V Pilot pleads not guilty of manslaughter Charged with deaths of 2 A S U f students in April plane collision By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press A pilot involved in a mid-air collision that killed two ASU students pleaded not guilty to two counts of manslaughter and two counts of reckless endangerment Tuesday in a Yavapai Superior Court. Robin S. Thompson, 20, was indicted last week and will ap­ pear in a Yavapai Division II court on Oct. 30, according to C laries Hastings, a Yavapai County attorney. Thompson is charged with, manslaughter in the April 14 deaths of Samantha F raser, 18, and Timonthy Streit, 23. Hastings said Thompson, a flight instructor, was released on his own recognizance by Judge Jam es Hancock. Thompson was piloting a Piper Cherokee 140 near Camp Verde when he collided with a Cessna 172, piloted by Paul Bjornstadt, 20, also an ASU student. The Cherokee’s propeller apparently struck the Cessna’s fuselage, severing the rear tail section behind the passenger compartment, according to an investigation completed by the Yavapai County Sheriff. Fraser and Streit, who were sitting in the passenger sec­ tion, died when they fell approximately 6,500 feet. Bjornstadt and ASU student Kim Marble, 24, were injured when the remainder of the Cessna crashed into a hillside. Thompson's plane landed on a nearby gravel road. Accor­ ding to the sheriff’s report, neither Thompson nor his three passengers were injured. The parents of Fraser and Streit have filed a $24.7 million lawsuit in Maricopa County Superior Court against Thomp­ son and his father, WiUiam Thompson, the owner of the Cherokee. According to the claim, William Thompson is charged with negligence because he entrusted his aircraft to a reckless pilot. The suit claims that Fraser and Streit were “violently sucked out and ejected into mid-air and then thrown to the rocky canyons below.” \ Hastings earlier said the lawsuit will have little bearing on Thompson’s trial. W ed n esd a y Septem ber 4,1985 s ta te p re s s Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University Voi. 68 No. 6 C o p y rig h t. S ta te P re ss, 1985 2 Fraternity houses damaged in fight with group of M esans S ta n p h o to b y K m tn J . Larfcln W indows at the S igm a A lph a Epsilon house, 706 A lph a Drive, ware broken in a fight early Saturday morning. By ED SCHUBERT State Press people were sent to the hospital k everal v with minor injuries, windows were broken and fences were destroyed when 40 to 50 assailants attacked two ASU fraternities early Saturday morning, house members said. Scott Freem an of Pi Kappa Alpha said the attackers descended on the PKA and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternities “in a rage” about la.m . According to Freeman, the trouble started when three men drove up to the PKA fraternity house in a car and started shouting obscenities. A fight broke out and the car left, he said. Ten minutes later 40 to 50 men arrived in several vehicles and began attacking frater­ nity members, he said. But according to preliminary findings from an ASU Police Department investiga­ tion, the fight began when several PKE members got in a fight in Mesa. Chief C. Russell Duncan said, “ It original­ ly started off campus. It was brought back” to ASU. Duncan said the location of the Mesa fight could not be released because it is under in­ vestigation. According to Loren Gold of SAE, the fight spread to his fraternity when a bottle was thrown into the courtyard. A member who was playing pool went out­ side to see what was happening, and because he was holding a pool cue, was mistaken for a combatant, he said. The SAE fraternity house received the most damage, including seven broken win­ dows and a broken fence, he said. According to Freeman, several PKA members are angry about the way ASU police responded to the intrusion. Freem an said the campus police were in­ formed there was “a riot going on” but did not respond for 15 minutes, despite the sta­ tion’s close proximity to the fraternities. con tin u e d p ig # 10 Former coach accepts settlement from regents Form er ASU basketball coach Bob Weinhauer accepted a financial settlement from the Arizona Board of Regents Tuesday, but his attorney said the offer is $53,000 less than an original agreement with University officials. Scott Clark, the former coach’s attorney, said the regents’ settlement totals $234,375, which is approximately $53,000 less than ASU adm inistrators had agreed to pay Weinhauer for his resignation. Clark said Weinhauer agreed to accept the term s to avoid a lengthy court battle with ASU. But Randal Bain, an attorney representing ASU in the set­ tlement, said there are no discrepancies in die payments of­ fered to Weinhauer by the regents during a meeting Friday. Clark said Weinhauer will accept a $220,744 annuity pur­ chased by the regents which will pay the coach an additional $79,256 in interest rates over the next five years. OT o d a y * he had recruited in what might have been a highly-publicized court battle. “We are happy to get the m atter resolved short of litiga­ tion,” Clark addeaT Weinhauer’s conflict with the University stem s from his July 9 dismissal by ASU administrators. Weinhauer said the University had agreed to pay him $300,000 for his resignation, and the agreement was signed by former Deputy Athletic Director Frank Sack ton, ASU At­ torney Duane Schultz and former Weinhauer attorney Charles Roush. The regents were give 60 days to offer a settlement to’ Weinhauer, according to state law. The coach had previously threatened to file a lawsuit that would have asked for more than $1 million in damages. —VICKIE CHACHERE AS ASU to retain past funding policy "JJ? Joyrides on electric carts have 01 become a* popular pastime for #■ juveniles. Page 3. at ASU is uncertain whether it will pro­ test the regents’ decision to maintain itsinvestments in South Africa. Page 5. An anti-apartheid student group A private agency is constructing a 700-unit apartment complex especial­ ly for students. Page I t . former ASU basketball player, has settled into a starting role with the NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers, Page 21. Byron Scott, Bloom County................ Collage................................ Classified................... Nai i on/ worl d. 2 Opinion__ . . . __. . . . i . . . . . . . . S p o rts......... | l i i .... In a statement prepared by the board, the regents said an additional $13,631 will be paid to Weinhauer in cash, and a previous payment of $12,000 will be retained by the coach. Weinhauer said he considers the $220,744 annuity along with $30,400 in attorney’s fees to be the only payments from the board and any previous payments had already been used to cover attorney fees. In a prepared statement, Weinhauer said, “While the offer is considerably less than ASU had agreed to pay me in June, I am willing to accept it.” The payments will be made from the University’s athletic department income, which does not include any taxpayer funds. Weinhauer said he did not want to bring the m atter to court because he still holds a great loyalty to ASU and did not want to injure the University’s basketball program or any players 12 14 31 4 21 ByANDREA HAN State Press The Associated Students of ASU executive branch will continue to use policies established last year when funding organizations, President Dave Varnell said. Varnell also said the ASASU Senate m ay use the policy during the appropriation pro­ cess as well. The policy consists of six guidelines set up by former president Ray Burnell that will aid the senate in appropriating funds for organizations, Varnell said. He said an organization will not receive funding if it: supports a University ad­ ministrative service; needs money to pur­ chase food; advances the causes of a religion; promotes sexual causes; furthers the campaigns of political candidates; or supports partisan political viewpoints. The guidelines were designed to single out groups that will reach more students, and to support stronger programs and successful organizations, Varnell said. “Every group can go through the hearing to try to make the senate support their case,” he said: “These guidelines are purely flexible.” Varnell said the guidelines will allow the senate to remain neutral and unbiased when appropriating funds to organizations. “When you give a club money, you are in a sense promoting or endorsing that organiza­ tion,1’ he said. “If the senate gives funds to a certain religious organization, then we are accused of taking a partisan view. “When we don’t fund an organization that is involved with a particular candidate, we aren’t ignoring them. They can confront us, but we want to take a non-partisan view­ point. That way we have a fair distribution of student money.” ASASU is working with a $867,926 budget for tihe 1965-86 school year. The senate is responsible for appropriating the money, but the president has the ultimate approval over all budget decisions, Varnell said. “As much as I would like to fund all groups, it is a m atter of opportunity cost,” be said. “The senate is binded by that oppor­ tunity cost. “We like to hind organizations that pro­ mote some educational purpose — a speaker, groups that offer tutoring, or groups that encourage minority involve­ ment.” ' , , - * - Dttve Varnell um n m Wednesday, September 4,1985 Pagcg nation/world C oastal M ississip p i begins to repair dam age ca u sed by H urricane Elena PASCAGOULA, Miss. (AP) — Residents of Mississippi’s resilient Gulf Coast set to work Tuesday to recover from a savage beating by Hurricane Elena, grateful that this time, at least, there was something left to repair, ■ Six federal and state disaster teams drove around making “windshield surveys” of damage and making preliminary estimates of losses. “Until that survey is completed, we would only be guessing but I don’t think I’d be too far out of line to say the damage to the Mississippi Coast could run in tbe hundreds of millions of dollars,” Harrison County Civil Defense director Wade Guice said. Pascagoula and surrounding smaller towns near the Alabama border appeared to be the hardest hit by the storm that roared ashore Monday with 100 mph wind, rain and tor­ nadoes. Residents of Pascagoula and Moss Point were aided by in­ mates from the Mississippi State Penitentiary and volunteers from outside the hurricane area. Gov. Bill Allain is awaiting word from the White House on his request that storm damaged areas be declared eligible for federal disaster assistance. He Said state agencies were investigating the condition of coastal water and food supplies and the status of sewage treatment. The Coast Guard reported Tuesday that ports along the coast had been closed because many buoys and channel m arkers had been blown off position. A spokesman said they would remain closed until a Coast Guard team completed in­ spections. Despite the damage, no deaths were reported along the Mississippi coast. However, the death toll from Elena rose to Tour Tuesday when the New Orleans coroner’s office at­ tributed a death a t sea to the storm. There had been three deaths in Florida last weekend when the storm lingered off that coast Teach ers strike nationw ide, requesting salary increases Teachers in Chicago and Seattle went on strike Tuesday, one day before the scheduled start of classes, while teachers in Philadelphia shouted their overwhelming approval of a new three-year contract that averted a walkout. Elsewhere, strikes by teachers In 10 other school districts in Pennsylvania, Illinois and Michigan disrupted die resump­ tion of fall classes for more than 70,000 students. The Chicago Teachers Union, representing 28,000 teachers in the nation’s third-largest school district, launched its third walkout in as many years after rejecting the 430,000-student district’s offer of a 3.5 percent salary increase. The union is holding out for a 9 percent raise. Aides to m inds Gov. Jam es R. Thompson met Tuesday with both sides to present a proposal, the terms of which were not disclosed. A coalition of 17 unions representing 12,000 other school workers, including painters and engineers, also struck Tues­ day. The 19,000-member Philadelphia Federation of Teachers ratified by voice vote a $250 million, three-year contract reached .after 39 hours of round-the-clock negotiations. S cien tists v ie w T ita n ic oceanliner fo r first tim e since sinkin g in 1912 BOSTON (AP) — The sunken Titanic is remarkably intact with a hull “ like a museum piece,!’ but any salvage attem pts would desecrate the gravesite of the more than 1,500 people who died with it, the first man to view the wreckage said Tuesday. Robert Ballard, chief scientist of the joint U.S.-French ven­ ture that found the oceanliner on Sunday and an engineer at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, described to associates in Massachusetts the remote-control television survey he made of the 73-year-old wreck. “The ship was pretty intact and u p rig h t,. . . ” said Nancy Green, a public relations assistant a t Woods Hide. Shelley Lauzon, public relations director at Woods Hole, spoke with Ballard in a ship-to-shore telephone call to the Navy research vessel Knorr. The Titanic was the biggest, the most luxurious and sup­ posedly the safest liner of its time. Its builders had called it unsinkable because of its double steel hull and waterproof compartments. But an iceberg cut a 300-foot gash across several of the compartments and the ship sank on the night of April 14-15, 1912. Approximately 700 people managed to get to lifeboats and were saved, but 1,513 others died. The Knorr arrived AUg. 28 a t the wreck site 500 miles from Newfoundland, where the scientists had spent a month in June and had come close to finding the vessel, Lauzon said. “The prim ary purpose of the' dive was not to And the Titanic,” Lauzon said. “It was to do>engineering tests on the Argo “To me, they (the regents) are attempting to stall the issue and to diffuse the movement,” English said. English, who describes SAA as a part of “ the broader anti­ apartheid movement,” said, “This movement didn’t start because people want some morally pure investment policy.” Fraternity settles debt with A SU , avoids eviction By JOHN CONWAY State Press An ASU fraternity escaped lease term ina­ tion this summer after meeting a debt pay­ ment of nearly $37,000 owed to the Universi­ ty, ASU Comptroller Gerald Snyder said. Sigma Phi Epsilon, 615 Alpha Drive, an ASU fraternity since 1952, acquired the money from local alumni members and the Sigma Phi Epsilon National Chapter in the form of loans, said Brian Fries, fraternity, president. According to Fries, membership fees were not raised and this year’s pledges will pay the same amount as last year’s. Fries said membership fees and alumni funding will be used to pay off the loans. Ron Paquin, president of the Sigma Phi EpsilOT housing corporation, said the debt occurred because the fraternity was block­ ed by the University from accessing a reserve fund established in 1964 with unused bond money secured for the purpose of building fraternity housing. Paquin said the debt would not have oc­ curred if the fraternity had access to those funds. He refused further comment. In April, the Arizona Board of Regents gave ASU the authority to cancel the frater­ nity’s lease if the debt was not paid by the deadline. “We had indicated to fraternities in the summer of 1984 that if we had a past-due receivable we would initiate termination,” Snyder said......-.... ... — .............M “Past-due receivables was a situation that had existed for a number of years.” Snyder said the University did not evict the fraternity because of a $10,000 payment made in April, which Snyder called a sign of “good faith” that Sigma Phi Epsilon intend­ ed to pay the debt in full. ASU evicted a fraternity house in 1972 that never returned to university grounds, he said. “Most of the fraternities do pay bills on time,” he said. ASU charges fraternities located on Alpha Drive approximately $17,000 a month, nine months a year for the use erf the building and the land, Snyder said. In addition, fraternities m ust pay for repair services made on their houses by the ASU physical facilities department, he said. BACK TO SCHOOL STUDENT SPECIALS T h e Sigma Phi Epsilon house at 615 Alpha Dr. Tubing Down The Salt River T H E S A L T R IV E R IS T H E T H R IL L T H IS Y E A R . Ü ÍÍ R ide a T u b e D ow n the $alt River TU B E REN TAL AN D S H U TTLE BU S SERVICE ALL-DAY RATES $5 plus sales tax per day per person P E U G E O T B IC Y C L E S Pipeline 1 (cruiser) Pipeline 5 (5-speed) M odel P6 (10-speed) Peugeot (3-speed) M odel P8 (12-speed) U rban E x p ress (Tou ring) (18-speed) $149 $259 $159 $189 r$199 $350 Large selection of colors and sizes. Many other selections of Peugeot bicycles: No other lock protects your bike from theft and frame damage, or protects you from inconvenience like Kryptonite. Don’t just lock your bike. Lock it Right with Kryptonite™! 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They will then print up State Press Industries in Arizona can now advertise to the booklet with the ads telling w h it is for sell their chemical wastes to other com­ sale and having a special code number for the company selling the-waste. panies who can utilize it, through a special Companies who receive the booklet and ASU waste information exchange, said Nicholas Hild, associate professor for the want to purchase a waste product will then contact Hild, who will look up the code Center for Environmental Studies,. number of the selling company and contact Hild, the project’s director, received an $80,000 grant from the Environmental Pro­ them with the name of the interested party, tection Agency to fund the project which will he sa id. Hild said there are sgnilar programs set feature a booklet of advertisements in up in other areas of the country that have classified ad format, he said.. “We’re trying to establish classified ads proven successful, and in some areas 20 per­ cent of the waste that would have been for waste that could be used by others,” Hild deposited in landfills is now being recycled said. and used by other companies. Currently, waste produced in Arizona must be shipped to California for disposal. “This is positive for the environment.” Hild said this is expensive fpr the companies Hild said, “The community is getting served and can be dangerous because of accidents during the research." and improper disposal. Hild said the program goes into effect Hild’s research is centering around the Sept. 1, and the first ad booklet is scheduled feasibility of the program in Arizona, he to be released around the beginning of the said. year. Hild said they are trying to determine if " “Timeliness is very important, they have industries will use the service and if it can to have them out fairly regularly,” he-said. be successfully run through the private sec­ Hild said they are also going to establish tor after his 15 month research period is an office in Tucson to help communicate over. with industries in that area of the state. “I’m hoping this is successful so that the “We’ve had good cooperation with the private sector will pick it up and continue people down in Tucson, and in the county it,” Hild said. down there,” he said. Hild said he and some student assistants BEFORE THE BUG BITES TOU ENROLL IN THE ASU STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN .. r j i Stop by the Student Health Center TODAY for full,details or call 965-2411. I.D. cards for students enrolled in this plan can be picked up at the Student Health Center. Don't let one of those bugs put the bite on you or your budget. 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September 4 , 1985 ASU film series expects more patroits, revenues tage given to the MU by the SAGA corpora­ tion for rental of restaurant space. This is the funding for all free showings as well,she said. ASASU receives its monies from a budget approved by ASU’s senate, according to Emmelkamp. The money to pay for the program is generated by student tuition fees. “Of the money we receive, 40 percent goes to student workers; 10 percent for movie promotion and advertising and the remain­ ing 50 percent to film rental,” Emmelkamp said. Although ASASU lost more money than MUAB last semester, income from concerts and other special events will more than make up the difference, Emmelkamp said. “We lost more because we offered twice as many films,” he said. Emmelkamp said he expects last season’s 5,700 attendance figure to more than double to more than 12,500 this semester. By DAVID O'BRIEN State Press After a shaky financial situation during fiscal year 1984—85, ASU’s two film series operators have been busy making changes designed to increase movie attendance, ac­ cording to an Associated Students of ASU of­ ficial. Jam es Emmelkamp, ASASU activities vice president, said, “If attendance goes up as predicted, we will double our revenues from last semester.” Kathy Cummer, advisor to the MUAB film series, said this sem ester’s attendance should improve because of parking changes near the MU. The two film series operators get their funds from different sources, according to Dee Schroder, a former film series coor­ dinator for MUAB. MUAB’s weekly “Encore” presentatwm is paid for by income generated through the MU recreation center and from a percen- Manzanita Hall ventilator overheats; alarm forces residents to evacuate The fire department report said eight fire engines showed up at the scene. Duncan said it is standard procedure to notify the fire department. “The risk is too high, and we don’t take a chance,” he said. According to Duncan, the smoke alarm warning was only a minor incident. “It was no big deal,” he said. “Whenever there is questionable nature in a high-rise resident hall, we roll the fire department in,” Duncan added. Several hundred students exited through the outside emergency stairwells and re­ mained outdoors for about 30 minutes, said Ray Miller, director of the residence hall. By ROB KELTON State Press Manzanita Hall residents were forced to evacuate the building at 3:58 p.m. Monday when a smoke-warning system on the sec­ ond floor was set off by an overheated ven­ tilation unit, said C. Russell Duncan, ASU chief of police. According to a Tempe Fire Department report, the smoke alarm was activated when a cooling-fan motor burned out in room 207 of the dorm. “When the unit overheats, the alarm sounds and goes to the ASU dispatcher and then the dispatcher calls the Tempe Fire Department,” said Larry Earle, refrigera­ tion attendant. BACK TO SC H O O L B A R G A IN S W ELC O M E B A C K IN T O T H E SW IM O F T H IN G S help Earn $30 Each Week, Over $120 Per Month! Receive $10 Your First Donation And $20 Your Second Donation In The Sam e Calendar Week, M onday Through Saturday, Each And Every Week. Call For Appointment. U n iv e rs ity P la s m a ■ C e n t e r .. 1015 S. Rural Rd. 968-6139 Federally Inspected STU D EN TS . . . D o n ’t m is s o u r 20-20 o f f e r ! & Art, architecture, en g in eerin g & d esig n students: & Shop for your art supplies from The Valley's most com plete selection by SEPTEMBER 20, and sa v e a b ig 20%. 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Jerry Eaton said the AFBA is trying to meet the nutritional needs of more than 300,000 Arizonans who live below poverty level, almost half of whom live in Maricopa County. g . “The needs are far outstripping the resources,” she said: “There are times when our warehouse shelves are practically bare,” Eaton said. “We need every kind of canned food, pro­ duce, bread and dried milk that we can get.” ASU clubs and organizations could help thousands of hungry Arizonans by taking the AFBA under their wing, according to Eaton. “If ASU groups would have food drives in the form of dances or contests, and charge a can of food for admisssion, the AFBA would g l a d l v s f “n H r o it » m e tre t o c o l l e c t t h e tn m i a n d bring it to our pantries,” be said. “ 11118 winter is going to be really tough,” Eaton said. “People come here from around the country looking for jobs, and our job market is glutted. “ If they run out of money, their only recourse is to apply for food stamps, which is a six-week process,” she added. “We try to help people in that waiting period by ra ­ tioning food on an emergency basis.” Mary Jo Henny, program coordinator for the Department of Economic Security, also thinks ASU groups could make a significant impact on the hunger problem. “ Almost half of those hungry people live right here in Phoenix. If we can keep the area food banks operating efficiently, we can take care of a lot of people,” she said. “Hunger is readily identifiable and easily taken care of, so the AFBA is one of the most cost-effective programs around,” Henny ad­ ded. “Hungry people are often sick, and the state has to foot their medical bills. We have so much food in this country that there is no excuse for this many people to be hungry,” The'AFBA is a middleman for groups like Meals on Wheels and the Salvation Army, which don’t have adequate storage space for food supplies, she said. The Phoenix area has three AFBA loca­ WithaFirst checking account andthis caid,you canbank wheneveryouwant. 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N ight Tellers® all over A rizona and the West. It also lets you cash checks at more th an 175 First Interstate offices in Arizona, and over 1,100 in the 15 Western States. You may also wish to apply for a gold First Interstate Bancard. The gold card does every­ thing the red card does, plus, it guarantees your personal checks to more than 21,000 Arizona merchants. To get your First Interstate checking account, just fill but the form below and take it to our University office. All we need then is ASU U niversity Office 707 South College Ave. Tempe, Arizonaa 85 85281 on any purchase tions, and Tucson has one. One of Eaton’s goals is to see the system expanded statewide, so there will be a food pantry in every county. your signature and initial deposit, and you’ll have the best checking account in Arizona! Choose the one that’s best for you: C ustom C hecking: If you write just a few checks each month, get a Custom Account. It costs a small amount per check plus a low monthly service fee if your balance falls below the minimum required. Regular C hecking: N o service charge if you keep a specified minimum balance. Below that, the charge is just a few dollars per month, with no limit on the number of checks you write. Checking/Savings P lan: By maintaining a specified minimum balance in a checking account or specially designated regular savings account,you can avoid a»monthly service charge on your checking account. If both your checking account and savings account balances drop below the specified minimum balances, there will be a nominal monthly service charge on your checking account. T he balance in your regular savings account earns interest. Ask shout our market interest accounts, too. 0 Bank H R SrW JEH S W E BAt^OFAfVONA. AIA MemberFDIC •FederalReserveSystem EqualOpportunityEmployer n j (die way you want it printed on your checks) 2 3 4 W . U n iv e r s it y (JV.E. C om er o f University & A sh) Mailingaddress_____ :---- ...... ,------ ----- , Phone number. Home (parents') address. 968-4831 Home (parents') phone number. Birthplace_________ —— — Your mother's maiden name—__ :-----(for verification when you phone in to check your balance) Mon.-Sat. Sun. 9 a .rn .-9 p m . 1 0 a.m.- 8 P .m. Your occupation_____ other than student)' ■ (if IHom . Social Security Number. Previous Bank. .G ty_____ — Sate:_______ .Zip. .Please check your preference O Custom Checking □ Regular Checking * □ Checking/Savings «* I Page 9 Wednesday, September 4,1985 State Ru m Getting the answers right is a matter of how many functions your calculator has. And no­ body gives you more functions and features for your dollar than ^Casio. Our solar fx-451, for in­ stance, costs only $34.95 yet it has 98 scientific functions— including binary, octal and hex­ adecimal calculations and con­ versions. What’s more, it lets you calculate with the speed of light—and twelve other com ­ monly used physical constants, including Planck’s constant and atomic mass. Plus it offers you 16 m etricconversion functions, as well as a 10 digit-f 2 digit exponent display, for greater accuracy. And its flip-open key­ board gives your fingers plenty of elbow room for calculating quickly. For only $19.95, our fx-115 is also Solar powered and has a 10 digit-f 2 digit exponent dis­ play. And it gives you 67 func­ tions—including statistics and computer math conversions, which are so valuable in today’s high tech environment. Whichever Casio scientific calculator you choose, it’ll help you get your answers right on the money. At a price that’s right. Available at your local col­ lege bookstore. W h e re m ira c le s tut« Pro» Wednesday. September 4.1985 p o l i c e r e Two ASU students were arrested early Wednesday in connection with possession of marijuana, police said. Michael Ang and William Matthess were taken into custody after police found them a t the Cholla Apartments with marijuana. The officer was on routine patrol when he smelled m arijuana burning and knocked on the door of the apartm ent it seemed to be coming from. - He was invited inside by the two men, who made no attem pt to hide the marijuana. -Both men were released on their own recognizance. A pre-trial hearing is set for Sept. 16. In other activity, University police reported the following incidents in the fiveday period ending a t 6:30 p.m. Tuesday: •A student told police a man looked up her dress while she was.on the third floor of Hayden Library Thursday afternoon, police said. The victim described the man as 5-foot-10inches tall, approximately 170-pounds, clean-shaven with gray hair and brown eyes. She told police she would not aid in prosecution. •A student received an annoying phone call Sunday evening at her room a t Palo Verde Main Residence Hall, police said. Riot co n tinued from 1 He said that after the police arrived they did very little to stop the violence. “The police were of no help whatever,” he said. But according to Duncan, ASU police “separated the people and took control of the situation.” Duncan said ASU police did not arrive im­ mediately because fraternity members first notified the Tempe Police Department. m 1. o r t The caller attempted to diguise his voice as a female’s, w . - ||g The victim told police she had received annoying calls in the past. •A second student received a harassing phone call Thursday afternoon at her room at Manzanita Residence Hall, police said. Police said they have a suspect and are in­ vestigating the case. •Two students got into a fight near Hayden Liteary Wednesday evening, police said .«»fill The fight involved an argument over a girlfriend. One student was treated for cuts and bruises. Both students told police they did not wish to press charges because they are best friends. •An International Business Machine com­ puter and some related equipment were stolen from the Physical Education Building, room 124, sometime between F ri­ day evening and Saturday morning, police said. A printer, stand and monitor were also taken. Police estimated the loss at $3,000. A staff member told police the west door of the room had accidentally been left unlocked. He told police the door faces a secluded hallway. He said Tempe called the ASU station at 1:27 p.m. and University police arrived at the fraternity houses within the minutg. He said all activity at the police station, including telephone calls and dispatch times, are recorded. “Anybody who wants to can look at the call cards and see what went down” that morning, he said. “Everything is on tape.” In addition, Duncan said he did not receive complaints from other fraternity members. a t h W hat r J } U n g f y LD? p S P E E D READING C O U R S E S S E P T E M B E R 9 T H R O U G H O C T O B E R 1 1 ,1 9 8 5 A special five-w eek co u rse, based ortyfche S a ck -Y o u rm a n Speed Reading P rogram , will be offered to graduates, u ndergraduates, faculty, s ta ff and th e com m unity. T h is special p ro g ra m requires pre- and post-read in g ra te testing, reading of tim ed p a ssa g e s, and developm ent of college level vocabulary. ' ■* R E G I S T R A T I O N : September 3-September 6 , 1 9 8 5 Tuesday-Friday — 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. . Payne Hall — Reading Education — Rqom B-112 S E C TIO N S : — A. Tuesday., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •••• 6:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m B. W ednesday......... . 6:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m C. Thursday................................. 6:00 p.m.-8:30 p.m FEE: $30 LO C A T IO N : CLASSES HELD IN FARMER BUILDING, R O O M '101 ON THE ASU C A M P U S FO R M O R E IN FO R M A T IO N : C A L L 9 6 5 - 7 7 6 6 Q u iz h s tn rt* S c t ***** **1T cyo7 c^ d n^ 2 l de ^ ^ o f a Lunt Av W PeP P e iS a & ded byhow E very W ednesday, Lunt Ave. M arble C lub in T em pe has a b ack-tosc h o o l sp ecia l fo r all y ou p e o p le o f th e sch o la rly p ersu a sio n . Just p resen t you r c o lle g e o r fa cu lty I.D . an d receiv e tw o d in n ers for th e p rice o f o n e (o f eq u al o r lesser valu e). You d o n ’t h ave to b e a g en iu s to figu re that o n e ou t! A nd w h ile y o u ’re there, catch th e c o o l p arty a c tio n o n T em pe’s h o ttest patio. Offer good from 4 p.m. until closing. Expires Septem ber 25, 1985 L u n t Ave. M arble C lu b 1212 E. Apache Blvd. 967-9192 S t l f P ltM Pase 11 Wednesday, September 4,1985 S u ite life Development to provide alternative to residence hall living By LINDA COULSON State Press By next summer, ASU students should have a new alternative to residence hall life — two new eight-story private dormitories which will house about 700 students a t Sixth Street and Forest: Avenue across from Sun Devil Stadium. According to Richard Raskin, managing general partner for University Towers 84,, construction on the suite-style apartm ent units began at the end of August and will be completed in July 1966. The University Towers is not on Universi­ ty property and is a private development, he said. It will be the first private student housing facility in Arizona and among the first of its kind in the nation, Raskin said. ‘‘Each year there are -a group of people who can’t find a place to stay on cam pus,” Raskin said. ‘‘They are pushed into Sin City or so far away they needed a car to get to school.” The facility will include 173 two-bedroom units which will house from two to four students each, according to Stuart Siefer, of Siefer Associates, the architectural firm which developed the plans for the complex. The units include a living room, a kitchen and a dining room, he said. Rent for the units will start at $250 a month per student, and will include, all utilities except telephone and cable 'TV, Raskin said. Rent will vary depending on the location of the unit within the complex. The plans also include a student activities center in the facility, a four-story covered parking garage, a pool, a jacuzzi, sun decks and volleyball courts, Siefer said. The developers are currently waiting for the Tempe City Council to approve plans for retail shops within the complex, he said. A student food service similar to the one used by the University is also awaiting Council approval. Raskin said the housing project will feature a complete security system and will be wired for computer terminals and cable TV. “What we are essentially providing here is a way to get away from the institutional feeling of a dorm,” Siefer said. Outside access to the furnished rooms and balconies will add to the apartment at­ mosphere, hesaid. Raskin said many students also enjoy the structure and social life of a residence hall, A TTEN TIO N rSmart Styling with PHD1 Perm .... *3000& Up Cuts...._____ *9“ S tu d e n t A p p o in tm e n t S p e c ia l (A fter 4th c u t g et 5th c u t F R E È ) so in order to give students the best of both worlds, there will be a full-time student acivities director to plan monthly events, he said. Clifford Osborne, director of ASU’s Residence Life, said that although suitable bed space off-campus can have an impact on campus residence halls, he does not know how University Towers will effect residence hall occupancy next year. “The real question is whether living ac­ comodations near campus or accomoda­ tions which are University-operated are a student’s first priority,” he said. Liberal Arts Students are invited to attend the 1st Driuoto Eyelash & Brow Tinting . * & 9S LACCOS LIBERAL ARTs COLLEGE COUNCIL MEETING September 4/1985 3:30 p.m. Navajo Room in MU Mon.-Sat 9:30$ Sunday 11-4 966-6111 Please Call for Appointment Across from the Cornerstone 933 E. UNIVERSITY Tempe Towne Plaza (S.E. Corner Rural 6 University) ^ Be A Part of Your Student Government! / SUN D EVIi SUN TAN Celebration To celebrate th e re tu rn o f our m any friends a t ASU, E c lip s e S u n T a n c e n t e r will be offerin g "special prices” until Septem ber 30. w e’re doing this to entice you into visiting our new quarters. You will be pleased to find: ^ #6 suntan beds featuring W oolf System Bellariun "S” lamps. •M ore spacious p rivate bedroom s com plete w ith a m -f m radio and individual headsets. " * •A clean a ttra c tiv e atm osphere designed to give you th e finest in tanning experiences. •Extended hours to b e tte r fit yo u r busy schedule. 7 a.m .-i0 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat., 12-5 p.m. Sun. For fu rth e r in fo rm a tio n a n d a p p o in tm e n ts ca ll 966-2150 to d a y I Serving ASU . students for the past 6 years " 9 6 6 -2 1 5 0 55 E. Broadw ay (corner of M & Broadway) center "W here Tempe the sun always shines, but never bums.” t State Press Wednesday September 4,1985 Page 12 b y B e rk e BLOOM C O U N T Y 'Z..IM90 INE FOR m m » ofanpuownmf i SIPemiK NT VOM. WENN» ONLYAtm OFMme f m SUFFERS ANO , velino m r o / m o r ' WTO M/CONSTITUENTSi i , senator m puffs, eNjoi m s s m up UNEJOANCOUNTS , EVERY CHANCET ( B re a th e d _ H0M6ÔTY». fiim jW T '* ™ r M A to u c ^ FOR THE I PRICEFindOF ««I how flood wmnwo o /rm ,tw T \ \*i*s or— „I G e t tw o s e tt o f q u a lity K o d a k c o lo r p rin ts fo r the p ric e o f o n e w h en you b rin g in a n y s iz e K o d a c o lo r h im for d e v e lo p in g a n d p rin tin g b y K odak. O ffe r ru n s (date) to (date). YOU 7m f : wM your prints can be... MhwcquaSty.. . . processine by Kodak. SUNSET CAMENA 82ft. 0424 Kodak Temp* Center • Mill t University J. ClASSfKP fo u r n i *a 6000 MORNTNb. 0000 MORNE» ¿ht VISIONS OF HAIR GRAND OPEN IN G SP EC IA L Vi o f f Haircuts Personals 4* "MOCOME, COMRAOE, TO THEMAN W0RP-FR0CESSM6 COMPUTERFORTHE6L0RWS RAM HENSAVEROFTHE stntet soenusr REPUBLICS: 'PRfNOA'.“ BEEPcuete, cuceBOOP.' \ TENUI» WITHEXCITEMENT, THEJUNIORHACKERPAUSES TO CATCHWHOtNFERVENTANTI­ CIPATIONOFm o m » THE FLAbSHIPOFCOMMUNIST JOURNALISMINTOA OLORTOUS STATEOFUTTER 1 9 8 5 Eggs-perim ent Graduate students test age-old theory on cam pus walks “ By EDSCHUBERT State Press Two ASU students decided to take the phrase “hot enough to fry eggs on the sidewalk’’ seriously Friday afternoon on the corner of Mill Avenue and Myrtle Street. Lefe Waldrep and Kevin Garey, both graduate students in the College of Environmental Design, had an egg frying on a mirror, eggs in solar ovens, eggs in cast iron and aluminum fryingpansas well as eggs frying on the sidewalk as the con­ trol group. Waldrep said the experiment, carried out to test theories of environmental design, was hampered when a sudden gust of wind blew thè eggs out of the solar oven and over the mirror, “scrambling’’ part of the experiment. The students were interested in seeing which eggs fried the quickest, they said. Waldrep said the egg in the cast iron frying pan was doing well, though the “egg by the m irror was doing great until it got scrambled.” lg This experiment was one of a series thé students are doing, they explained. »■;'— An earlier experiment involved the use of a gnomen; a wooden pole used to determine cardinal directions by the movement of the sun, they said. Waldrep explained that the shadow of the top of the pole is traced throughout the day, and the arc indicates the direc­ tions of north, south, east and west. The purpose of the experiment was to investigate “the sacred geometry of the ancients, ” he said. Many ancient cultures used similar methods to geographically orient their buildings fortaligious reasons, he added. Kevin G arey show s how he and Lee W aldrep tracked the sun using a device called a gnom en, at left. The two proved it’s hot enough to fry an egg on the sidewalk, then multiplied the effort, at right. Instruments used in their egg-speriment included black bricks, a mirror, skillets and homemade parabolic reflectors and miniature greenhouses. S tiff photos by Hon K ucssk Jr. iR p iiicrn en c r HdIR CUTTERS' FREE SHAMPOO W ITH THE [CUT with this coupon o A Perfect Cut Every Time N o appointm ent n ecessary ever! Bring the whoie family SAVE 50%-70% Reconditioned bicycles All styles & types Complete repairs All makes & models Accessories & parts Trades welcomed BOB'S USED BBS OUTLET 1908 E. APACHE, TEMPE (2 bits. £ of McClintock) 894-6852 mene F4IM LY HOIR HR CUTTERS U niversity & Rural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 968-8008 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5 Designer Perm $86 °° In c lu d e s: ■Shampoo and Designer Perm •Perfect Cut •Styling L o n g h a ir s lig h tly h ig h e r 1981 No Appointm ents Fam ily Hair Cutters State P ro» Wednesday, September 4,1985 Page 16 No g o , J o e University of Texas cancels^ Briggs’ drive-in film festival reject plans to hold the film festival ón ihe Austin campus. By College Press Service ’ Bloom and UT began festival negotiations last spring AUSTIN, Texas — Nobody loves a critic, especially one before the “Weird” column appeared. who regularly peppers his reviews of slasher flicks and “B” “Frankly, I was surprised at how people feel about him,” grade drive-in movies with ethnic slurs guaranteed to enrage Bearden said. “They either like him or hate him. There’s not the censors. So, the University of Texas won’t host the Fourth Annual« much middle ground.” A recent Joe Bob review, for instance, noted the remake of Joe Bob Briggs Drive-In Movie Film Festival this fall. “Where the Boys Are” starred “four bimbos whose “ He’s pretty controversial with students,” said Steve philosophy of life is all you need is a bikini and quality con­ Bearden, film program adviser for ITT’s Texas lJnion. traceptives.” “Students were distinctly unhappy and dissatisfied with the Joe Bob rated the movie “three-and-a-half stars” for prospect of Briggs appearing on campus.” displaying 11 breasts, no blood and one beast. “Heads do not Joe Bob, the red-neck, racist alter-ego of former Dallas roll,” he complained. Times Herald staff writer John Bloom, offended nearly UT’s Black Student Association and other interest groups, everyone last spring when he wrote a take-off of USA for suspicious of such sentiments, wanted to interview Briggs Africa’s anthem, “We Are the World” entitled “We Are the before the college approved the film festival. Weird.” “We felt he shouldn’t come unless he spoke to us first,” The parody — labelled “ blatantly racist” by ethnic groups — drew so much flack, the Times Herald and newspapers na­ said BSU President Kevin Williams. “We were opposed to him coming if he didn’t really explain himself to minority tionwide cropped Joe Bob’s syndicated column. John Bloom resigned and sold the Joe Bob column to students.” “Some take what he says satirically, but others take it United Press Syndicate. “The Times Herald did a real disservice when they labeled seriously,” Williams said. But Eisenberg says Joe Bob’s humor isn’t a “put down,” in him a racist,” says Bloom’s business manager and literary agent Vicki Eisenberg. “He’s never had a problem with fact, Bloom has received many awards for social writing. And, while he has no campu% appearances booked in the minority groups during any of his speeches.” But minority student protests helped sway UT’s Bearden to near future, she said Joe Boohas performed a t a number of F schools where “he was always very well received.” She accuses UT of censorship and calls the publicized deci­ sion to cancel the film festival for “financial considerations” a lie. “The big censors on top — we were never told who — stop­ ped (the festival),” she said. “The film department approv­ ed, then said it wasn’t a good idea. The official reason was financial, but they lied. “ IPs hard to believe anything cost too much money for t i t , ” she said. But Bearden claims he made the decision to cancel the festival himself, and while he hasn’t discussed “specifics of ixice” with Joe Bob's agent, “it was a big deal and obviously was going to be a lot of money.” Bearden even admits Joe Bob sometimes is funny, and defends the humor as “obviously a put on. If people take it seriously it could be real offensive. I don’t see how they do, but they do.” “ It’s an Archie Bunker situation,” Eisenberg explains. “Joe Bob’s humor is where he comes from. It’s people he knows.” But for now, the Fourth Annual Drive-In Film Festival is homeless, and Eisenberg says that’s not funny. “I haven’t heard from him (about UT’s decision)," she said. “But I’m sure his reaction is forthcoming in his col­ umn.”................ -............. ..... .... ....-............ ................ UNDER NEW M AN AG EM EN T Papa Jay's New York Pizza We Also Deliver Ice Cold Beer FAST FREE DELIVERY! I I #2 Sun Devil Combo I #1 Sun Devil Combo A ONLY $5.95 I ONLY $6.95p/ustax I #3 Sun Devil Combo #4 $2 OFF I I ONLY $4.95P/ustax LIM ITED FREE D ELIVERY AREA 804 S. A S H (UNIV. & M ILL) Save $1.95 Save $2.30 Any large pizza, your choice of up to 4 toppings. 1 -1 - G o o d o n delivery, take-out o r dine-in. E x p ire s 10-31-85 BEFORE YOU OROER FROM DOMINO’S. CHECK THEIR REGULAR PRICE OR Save $1.80 Coupon price Any small size pizza with your choice of up to 4 toppings. OUR PRICES ARE CHEAPER AND OUR PRODUCTIS MUCH BETTER Any medium size pizza with your choice of up to 4 toppings. plus tax G o o d o n delivery, ta k e-o u t o r d in e-in . E x p ire s 10-3T-85. G U AR AN TEED G o o d on delivery, ta k e o u t o f dine-in. E x p ire s 10-31 -85 966-4292 O R . 966-1003 Any large Sicilian style pizza* with two or more toppings ‘Extra thick G o o d o n delivery, ta k e-o u t o r d in e -in . E x p ire s 10-31-85. Ü damentols Futons • sleep sofas • desks • entertainment centers • w all units • lights • clocks • swatch • personal organizers • tables • chairs • mirrors and accessories____________ __ furniture for upbeat lifestyles SS homespace ltd 522 s. mill, old town tem pe his: 9:30am-5pm sat. noon-5pm sun. opeg weeknights till 9pm I I I I r » n h u i» Page 17 Wednesday, September 4,1985 Business skills seminar to be held at A S U -W est The Advanced Public Executive Program 's 1985-86 Management Skills Series’ opening session will be “Using In­ fluencé to Make Things Happen,” to be held on Oct. 9, 1985. This year’s Management Skills Series will consist of nine ses­ sions focusing on “Competency-Based Management.” In this first session, participants will learn the basics of managerial credibility. They will practice skills like keeping a group on task and productive, as well as explore advanced com­ munication areas and group dynamic skills. George Bass, assistant commissioner for human resource development for the Tennessee Department of Personnel, will be the keynote speaker. He has served in Tennessee state government for 28 years and has Iqpeh a consultant and speaker for ASTD and the Tennessee Valley Authority. The seminar will be held at ASU-West Alhambra, from 8:30 a.m . to noon, following an 8 a.m. registration. The cost of the session is $60, including all materials and breaks. The Management Skills Series is sponsored by the Ad­ vanced Public Executive Program ( APEP), School of Public Affairs, ASU, Tempe, AZ, 85287. For more information, call 965-4006. Signing on H e lp P r e v e n t B irth D e fe c ts ^ Hard workouts. Hard Bodies. Start now for & $ 1 0 .0 0 Support the (T p M a cIHh of es OtffC ÌSKMDim NtMaÖNBi A S U com m unication Junior W endy Vincent, and psychology Junior D onna Bennett and business Junior B ecky Henderson of U A sign autographs for fans at cam pus D rugs Friday. T h e three appeared In Playboy’s “Women of the Pac>10” issue. A ROOMMATE IN A ONE BEDROOM? YES! 1 BEDROOMAPARTMENTS AVAILABLE W e know that tim es are tough so w e e n c o u r a g e y o u to find a room m ate to sh are e x p e n se s. O ur l-b e d r o 6 m s are large e n o u g h fpr y o u both to h a v e p len ty of "living room." A nd w e're just around th e corn er from A SU . A sk ab ou t our quiet n eig h b o rh ood atm osp h ere an d great lifestyle am en ities. eAerobics eTaekwondo PALM TREE VILLAGE 835-7689 (Special discount for 24-hr. Nautilus members) 1 2 1 6 E. Vista d el Cerro 966-6729 A T A FITN ESS C E N T E R S 1620 w. university at Longmore, Mesa • Just Five Min. from ASU 50four fa v o rite sm a ll so ft drink. And, to fo p It off. o c o o l a n d c re a m y 5 oz. DAIRY QUEEN* Soft Serve Su ndae. H e a d fo r yo*-r p a rtic ip a tin g DAiwv w Uc l N * BRAZIEP* storo. to g e t th e B urger Full M e a l D e a l"’ — th e b e st b a rg a in in tow n. ‘ brazier C AM O O Carp 1983 ONLY AT: 1389 E. A P A C H E (Betwe in Rural & McClintock) > Limit 2 per coupon. r . _ . ■■ i M H a n C O U P O N M i M i e i M Contact Lens Consultation Have you been told you can’t wear contact lenses. Come in for free consultation. REFUND POLICY If y o u ’re not com pletely satisfied with you r contact lenses within 30 days, we will refund y o u r m oney 100%. Stal« Pros« Wednesday, Sep tember 4,1985 Page 19 Cubans to return to Florence when repairs áre completed PHOENIX (AP) — Cuban inmates will return to a riot-damaged federal im m igra­ tion center as soon as repairs are completed within four to six weeks, the U.S. Im m igra­ tion and Naturalization Service said Tues­ day. Repairs at the Florence center, rendered uninhabitable by the Aug. 22 disturbance, are expected to cost from $22S,000 to $250,000, said INS District Director Ruth Ann Myers. The Cubans are to be sent to the center as soon as possible after the repairs a re com­ pleted, she said. It probably will house almost 100 Cubans, as it did before the disturbance, Myers said. She said her office had gotten authoriza­ tion from Washington, D.C. for a new ad­ ministration building at the complex, but still was seeking approval to install addi­ tional security equipment. The Cubans all came to the United States during the 1960 boatlift and later were con­ victed of crimes in this country. They had been protesting the uncertainty over their desire to return to their home country. The inmates were moved to other federal facilities in Texas, California, Nevada and Oklahoma after the riot, in which they broke windows and furniture and tore lighting and water fixtures from the walls and ceilings. The new administration building will be outside the fenced-in area surrounding the main building. Until now, administrative of­ fices have been housed inside the main building where the riot occurred. Myers said, “If anything again goes on within the jail we will have our staff outside of the area.” ' ..... ■ The new modular building will cost ap ­ proximately $125,000 and is to be built within 45 days, she said. Myers had sought additional security equipment — including underground sen­ sors near the fence, perimeter lighting and closed-circuit televisions — when Cubans first were assigned to die center. As of now, she said, “The center will be restored the way it was" before the riot, without such equipment. The Cubans to be sent back to the Florence facility include at least 30 of the 40 inmates who were bused from Florence, to federal facilities in El Paso, Texas, and 28 inmates who did not participate in the riot and were sent to El Centro, Calif., Myers said. She said she was uncertain which other facilities would be sending inmates to the Florence center. BACK TO KINKO S H §5 Head over to Kinko’s for ail of your copying needs this term and discover outstanding quality and abundant services at very affordable prices. W e’re close to cam pus, open early, open late and open weekends. BACK TO KINKO S Birth defects are our nation’s number ne child health roblem. You can elp prevent them. I . TEM PE I TEM PE II 715 S. Forest OPEN24 HRS. Support the <7D SBUBaSTH M a rcOfFfCK h oFOUNDftTIONgMB f D im e s 8 9 4 -95 8 8 933 L University 894-1797 p e r c u sto n w ^ w h U e s u p p lie s last. Dinner enacts gift in honor of ASU professor A fund-raising dinner in honor of William Huizingh, a recently retired ASU ac­ counting professor, will be held a t the Registry Resort on Sept. 12. C ontributions will go toward creating the William Huizingh Scholarship En­ dowment in Accounting. Those interested in con­ tributing to the fund and at­ tending the ceremony can contact the Office of Special Events a t ASU. Huizingh, who completed his 30-year teaching career this spring, received the department of accounting U ndergraduate Teaching Excellence Award and was r e c o g n iz e d as th e outstanding undergraduate faculty member in the Col­ lege of Business. Huizingh has also con­ tributed to several ad­ ministrative positions as well as teaching a t AStj.jaccording to Jeff Mann, presi­ dent of Beta Alpha Psi. Huizingh was chairman of the department of account­ ing, director of the Bureau of Business and Economic Research and the acting dean of the College of Business. H u iz in g h ’s - o t h e r achievements include the E d u catio n al. E xcellence Award, an honorary life m em bership from the Arizona Society of CPAs, a Medallion, of Merit from Beta Gamma Sigma, a Cer­ tificate of Merit from the Na­ tio n a l/ A sso c ia tio n of A c c o u n ta n ts an d th e Outstanding Faculty Vice President Award from the . National Office of Beta Alpha Psi. R m Get our new $ 4 9 software module when you buy an H P - 4 1 . It’s a deal that has no equal, for a calculator that has no equal. Our new HP-41 Advantage software module packs’ 12K of ROM. One and a half times the capacity of any other HP-41 module. Large enough to hold the most popular engineering, mathematical and financial pro­ grams ever written for the HP-41. You get comprehensive advanced matrix math func­ tions, roots of equations and polynomials, integrations, base conversion and logic functions, and time value of money functions. Our new module is also sub-programmable. 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Zip Phone Number HP-41 Serial Number Mail coupon with proof-of-purchase to: Hewlett-Packard Co.vc/o Direct Mail Projects/M-M , P. O. Box 10598, Portland, Oregon 97209 D efects Support the 'inns»»'«ÇO*»’«i6u'toBV'HEPuBljShER PG12511 •U.S. suggested list price Offer not redeemable a t HP dealer, HP-41 m a s t be purchased * tween 8 /1 5 /8 5 and 11/15/85. Envelopes m ust be postm arked 12/31/85. Good only In U.S.A. Void where prohibited, t e n d r restricted hy law. H P employee purchases not eligible. Allow -8 weeks for delivery. j Wtónoda^SegteJTtbw^JWS Page 20 StrtePres» Riots mark first anniversary of S. African apartheid protests JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Students aban­ doned black schools near Johannesburg and rioted around Cape Town Tuesday, (me year after bloody rent protests set off a flood of violence against white rule that has cost more than 650 lives. Police and troops sealed off eight black townships, in­ cluding the two in which the rent protests began Sept. 3,1964. The black National Union of Mineworkers said Tuesday night it had “suspended” a two-day-old pay strike against selected gold and coal mines after a gold mine fired 5,000 of its 7,000 workers. Gold Fields of South Africa said earlier that it was “processing” w d ww »««missed from its Deelkraal mine, west of Johannesburg. Mine guards and police fired tear gas to drive strikers away from a heavily guarded dor­ mitory block, where management said 1,400 miners who wanted to work took shelter. The strike appeared to be crumbling through the day. Managements said only two gold mines remained struck, Deelkraal and the General Mining Corp. operation at Marievale. In announcing the suspension, the union said it was seeking a court injunction to stop management from sending dismiss­ ed miners back to impoverished black homelands. It said Marievale already had sent 300 miners home. There was no immediate comment from the mine management. I The eight sealed townships included Sharpeville and Sebokeng, near the industrial white towns of Vereeneging and Vanderbijl Park, 30 miles south of Johannesburg. There had been rioting incidents in August, but it was the Sept. 3 protest of rent hikes that marked the beginning of South Africa’s year of black rage against apartheid, the race laws that guarantee supremacy to the white minority. A black man was shot to death Tuesday in the black Eastern Cape township of Duncan Village, near E ast London, when police fired on a crowd during a gasoline bomb attack on a police vehicle, national police headquarters in Pretoria reported. Government agency may change evacuation regulations WASHINGTON ( AP) — Amid criticism that governmentrequired evacuation tests for jetliners often bear little resemblence to the problems faced in a crash, the Federal Aviation Administration is considering an overhaul of its rules. Before a jetliner m ay carry passengers, the government must be convinced a full plane can be evacuated in 90 seconds. But flight attendants, members of Congress and safety experts say the tests are often contrived to meet the regulations and give little assurance of what can be expected in anaccident. The FAA, acknowledging it is time for “a rigorous reassessment” of its evacuation regulations and how manufacturers and airlines abide by them, began four days of meetings Tuesday in Seattle to take testimony. Rep. Jam es L. 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FREETUTORING967-2967 Tempe Nightclubs 8 9 4 -2 5 1 3 Phoeni x/Scottsdale Nightclubs 8 9 4 -2 5 1 9 (Clip & save for use all year) Page 21 Wednesday, Septem ber 4,1965 State Press aporta______________________gjfe BY-ron! - Scott ends transition from ASU to NBA world champs By STEVE R1CHMAN Contributing Writer With Byron Scott growing up near both Hollywood and Disneyland, his first two years in the NBA could be easily referrm to as a story-book tale. Scott, who played basketball at ASU from 1979-1983, amass­ ed many outstanding achievements and awards during his Sun Devil days. Scott played in 90 games while at ASU and finished his career with a field-goal percentage of 50.7 while converting 74.7 percent of his free-throw attempts. During his final season at ASU in 1982-83, Scott led the Sun Devils into the postseason NIT Basketball Tournament while averaging 21.6 points per game for the season. Scott holds four ASU records, including most points in a season with 713 in 1982-83, most field goals in a season with 283 in 1982-83, most total career points with 1,572 and most total career field goals with 646. After his final season at ASU, Scott was a unanimous firstteam all-Pac-10 Conference selection. His other awards in­ clude Pac-10 Rookie-of-the-Year and all-Pac-10 honorable Staff photo by Ron Kuesofc Jr. Form er A S U basketball player Byron Scott, show n here against the S uns’ Kyle M acy, replaced N orm Nixon on the Los Angeles Lakers in 1983, mention in 1979-80 and honorable mention all-Pac-10 again in 1980-81. Despite feeling content after being drafted fourth overall by the then San Diego Qippers in 1983, Scott was in store for a big surprise. Enter the World Champion Los Angeles Lakers, The Lakers, in need of a point guard, traded team and fanfavorite Norm Nixon to the Clippers for Scott. After not play­ ing a single minute for the Clippers or, for that m atter, in the NBA, Scott was playing for the best team in the world. Just playing in the NBA was a dream come true for Scott. “ I always had dreams about playing in the NBA,” Scott said. “But never of winning a World Championship.” Most athletes have said that the transition from college sports to the pros is difficult, and Scott is no exception. “The hardest thing was playing with different people on a different team and not being die main man,” he said. “Everyone has to assum es role, and I had to change mine.” Another adjustment Scott had to make was the increase in traveling and the number of games played. “Traveling can be very tiring. It seemed we were always on the go," Scott said. “In college we used to play about 34 games for the whole season. Here it seemed I got tired after 30 games mostly because of the traveling.” After being traded to the Lakers, Scott said he had to deal with many pressures that mostly centered around the Nixon trade. Despite the criticism from the people off the court, Scott said he had to establish himself with the other players before he was really accepted. “ Norm had a lot of friends on the team ,” he said. “The other players wanted to see what I could do by taking it at me. Things came together when I got the system down.” When Scott began his second year with the Lakers, he said everything came more easily. ' “Everything was a lot easier because I had more ex­ perience and confidence. At training camp there was no animosity because everybody knew everybody and how each other played,” Scott said. Another plus was the attitude of Coach P at Riley. “ Riley is very laid back,” Scott said. “He has a structured offense which lets players do what they do best.” Scott added that former ASU coach Bob W einhauer had a different method of motivating his players. “ (Weinhauer) was more gung-ho,” Scott said. “He got players pumped up by yelling and screaming.” After his first year with Los Angeles, in which the Lakers lost the NBA Championship to the Boston Celtics in a heart­ breaking series, Scott said the team had a lot of incentive during the 1984-85 season. “ After losing to Boston in 1984, we knew what we had to do to win the championship in 1985,” he said. “ Magic (Johnson) took it upon himself, and we beat Boston at their own gam e.” Scott is alluding to the feet that Johnson received a great deal of criticism for his (day during the 1984 championship series, and there was revenge on the minds of the Lakers. Statt photo by Ron Kucsafc Jr. Scott, shown hsrs attacking Walter Davis and the Suns, was a main cog in the Lakers march to the 1985 N B A cham pionship. Playing for the Lakers fulfills many dreams for Scott. “I have a special feeling playing with Kareem AbdulJabbar and Johnson,” he said. “ It’s a lot easier to play on a team with them. I am also from Los Angeles, and it’s nice to (day in my home city.” Scott said his idols are Jerry West and Bob McAdoo. West, also known as “Mr. Clutch,” was a prolific scorer during his playing days with the Lakers. McAdoo played with Scott in his first two years, including last season’s championship series. The Lakers have not picked up McAdoo’s option year on his contract, and he will not play for the Lakers next season. Scott said it was very hard to lose McAdoo as a teammate. It has been said that it is hard to improve on excellence, but Scott said he has some room for improvement. “ I need to improve on going to the basket,” be said. “ I played in a summer league and worked on creating things for myself.” It has been 17 years since a team has repeated as NBA champinns, but Scott said he believes the Lakers have the at­ titude to do it. “We won the championship, and some team will have to take the title away from us to get it,” he said. Tales of a coach who cared - and administrations that don’t Pennsylvania for Tempe trying to pick up the pieces of the Sun Devil basketball pro­ ■♦ gram. He left a school team he had led to the Final Four in 1979 and a contract that the Jerry Brown coach himself described as “ lucrative.” Asst. Sports Editor He received a one-year contract. Actual­ ly, he received five .of them, courtesy of then-Executive Vice President Paige Mullhollan and then-Athletic Director Dick Tamburo. (Notice the preponderance of the Well, the Board of Regents made its offer word “ then” in the preceding sentence.) to Bob Weinhauer on Friday. The numbers Wait, Russ, isn’t that illegal? Well, sort of. ($356,000) are nothing to sneeze at and no But hell, if we can land us a top-notch coach one will have to say Gesundheit to “The and Paige says it’s okay. . . . Gestapo.” Ih e coach and his lawyer ac­ The first year was full steam ahead. ASU cepted the bucks late Tuesday night. goes from an under .500 club in 1981 to 19-14 I t was like deciding whether to snag a and gets to the second round of the NIT. five-spot when it blows past you on Cady Byron Scott and Paul Williams set school Mall. I don’t blame you for taking the money records and tlie fans are taken by and running, Robert. After all, there might Weinhauer’s sideline ranting. He is dubbed be a ra n g e on tihis offer, too. “The Gestapo” (probably not for the first After three seasons of ever-darkening time) by those who venturedinto the student clouds, Bob Weinhauer has escaped. He section. Ah, life is sweet. didn’t want to. A man of his caliber wouldn’t Year two. Scott and Williams graduate. run away no m atter how bad the situation Weinhauer is hampered by a lack of ex- ' turned. So President J. Russell Nelson and perience on the court despite a promising the boys decided to help him out, by hook or, freshman class. The Devils slip to 13-15, but as the regents’ lawyers found out, by crook. win four of their last five to renew hope. Weinhauer should have been ready for Problems however, begin to rise. something like this. When he came here in Weihhauer’s relationship with the local 1982, he replaced another victim of ASU’s media erodes. be-out-of-town-by-sundown mentality. The Weinhauer’s relationship with the ad­ bushwacking of Ned Wulk m akes ministration erodes. “Weinergate” wilt by comparison. Weinhauer’s relationship with his players Not to say this one doesn’t stink, too. Out •< does not. loud. Year three. The Devils finish under .500 Bob Weinhauer left the University of for the second straight season and Sun Devil attendance, which definitely is something to sneeze at, sagged to the lowest point since ASU moved into the Activity Center. Ipso facto, no year four? No. You see, then-interim Athletic Direc­ tor Frank Sackton told Weinhauer the reason he was going to be a “ then” real soon had nothing to do with either his win-loss record or pending investigation by the Pac10. But Nelson and Sackton knew one thing. They wanted Bob Weinhauer out and at each turn never ceased to amaze the coach or themselves how they did it. First, the oversight that,the University only can give a single, one-year pact is sud­ denly noticed. Silly us, Bob, it seems these agreements aren’t valid. What, oh what, willwedo? x A first offer was made. It seemed fair, if that was possible by then. Weinhauer would coach one more season and then resign. This way the University would get a new start and Weinhauer’s reputation would go un­ tainted. But no. The offer is tucked into the desk and replaced with a second offer. On June 14, the administration offers the coach 300 G’s to turn in his whistle. Again, the coach agrees. Again, the administration waffles and pulls back the offer,, By this time, Bob is checking court dates and the administration scrambles to the red phone for the Board of Regents. So now the final settlement sits on the Bob Weinhauer table ancHhe coach must decide if it makes up for what he has gone through. It probably doesn’t, but people who get everything they deserve in life are few in number. In sports, they are non-existent. V| Bob Weinhauer was not the most effective coach in college basketball. He coached his home games in a gym two-thirds empty and with a team of not-so-great talent in a not-sogreat conference. But he is a fair and truthful man. A man silly enough to speak his mind. A man silly enough to believe his players came first. A man silly enough to believe in another man’s word. Three times. And saddest of all, there are still people at ASU who believe Bob Weinhauer got what he deserved. Page 82 Wednesday, September 4,1965 Reynosa says Devils in shape - honestly State Press By MICHAEL KONZ State Press When it comes to talking about team attitudes and emo­ tions, it is difficult to find an honest response. ASU junior defensive end Jim Reynosa, however, gives an honest answer. After being asked about how Camp Tontozona was go­ ing, he gave the stock response. “ Right now, we’re in the best shape this team has been in since I’ve been here,” he said. Then came the surprise—honesty . “Last year we said it because that’s what the people wanted to hear,” Reynosa said. Other than a change in .answers, Reynosa said there also has been a change in how camp was run this year. “It’s going pretty good,” he said. “ We’re just starting to get our legs back. This (camp) is more up-tempo. It’s boom-boom-boom. We’re running here. There’s no walk­ ing. Everything’s on a time schedule. A lot more learn­ ing’s going on.” Reynosa said head coach John Cooper’s system of three practices a day at Tontozona was better than the two-aday practices under Darryl Rogers. “An hour and ten minutes is real good because you get GRAND OPENING S€PT. 6 • 6-10 P.M. H IG H T O P S m B A R À G R IL L 3 FO RM ERLY SN EAK ERS S.€ CORN6R O f MILL€fl & SCOTTSDR16 RD. IN SCOTTSDALE OVERLOOKING VISTR DEI CAMINO PARK 947-1644 $20EYE EXAM including contact lens professional fee FnmArtzMUfi LëaiRiigContactLefls,Eyetfass&Hearing AM Centers HIGHFASHIONGLASSISI FRAME & GLASS LÈNSES COMPLETE RH>TAG FRAMES Standardbifocalscomplete$39.95 Nootherdiscountsapply Priororderexcluded Redtagframesonly. PLASTIC LENSES AT ADDITIONAL COST +3.75tO-3.75 $ 2 1 .9 5 DAILYW EAR SOFTCOLORS EXTENDEDW EAR PACKAGE BYCIBA PACKAGE VISIONCARE $69.95 $99.95 $84.95 Packageincludes 1pr. soft contact lenses........0 Start-upkit...............<,• • • 0 Lens solution...................0 ^tearinginstructions............0 Soniceagreement............. 0 30dayfollowup................. 0 ’ Completepackage. . . . 169.96 COMPUM€NTRRV HORS D O€UVR€S $1 UJ611, UU)N€ & DRAFT B€€R $3 PfTCH€RS O f B€€R $5 PfTCH€RS OF MRRGRRITRS PLUS OTH6R FOOD SP6CIRLS an hour and a half break," he said. “ If you go two hour practices, your mind starts wandering. You don’t pay at­ tention. You aren’t as sharp. ” Reynosa cam e to ASU in 1962 from San Fernando High School in California, where he earned nine letters. After his senior season, he was named to all-Valley teams by the Los Angeles Times and The Daily News, In basketball, Reynosa was second-team all-city and all-league while averaging 20.5 points and 11 rebounds per game. He also finished second in the shotput a t a Los Angeles city high school track meet. With the season opener against Michigan State coming up, Reynosa is battling fellow junior Frank Rudolph for a starting position. “ It’s gonna be close,” Reynosa said. “I have a feeling (the coaches) are going to alternate us every series to keep us fresh. “ It makes you better,” he said. “ You don’t sit back and say, ‘I’ve got this spot,’ and you don’t worry about it. You work in every drill. You’re busting your butt.” Reynosa also is happy with the future he sees for the Sun Devils in the Pac-10 race. “We’ll be in there, right down to the wire,” he said. p rp M r THEEYES VOJWISH YOU'DBEEN BORNWITH Soft contact lenses inloi*natural cobs; Hue. green, aquaand amber. Onepairpercustomer. Packageincludes: 1pr otendedwear soft lenses. 0 . 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LSAT CLASSES BEGIN SEPTEMBER 9, 1985 C a ll n o w f o r e a r ly e n r o llm e n t d i s c o u n t G IN O ’S P IZ ZA 966-4666 T o e n r o ll c a ll 822 S. Mill A venue K a th y M c G r a th O p en M on.-T hurs. 11 a.m .-m idnight Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m .-2 a.m. Sun. noon-m idnight. 9 6 9 -8 9 5 3 A State Press Page 23 Pro takes pool ‘schtick’ to M U for annual clinic - «ili*.. 1 ‘ By BOB HEILER State Press Jack White and others in the same profession make a living out of never getting caught behind the eight ball. White is a professional pool player who will appear in the MU Sept. 9-13, staging a free tournament, clinic and exhibition for all ASU students. White, born in New York City in 1931, has been involved in the game of pool since he was eight years old. He has built a reputation as a trick-shot artist and teacher of pocket billiards. He was the first to introduce "Pocket Billiard Clinics,” and he has toured colleges and universities for over 20 years. He has performed at ASU several times in the past. His credentials as a "pool shark” include an honorary “Doctor of Poolology” degree from the University of Notre Dame, as well as a “ Master of Billiard Science” from the University of Alabama and a “Bachelor of Billiards” from Utah State. ’ His career high run in straight pool is an impressive 319 balls, and he has shot perfect snooker games of 147. He is also the only professional pool player ever invited to play at the White House. „ The schedule forihis visit includes a two-day clinic for interested students and a three-day tournament for both men and women. The winner of the tournament earns the right to play against White in the feature match. Last year this honor was taken by then-ASU place kicker Luis Zendejas. The program draws to a close with White’s trick-shot exhibition. White’s visits to ASU have been met with enthusiasm in the past, causing traffic jam s in the basement recreation center of the MU. Due to this popularity. White has become an annual visitor to ASU. Colts gamble on Schlichter with No. 1 job INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Art Schlichter, free of gambling habit that led to a y ear’s suspension by the Na­ tional Football League, achieved another milestone in his comeback by regain­ ing the Indianapolis Colts’ starting quarterback job. After four months of evaluations during spring and summer drills and four weeks of alternating starts during the exhibition season, Coach Rod Dowhower on Monday picked Schlichter pver three-year starter Mike Pagel. “ H e ’s o u r • m a n , ’’ D ow how er s a id of Schlichter. “He’s got his foot in the door. Now it’s up to him.” Schlichter, 25, who threw for a school-record 7,547 yards and’50 touchdowns and ran for 1,303 yards and another 35 touchdowns at Ohio State, was the fourth player chosen in the 1982 NFL draft. He played in three games with the Colts as a rookie backup to Pagel, but he was unable to handle six-figure gambling debts and th re a ts fro m bookmakers. The NFL suspended Schlichter for the 1983 season, and he rejoined the Colts last year, first as the backup to Pagel and then as the starter in the final five games. U ltim ately, Dowhower said, Schlichter and Pagel “were close, and it was my background and experience that led me to this (choice). To be specific (about the reasons) would be difficult, and I don’t plan to be (specific). “If he (Schlichter) con­ tinúes his work habits to go along with his athletic abili­ ty, I think he has a chance to be/a solid player a t his posi­ tion. Beyond that, I don’t w ant to s p e c u la te ,’’ Dowhower said. “It didn’t come easy for m e,” Schlichter said of his assignm ent. “ I had to change my habits to get back into the NFL and then 1 had to change my practice habits. “I had to start thinking clearly again. When I was in the depths of the disease, I thought about nothing but gambling.” Schlichter, who started in preseason games against Seattle and Denver, com­ pleted 54.9 percent of his passes for 283 yards and no touchdowns during exhibi­ tion play. Pagel, who has passed for more, than 5,000 yards and 25 touchdowns in his tliree-year career, said, “I’m not happy with the decision, but J understand why they did it.’!; ■ fM JG G D A T THE AMZOIIA BANK . . . w h e n y o u o p e n t h e m o s t e c o n o m ic a l S t u d e n t C h e c k in g A c c o u n t in A r iz o n a . I right! Getting mugged at The Arizona Bank can actually be fun! Merely open a new Student Thrifty Checking Account, and youll receive a beautiful Kachina Mug, absolutely FREE! Along with your $25.00 opening deposit, youll also receive The Arizona Bank 24HR Teller Card, Check Safekeeping, and your first order of checks, FREE. It's our way of saying thank you for making The Arizona Bank your bank. annual service charge* when the account is opened, and every 12 months thereafter for as long as you qualify for the account. Visit any office of The Arizogp Bank and show your student I.D. to open a Student Thrifty Checking Account. Then stop by any of the convenient offices listed below to pick up your free mug. But don’t delay. This is a limited offer! Getting mugged at The Arizona Bank can’t be all that bad! It’s really economical, too! The Arizona Bank. . . It’s pretty hard to beat. (Sucry, offer limited to tme mug per customer. Good thru September W ,1965.) Write all the checks you wish and make 24HR Teller withdrawals during die year, without paying a monthly service charge. Your only cost is a non-refundable $24.00 Rural & Baseline Road Office 906 East Baseline Road •lem pe Tempe Main Office 619 Milt Avenue • lempe ’ Nummi «rartes chmp i mdr Chech usdtw.«>u|>payments. mn A k m u hm dichniw . etc. are additional. Kcfcfsuthe SwviceCIwmr hwichMte foec«—f lew Jttaih j f c ia o n a “ W S A A f/C M MEMBERfDC An Equal Opportunity Candar an d Em ptoyarM/F State ........................................................... .. Page 24__________________________________________________________ Wednesday, September 4,1985 Pues» Gallimore hangs in, fights Kofcs for starting spot By CHRIS McKAY State Press On the practice field, junior tight end Jeff Gallimore seems to have that inspiring, outgoing attitude that is noticed by all. “He’s got that loosey-goosey personali­ ty," according to offensive coordinator Jim Colletto. “Not everyone can be serious all the time.” Head coach John Cooper says Gallimore, along with fellow junior Stein Koss, is serious in his approach on the field. “These two aren’t flashy, nor are they blazers,” he said. “ But they run very disciplined routes, and they’re steady. Con­ sistency is all we ask for, and they have it." Gallimore and Koss are currently in a fight for the starting position. “Right now you can flip a coin,” said Cooper. “Both have had an outstanding cam p.” With the talent they both provide, Cooper said he plans to utilize both in double tight end situations. Gallimore said the tight end position is one of the Sun Devils’ strengths.' “We’ve probably got as much depth at tight end as anyone in the Pac-10, possibly the nation,” said Gallimore. According to Colletto, the coaching staff may put on a competition each week to decide who will start in the upcoming game. Gallimore started only one game foe the Sun Devils last season, after seeing limited action in 1983 and redshirting in '82. In the tenth game of the season against Colorado State, Koss suffered a knee injury that allowed Gallimore to step in. He m ader his first start in the season finale loss to UA, 16-10. Going into the game with only two recep­ tions all year,. Gallimore had nine catches for 77 yards against the Wildcats. Listed at 6-foot-3, 229 pounds in the off­ season, Gallimore came to camp weighing 244. “I gained the needed weight and the strength,” said Gallimore. “What happened was, I lost endurance.” A 1982 graduate of California’s Oxnard High School, Gallimore hauled in 34 catches for 732 yards and seven touchdowns, for a 21.5 yard-per-reception average. He was named Most Valuable Player of the Channel League, all-Ventura County and second-team all-California Interscholastic Federation. With all the needed fundamentals of a tight end, including speed, blocking ability and an understanding of the passing game, Gallimore only “needs to buckle down and work on basics,” according to Cooper. Gallimore said Camp Tontozona was ideal for working on his weaknesses. *■ ^ “ I can’t say enough about it,” said Gallimore. “ It’s the best camp I’ve ever been to.” With his attitude about practice, the team and the season, Gallimore is expecting ASU to be a strong competitor. “We’re definitely going to make it to a bowl,” Gallimore said. “ I’ll do anything I can to get this team a Pac-10 champion­ ship.” Jeff Gallimore R U N D LE’S . L IQ U O R S a MKT. 730 S. MILL IX X X ll C o m e r M il lt University Ave. LITTLEKINGSALE s-nn J MEISTERBRAUBEER m,a ANDRECHAMPAGNES tm* PLAYBOYUsedMagazines $2.97 $1.89 $2.97 $ .7 1 j Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines. Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. 967-9079 i I I Q D Q t t W E LU D J N E ************ ******* t* 22 2 S. 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M 8 M » Archers aim for Nationals IP 000* ¡®l s A* the A S U archers prepare lo r the ’85-’86 season, a rigorous schedule of practicing and equipment checking becom es the norm. T h e team returns from a very successful year in ’85; at the national cham pionships the archers swept the team competitions, also 5 of the 6 men and all 6 o f the women were all-Am ericans (nationally only 10 Individuals are chosen as all-American). Archery is a sport that requires a great amount of concentration, so the archers not only work on the physical aspect, but spend slot of hours in silent thought about their performances. A S U has a spectacular history in archery; several national cham pions have emerged from the program, and the team he» swept the national competitions for the past three years. Dope Bailey, top left, an all-American last year, says, “There's only certain level of physical ability, the thing that separates the elite from the average is mental abiltiy." Equipm ent is also a major factor in the sport. T he two photos above illustrates some of the m any technological advancem ents that have been made since the “William Tell” days. T h e bows that are used today are com posed of a magnesium handle, wood fiberglass lim bs, aluminum arrows, and Kevlar bowstrings. T h e advancem ents have been made to Improve the speed and stability of the bows, and sh ock absorbers have also been added to Improve the flight of the arrow. Below, from left, business junior Tom R ichard, alumni advertising senior R ick Betts, and biology freshm an Elizabeth Zutell spend the m orning hours perfecting their craft. T h e m any hours that are spent each day pay off for the dedicated few. A s you ca n see, below left, the archers of A S U really do . . “G o Fo r T h e G old.” Photos by Ron Kuczek, Jr. Copy by Rick Betts Page 26 Wednesday, September 4,1985 Stale Press ‘Swaf team Addition adds strength to national badminton cham ps By BOB HEILER State Press Badminton coach Carole Fisher has five returning men and three returning women from last year’s national champion team, along with a new addition, Mary Fran Hughes, who was ranked fourth in the nation last year. Hughes is from New York and played for George Washington University. She came to ASU for a variety of reasons. “F irst of all, I got a scholarship," said Hughes, a junior advertising major. “Also, ASU has both a men’s and a women’s team. A lot of other schools just have women’s teams. The teams are really good, too, so they travel to a lot of tournaments, which is good. “ I know a lot of these people, too,” said Hughes. “We’ve known each other for years, from playing in junior tournaments together. Even though we’re from all dif­ ferent parts of the country, we’re all friends. “I already feel like we’re a team .’’ This outstanding lineup has Fisher’s ex-* pectations high for the team s’ performance this year. “I think that we’re going to win all three national titles this year,” Fisher stated. “How’s that for cocky?” The badminton team has been ASU's most consistently outstanding sports organiza­ tion, winning 12 national titles in 13 years. How does one go about holding that kind of team together for that long? “ It wasn’t m«^.’ Fisher said. “ It was Merle Packer, the woman before me. She really built the team, and I worked under her as an assistant coach for four years. She still helps me out occasionally on a volunteer basis;” For the men, one important factor in this (Wolk) are both really good players.” Another new addition to the team is Wolk, a freshman front Denmark. She was added only recently due to an admissions problem. “I also expect to win all three titles, especially with the new, good players,” Jogis said, “The girls came awfully close last year, and the guys did win; so we’ve got a real good chance.” On the women’s squad, the No. 1 spot is up for grabs between Hughes and last year’s team leader, Linda French. ‘A lot of the tournaments we play in are open, which means that you don ’t have to represent any college to play in them.’ — Fisher year’s competition will be Chris Jogis, the No. 1 player in the country since his win last March in the U.S. Open. Jogis, a junior finance major, also was very optimistic about the teams’ upcoming season, which lasts throughout the school year. “Our new players are really going to help, and we only lost one, so there’s nowhere to go but up,’’ said Jogis, last year’s NCAA singles champion. Mary Fran and Nina Practice starts today for the teams, in preparation for an exhibition against the U.S. Challenge Cup team, a group of outstanding players from the California area, on Oct. 10. The team also is hosting the Arizona Opqp, Oct. 12-13, a tournament that anyone may enter, since it is not a collegiate competition. “ A lot of the tournaments we play in are open,” said Fisher, “which means that you don’t have to represent any college to play VO LUN TEERS • VO LUN TEERS HELP WANTED CO FULL & PART TIME SALES HELP TOP WAGES PAID Ä U ASU Football in them. They are pretty competitive tour­ naments." . There is a collegiate tournament every year, sponsored by the national coaches’^ organization. “ The collegiate championship is usually held somewhere back E ast,” said Fisher. “There are generally between 25 and 30 teams participating.” Matches consist of best two-out-of-three rounds of 15 points each, except for women’s singles, which consist of games to only 11. Scoring is similar to volleyball, with oppor­ tunities to score coming only while serving. The only variation on volleyball scoring is a practice called “setting the score.” When a player ties the score within two points of winning, the other player can set, which takes the score back to . The players then play to five points, with the regular rules. “A lot of people set because it’s tiring," said Fisher. “ If you think you’re in better shape (than your opponent), you can set to make the match last longer” . The team s compete in singles, doubles and mixed doubles, a fact that may cause problems for Fisher because she has six men on her squad and only five women. “ I may bring in one more girl in January, so we can even tne teams out,” she said. R A R E LION w Coaching Staff is D looking for two hard ► O working student > m anagers with the CO 06 U opportunity of earn ­ E ing financial aid. z Eh Z B u y in g • S e llin g A p p ly in person M on.-Fri. 10 a. m .-5 p.m. C lo t h in g • V in t a g e & C o n t e m p o r a r y A c c e s s o r ie s • S h o e s . H a t s . G / o v e s O J e w e lr y • R h in e s to n e s . G la s s B e a d s • w h D hJ O > bedroom C o lle c t ib le s • For More Information Call: 1 0 -6 M o n .- F r i. 10% OFF i €ntire Stock ]o for students with this coupon I Dave B oiler, 965-4310 9 6 0 -6 0 7 4 S I S T E R R U S H Please bring I.D. Thurs. Sept. 5th 4-6 861-9775 u R efreshm ents with the Men o f Pi Kappa Alpha ••IsM f o r m a l a t t ir e r e q u ir e d Volley ball -Bar-B-Q by in v i t a t io n o n ly 6 2 0 Alpha Drive Any Q uestions 965-0651 | lower level Next to Joskes ^ ■■■■■■■■■CO U PO N m A L I T T L E Wed. Sept. 4th 7: 30-10:30 | Ladies Junior fashion I Metro Center I, 11-6 S a t. VO LUN TEERS • VO LUN TEERS W e lco m e B o ck | Sun D e v ils I I A n t iq u e s • 7 2 2 S . M ilt A v e ., T e m p e UPS j l d o w n s ] P I K F I T r a d in g j Walking distance from cam pus { # n u J PIKE IS IT! J State Press Wednesday, September 4,1985 Page 27 Spikers’ move means tough foes This is the first o f a State Press two-part series concerning the ASU women's volleyball team. Today's article discusses the Sun Devils’ move from the Western Conference Athletic Association to the newly formed Pac-West Conference. By DEAN OBENAUER State Press The distinctive echoes of volleyballs being bumped, set and spiked are once again heard in P.E. E ast as the ASU women’s volleyball team gears up for its season opener this Saturday. Although all is normal on the court for the Sun Devils, out of the gym they find themselves in a new conference — a con­ ference of five schools and an undetermined future. Along with Arizona, Southern California, Stanford and UCLA, ASU pulled out of the Western Collegiate Athletic Association, of which it had previously been a member for six years. The five Pac-10 member schools then formed the new Pac-West. “It was an administrative decision,” coach Debbie Brown said. “I didn’t make the decision.” With the five teams leaving the WCAA, San Diego State, Cal State-Pullerton and Cal State-Long Beach were left behind. San Diego State, Fullerton and Long Beach were picked up by the Pacific Coast Athletic Association. In the past, the women’s teams of five Pac-10 universities have played in the WCAA while the men’s teams have com­ peted in the Pac-10 Conference. The move to the Pac-West may be the first step to an ultim ate Pac-conference for the women. Administrators have said the reasons for leaving the WCAA were for the for­ ming of a Pac-10 for women. There are advantages and disadvantages to the move, ac­ cording to Brown. “We are playing with the best teams in the country in the Pac-West and that will help us improve,” Brown said. “The disadvantage is that there are only five teams in the con­ ference.” : ' Despite being short of schools in the Pac-West, there is no shortage of talent. As of Tuesday's Tachikara Division !> Coaches Top 20 Poll, four of the conference’s five teams were ranked. UCLA was ranked No. 1 in the nation, USC second, Stan­ ford third and Arizona No. 18. ASU was an honorable mention to the poll, receiving 10 or more votes. With the Pac-West not having at least six teams, the con­ ference receives no automatic bids to the NCAA playoffs. That makes it unlikely for all five teams in the conference to get at-large bids for post-season play regardless of their rank. Other disadvantages include making it difficult to schedule matches a t home. But Brown said she looks at the bottom line. “Being a member of the strongest conference outweighs all of the little things,” she said. With the Devils being in such a strongjconference, Brown is confident that her team will be competitive. Admitting that it is difficult to know how her team will match-up this early in the season against the competition, Brown does have a goal for the team . “I think we can aim a t third in the conference,” she said. “ It is important to beat our rival, Arizona. ” The Sun Devils open their season Saturday night, hosting Utah at 7:30 in P.E. East. AT GAM MAGE CENTER: • • • ’1 A S A S U / G C Present STANLEY JORDAN, Jazz G uitar with S p e cial Guests: Francine Reed & C om p any S u n d a y , S ep tem b er 8 * 8 p.m. T h e first new a rtist to b e s ig n e d b y B lu e N ote. S ta n le y J o rd a n is a ls o o n e o f th e ja zz w o rld 's b rig h te s t a n d m o st in ven tive n ew stars. L o c a l fa v o rites F ra n c in e R e e d & C o m p a n y p ro v id e a n upbeat o p e n in g f o r w h a t p ro m is e s to b e a m e m o ra b le e v e n in g fo r V a lle y ja zz fans. Tickets: $9, $7.50 • • • A S A S U / G C Present GORDON UDHTFOOT S u n d a y , S ep tem b er 1 5 * 8 p.m. O n e o f th e m o st p o p u la r e n te rta in e rs to e v er a p p e a r at Q a m m a g e C en ter, L ig h tfo o t p a y s a n e n c o re visit. T ic k e ts w ill g o fast, s o get y o u rs early! „ Tickets: $14.50, $12.50 • •• A S A S U / G C Present PETER, PAUL AND MARY S atu rd a y, S ep tem b er 21 • 8 p.m. ' T h e m o st s u c c e s s fu l fo lk trio in th e h is to ry o f p o p u la r m u sic. Peter, P a u l a n d M a ry w ill b e m a k in g a s in g le Q a m m a g e ap p ea ra n ce. C o m e aind h e a r th eir a ll-tim e hits, " I f I H a d a H a m m e r," “ L e m o n Tree ," “ B lo w in ’ in th e W in d ,” " P u ff th e M a g ic D ra g o n ," a n d m any more. 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FOR RENT T O S T U D E N T S : Condominiums at dorm prices TERRA MARKETING CALL TO RESERVE NOW 6 0 2-968-6427 4 2 5 S. Mill ( 5 th and M ill) Suite 101 E c o n o m ic in fo rm a tio n a n d a ssu m p tio n s a re a v a ila b le fo r y o u r « valu ation . C o n t a c t y o u r fin a n c ia l a d v ise r reg ard in g y o u r pa rticu la r requ ests rnaipotter lopurchateor leaeemaybt accented prior to issuance of the fine Anione Subdivision Pubhe Report T h u rsd a y , S ep tem b er 12 • 8 p.m . B rin g in g to life th e m u sic o f th e 17th a n d 18th c e n tu rie s, th is g ro u p h as g a in e d a n in te rn a tio n a l re p u ta tio n a n d is a m o n g th e fin est an d m ost e x c itin g in its field . (B a c h /H a n d e l/S c a rla tti T e rc e n te n a ry C ele b ra tio n ) Tickets: $10 • • • *> THE NEW ART STRING QUARTET S u n d a y , S ep tem b er 29 • 4 p.m. T h e p o p u la r "F rie n d s o f M u s ic ” S e rie s o p e n s its s e a so n w ith the in te rn a tio n a lly a c c la im e d N e w A rt S trin g Q u a rtet — th e q u artet in re s id e n ce at A S U . Tickets: $5 • • • AT THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER: . In trod ucin g th e fantastic new JA Z Z T R A X seamless - butter-soft leather u p p e r - V ery S pecia l S ole - great for those slip p ery w o o d floors - V ik o fo m e in so le for c lo u d -so ft cu sh io n in g great b u ffer betw een fo o t and flo o r. J A Z Z T R A X has it all. Light, fle xib le , strong, a n d it lo oks Frid a y , S ep tem b er 20 • 8 p.m. O n e o f th e o rig in a l E a g le s, H e n le y is n o w s o a rin g o n h is ow n. H is cu rre n t h it s in g le is “ B o y s o f S u m m e r." 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Free Tap A ttachm ent (Save up to *6.40) 1710 W a t S outhern with S p e cia l G uest David Lin d ley S H O P EARLY — W e have o n ly a lim ite d supply. ,r / plus other gifts C ash prizes will also be awarded to the 10 sem ifinalists and four princesses. v SEPTEMBER SPECIAL RECEIVE A SEC O N D FREE LITER OF SOFT DRINK WITH EVERY PIZZA PURCHASE THROUGH SEPTEMBER. 1985 R E S T A BOW L QUEEN CONTEST Official Entry Application (please print or type) ASU Bkthdate. Present Mailing Address. 1LOCATION 000110« 8 29-1717] 933 E. University Tempe Towne Plaza (A cro ss from The Cornerstone) HOURS: 11 A.M.-1 A.M SAT.-THURS. • 11 A.M.-2 A.M. FRI.-SAT. I---------- “ — * — iM Téléphona Number (home)___________ University/Collog, ____________ Sr Number at Credits Carried this Semester. School Activities —____________ - c*y e«» a. -(w o rk ) .C la s s (Circle O ne) Fr So i M w anw ; $100 o f f $1 oo o ff a n y p izza a n y p izza One coupon per pi?za. One coupon per pizza. Good through 9-15-85. Good through 9-15-85. Jr Jafor. n e ,» , AreuM — _____ _____ ______________________________ I certify that s i s to re kdonreton is * u t end correct end agree to slow the Fiesta Bowl uoe of my photograph snd oppireiltin. I undorwend the! doccioni by judges or ttpis oonleliv o i io linai in a l mantra. sreMrsaanMe ALL APPLICATIONS MUST INCLUDE A RECENT PHOTO (non- returnable) ------------------- T M Noma Mailing Address. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 26 ADDRESS ENTRIES TO: Fiesta Bowl Qusan Contest. 5144 E. Camelbacfc Road. Phoenix, Arizona 86018 Sept. 26 - Applications for those who will interview in Phoenix must be postmarked Oct. 5 - Initial interviews in Phoenix Oct. 12 - Interviews for semifinalists Oct. 28 - Q ueen selection dinner - final judging Page 30 State Press Wednesday, September 4,1985 Soviets nip U.S. for gold medal KOBE, Japan (AP) —>A last-second long shot-gave the the men’s 110-meter high hurdles, with teammate Keith Soviet Union a 96-93 victory over the United States for the Talley third. men’s basketball title Tuesday, while the Americans had Ramos, of« Missoula, Mont., overtook first day leader their best day in track and field, winning three gold medals in Michael Neugebauer of West Germany with strong perform­ th e World University Games. ances in the pole vault and discus. He finished with 8,071 The Soviets won a total of.four golds for the day:-« in­ points to 7,971 for Valter Kyulevet of the Soviet Union. cluding water polo, men’s epee team fencing and the Neugebauer ended up third with 7,895. women’s 800-meter- run — but Japan stopped them in the Branta, of Madison, Wis., won the women’s -3,000 in 9 men’s volleyball final. minutes, 2.75 seconds, with Hayes, of Eugene, Ore., just Down two sets to one, Japan recovered for a 15-8,10-15,12- behind at 9:02.92. Angela Chalmers of Canada was third at 15,15-17,15-8 victory before a crowd of about 6,000, mostly 9:03.19. In the Soviet triumph in the women’s 800 meters, Nadezhda ecstatic Japanese rooters. Zvyagintse edged Romania’s Cristieana Cojocaru, 1:58.59 to North Korea blanked Uruguay 1-0 for the soccer gold, scor­ .1:59.09. ing on a header that bounced off a Uruguayan defender into Bulgaria's Ginka Zagorcheva won the women’s 100-meter the goal. * ~ ' hurdles in 12.71 seconds, with Soviet runner Nadezhda Kor­ With nine gold medals left to be decided on the University shunova second in 12.87. Games’ final day Wednesday, the Soviets led the standings In the gold medal basketball game, the Soviets led at with 77 medals, including 41 golds. The United States had 61 halftime but the Americans led 74-68 at one point in the sec­ medals, including 21 golds, and Japan, China and Cuba each ond half before the seesaw battle came to a 93-93 tie with less had six golds. . than one minute left. In the last games in 1983, the Soviets had 115 medals in­ Chuck Person of Auburn, Ala., missed a free throw with 39 cluding 59 golds and the United States had 53 medals in­ seconds left, and the Soviets got the ball and stalled until cluding 12 golds. Valzdemaras Khomitchus dribbled across the court to the In another highlight on the track Tuesday, Cuba’s Silvia side and took a desperation jump shot with three seconds left. Costa won the women’s high jump with a University record of His shot of about 21 feet swished cleanly through the net for a 6 feet, 7 inches, breaking the old mark of 6-6 set by Tamara three-print goal. Bykova of the Soviet Union in 1983. “They (Soviets) are good players. Still, we had good For the Americans, Mike Ramos’ won the demanding two- chances to win. But we didn’t hit the free throws. That makes day, 10-event decathlon, Cathy Branta and Kathy Hayes a big difference in a close game like this,” said U.S. Coach placed 1-2 in the women’s 3,000 meters and Cletus Clark won Lee Rose of the University of South Florida. GRAND OPENING!! A ® ,<8 o u fa m t *• 1 0 % ALL O F F w ith A S U I.D. FLA V O RS: A m a r a ft o O te a s e C h e rry S tra w b e rry Peanut D aiqu iri And M o ra ... T offee 903 So. Rural Rd. CZNN A/W V C 5 I TRI*. ASL) . X Î ONTfR 967-4344 ■ COUCH BY DAY BED BY NI6HY. FREE DELIVERY BEDS • SOFABEDS • ACCESSORIES The Futon Store 2 6 2 0 W . B road w ay #8, M e s a Broadway Plaza Center, 1 block east of Price 966-8031 • M o n .-S at. 10-6, Thurs. til 8 2 for 1 Develop 6 Print HAPPY HOUR DOUBLE PRINT SPECIAL 829-0424 EVERY MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY ... A T REG U LAR LOW PRICE, . Tempo Center Mill & Univ. THERE A R E TW O SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARM Y. And they’re both repre­ sented by the insignia you wear as a member o f the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you ’re part of a health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you’re1 earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Clifton, NJ 07015. O r call toll free 1-800-USA-ARMYr A R M Y NURSE CO R PS. BE A LLY O U CAN BE. ■State Press ON THE FRONT UNE... Wednesday, September 4,1985 B icycles H elp Wanted USED BIKES from $35 to $300. They all work. Call Don 820-9618 keep trying. B u sin ess Opp. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY to earn extra income for only $25 investment. Free training call 066-3235.___________ F b r R ent or Lease $185 PER MONTH gets you a two bedroom c o o p apartment (similar to a condo), if you can beg, barrow, or steal $19,500 to purchase the equity. In­ cludes most maintenance, refrigerator, stove, shared yard, pool and laundry. Sooth Scottsdale. 96682110468016. Dr. Erte Knud— **-.- .n reeuroototogm V Stantold UnhwdHy A March of Dimes research grantee, Or. Knudaen stud­ ies the hearing of owls. If he can discover how It works, develops and adapts to hearing Impairments, he will gain insight into hgman hearing and deafness. Such basic knowledge may one day help bring sound to babies who are bom deaf. >bur March of Dimes works to create a world without birth defects. BEDROOM FOR rent, furnished, utilities Included $240 804-1485 0682076. __________________________ COMPUTER DATA entry operator, 6:30 to 12:30 daily. Salary start at $3.50 raising to $4.00 after one month. Temps location 0668558.____________ CONSULTING FIRM needs 10 en­ ergetic people to set appointments part-time. If you're serious about having fun and making big money, call Nancy at 9668810. Two minutes from campus._________________________ _ EARN $4 to $8 per hr part time making light deliveries on campus, flexible hours, dependable help required 8333 1 7 1 . _______________ EARN EXTRA money, set your own hours, ca ll 827-8302 ask for Doug. EDUCATION MAJORS wanted to take care of .children overnight in there homes while parents are away. Call 438-1699 F A LL CLASSIC hair show. Models wanted. Must want new look. Created by top stylists at no cost. Model call, 7:00 p.m. Sept. 6 at Regency Resort in Scottsdale. Ask for August Haydom. BRAND NEW two bedroom two bath apartments near ASU. Washer and dryer hook-ups, covered parking, brand new pool, secured bike area. $450 per month, $100 o ff first months rent for new residents only. Located, Hardy and fifth. For further information please call Jackie 9688422.__________ FLO R A L DELIVERY drivers must be available Monday, Wednesday, Friday 8:305.30. Call 252-4773. ____________ FU LL O R part time graphics and sign work 437-1214. _______ CUTE FURNISHED studio near ASU includes utilities $260 .894-1485, 9682076. G IR L F R ID A Y , good s k ills , Hayden/Thomas-nice office, Scottsdale PT a.m. caH Toby 046-0962.________ FOR RENT, two bedroom one bath tow nhouse... furnished, pool, ap-. proximatety two miles from ASU 8348376. _________ ' GREAT PART-TIME job. Earn $6 to $8 per hour as a delivery p erso n . with Dominos Pizza Full or part-time, flexible day or evening hours. Drivers earn excellent hourly wage + tips and mileage: Many delivery people advance to our management training program. Must be 18 or older with a good driving record, car and insurance. We want dependable clean cut people w illing to hustle. Applications w ill be accepted at 903 W. Broadway in Tempe and all Valley locations after 11 am . daily. O N E BEDROOM condo for rent. 700 W. University. Ail appliances plus washerdryer, pool and rec area. Lynne 831-7774. Computer Realty. _______ C L A S S IF I E D S START HERE The STATE PRESS disclaim s all respon­ sibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. A nnouncem ents FLIGHT ATTENDENT 34 airlines hiring. 3 hour seminar. Airline recruiter limited seating, Travel Vision 945-2601. ROOM FOR rent, four bedroom house, pool, Alma school and Guadlupe, Mesa, house privileges, $175 per month 926-1234, TOWNHOUSE FO R rent Dobson and University area, 2.5 miles, from ASU. Two bedroom two bath, den, pool, washer, dryer, $500 monthly call 893-1385. F o r Sale_________ NISHIKI M ENS 10 speed bike excellent shape $200 c r best offer. 897-7088. 1075 BUICK SKYLARK. Needs nice new home. Looks great, runs great, power steering, power brakes, nearly new tires and transmission. New am/fm cass. $1,850 call 8400370 M-F 9-4 or 840-80076-8 p.m. v NO DOWN, no ‘ qualifying. Three bedroom, two bath, block horde. Fenced yard, covered patio, new carpet, tile and kitchen counter. 15 min from ASU. 144. N. Glenview, Mesa 006-4212. 1077 TOYATA CAROLLA SR5 llftback, a/c, am/fm, 5 speed $1,700 obo 893-9137. _________|__ SANSUI TURNER, amp, cassette, turntable, equalizer, speakers, beauti­ ful walnut cabnet with double glass doors. $75 - $150 moving must sell 9648627._________ ________________ 79 FORD MUSTANG, autom atic, cruise, 2.8L, V6, $2200 or best offer, call Wayne 0648218. 79 FORD MUSTANG automatic, cruise, 2.82 V8, $2,200 or best offer, call Wayne 9848218._____________________ . MUST S ELL my classic cm collection. These cars are absolutely like new. Low mileage on all vehicles. One 1964 VW Bug 100% ground up restoration. One 1964 two door Corvair completely original, new condition, four speed with cold AC. One 1963 Corvair convertable, one you can be proud to drive and show anyone. One 1071 Volvo Sport Coupe P1800 completely original low mileage, automatic with air, one owner. Call 0648663anytime.________ S C H O O L SPEC IA L 78 Plym outh Horizon, 4,2000 miles a/c FWD four door, asking $1,800. Call after 5:30 9678156. _____ ____ _ Babysitters waited BABYSIT 2Yt YEAR twins. 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. three to four nights per week, 16th and Bethany Home area 2668306. I N EED a babysitter in my home, full or part time, flexible hours for one two year old, and one four year old. Pay ntKrttatitotew«».________ __ INSURANCE INTERNSHIP student in junior or senior year studying insur­ ance, finance, and or marketing,' who would, Hke career oriented opportunity. Hours to work comfortably with academic schedule. Office located near Paradice Valley please call Tony Leombruno 9 to 5 at 257-4525 or 906-4525. _____ GUILD GUITAR six new strings with case $125 obo, electric, typewriter $115 Kent 966-2601. A utom obiles 78 FORD FAIRMONT wagon, fully equiped $1,275 831-7111. IMMEDIATE JO B openings. Opinion research company needs interviewers absolutely no sales! We w ill train. $4.00 hr. O'NIel Associates 8948728. _____ COMPLETE B - W darkroom setup with vivitar enlarger, excellent condition $275 246-0271 after 5. IBM MULTI- function board. functions — 384K — utility — cable. $106.966-4480. 72 VW Super bug. New interior, 10k m iles on rebuilt engine. $2,000 or best offer. Peggy 834-3155._____ ________ IBM COMERCIAL sales, phone-work, part time, new office in ASU vicinity, above average pay, salary plus commiaSion, ca ll Peter 046-0449. _______ $2,500 FOR SALE or trade. 10 x 47 trailer. Two bedroom one bath, partially furnished, new carpet, McClintock and Apache 0488360.___________________ HANG GLIDE! certified instruction/ gently sloping hill/ our equipment/ two Saturdays $50 one $35. Group rates and pift certificates available. Since ‘70. Arizona Windsports 807-7121. 1963 CHEVETTE FOUR door auto­ matic, power steering, power breaks, air cond, tilt, tinted glass AM/FM casse tte , transferable extended warranty, new belts and new battery $4,300 or best offer. Ask for Teresa 807-1078. G U RLEY’S, STETSON Drive at 75th at Scottsdale. Applications accepted for food, beverage, hostess and bus persons on Tues and Weds Sept. 10th and 11th 9 0 0 to 11:00 am . and 3:00 to 5.80 p.m.________ _________________ Five disk Page 31 H elp Wanted H elp Wanted R e a l E state______ JONATHANS PIZZA it looking for delivery drivers and pizza cooks to staff four new locations In Tempe and Mesa. Drivers must have own insured car. High possible earning potential, apply in person after 11:00 daily at Jonathans Pizza 933 E. University. SECRETARY. TEM PE research firm needs part time morning help, must be fsciie with Wordstar 604-6728.________ O NE BEDROOM condo, walking dis­ tance to ASU. Washer, dryer, dishwasher. $42,000.__________________ LANDSCAPE HELPER, install plant and rock material. Experience helpful. Full or part time call Chuck Kelly 945-1015._________________________ LAWN MAINTENANCE service needs pert time help, no experience neces­ sary $15 plus hours weekly. Flexible hours 066-3260. ___________ LIQUOR STORE clerk, flexible hours. Work hours scheduled around class hours. $4.00 par hour. 276-2603._______ MALE MODELS: Versatile male models needed, by adventuresome photogra­ pher who w ill be in Phoenix in October. Those selected w ill earn top dollars. Send recent photos, etc. to J.G., Crosscreek Lane, Suite 1075, Fort Worth, Texas 76100.________________ MONEY-JOBS; worried about making ends meet with the Increase of education costs and talk of aid being tightened? The Army National Guard can help. Have part time jobs and aid available. Earn $25,000 + toward your education. For details, call Dave Wautelet at 225-5674 or visit the Tempe Armory (across from Sun Davit 8tadium). _______________ . ON C A L L . ch ild counselors. Good Samaritan Medical Center is seeking on call counselors for it’s child psychology department. Applicants must have a BA or equivalent degree in Psychology or a directly related field. Preference will be given those with one or more years experience in an scouts care facility. Candidates may apply to: Good Samaritan Medical Center Per­ sonnel Dept., 215 E McDowell Road, Phoenix, AZ 85004. A n Equal Opportunity Employer. M-F-H. ______ ___ PANHANDLER PIZZA now hiring daytime preps, end delivery people. Apply at 106 E. University0668456. PARADICE CREAM needs ice cream servers. Must have car and work both Tempe and Phoenix stores. Part time, flexible hours, apply 1044 .South Terrace. 967-2414. ______ • READY FOR KICKOFF! Earn $300 to $500 a week part time learning exciting growth industry. Scottsdale0468204. REAL ESTATE secretary part time, prefer junior or senior business major. Call Dick Shefrin at John Hall Realty 9488550. ALL STUDENTS W ITH A 3.0 C U M . G PA OR BETTER Perfect part-time job is waiting for you. Work while attending class. Call Bill or Oanny at 827-1961 between 9-1 or 5-12. 9/4 TWO TEN speeds for sale $80 and $40, .good co n d itio n , near cam pus. 068-4242.____________ ________ • VOLKSW AGEN FIBERGLASS flare fenders. Fits 1967 and similar body styles. Best offer. 064-2393.__________ $10/HR. TO START Furniture Four-week training period. Sell industrial tools and equipment nationwide via WATS. Monday-Friday, 5-10 a.m. FURNITURE FURNITURE big dis­ counts. Mattress sale, twin sets from $49.05, full sets from $59.95, queen sets from $89.95. Sofas and love seats from $173.00. Seven piece bedroom sets from $89.05. Bunk beds from $125.00 complete. Bookcases, stereo cabinets, wall units, sleepers, trundle beds, plus much more. 3332 W. McDowell Rd. 233 2236. “ ASU is calling you.... to foin the telefund drive; gain valuable work experience in P.R., fund raising, tele marketing, with nightly bonuses and incentives. C all Jeff Psrius at 965-7501 for more infor."______ . ■ . -- ■ UNIVERSITY PLASM A center Has the followng part time positions open. Receptionist, phlebotomist, centrifuge tech, cam pus representative, a il positions require around 25 hours per week, Monday thru Saturday, Apply at 1015 S. Rural Rd. in Tempe. (next to Snow.)___________________________ WILL TRADE A ll American Fitness Center membership in exchange for 14 hours of light delivery work, 633-3171. WORKSTUDY CHILDACARE sides and substitutes. Morning hours available. Apply: The Children's Center 330 E. 15th St. Tempe Az 894-0370.__________ Instruction DAVE ROBERTS 966-0582 THE FOOD. THE FUN, THE FIFTIES MASTERING S E L F hypnosis, a practi­ cal course to improve consentration, confidence and self control. Jim Lane PhD. 9668810. M iscellaneous IMPROVE LEARNING skills and study habits. Buy Midwest Research Inc. Subliminal Tapes call 838-4692 for brochure and Information. P er so n a l_______ BUFFET CHEFS DO YOU really want to make an impression? Then (say it big..: say it with a microbanner!) Send a computer banner anywhere postage free! Choose from over 70 different graph­ ics, 8 writing styles, and 4 colors, for more information call 234-2430, 1985 HONDA V30 magna. 321 miles. Three year warranty 500cc. helmet, $1750 839-4406 965-4084. FOR PERSON who found my wallet 8-27-65 and put more money in it. Please call 968-4383. R eal Estate______ 9/6 I ANYTIME / PART-TIME I $5 to $7 Per Hour • We Putty Train : : ; C ! t ; : ; T h e n a tio n 's fin e st te le m a rk e tin g firm is n o w a c c e p tin g a p p lie s | tio n s fo r th e fo llo w in g shift*: ; 5-9:30 p.m . • 6:30 -9:3 0 p.m , ... I O u r s a le s p e o p le w ork in a m odern , c o m fo rta b le b u s in e s s e n v iro n * m ent c o n ta c tin g e s ta b lis h e d c u s to m e rs o n lo n g d is ta n c e W A T S i lin e s. G u a ra n te e d s a la ry o r co m m is s io n , w h ic h e v e r is g rea ter, a n d ; a v e ra g e s $5 to $7 a n h ou r. O u r T e m p e o ffic e is lo c a te d a p p ro x i- * m a te iy five m in u te s fro m c a m p u s . - i ; PLEASE CALL DIALAMERICA FOR DETAILS, j . 829-1140 are ; l a H^ __ ___■_ _I ____ ■_ *_ 1 ‘ CA RS AVAILABLE or 0^ State» PrivS-away. 992-5200. *1 PIANO LESSONS for adult beginners. Years of experience, very capable, and easier than believed possible 967-2155. The following "parts" are open: 9/6 SH ARE THREE bedroom, two bath, townhouse with one female end cat. Washer on premises. Access to pool. Less then three miles from ASU $235 per month plus half electricity. 8440727. KARATE TRADITIONAL TAEKWONDO instruction. Not a competition oriented school. Emphasis on improved skills end higher techniques. Small classes. Free trial. 894-5360. _______ 1983 HONDA CX650X 9000K miles, convenient to park ail over campus, fast, strong, reliable, $1,575 call Randy 994-4511._____________________ To "Audition” please come by 705 S. Rural, Suite 101, Tempe, AZ 85281, on Wednesday, Sept. 4 to Fri., Sept. 6 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. ,No phone calls please. NEAT FEMALE or male roommate to share two bedroom two bath apt, furnished, utilities paid, covered perk­ ing, dishwasher, close to Thornes Mall $256.225-5250evenings. __________ DO YOU want to get away? Wa have an exciting fleet of Cessna airplanes for rent from 152’s to T210. Stellar Air Park 961-1156. _______■'••• ■ ■ 1961 SUZUKI 450L. Black, beautiful, mint condition, driven ten months, 6000 miles. Luggage rack, helmet, $899 call 830-7423 week nights after 5:00. DISHWASHERS M A LE FEM ALE housemate wanted beautiful three bedroom house, two bath, living room, dining room, full kitchen, washer, dryer, air condition­ ing, ww carpeting, pool, q u iet neighborhood, fenced yard, trees, close to ASU. Graduate, faculty, or staff, considerate and clean. $275 2610 W. E llis Dr.(48th and baseline) contact Ed Sloate 2568833 days 4318972 evenings and weekends_____________ DO YOU want to learn to fly? It’s easier end less expensive than you think. Give us a call for $20 demo ride. Stellar A ir Park 061-1156. The original STUDEBAKERS is now interviewing “cast, members" to fill positions in the kitchen. First priority — PERSONALITY, and creativ­ ity!!! STUDEBAKERS is a young aggressive restaurant chain committed to growth and continuing expansion in the future. NIGHT COOKS FEM ALE ROOMMATE needed. Two bedroom two bath, washer, dryer, $165 •f V>utilities call 9678329 o r 947-5996. CRUISEHIPS HIRING data phone 7O7-T7$il066 "for directory and job information._________ _____________ _ 1975 KAWASAKI KZ400, great condition, many new parte. $500.064-2393. PREP COOKS / SALADS FEMALE, NON-SMOKER, to share two bedroom apartment. $205 a month, includes utilities. University and Hardy. Call Mary 966-3831._______ __________ DO YOU want to get away? We have an exciting fleet 61 Cessna airplanes for rent from 152’s to T210. Stellar A ir Park 961-1156. 9 1975 HONDA CB400 4cyl. Excellent condition. New brakes and rear tire. $4500668744. mimm W / ì m m m Z W I S h R oom m ate wanted S erv ices______ __ USED CARPETS $10 for dorms, vans, cars, apts, etc. New remnants too! Carpet House 1516 E. VanBuren Phoenix. H elp W anted ACTIVISTS- FU LL or part time to work with community group on housing and utility issues. $120 - $180 a week. 2S3»11119tOll am .________ _ _ _ _ _ STUDENTS EARN $5.05 per hour for part tim e w ork m ornings and weekends. Scottsdale area call the Arizona Republic 271-6667 between 9 a.m. end 6 p.m._____________________ M otorcycles_____ SCOOTER FOR sale, 1964 Honda Aero 80 only $650. Low Mileage,very clean. Call Mark 804-1560. AB LE TO read and speak some Mandarin? The Lotus Inn Chinese Restaurant is hiring part-time food servers and evening hostess. Applying in person, 11 am . - 4 p.m. Lotus Inn, 1457 W. Southern Ave, no. 1, M esa 627-9119. _______ _ SPECIAL EDUCATION Director. Good Samaritan Medical Center is seeking an experienced instructor to provide diagnostic special education services for its psychiatric in-patient adoles­ cence. Eliigible candidates Will have at least a currant Arizona LD or EH teaching certificate end in department knowledge of special education pro­ gram. Applicants should apply in person or send their resume to: Good Samaritan Medical Center, Personnel Dept., 215 E. McDowell Rd., Phoenix, AZ 65004. An Equal Opportunity Employed nrM-h. ________________ $185 PER MONTH gets you a two bedroom c o o p apartment (similar to a condo), if you can bag, barrow, or steal $10,500 to purchase the equity. In­ cludes most maintenance, refrigeratof, stove, shared yard, pool and laundry. South Scottsdale. 9658211946-9016. FOR S A LE by owner two bedroom two bath condo. University Shadows com­ plex, great for students $60,000 assumable. Pitt 894-2075 or 966-9260. FOUR BEDROOM home near ASU for sale. Leave message with Alan Mannatter, at 9648755. ______________ W HY RENT when you can own th is four year old townhouse. Less than one m ils from ASU, two bedroom, two bath with all appliances. Lease purchase or buy outright $58,500 call Dave, Russ Lyon l l e e l t y 6 6 6 8 1 8 a ___________ S IN G LE ? H E R P E S ? C o n fid e n tia l Connections-a unique, affordable dat­ ing service for singles with herpes 241-9674.__________________________ SPECIAL! FU LL set sculptered nails, $20. F ill ins $12, and other manicuring services. Call after 1:30 p.m. for appointment 844-9190.________ ______ WEDDING CEREMONIES. Do you need a minister? Call 861-1121. ________ Travel AIRLINE DISCOUNTS: Chicago, Minn, Wiss, North Dakota, $265 round trip. No restrictions 9-2 11-20 Travel Tips 968-7283. TWO ONE way tickets to Seattle/Anchorage Sept. 12 only $100 each 8298411. _______ Typing__________ 1-DAY turn around word processing, typing for short papers, resumes, and letters. No extra charge for rush jobs. Rate includes automatic edit for spelling and punctuation. Call Nora 820-9681 for all your typing needs. ACCURATE FAST experienced typist $1.50 per page call Sharon 833-5687 or Janet 8348893.____________________ A LL PAPERS typed to your complete satisfaction. Convenient. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley 9678602. _________ PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing. Will edit and correct spelling. Caroiynn Douglas, 8388959. PR O FES S IO N A L TYPING service; Competative rates, spelling and punc­ tuation corrected, proof reading, pick­ up and delivery available. Suzanne 820-1843. _________ _______• PROFESSIONAL TYPING, low rate, fast service, discount for students, call Sandy 8498689. ___________ ___ SHORT O F time? I can help. Reasona­ ble. Profesional. Guaranteed. Ex­ perienced in academic, call Jessie 945-5744._________ ' SUSIE TYPES. Fast, reasonable, close to ASU. 8298645. ________ _______ _ TYPING. 966-2186.__________________ TYPING DONE. Thesis, term papers, resumes etc. W ill pick up and deliver, Kathy 962-5825. _______' WORD PROCESSING on IBM PC. Research papers, thesis, dissertations, graphics capability. Lisa, days 9675278evenings831-7932. W anted WANTED: LIBRARY m odules TI58/56 calculator667-8411. for WANTED, STUDENTS: Teacher with graduate work In opart, Royal Collage of M usic London: sight yaers pro­ fessional theater, London and west Germany. Serious voice and piano students welcome Lillian Laa 4368667. Page 38 JMednesda^eptembeMjJ985_ I N - State Press W ELCOME BACK ASUST U D E N T S SHOW US YOUR STUDENT I.D. YOU 'LL GET DINNER FR EE H appy Hour hors d’oeuvres 4-7 Mon.-Fri. 10-12 Sat. evening (happy hour) # This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), M ike Pulos of the Spaghetti Com pany will give you one FREE dinned for each dinner you order! Ifs our 2 for 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL And if s good for the whole school year at both our Tempe and Phoenix locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Com pany is known for a great m eal a t an affordable price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes our already terrific p rices even better! Our dinners include a full course meal with all the trimmings-from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you're hungr/and you need a break, you ca n 't beat The Spaghetti Com pany! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! But you MUST have your student I.D. card with you to take advan­ tage of this offer. O PEN AT 12 N O O N O N S U N D A YS! «W É âË Ë Ê m w f/w Æ Ê Ê m wgÊÈËÊÊÊm. T h e IMUMKi C p ttfp sw tf* RESTAURANT PHOENIX South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Picatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT included in the 2-for-1 special. TEM PE 4th Street arid Mill 966-3848