disclaims all responaibHIly tor quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified end display advertising by Its adver tlstrs Announcements DON’T BUY a useless parking permit, rent a guaranteed parking space instead, next to campus. «itcfK968-4207. PHOENIX GAY Youth Group offers discussion groups and social events for young men and women under 23. Meet new friends! Call 839 7989 or 938 3932 TURNED-OFF BY religion? Single? Like the outdoors? For an alternative based on logic and reason give S.A.N.E. (Single Agnostics and Nature Enthusiasts) a try Box 25623, Tempo 85282 o r 9667815 (Mar k ) . ____ WANTING TO start eating disorders support group: bulimia and anorexia. Call 831-8352 MUST SACRIFICE 70 Plymouth: new certo, starter, shocks, runs great. $750 o r bes toff er Rebecca 965-8373. OLDSMOBILE 1979 C u t le s s Supreme, a very nice car. $3,500 Cali a fte r 6 pm 946-9233 Babysitters wanted BE A nanny to our three children infant, three year old and eleven year old. Some light housekeeping. Walking distance to ASU. Full-time, immediate position. 967-3392 days. 967-5682 evenings. PART-TIME childcare needed for 17 months. South Tempe location, Monday- Wednesday- Friday- and Saturday, 6 6 pm. $2/hr 820-5817 evenings.________ Books MAKE THE most of your time. Ask for Do lt Datebook at the bookstore._____ B usiness Opp. CAPITALISTS WANTED. Earn $4.000 $10,000 by Christmas, 2-6 hours weekly. $385 inventory investment. Send $20 (deductible) for information: Classic Imagery, Suite 5015, 2049 Century Park East. L A .. California 90067_______ __________ JL )£ T û P f L k lÉ D CHRISTMAS IS coming, earn extra money now selling Avon. Please call Kim, 831-1863. Clothing EARRINGS * 1 pair or 3 pair $2.50 Batts $1 or • for $5. Dollar *. 414 South Mitt. *207, Tempe, 829-1127.____________ A VERY TINY BUT V I S T Cool sh o p HAtttTHC MOSTBEAUTIFUL MOSTCOSMIC MOSTOUTAAOCOUS. cards no arizoma ! lsoimcmobu cíahíthw ; For Rent or Lease A TH REE bedroom house for sale. Nothing down. No qualifying. 144 N. Glenview, Mesa. $570 per month. 224-1663.___________ DELUXE, LAR G E mobile home (12x6), 1 block from campus, private patio, mega air. completely furnished, washer and dryer, cathedral ceiling. 9666686. EXCEPTIONAL O FFER . 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouae partially furnished, air, covered parking, community po d. 2 miles from ASU. $425/ month plus electricity. Ceil 6066251,9am to 9 pm. FOR RENT: One bedroom condomi­ nium. 700 W. University, walking distance to ASU. Mike, between 9 end 5,9769499._______________ _______ uT a n f i FOUR BEDROOM, one bath house. Unfurnished, $350 monthly. $200 security deposit. 254-3520,1-10 p m '85¿AieA®ttS QCOTK G IFTS ±ET*sntnfc CbRNGR-nuii'l« ont tuck IL«TIMM. 9/10 Automobiles FULLY FURNISHED master bedroom available in nloe Tempe neighborhood. Close to ASU. Sleeps 2 or 1 comforta­ bly. Cell Tracy before 5, weekdays only, 263-7626.________________________ TWO BEDROOM apartment, walk to ASU. New carpet, paint. 6356. Cell 639-9660. F or Sale 10x50 DETROITER mobil* horn*, half block from ASU. low apace rant, vary nica $9200. Call 8998804. For Sale Help Wanted A THREE bedroom house for sale Nothing down. No qualifying. 144 N Glenview. Mesa $570 per month. 224 1663 CHILD CAR E workers for emotionally handicapped. Part-time weekends. Some potential eveni ngs/hol ¡days. Excellent clinical opportunity $3.35/hr E O.E. Devereux Center. 6436 E Sweet water. No. Scottsdale NEON! FOR your dorm room or apartment. Cheaper than you ever thought possible 968-6025 STEREO BRAND new, never used cassette deck, turntable, receiver, speakers. Cost over $400. $165 takes everything. 954-9541 USED ROOM size carpets $10 and up New carpet specials for apartments, dorms, cars, vans. Carpet House. 1516 E. Van Buren. Phoenix Furniture 2 BEAUTIFUL matching ioveseats. Excellent condition. Neutral color. They must go! Any reasonable offer accepted. 949-7896 DON’T BUY that futon til you've seen ours. Call Sweet Dreams, we ll tell you why. $20 off all futons 9465667. FUTONS- BUY factory direct, the answer to students sleeping and seating needs. Futons by Kinsani. 233-1281 FURNITURE FINDS 9/io HOLIDAY INN Scottsdale is remodel­ ing! Desks, table and chair sets, carpet, mirrors, lamps, pictures, drapes, and more. On sale now! 5101 N. Scottsdale Road. Scottsdale. 9:30 to 5:30, Monday through Friday. _____ SCOTTSDALE USED Furniture, 2200 N. Scottsdale Rd.. behind Kwan‘4. 9490380. Beds, desks, bookcases. Dressers. $49. _______ SOUTHWEST FUTON Factory Direct. Kings $139, Queens $109, Fulls $89. Twins $69, Cots $59. All wood couch platforms, bed frames, convertibles. 254 5943 or 277-7175. Open evenings, days, weekends. Factory 415 S. First St., downtown Phoenix. ASSISTANT MANAGER/ protectionist part-time, flexibla boum Los Area* Cinema, Monday through Friday, 1-5, Saturday evening.________________ AU TH O R S TO write “ how-to“ — checklist* on many subfacts. Sand resume, areas of expertise, writing samples. Checklist Publishing. Box 784,462 S. Gilbsrt, Mass. A2 85204. 1977 FIAT SPYDER convertible: 54,000 miles. 5-speed. AM-FM cassette, new Michelins. excellent condition. $3500. Can Jeff. 696-65160*8361736 __ CALIFORNIA CO O LER S $3.50. Meister Brau $2.00. usad Playboys 75 cants, liquors, cold bears, wines Snacks, ice. Haagen D a n Rundía s. University and Mill. 1977 FIAT SPIDER. 35.000 miles immaculate condition. AM-FM. seatcovers. bra Must see to appreciate. 834-3961, Dave DORM REFRIGERATORS! Two cubic leal. 90 day warranty. $«o each Pacific Setae 500 In stock Dave, 945-8362 COOK - PART-TIME broiler/fry. Ex­ perienced Apply 11-5 Monday through Friday. 3339 S Rural Rd ELEGANT BROADMOR townhouae Two car garage, three bedroom, two fireplaces. Almost new. $113.000 Closing costs down or lor rant for $950, ask about *850 rat*. Call Barbara Rickard. B31-130C DESPERATELY NEEDED! Hourly stu­ dent for employment Offic* of Re­ search Service. Farmer 400E. 965-4342 Please pick up application at Student Employment._____ S p e c ia liz in g la Im p o rts BMW • FIAT • ALFA ROMEO • MCB • TOYOTA • DATSUN ConvertiblesI BUY SELL TRADE 7 1 1 N. Scottsdale Rd. <2 b lo c k s North o f A S U Stadiu m ’ Workdays 9-8 Sal & Sun 9-6 FOR SALE: Okidata U93 printer Used only two months. Transfer mainten anee agreement. $850. Can $87-4265. K EY B O A R D EQU IPM EN T Rhodes Stag*73 piano $940. Korg PolySOO synthesizer $525, Paavay KB300 am­ plifier $350. Package *1700. Almost new- band broke up. Tom 9854098 1298882. 9 6 6 -4 3 6 3 H elp Wanted DISABLED MALE student needs per­ sonal care attendant. No experience required. Male or female Part-time. 988-5017 DISSATISFIED? EAR N $300*500 weakly helping others become healthy Comptais training Call 964 9502 between 10am-3pm DOORMEN NEEDED at World Famous Nightclub. 3400 S Mill Avenue. Tempe Apply in person. 1 pm to 4 pm. Monday and Tuesday Sea Jim TERMINAL RENTALS ANYTIME / PART-TIME D ecw riters and C R T s $5 to $7 Per Hour • We Fully Train U p p e r Case CRTs $40 U p p e r/L o w e r Case $45 Call 966-3105 T h e n a t io n s finest telem arketing firm is now a ccep tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r the fo llo w in g shifts 12 n o o n -5 p.m • 5-9:30 p m * 6 30-9 30 p m * W eeken ds O u r s a le s p e o p le w ork in a m odern, co m fo rta b le b u sin ess e n viro n ­ m ent c o n ta c tin g e s ta b lis h e d cu sto m e rs on lo n g d ista n ce W A T S lin e s G u a ra n te e d s a la ry o r c o m m iss io n , w hich ever is greater, and a ve rag es $5 to $7 a n h o u r. O u r T e m p e o ffic e is located a p p ro x im a ­ tely five m in utes from c a m p u s C om p u ter Term inal Service PLEASE CALL OIALAMERICA FOR DETAILS. Delivery Available 829-1140 VVV 9i3 Services LIQUOR STORE clerk. Flexible hours. Four dollars per hour 276-2603. CARS AVAILABLE • 21 or older. All States Drive-away. 992-5200. MALE MODELS: Versatile male models needed by photographer who will be in Phoenix in October. Those selected will earn top dollars. Send recent photos, etc. to J.G.. 5509 Crosscreek Lane, Suite 1075. Fort Worth. Texas 76109 __________________ HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation. Located in Tempe. Call Sharon, Desert Electrolysis Center 8361685 __ LOSE 10 to 29 excess pounds in one month safely. FDA approved, 100% PART-TIME OR full-time work, east guaranteed. 8267125. Phoenix or Scottsdale area. $6.85 to start Call 9561657, 9:00 to noon for * interview. _______ THE MARINE Corps officer selection team is currently receiving ap­ plications for pilot and ground officer openings. Contact Capt Johnson, 261-3860._________________ TWO PART-TIME telephone solicitors. Good salary plus bonuses, late after­ noons and evenings. Good working conditions and benefits. Call Water Refining Systems in Tempe, 620-0707. WAITRESSES WANTED, Desperados Bar and Grill. 524 West Broadway, Tempe. 894-6423 Flexible hours, fell/psrt time. Contact Gary or Dsn. W AREHO USE HELP needed in Phoenix. $5.50 per hour Monday through Friday, 1 to 6 pm; Saturday, 9 am to 5 pm. Apply at 2226 N. 7th Street from t pm to 5 pm.__________ WE ARE looking for 2 personable people to sell travel around campus. Work on s commission basis. Ask for Karyn Shapiro, 9466888 or 9469908. Motorcycles____ Help W a n t e d WAITING FOR an apartment? Stay in 2 bed townhome close to ASU from Sept 15 to Oct. 31. Only $355 plus Vi one month s utilities. Call Lynn, nights 996-3267 JANITOR POSITIONS. Scottsdale. Central and North Phoenix. 2-4 hours per night; between 5:00 and 10:00 p.m., Monday- Thursday and Friday or Saturday. Start $3.75 per hour Call 274-0979__________ PfT CASHIERS. Most shifts available, particularly weekday afternoons. Apply Monday through Friday, 1-5, Thomas Mall Cinema». ________ ______ THREE BEDROOM condo. 1V» miles from campus Pool, tennis, partly furnished 964-5499 or 953-1159. Spike HILLEL-JEWISH Student Center stu­ dent board meeting September it , at 5:00 pm 1012 South Mill Avenue Everyone welcome. Great pre-owned furniture at great prices. 3223 E. McDowell Rd. Phoenix • 275-5592 TEMPE ROOMMATE Service Free roommate service for ASU students Have several furnished rooms and houses near ASU available Rates from $145 to $225 per month, 629-9228 ENTRY-LEVEL positions at KAET-TV are now a v a ila b le -m o rn in g s or after­ noons at $3.50/hour Applications and information available in KAET lobby PART-TIME WAITER or waitress wan­ ted at a Chinese restaurant. Please cell 990-6217. _______________ S ofas, dinettes, beds, c h a irs and lots more! FEM ALE ROOMMATE needed a sap! Private room Shared bath, furnished apartment. A/C dishwasher, petio. Campus tv* miles Pools, tennis courts. Jacuzzi, weight room, laundries. BBOs. covered parking, security, etc $260 monthly includes utilities Need deposits, lease Liza 994-4157 DRIVER NEEDED part-time. Drive to Pinetop overnight. Help with pecking. 640-2631 D on 't bu y for yo u r apartm ent until you've ch e c k e d us out. AVON REPRESENTATIVES needed Som a on-cam pus end nearby territories still svsilsbie. Pert or full time. Earn Xmas and travel money with the USA's number one beauty compsny. Call Prana. 967-1714. ________ UFMAMS AUTOMOTIVE Roommate W anted 1975 HONDA GL1000 (gold wing), 16,000 orginaf miles. Fully dressed. Price negotiable. 931-4969.__________ Personal LIMOUSINES •D iscreet Drivers •B est Rates in Town •B a r - TV Set-ups • Ski B o at R en tals A va ila b le j For All Special Occasions 9 8 1 -2 1 5 0 9/10 Travel AIRLINE COUPONS. *250 to Boston. Special low lares to moat cites. USA. Call Brent 829-7300. T y p in g ACCURATE, FAST, experienced typist. IBM Selectric $1.25 per pege. Dis­ sertations, theses, legal briefs. Cell Sharon 8365667._____________ A LL PAPERS typed to your complete satisfaction. IBM Selectric. Near ASU. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakiey, 967-0602. A LL TYPING dons fast and accurate. $1.15 a paga. Word processing avallebit. Close to ASU. Call Bobbi 9669166. AT YOUR service. University and Mill ares. Quality typing to your Specs. Information Keyboarding Lab. 9667111. ______________________ BOOK REPORTS to theses. $1.261.75 par page. 30% off 1st 10 pages. Linda 627-9942._______________________ CUSTOM TYPING. Fast, accurata, d o s s to ASU. Call after 6.9666961 chiuse Self Defense Strength and Agility Confidence and Control PROFESSIONAL TYPIST will adit spelling, punctuation, and grammar. Fast return/ accuracy guaranteed. Joan 6360772.__________ B e g in n e rs Introdu ctory C o u rse $15 PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing. Will edit end correct spelling. Carolyn Douglas, 6360959. 'h Mile North of ASU 1020 N. S c o ttsd a le Rd. 965-1080 9/18 P ets N EED A home tor one year old. pure bred Siberian husky. Papers available It's beautiful and free. Call Neddai 9671459 ______________ Heal Estate_____ AFFORDABLE HOUSES, Townhouse*. Forctosures Why Rant? Invest! Mr*. Topper. 948-2825 John Hall and A s­ sociates 948-0550 TWO BEDROOMS, two bath condo near ASU, $69,000. Low down, good financing 968-1145 or 941-5220. Hoommate wmed $110+ !4 utilities. $125 deposit. 1 mile to ASU. own room/ share bath Available now Mike 966-3259. BRAND N EW th ree b ed ro o m townhouae loaded with amenities $225 plus vj utilities. University and Price, Tempe 994-6961. days; 946-4316 evenings, weekends. SHARE 3 bedroom. 2Vi bath house, vicinity south Tempe $300 per month includes utilities Call 65. 4361500. ask for Cindy After 6.820-1630 TYPING. Expert word processing plus letter quality print for theses, man­ uscripts, etc. Reliable perfectionist with reesonebie rate«. Myra, 9564233. WORD PROCESSING, typing. Can type anything. Guaranteed word perfect. Located in Tempe. 8363412. WORD PROCESSING PROFESSIONAL, FAST AND ACCU R ATE $1 25 per page with notice and coupon J u s t 5 min. from A S U L ib ra ry THE COMPUTER TERMINAL 122 E. University Or. 967-0900 Exp 9 30 -8 4 8/10 Wanted ACCOUNTING TUTOR wanted Week nights anytime. Call Mr. Shelly. 967-4646.___________ FOOTBALL TICKETS: Need 4 together (or 2 p * t for ASU/USC Bill. 9666262 PAYING CASH tor gold- silver and diamonds, class rings Mill Avenue Jewelers. 414 S Mill Avenue Page 16 MondayJseptembcfiai^W Devil spikers still face problems, but rally to down New Mexico, 3-2 By TOM BLODGETT Sports Editor The ASU volleyball team faced its first test of the season Friday night and managed to get a passing grade. But it was by the barest of margins as the Sun Devils were forced to rally from the brink of defeat, squeaking past the Universi­ ty of New Mexico, 3-2 (15-12, 8-15, 11-15, 1511,15-7). Though ASU (2-0), ranked No. 12, showed further signs of improvement, the Devils still committed too many errors to suit coach Debbie Brown. “In the first three games, we were not passing well at all,” Brown said. “Once you start having problems in such a fundamen­ tal area, your offense starts to break down. You can’t utilize all your hitters or get the set you want.” Of even greater concern was ASU’s in­ ability to consistently keep the ball in play on its own service. The Devils committed 19 service errors. “That’s way, way too high,” Brown said. “I don't know what I’m going to do about it. “We weren’t serving all that tough, which makes it even more distressing." The team knew it had to improve in that area. “We missed too many serves by far,” cap­ tain Lisa Thomas said. “Without serves, you can’t score points.” The problem is especially perplexing for Brown, since the team has had no problems serving in practice. “ I think it's just a problem with their con­ centration,” she said. “They may just not being thinking about what they are doing back there.” ASU started the match slowly and took the first game only after taking the last six points to close it out. But the real problems began in the second game. ASU jumped out to a 7-2 when the Lobos' Sue Guinn, who had just entered the game as a result of an injury to Katy Timmers, served New Mexico to a tie. New Mexico used the momentum to squash the Devils 15-8 in the second game, and build a 12-5 lead in the third. The Devils appeared to be in serious trou­ ble. The Lobos were beating ASU at the net and capitalizing on the Devils’ errors But ASU was able to mount a small challenge at the end of the third game and turn the match around in the fourth. The Devils never trailed in either of the final two games. They showed a spark that had been missing earlier. “The fourth and fifth games we played much better,” Brown said. “There was more enthusiasm and more intensity.” Thomas agreed. “We were much more en­ thusiastic,” she said. After holding off a Lobo rally in the fourth game, the Devils put together their finest game of the season to win the match. The ASU attack showed better balance, led by Thomas and Susie Merson Improved passes to setter Regina Stahl played a big part of the resurgence. “We hit a little better,” Brown said. “ Regina got some real nice sets out there.” Still Brown was not totally satisfied. “I feel we don’t ever played great.” Though the left side had the hot hand at the end, it was middle blocker Tammy Webb who finished with game-high honors in kills. Webb had 15 for the match and an im­ pressive .444 hitting percentage. She also was the top blocker on the evening with seven, including three solos. Merson and Thomas also racked up dou­ ble figures in kills. Merson put down 13 and Thomas 11. The team ’s hitting percentage was a solid .265. Stahl came up with 46 assists and an as­ tounding nine service aces. Three of those aces helped ASU bury the Lobos early in the fifth game. New Mexico used a balance attack; four players were in double figures in kills. JoAnn O'Connell led with 11. Jocelyn Funk dished out 36 assists. A S U ’s Tammy Webb, toft opposite side of net, and Lisa Thom as, right, react to a dink by New M exico's Jocelyn Funk, center, as the Lobo's Linda Archutetta, (9), looks on. MICHELOB. presents the 1984 INTRAMURAL GOLF TOURNAMENT for M en and Women WHO: WHEN: WHERE: Men & Women full-tim e A S U students Sunday, Sept. 23 — M en’s C la ss A & W om en’s Sunday, Sept. 30 — M en’s C la ss B Tee tim es begin at 7:30 a.m. Cam elot G o lf C o u rse 6210 E. M cK e llip s Road (8 minutes east of Mesa) COST: $7 per person in clud es greens fee and M ich e lo b novelty items AWARDS Aw ards to team, individual, longest drive and closest to the pin. Intramural C h am p ion T-shirts to the first place team s and individual winners. ENTRY DEADLINE By 4 p.m. Thursday, Septem ber 13 Intramural O ffice P.E. West Lobby 965-5638