Thursday O cto b er 1 7 ,1 9 8 5 Voi. 68 N o. 37 A r iz o n a S t a t e U n iv e r s it y s ta te p re ss ® Tempe, Arizona Copyright, State Press, 1985 Carried away (O ff photo by Kevin J. LefUn ‘ Sharon Salim , left, Jannltar Vanhorn, right, and Nlclola Davis, back, transport Brette Gluck to tha Cady Mall fountain, where tlw y deposited her. The sisters of Delta Gamma sorority ware holding their annual celebration at tha fountain in honor of their holdovers going active. Agency 'reluctantly’ accepts ASU’s reaction to toxic spill Professor can reapply for handling license By CO LLE E N M OORE State Press A SU ’s response to a radioactive spill on campus has been “ reluctantly accepted” by the Arizona Radiation Regulatory Agency, state documents show. The spill of Phosphorus-32, a radioactive isotope used in research, was discovered in zoology asso ciate professor E llio tt Goldstein’s laboratory in a routine survey April 3 by AR RA inspectors. As a result of the incident, Goldstein’s license to handle radioactive m aterials was revoked, and he could not apply for another for at least six months, documents show. Any approval of a reapplication by Goldstein will stipulate that a subsequent revocation would be permanent, the document said. No one was injured in the sp ill, but A SU and state officials said it posed a safety hazard. A fter a three-day hearing in M ay, the University Radiation Protection O ffice revoked Goldstein’s license to handle radioactive m aterials with the condition that he could not apply for another license for at least six months. Goldstein can reapply for a license in November, A R R A officials said. Goldstein refused to talk to the State P ress, but suggested it talk to ASU Radiation Protection O fficer Richard Brown. In an Aug. 22 letter addressed to Brown, A R R A Director Charles Tedford said U R P O ’s revocation of Goldstein’s license is considered to be m inim ally acceptable action under the circum stances. “ However, the agency w ill concur with the revocation and clo se ly follow subsequent occurrences in order to adjudicate the effectiveness of this action.” On Wednesday Tedford said A R R A was reluctant to accept U R PO ’s reaction to some of Goldstein’s safety guideline violations because, “ We thought (UR PO 's reaction) probably was not a^jWTOie a ^ it should have been.” Brown said : “ It was one incident where a guy has a spill. It’s been taken care of. We have a very good program at ASU of the handling and safe disposal of radioactive m aterials.” Tedford said, “ I think you have a number of people handling radioactive m aterials at A SU , and on occasion you w ill have incidents where they don’t adhere to safety guidelines.” A R R A Health Physicist Jim Geringer, who conducted the investigation of the lab, said the spill was not as dam aging as A SU ’s failure to report its occurence. When asked what kind of corrective actions taken by U R PO would have been acceptable, Tedford declined to elaborate. " I accept (the actions), and 1 don’t want to second-guess (Brown).” A M ay 14 letter of non-compliance from A R R A to U R P O listed G o ld stein ’s violations, proposed a $6,000 fine and recom m ended that U R P O giv e an “ adequate response” to the incident. Geringer said the proposed fine was revoked because U R PO ’s response was “ adequate.” The violations and U R PO ’s response included: •Goldstein did not report the spill. Brown, representing the U R PO , closed Goldstein’s laboratory and temporarily revoked his license, as stated in his Ju ly 15 response. •The contamination of the spill exceeded m axim um perm issible levels. Brown notified President J . Russell Nelson and expressed concern to him that immediate action be taken. •Goldstein allowed unauthorized people not wearing required film badges to use radioactive m aterials in his lab. U R PO ’s response was to decontaminate the lab. •Goldstein allowed untrained, unauthorized people to use radioactive m aterials in his lab. Brown closed off Goldstein’s lab until it could be decontaminated and inspected. In addition, U R PO assigned liberal arts professor G ary Krahenbuhl, who was then associate dean of the college, to review and if necessary modify procedures of handling radioactive m aterials when licensed faculty members are away from cam pus. “ Brown also agreed to conduct a seminar for any faculty or students who use radioactive m aterials. After being decontaminated, Goldstein’s laboratory was to be opened only for research not involving use of radioactive m aterials. Is . “ I f Goldstein should be re-licensed, and we find sim ilar problems in the future, the s ^rivitTJ6nalties of the law will be unavoidable G as tim e,” Geringer said. Geringer said ASU radiation inspectors should have found the spill. “ A SU wasn’t doing adequate surveys,” he said. “ In the past we had noted some particular problems with (Goldstein’s) lab .” * senate rejects court appointee, Varnell says By K A R I BLAN D State Press Personal biases affected the objectivity of Associated Students o f A SU senators deciding the appointment of a guprom» court ju stice, AS A SU President D ave Varnell said. The senate dented the presidential appointment of thirdyear law student Ja y H eiler to the A S ASU Supreme Court Tuesday night. “ I fe d the senators were unfairly lobbied to oppose his appointment to the position,” Varnell said. Executive V ice President Chris Cum m iskey said he fully supports both the Screening Com m ittee’s recommendation and the senate’s decteion. “ The system has worked w ell and President Varnell w ill be asked to appoint another candidate,” he said. Senator John Lapp, chairm an of the Screening Com m ittee, n id the com m ittee voted three to one not to recommend confirm ation o f H eiler for two reasons — questions about H eiler’s tim e com mitments and objectivity. H o le r, who was not present at the m eeting, said he was “ not really surprised or particularly disappointed.” I fi|y , who is from the College o f Pine A rts, said the nnfwmiHae was concerned about Heiter’s tim e commitments h^v-flUMi he carries a fu ll academ ic load and is involved in an internship. . . . . Lipp also said the com m ittee had doubts about Heiler s ability to rem ain objective. “ M r. H eiler was not an acceptable candidate for a supreme court ju stice,” Lapp said. Senator Je ff Lanham from the College of Liberal A rts was the only member of the Screening Comm ittee to vote in favor of H eiler’s confirm ation. L a n h a m said the screening com m ittee was “ presumptuous and unfair” in deciding H eiler’s appointment. He said H eiler was discrim inated against for opinions he expressed as editin’ of the State P ress three years ago and as a member of the senate last year. In reference to H eiler’s tim e com mitments, Lanham said H eiler was w illing to 1juggle bis schedule to m eet the responsibilities of the supreme court justice position. l anham said H eiler was not judged on his qualifications and ability to do the job but on his political viewpoints. H e said political and philosophical viewpoints were not used in the decision of the first two candidates and should not have been used for deciding H eiler’s case. Varnell said “ he was not judged With the sam e criteria as B u s in e s s b u ild in g c l a s s e s c a n c e l e d Classes in the Business Adm inistration building have been canceled today due to a power failure. D ave B rixen, assistant director of the physical plant, said w ater seeping into an electrical tranform er caused it to short circuit at approxim ately 1:30 Wednesday afternoon, and classes were canceled for the rest of the day. “ We’re hoping it w ill be (working) before 48 hours,” Brixen said. Brixen said either the transform er w ill be replaced or a generator installed in its place. \ Classes in the Business Annex building w ill be held today. the other two applicants were, and that is extrem ely inconsistent.” Senator Herb Dooley of the College of Public Program s «nid the com m ittee acted fa irly based on H eiler’s reputation. Dooley said H eiler is a third-year law student and would not be able to fill the two-year term. Senator Bridget Shelton from the College of Liberal Arts asked the senate to rem ain consistent in its decision. “ I f we deny him from the supreme court because of political viewpoints, then we need to bring back the other two candidate^,” she sa id The vote was nine to seven against confirm ation with two abstentions. Shelton, a friend of H eiler’s , abstained from the vote because of her personal involvement. Varnell said he was “ extrem ely disappointed’’ in the senate’s decision. In other senate business: •Cummiskey announced that Sen. Bob Taylor from the O lteg» of Ed»«e»Hnn and Sen. Ann M arie M cNeal from the College of Social Work have resigned from the senate for health reasons. Replacem ents w ill be selected by their college councils. continued pag« 2 0T o d a y •o ft c ASU weather — Cloudy in the morning with a 30 percent chance of showers. Clewing by late afternoon. The expected high is 79 degrees; the expected low Is 63. A n alysis.............................. Bloom C ou n ty.................. C lassified............................ Nation/world.................... Opinion................................. Sports................................... .................. 5 .................. 9 ...............1 5 .................. 2 .................. 4 ..................11 nation/world press C ivil rig hts suspension adds to w a r-lik e atm o sp h ere. opp osition leaders say M A N A G U A , N icaragu a (A P ) — Opposition leaders said Wednesday the suspension of civil rights w ill intensify the war-like atmosphere in this leftist-ruled nation and m ay encourage support for U .S .backed rebels. President Daniel Ortega announced Tuesday night that free expression, public assembly and the right to strike had been suspended because of “ brutal aggression” by the United States and “ its internal allies” against the Sandinista regim e. H is decree subjects Nicaraguans to inspection of m ail and search and seizure without w arrant. Authorities have no nhiigaHnn to release information about those arrested. In Washington, White House spokesman i -airy Speakes called O rtega’s action “ a clear exam ple of the Sandinistas tightening their control of their country by violating basic freedoms and refusing to tolerate d is s e n t” th a t r e fle c ts “ g ro w in g disillusionment with the Sandinista regim e by large parts of the population and the Sandinistas’ fear of their own people.” E arlier this year, President Reagan signed into law a measure providing $27 m illion in “ non-lethal" aid to the rebels. Congress had cut off m ilitary aid last October. SALE Sat., O ct. 12 through Sat., O ct. 19 Only! SA VE 1 0 %to IB M •Em eralds, Ruby, Sapphires A ll Colored G em s at 20% Savings •G o ld Rings & Chains •D iam onds & D iam ond Jew elry Save 15% •Lafge Display o f Estate & Antique Jew elry at G igan tic Savings Senate conttiHMd from 1 “ The tim e they spent in the senate was productive, and we enjoyed having them here,” Cummiskey said. Lipp w ill replace Taylor on the Executive Comm ittee. •During his budget message for the 1986-87 fiscal year, V am ell asked the senate to consider elim inating outdated program s, funding program s instead of salaried positions and expanding the budget to b e n e fit' c o m m u te r, m in o rity and handicapped students. He said he would like to see $5,000 added ttr Oie campus clubs and organizations account and money allocated to improve the ASASU election process. He also said he would also like to see the Lecture Series budget increased. “ th e Lecture Series has proven to be NOW ! You can place your W A M T A D S incredibily popular,” V am ell said. He said it is one of the strongest forums for expressing student views. •The presidential line veto on the campus clubs and organizations funding b ill was uncontested in the senate. V am ell defended his veto, saying that to fund publicity for a fraternity would place ASASU in the position of funding other Greek associations.' •The Native Am erican Student Association funding request for $842 was passed by the senate. The money w ill be used to send two representatives to the National Indian Education A ssociation convention in Washington. The representatives w ill help write proposals for legislation to be sent to Congress, Shelton said. a unique o p p o rtu n ity fo r jfa e h k ^ Jeweliy & Diamond Cutting 130 E. University Dr. Tempe, AZ. 85281 Member American Gem Society "in TheArches” 967-8917 HIS AND HERS! The to u g h e s t jo b y o u 'll ever love H O N D A . F i s h e r ie s Inside the North Entrance . . . 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M c D o w e ll 994-8400 MCDOWELL Page 3 Thursday, October 17,1985 Siate Pres« Pay off T Y P E SE T Y O U R OW N R ESU M E! Dean claims tenure days numbered The survey found that 60 percent of U .S . teachers believe By D A V ID O’B R IEN they have received inadequate salaries, and one-third are in State Press A SU , along with other universities throughout the nation, favor of abolishing tenure. The Carnegie report, which found a decline in the number may place a moratorium on tenure awards to faculty members in order to save finances, said the dean of the of university professors still teaching, cited job morale and economic rewards as the m ajor reasons for the decrease in College of Liberal Arts. Sam uel A . Kirkpatrick said, “ Educational institutions the number of educators holding university positions. “ We (ASU) don’t have m udi of a problem with m orale,” he nationwide have suffered from financial problems which said. have led to enrollment declines.” ’ Kirkpatrick said, “ In the last few years; m any potential f r Professors at wèstern and southwestern universities are teachers have opted for managem ent positions in human fairing much better financially than other educators in the service areas away from teaching, because of the system ’s country, he said. inability to reward better teachers with better pay. ” Southwestern economies have experienced rapid industry M any universities have been tightening their tenure expansion and population growth, he said. standards, he said. “ When you com pare our clean high-tech industries to those “ It’s num erically tougher (to grant tenure) because when of a frost-belt economy such as Dayton, Ohio, there’s no enrollment declines, universities cannot expand faculty com parison,” he said. positions, let alone increase wages for em ployees,” he said. ‘‘The demography of our state and the nature of our economy gives us an edge for hiring good teachers,” he said. Kirkpatrick said, in regard to salaries, ASU pays attention to pay scales at universities nationwide. ‘(Universities) hire junior faculty, and ASU is very com petitive with teachers’ salaries, he said. then before they can secure tenure, “ Because of our strong state economy, we can keep our faculty salaries up,” Kirkpatrick said. they let them go and hire m ore junior Twenty percent of the teachers polled in the survey felt m em bers.’ — Sam uel Kirkpatrick they would not choose teaching if they could start over. Teachers in the survey said the quality of college students have recently declined. “ Many high school disciplines are not emphasized “ They (universities including ASU) hire junior faculty, and then before they can accrue tenure, let them go and hire enough,” Kirkpatrick said. In addition to lower SA T scores, lack of attention in the more junior m em bers,” he said. More than half of the 5,0Q0 university professors math and science areas has led to a lack of competent math participating in a recent Carnegie Foundation survey agreed and science teachers, he said. “ Many English teachers have failed to teach students that tenure is much harder to achieve now than it was five adequate writing sk ills,” he added. years ago. Show Student I.D. and receive one FREE hour on our H9 6 LAZERGRAPHICS " COMPUTER SYSTEM ^Trained help to assist you! B (602) 821-0985 1982 N. A LM A SCHOOL RD., CHANDLER T H E F O R E IG N S E R V IC E O F T H E U N IT E D S T A T E S Department of State Department of Commerce U .S. Information Agency Com pete to becom e a Foreign Service O fficer Applications a n now being accepted for the Foreign Service W ritten Exam ination, which w ill be held on December 7,1985. They m ust reach the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, New Jersey, by October 25,1985. 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KMASmmM J 9 *9 7 -7 3 2 4 No o fe r to sen or lease may be mede and Hooiler to purchase or tease may be áccdfrted prior to issuance ot the final Arizona Subdivision Public Report State Press stale press o p in io n Do no dishonor to the earth lest you dishonor the spirit o f man. — Henry Beston W riter inquires into W att m ight have been Steve Watentrat Editor October is a special month. By now we’ve heard a ll the - schm altzy expressions of autumn serenity, memories of other states where the seasons really change and read mor­ bid essays on how the fall symbolizes death and the frailty of physical existence. But for m e, October is an upbeat month. Besides contain­ ing the birthday of Mohandas K . Gandhi, this month m arks one of the most important dates in contemporary U .S . history. . . „ On O ct. 9,1983, U .S . Secretary of the Interior Jam es Watt rode off into a picturesque sunset (which m ight have ruined his day), his letter of resignation fresh on the president’s Now, in all fairness, Ronald Reagan did not hire M r. Watt on the basis of his sharp sense of humor. Jam es had been a corporate law yer, representing oil companies against the Department of the Interior. “ Why m ake it so difficult on the oil com panies?” the president no doubt figured. Instead of requiring this man to stay up late at night figuring out how to persuade the Interior folks to slack off a little on en­ vironmental concerns, why not just put him in charge of the departm ent? Like other compassionate Am ericans, I worried about M r. W att’s financial future after his departure. Then, like politicians who had fallen from grace before him , M r. Watt took to the speaking circuit. The following M arch, he showed up in the M U Arizona Room. In that lec­ ture, he shared with us the understatement of the Reagan era: when Reagan and W att first sat down to discuss slated departmental policy, the president said ‘‘Now Jim , you m ight take some political heat from this An interesting tidbit of information from the Associated s im p ly Students of ASU office, however, has kept me from losing sleep over W att’s financial future. H is original agreem ent with the Associated Students Lec­ ture Series director was to speak for a fla t fee of $6,000. But his booking agent then told ASASU that M rs. W att also would be flying from New York to attend the lecture, so the fee was raised to $7,000. A SA SU , certainly in favor of spousal sup­ port, agreed. W ell, the way it turned out, M rs. W att ended up not showing, but Jam es and his agent kept the extra grand, there being no contractual agreem ent that his wife had to show up in order for him to cash the check. No, one need not worry about Jam es W att’s survival instincts. But the question that bugs ine is “ Did we give this man and his visions a chance?' ’ Perhaps, media critics were overly hasty in demanding his departure. In a quest for the real story on what m ight have been if the man were still in office today, I m et with Jam es Watt per­ sonally. The following are highlights from this exclusive in­ terview (so exclusive I was the only one there): SW :M r. Farm er Secretary, what kind of agenda would you be following if you still directed the Interior Department? JW : W ell, I would be pursuing my basic philosophy that the land should be used for m aximum benefit to the people. Like your Grand Canyon; not everyone’s info hiking, and per­ sonally, I’m scared as hell of m ules. We need several paved roads leading to the bottom, maybe a gondola or two, bathrooms, restaurants — ... SW :M r. W att, this is the Grand Canyon w ere talking about. JW ¡E xactly, so let’s open it up to everybody. Like those raft trips: not everybody has a week to float down some river. We need high-powered boats down there, maybe a hydrofoil trip. There are profits to be had. You see, you and other Am ericans have been brainwashed into thinking the land is just there to look a t, and try to pre­ vent honest people from using it. Like those redwoods in California. Before Am erica had these illusions about saving the land like some kind of photo album , men could saw these trees down and m ake fences, houses and picnic tables. Now, we designate a park just so people can gawk at them. 8W :Shouldn’t some of the outdoors be saved for recrea­ tion? JW :H ey , I’m a ll for recreation. Like those sand dunes m New M exico— SW : White Sands? JW :Y ea h . Here we have them off-lim its to jeeps and 4wheel-drive vehicles. What’s wrong with a little good, clean off-roading? SW :Hold on now, you want to take a glistening stretch of dunes and turn it into a pile of tire tracks? JW :I’m not interested in your subjective definition of beau­ ty. I ’m sick of these Sierra Club types trying to prevent real outdoorsmen from enjoying this country we so rightfully took from the Indians, who were just wasting it. SW :You make preservation sound like some sort of con­ spiracy to harass people. JW :Couldn’t have said it better m yself. Then agam , of course I could. I’m a law yer. You see, I ’m for responsible use of this country. SW :I m n k I understand your position, M r. W att. Now as for energy sources— JW ¡Don’t start off on some tangent about how great solar energy is. The best energy source around is good, clean, cr»r>nnmieai nuclear power. Every neighborhood should have areactor. . * ' sW :It sure seems to cost a lot around here. And if these things start popping up everywhere like dandelions, what are we going to do with all the waste? JW :There are a ll kinds of places to put it. Why, out here you have that big hole that meteor made. SW :Surely you don’t mean Meteor Crater? JW :W hy not? What is it? A bunch of burned rocks. What better site exists for waste disposal? SW :But what about— JW :Enough questions already, now beat it. I have a seal­ hunting sem inar to teach. As the form er secretary drove off in his Winnebago, I thought about how we should have a name to commemorate the day he resigned from office. How about National Sigh of R elief D ay? s**!® >M acs? i f L W *S*tt!* flu te / Prize for Soviet doctor may rob m eaning Editor: Awarding ,a Nobel Peace Prize to the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear W ar could rob that award of future meaning. The facts are: one prominent Soviet affiliate is' Professor M arat Vartanyan of the Moscow Institute of Psychiatry. H e’s a leading apologist for the Soviet practice of throwing dissidents into m ental hospitals. The Soviet Union in 1983 withdrew from the World Psychiatry Association under threat of expulsion over this misuse of medicine for- political repression. The government-led Soviet partners in the International Physicians Lobby contrasts with the genuine U SSR peace activists, the unofficial Moscow Group to Establish Trust between the U SSR and the United States. Two months ago, a politicized Moscow court imposed a three-year sentence on a leader of that dissident peace group, D r. Vladim ir Broadsky. The real peace activists in the U SSR go to prison. The phony stooges for the Krem lin get a Nobel P rize. M arvin Alisky Professor of P olitical Science G ive U.S. m oney to Palestinians, not Zionists Editor: If President Reagan and the Congress are serious about wanting to end M id E ast ter­ rorism , they should hold up on giving the Zionists billions a year. Instead they should give it to the Palestinians as compensation for the land and homes stolen from them by the Zionist terrorists. After a ll, it w ill take a number of decades for the Palestinians to match what Am erica and the Zionists have dime to them. O .L . Brannaman Sacram ento, C a lif. m o s r w s m a M A w r D o n 't drag innocent Am ericans into terrorism STATE PRESS STEVE WATERSTRAT Editor TOM BLODGETT M anaging Editor PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Kuczek Jr., Kevin Larkin, Rick W iley SPORTS REPORTERS: Brad Halvorsen, Bob H eller, Chris M cKay. Dean Obenauer COPY EDITORS: Judie G aillard. Rebecca Kiessling, Khali Crawford STAFF ARTIST: Jon Basalone C ity E d ito r.. . . . . . . . . . . W -TJM AML Asst. City E d ito r........................................ JOHN CONW AY CARTOONIST: Chip Sheean Asst. C ity E d ito r. . . 1.............................................. MELISSA SMYTH EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Laura W ilson Nows E d ito r................................................................. MEAD SUMMER Opinion E d ito r........ ............................... GRAY T. ECHOLS The S late Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ Asst. Managing E d itor................. .. W HITNEY PETERSON ing th e academ ic year except holidays and exam Sports E d ito r.............................................M ICHAEL KONZ periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 1S, Arizona State Asst. Sports E d ito r ............. .. JERRY BROWN University, Tem ps, AZ 85287 Newsroom: 985-2292. Copy C h ie f.................................................JACO UIECIRO U Advertising & Production: 965-7572. Arts E d ito r...........................................CINDY PEARLMAN Asst. Arts E d ito r................. ...............PATRICK J. KUCERA The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively Photo Editor......................................................................... KIP W ILLIAM S published for and circulated on th e ASU cam pus. The news and views published In th is newspaper are not REPORTERS: Vickie Chachere, Linde Coulson, Andrea necessarily those of the ASU adm inistration, faculty, Han, Rob Kelton, Carri L. M itchell, David O’Brien. Karl staff or student body. Bland, Ed Schubert, Theresa W illeford Editor: Ju st recently, another episode in the ongo­ ing war between the Palestinians and Israel has ended. The hijacking of the Italian lux­ ury liner, Achille Lauro, has resulted in the death of one Am erican, and, only as a result of drastic m ilitary actions by the United States, the capture of his slayers. Such outlashes between the P IX) and Israel are expected, frequent and endless. Only two weeks ago Israel bombed a P LO base in Tunisia. Several Palestinians died. However, within the past few years the Palestinians have made their store of at­ tacks too. The one difference between these attacks is the point of this letter. When Israel outlashes at Palestinians, they kill Palestin­ ians and maybe a few innocent civilians; however, the attacks them selves are directed a t Palestinians. When Palestinians outlaah at Israel, they k ill not only Israelis, but Am ericans too. These killings of Am ericans, unlike those o f innocent citizens by Israel, are directed precisely and accurately at those Am ericans who die. The logic behind these attacks fa ils to uphold sane thinking. If I were to kill your father, you would avenge his death by kill­ ing m e, not m y sister on the other side of the world. M y plea to those Palestinians who are fighting for a homeland is one which asks them not to drag innocent Am ericans into their private w ar. A continuation of such violent acts against Am erican people w ill only cause others like m e to dislike the Palestinian people even more. Yeusef Hashim i Freshm an, Engineering Paae5 Thursday, October 17,1985___________________ U t e Press state press anally s is Acting dean trying to rebuild w eaken ed college --------- B y W .T IM A H L State Press Raymond Kulhavy must understand how Gerald Ford felt when he stepped into the presidency in the afterm ath of W atergate. Kulhavy, 44, has been the acting dean of A SU s College of Education since Ju ly 1. He inherited a school that still faces a huge rebuilding project. Form er Dean Robert Stout resigned early last spring and Kulhavy stepped in tem porarily to start the college’s rebuilding stages. A list of three candidates for the permanent post are currently being discussed by a search com m ittee, but the decision could not come soon enough for Kulhavy. “ I ’m an academ ic, not an adm inistrator,” he said. " I just agreed to do this because somebody needed to.” No argument here. Kulhavy speaks his mind — a trait not all that HMnmim for adm inistrators — and does not use the political doublespeak common with people who are trying to clim b the ladder of success. The dean’s office, located on the first floor of Payne H all, is large and spacious. >_ But to Kulhavy, it is wily show. He still works out of the cramped quarters of his third-floor educational psychology office. “ This is where the real work gets done,” he said. And this is a college that needs a lot of work. Since 1980, Kulhavy says, ASU education officials have not responded to national and local calls for reform . Teacher trainees were able to work around the normal load of fine arts courses and avoid getting a much-needed general education. , Some state legislators were concerned enough this summer to call for a review and possible closure of the oldest teacher-training program in the state. Kulhavy’s first moves in his new post w ere to talk with legislators and inform them of his plans. “ I met with legislators and told them what I saw as the problem s,” he said. “ They said ‘good.’ They were glad. “ They wanted to see what they were getting for their money told them. They " ,v i and ™ — nobody --------- ' had j ---------------- had asked before and xxly had answered. nobody ----------- ------------ ----- — ‘I’m an academic, not an administrator. I just agreed to do this because somebody needed to.’ — Raymond Kulhavy ________ „11 iL . r tr o r tlio to c in “ We provide 50 percent of all the education graduates in the state.” Kulhavy said he thinks his public relations gam e m ay have worked, but not all legislators were convinced — especially Rep. Ja n e H ull, R-Phoenix. “ I’d rather have one good school. We’ve already put NAU in the position of a center of teaching excellence,” she said “ ASU has engineering excellence and U A is supposed to be everything else, but that never w orks.” Hull said, “ The people who want to teach could take a liberal arts program and six hours of teaching classes. They don’t need 15 hours of elementary basket w eaving.” While the school’s local reputation m ay be suffering, Kulhavy said he thinks it is respected nationally and the School does a good job producing teachers. A SU ’s education college is one of the five largest in the nation and, he said, “ We are no better or worse off than other education program s. “ I think (Other colleges) think we do a good job. ” Kulhavy also spent tim e stressing the 60 percent of the college that is often overlooked. Program s, such as graduate and psychological education, are not directly involved in teacher training. „ “ Our psychological education program is top-notch, he said. Kulhavy also outlined a stringent set of guidelines that would force students to get a strong liberal arts background — something critics have lam basted the college about in the past. He also implemented a strict 2.5 grade point average requirement and reduced the number of required teaching methods courses. Kulhavy m ay be leaving soon, but his changes are bound to have a lasting effect on the college. “ I can guarantee some things,” he said. “ These new reforms w ill be used by the new dean.” “ I think once the Legislature realized we were making progress, this was not the place to close,” he said. “ I don’t know if they were serious — quite frankly they may have been. oeen. But he also knows that the future dean, who most likely will be someone who is unfam iliar with A SU , has a lot of rebuilding left. •“• Problem t T O D ie m ss alw a iw aays y s sseem c c m to iv w i i i c uup y from somewhere.” come Reforms Ineffective; further improvements needed By M E U SSA SM YTH State Press For nearly 10 years the ASU community has heard Arizona lawmakers, University adm inistrators, professors and students criticize the College of Educatidn. Criticism has peaked during the past five years as University task forces and professors have issued (fire warnings on the fate of education in Arizona if improvements were not made in the state’s largest teacher-training program . _ , If their warnings are correct, this University has been graduating potential educators who cannot pass the most basic of general education tests. But now, according to President J . Russell Nelson, ASU is finally in a position, after years of introducing reform s and gafting them approved through the proper channels, to make concrete improvements. So, are we finally on the road to reform ? According to form er College of Education Dean Robert Stout, the answer is yes. Stout said the college has been slowly and steadily j tnpiannanting reform program s and addressing problems since he took office in 1OT8. According to Stout, who served as dean until 1984— the five years in which the college received its most severe criticism — the education debate has produced a better college. “ I ih»nk it’s a different place than it was in 1978,” he said. “ I think the whole program is a better program .” Stout said the criticism directed at the college was “ healthy,” in that most of the claim s were ware substantiated, and provided the impetus for much needed reform s. “ M y hunch is that out of this debate and serious ronsHorntitwi we’ll get a better program for the preparation of teachers,’’ Stout raid. Reform s and rumors of reform began to sweep through the college in 1978 when a Blue Ribbon Task Force on Teacher Certification submitted a report to Carolyn W arner, the state superintendent of public instruction. The report recommended changes in the way teachers were certified and provided partial justification for the inception of the Arizona Teacher Proficiency E xam in 1980. The A T PE served as an entrance exam for the education r^iinapg at the three state universities until it was replaced b y th e Pre-Professional Skills Test in 1985. th e A T P E was criticized because of the high rate of failure among students, especially m inorities. , _ Then in 1983, while the quality of education was being debated across the“ United States, Gov. Bruce Babbitt commissioned a report addressing the “ strengths and weaknesses of the state system . ’ ’ One result of that report was the form ing of a task force, headed by form er U A President John Schaefer, to study the education of teachers. H ie tng|r force Issued a report recommending that the 1°° ea. or buy 5, get 1 fre e E a rrin g s $1°° pr. or 3 pairs for *2*° CASEY AT THE BAT D ollars — where the jewelry looks like it cost more than you paid for it Baseball & Softball Batting Range Unique Wide Open Hitting With a Home Run Fence Mon.-Fri. 12 p.m.-10 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday 12 p.m.-10 p.m. N ow a t tw o locations: One per customer. S. Mill # 2 0 7 (above Spaghetti Co.) 120 E. University (The Arches) 829-1127 D ollar’s Fashion A ccessories Largest selectionof belts, earrings inthevalley. Giant Watches *9 * 414 Sporting Goods eoncBSS'ons | 990*7742 High Ball j On Hayden Rd. — Across from Big Surf Grand Opening Special! 10% D is c o u n t w ith C o lle g e I.P . 1 A STATE OF M IN D ... A n n ¡3 I® !] B A RALL G SHOWS A INBEfORf P R6 IC E PM SATUWQAY l SUWOm HWST SHOW A ONLY, m i v m ynerstone • Rural & University^ SILVER IUUETIIH 1:30,3:30.5:30,7:30,9:30 REM WILLIAMS (P8) 12:45,3:00.5:15.7:30.9:45 RACK TO THE FUTURE |Pfi) 1:45,4:30.7:00,9:30___________ INVASION UAA. |R| 1:00,51» ,9:15 .TEEN WOLF|PB|3:15. 7:15 v NATTY SANN (P6| 1:00. 3:00,51». 7:00.91» JA66E0 EDGE |R) 11». 3:15.5:15.7:30,9:45 ■ ATSO lONGMQRE A SUPERSTITÎQ 11». WO. 5:10.725.9:30 12:45.2:45.4:45.7:00.9:15 FEE WEE HERMAN (PS) 1:15.3:15.5:15,. 7:15.9:15 CREATOR W 12:45.5:00.9:15 ~ RRHRMSWORM IN 31». 7:15 soi |ps-m 12:30.2:45.51». 7:15,9:30 ashes of MAXE |FS| 12:15.41», 7:45 MARE fPS-m 21». 5:45,930 A spirit of team work ... a drive to achieve ... a talent for discovery. We thrive on meeting the tough energy demands of a changing world. We help our people discover their energies w ith challenging problems, diverse assignments, high mobility and visibility, and salary and benefits among the best in the industry. That's the Chevron State of Mind ... searching, energetic, progressive. It's resulted in an impressive list of accomplishments over our one-hundred-year history. We were among the first private companies to recognize the potential of the digital computer to solve complex industry problems. Today, w ith the acquisition of Gulf, w e are one of the heaviest users of computers in the world. O ur central­ ized operation includes tw o state-of-the-art data centers plus a sophisticated communications network to tie us together globally. If you are graduating in the area o f computer science, business administration or engineering and w ant to apply information science to problems in finance, logistics, marketing, refining, systems soft­ w are and data communications, w e invite you to join us. Working together, w e plan to maintain a standard of excellence unsurpassed among energy corporations. The Chevron State of Mind ... its the state of the art in the energy and the computer business. Become a part of it. Sign up for an on-campus inter­ view or write: Manager, Pro­ fessional Employment Chevron Corporation, P.O. Box 7137, San Francisco, California 94120-7137. INVASION U.SAJM 12:30.4:15.8:00 SAY OFTNE0EA0|fc|2:30.6:15.10:00 , RITTER OFF 0EA0IPNI 11». 3:00,5:00,7:00. MO AFTER HOURS IR| 1:30,3:30,520.7:30.920 ...YOU’VE BEEN WORKING TOWARD 1 249-28431 5707 N O 19TH ÀVE A6NES OF 000 fPO-13) 12:15,2:45,51». 7:15.9:45 SILVER RULLETJRJ 12:45.3:00.5:15.7:», 1020 AFTER HOURS (» 121». 2:30,5:00.7:30,101» CHEVRON RECRUITERS WILL VISIT THIS CAMPUS Thursday, October 31 -Friday, November 1 JAMEOEOKfRI 11:45.2:15,4:30.71», 920 JOURNEY K NATTY 8ANNIP6) 11:45.2:15.4:30.71». 920 *250 MI0NI6HT MOVES FUMY AM) SATURDAYAT All MMM THEATRES CALLF8RTITUS I An Equal Opportunity Employer Chevron State Press Page 7 T h uradB j^ctob ig^liJSL i ASASU petition wants current student seating re-evaluated B yR O B K E LT O N State Press A petition sponsored by the ASASU E x­ ecutive V ice President’s office is asking for a re-evaluation of the current generaladmission ticket policy in regard to ASU stadium events. “ I just think the adm inistrators made a decision without even explaining it to the students,” said Chris Cum m iskey, ex­ ecutive vice president. Block seating, which allowed campus groups to sit together at football gam es, was elim inated this year and replaced by a general-admission policy. ‘Block seating is a strong m eans of school spirit and provides student unity.’ — Laura Kofman “ Block seating is a strong means of school spirit and provides student unity,” said Lam a Kofm an, a senior communication m ajor. Cummiskey said his m ajor concern was that students were not involved in the ad­ m inistrative decision. A SASU President David V am ell was not aware of the petition, but said more students are in favor of the general-admission policy. “ I got (a ratio of) S to 1 calls from students supporting the new policy when it first cam e out,’ ’ he said. Cummiskey said the petition has been sent to campus fraternities and w ill be sent to the sororities and residence halls next week. “ If A SA SU , the Greeks and R H A (Resi­ dent H all A ssociationicouldget together as a unified front, there would be a capacity to be more productive,” he said. The adm inistration w ill listen to student issues if there are enough students behind them, he said. Cum m iskey said his office is not out to condemn the adm inistration, but to “ test the water and to generate discussion. ’ ’ “ We are just looking for some answers, and we’re not getting them ,” he said. Cummiskey said students are looking to A SASU for the answ ers, but his office is unable to respond. “ When I have 15 to 20 student visitors ask­ ing how the general-admission decision was m ade, and I don’t have any answers, that is a problem ,” he said. «R esident manager on site •In sid e O utside S elf Storage •K eys made a « •E asy access, firs t flo o r level, variety o f sizes 6i , S# ° V 00 !b \ RENT ONE MONTH GET THE SECOND MONTH c FREE! PEARLEl vision c e n te r J AT TR I C ITY MALL *25 O F F Com plete Eyeglasses — or — *99 Special in c lu d e s Eye Exam Fit C ontact Lenses* C old S tarter K it Heat D isinfection ( o r S e p tico n extra) EXPIRES DEC. 10. 1985. OFFER GO O D WITH AD AT TRI CITY MALI. ONLY. Eye exams can be arranged by independent Doctor of Optometry. Dr. Michael Clark, 964-1596 TRI CITY MALL 964-2439 IBM W. Mala. Mas* *Standard daily wear spherical lanaaa only. OFFICE PRODUCTS WAREHOUSE " OPEN TO THE PUBLIC" W h e re you g e t n am e b ran d s at w a re h o u s e prices! brother H EW LETT PACKARD S M IT H CORONK V IC T O R . In Texas * strum en ts We’ll match any advertised price. Just bring in the ad. 1755 W . U n iv e rs ity D r. 1Vi miles west of campus 9 6 8 -1 1 9 8 Thursday, October 17,1965 Page 8 c h u n In pursuit O V E R 33 IC E CR EA M FLAVO RS FR O ZEN YO GU R T SP ECIA LT Y D ESSERTS P E U SA N D W ICH ES Ps Student banks on board game craze IC C O E A M C A F E V alue ¿FREE D ou b le C o n e W hen M O T V A L ID W ITH ' A N Y O T H E R P R O M O T IO N O R D IS C O U N T ' Y ou Buy First at Regular P rice. E x p ire * 10-24-65. 915 E. Broadway Daily Sandw ich Special $ 2 .4 9 S .E C om er Bm aduxty & R u ral T em p e • 966-8950 ilr.M C le a n in q McKELLIPS & SCOTTSDALE RDS. (alpha beta sdophug cmi STUDENT DISCOUNT 25% OFF DRY CLEANIN6 SHOW I D. CARD WITH INCOMING ORDER 504 FA SH IO N EARRINGS 504 FA SH IO N E w A * ASU Baseball Caps $ 3 .9 5 Sunglasses $ 1 0 .0 0 n A Beach Towels $ 1 0 .0 0 ^ 6 n s H I 0 N E A R R 1 N GL . S 5 0 a * ^ R I N G S 5 0 F A $ 2 .0 0 Q oissene $ 1.59 Necklaces S 8 8 6 & u p Belts H $ 2 .0 0 Make-up $ 2 .5 0 Perfume * $ 1.80 Rhinestones O 5 96 Hair brushes M FA SH IO N EARRINGS 504 FA SH IO N EARR By A N D R EA HAN State P ress Q : What is the nam e of the new board gam e designed to challenge Trivial Pursuit and marketed by an ASU finance student? A : Vocabulary D eceit. Todd Franke is banking on his per­ suasive gam e, Vocabulary D eceit, to cash in on the success of T rivial Pur­ suit. Convincing another player into ac­ cepting an incorrect definition of a word is the object o f the gam e, Franke said. An exam ple of a word would be “ doxy,” he said. “ The word is slang for prostitute, but I would try and fool my opponents by saying it is a dog related to the dachs­ hund fam ily,” he said. “ You score the most points when you m ake someone believe your made-up definition,” Franke said. The gam e, which is played like S taff photo b y Rtofc WItoy T rivial Pursuit, includes 250 word cards Todd Franke with Ms “mind game.” Ha stores the empty boxes In his dorm room at with the correct dictionary definition Ocotfllo Hall. Roommates Greg Snyder and Dave Läwitz say they don’t mind the and tokens for 12 players. stacks ot boxes as long as he keepe them on Me eld# of the room. “ You can use the cards or expand the sell itself, chose to design a word gam e Franke plans to utilize a better grade of gam e by just using the dictionary,” m aterials once sales begin, he said. because it “ helps people. Franke said. “ We are disadvantaged because “ Learning expands your vocabulary, “ The difference between my gam e and T rivial Pursuit is my gam e focuses so we looked at the dictionary and those companies have a large m arket and are able to produce their gam es on people. You start having fun because wanted to m ake it fun,” he said. Franke said the gam e has interfered cheaply,” he said. the definitions com e out of people’s with his school work because he spends im aginations. “ We’re com peting against some huge “ We are trying to compete with eight to 12 hours a day m arketing the companies. We are going to have to sell T rivial Pursuit by adding another ele­ product. some games before we go with a high“ Since I started this project, it seems fashion board and package,” Franke ment. Our gam e has more of a creative like I ’ve dropped a lot of classes,” he said. aspect than their gam e,” he said. The E l Rancho, B . Dalton Bookstore said. Franke will graduate in M ay and Franke has turned his dormitory and Toys B y Roy m anagers are plan­ plans on becoming an entreprenuer and room at Ocotillo H all into a production ning to carry the gam e, he said. inventing more gam es. A thousand copies of the gam e, priced office where he is putting the final “ I like introducing products. (The) pieces of the gam e together, he said. between $14 and $16, w ill be available most important part o f inventing is im­ The quality of the gam e’s board and after F rid ay, he said. proving on ideas,” he said. Franke, who is hoping the gam e will box is not like that of his rivals, but W ho Leads the Profession in M eeting The Challenge o f Advancing Technology? IN ACADEME Who has provided $8 million to support a nationwide program for curriculum and faculty development? IN PRACTICE Who is the leading supplier of client service software to accounting and auditing firms? IN RESEARCH Who has developed the architecture for auditing tomorrow’s networked computer systems“! Who offers real challenge for innovative accounting, tax and consulting professionals who want to be in the forefront of this dynamic, new era? INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS OCTOBER 21 AND 22,1985. ICoopers I&Lybrand Page 9 Thursday, October 17,1985 State Prees VALUE COUPON* Director: state’s bilingual policies OK By JO N ATH AN H IG U E R A Contributing W riter A federal government policy shift on bilingual education w ill have only a m inim al effect on aucta program s in Arizona, according to state specialists in the field . Eugene G arcia, director of A SU ’s Bilingual Education Center, said Secretary of Education W illiam Bennett’s pro­ posals open the door for local school districts to determine which method is the most effective way of teaching lim ited and non-English speaking students — something Arizona school districts have already been doing. “ It w ill have no effect on present programs that are one or two language dom inant,” G arcia said. “ But it m ay have more of an effect on those with a large number of distinct languages.” Currently, Arizona school districts can provide any pro­ gram they want, as long as they are addressing the needs of lim ited or non-English speaking students. G arcia suggests that the English-intensive program m ay be better suited to districts with a large number of distinct languages, while the native-language program m ay be more effective in a district with one dominant language. “ (Bennett) wishes to get away from the notion that there is only one way to teach these children,” G arcia said. But Bennett made it clear in a speech last month that he prefers the English-intensive method, which does not allow any instruction in the student’s native tongue, over the native-language program , which allows instruction in the student’s native language and gradually switches to E nglish. “ I tend to agree with him that the needs of lim ited English speakers in which there are many distinct languages should be addressed,” G arcia said. “ But he’s certainly not calling for the defunding of transitional bilingual education, if only ves..nnse F n m .v p e M .m A smrt£35.HACK- H E tK .M fiR , urne su/msep vom ansano uve so cuseioiHe~.weu. u ine -mm a.etmr‘- £ ANP-m nt, Fusmess OROW EAT because of law .” Currently, the most widely-used program is the nativelanguage method since Congress only has allowed 10 percent of its federal funding for bilingual education to go to alter­ native programs such as the English-intensive method. Bennett indicated he m ay try to change that. The new direction Bennett is asking for, G arcia said, sim ­ ply places more emphasis on alternative program s. “ He’s just responding to the 1984 legislation to identify areas that need alternative program s,” G arcia said. “ It’s not negative and it doesn’t exclude present operations of program s that are transitional.” Verm a Pash»', a bilingual education specialist for the state, said Bennett’s rem arks are nothing new. She says it is ju st a m atter of differing philosophies between Bennett and his critics in bilingual education. “ Which means is going to get you m ore?” she said, refer­ ring to native-language instruction versus English-intensive instruction. “ Why eradicate a language when they already have it. Why not develop both? ’’ Pastor favors the native-language program and cited the successful bilingual program of the Sunnyside district in Tuc­ son as an exam ple of its capabilities. “ If a non-speaker is immersed in an English-only setting, he m ay not be growing cognitively speaking,” she said. O f course it’s a ll relative, Pastor said. “ Every program , no m atter what kind it is, is only as good as the teachers that implement it,” she said. Robert Sosa, another bilingual specialist for the State, said, “ Critics of bilingual education need to realize they are also criticizing education in general. M any things that are wrong in bilingual education are also the things that are wrong in a regular classroom .” HOLPH Mf&munf m o n e of iH B se .n o / T i NEHSRMW m m w L- w ** tNtmoR. o n to so IH M <___________ BAKERY OUTLET (.1115 W. Broadway Rd. Tempe, AZ 85282 (one coupon p e r person) Broadway >. T3 <0 X Good 10-17-85 to 10-24-85. HOURS: 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 967-8705 FREE loaf french bread or rolls just for visiting o u r store. D a iry Q ueen v Banana I Split I Reg. $1.65 I 950 S . \ A Q $ -1 I b W W Offer good only at Mill (Across from Gam mage) I (with coupon) ACCEPT TH E CHALLENG E of starting your own fraternity NOW. . . Place your T h e D e lta C h i F ratern ity is co m in g to A S U N a tio n a l R ep resen tativ e R ob C h a p in w ill be on cam pu s n e x t w eek. For more information, contact Marty Farris at 965-8007. ‘ STATE PRESS WANT ADS at the MEMORIAL UNION IN SID E THE NORTH EN TRAN CE . . Announces Fall Semester Values BSLAHOEMENTSPECIAL WITHTO»COUPON Tht Msal Christmas 4Prints3x5 FamilyGift 8x10 5x7 •R9 EE L S O P Y O U R « M M M O V IE S O R $1.69 $ 1 .8 9 . 89* S OP SU P ER •.C A N K 4x6 CONR VE EE RL T E D T O » M N O F V ID E O M 0 IB—HISPON COUPONMUCTMXOMMMVO— $3.00 DPMI12/31*16 $44.95 (MTAORVHS) AOOmONALCOPICSS21.4SEACH CHRISTMAS VALUE SAS C KP M O U M M U SQ IC AM U LN A S FOR YOU U S S C BO NB L S — O O V SU BIM TSM PM PERSONALIZED DON’T1MEA GREETING CARDS! TH A8N TF U K*EY10CAROSONLY$2.95 8C TK HS SQ PIV ieIN ni•IRK LR AG REGULARP«»CE NCE posvouaBasraFOB1PIP FidiIA Y P fM O THESEEVERY ¡Ü E S 1MM 2Printe 1 2 E x p o s u re 2 0 % Nannm ■■■ M .m Itam lul 2.SS 3.SS mum If x— pos4ure ProE co Print 2 4 K x p o e u re Pro— APrint NExpoeure Prese-4Print a 3.«t 4.6t ALL KODAK A cross from the Resident Life Office 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Daily M O N D A Y TH RO U GH F R ID A Y O r J . you can p la ce your ad D A IL Y 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .; • B y calling 965-7572 and C h arge it! • B y visiting the State Press counter ... North Basement, Matthews C e n te r... where you may pay by cash or use your V IS A O R M A ST E R ­ CARD. State Press Want A d s Work ! 4.88 áj» i S.SS i 965-7572 (M asterC ard ) StstePrc«» Thursday, October 17,1965 In pursuit Student banks on board game craze d r.y.c leaning McKELLIPS & SCOTTSDALE RDS. (alpha beta shoppiug ctr.» STUDENT DISCOUNT 25% OFF ORY CLEANING SHOW I D. CARD WITH INCOMING ORDER 50$ FA SH IO N EARRINGS 50$ FA SH IO N E vr ASU Baseball Caps $ 3 .9 5 Sunglasses $ 1 0 .0 0 A p A Beach Towels $1 .0 0 w e is 1 10 0 .0 0 I H I N G 0 N E A R R 0 1 N G 0 3&f ■V lV FA SH IO N EAR R IN GS 50$ FA SH IO N EARR By A N D R EA HAN State Press Q : What is the name of the new board gam e designed to challenge Trivial Pursuit and marketed by an ASU finance student? A : Vocabulary Deceit. Todd TFranke is banking on his per­ suasive gam e, Vocabulary D eceit, to cash in on the success of T rivial Pur­ suit. Convincing another player into ac­ cepting an incorrect definition of a word is the object of the gam e, Franke said. An exam ple of a word would be “ doxy,” he said. “ The word is slang for prostitute, but I would try and fool my opponents by saying it is a dog related to the dachs­ hund fam ily .” he said. “ You score the most points when you m ake someone believe your made-up definition,” Franke said. The gam e, which is played like T rivial Pursuit, includes 250 word cards Todd Frank* with h i* “mind gam *.” H * «tore* the empty b ox** In h i* dorm room at with the correct dictionary definition Ocotlllo Hall. Roommates Greg Snyder and Dave Lawltz *ay they don’t mind the and tokens for 12 players. •tacks of boxes as long ss he keeps them on his side of the room. “ You can use the cards or expand the sell itself, chose to design a word gam e Franke plans to utilize a better grade of gam e by just using the dictionary,” m aterials once sales begin, he said. because it “ helps people. Franke said. “ We are disadvantaged because “ Learning expands your vocabulary, “ The difference between my gam e and T rivial Pursuit is my gam e focuses so we looked at the dictionary a itf those com panies have a large m arket and are able to produce their gam es on people. You start having fun because wanted to m ake it fun,” he said. Franke said the gam e has interfered cheaply,” he said. the definitions come out of people's with his school work because he spends im aginations. “ We’re com peting against some huge “ We are trying to compete with eight to 12 hours a day marketing the companies. We are going to have to sell T rivial Pursuit by adding another ele­ product. some gam es before we go with a high“ Since I started this project, it seems fashion board and package,” Franke ment. Our gam e has more of a creative like I’ve dropped a lot of classes,” he said. aspect than their gam e,” he said. The E l Rancho, B . Dalton Bookstore said. Franke w ill graduate in M ay and Franke has turned his dormitory and Toys By Roy managers are plan­ plans on becom ing an entreprenuer and room at Ocotillo H all into a production ning to carry the gam e, he said. inventing more gam es. A thousand copies of the gam e, priced office where he is putting the final “ I like introducing products. (The) between $14 and $16, w ill be available pieces of the gam e together, he said. most im portant part of inventing is im ­ The quality of the gam e’s board and after F rid ay, he said. proving on id eas," he said. Franke, who is hoping the gam e will box is not like that of his rivals, but W ho Leads the Profession in M eeting T h e Challenge o f Advancing Technology? IN ACADEME Who has provided $8 million to support a nationwide program for curriculum and faculty development? IN PRACTICE Who is the leading supplier of client service software to accounting and auditing firms? IN RESEARCH Who has developed the architecture for auditing tomorrow’s networked computer systems? $ F A $ 2 .0 0 Q oissene _ $ 1 .3 9 Necklaces S 8 5 « & u p Belts JJ $ 2 .0 0 Make-up y $ 2 .5 0 Perfume ^ $ 1.5 0 Rhinestones O 59« Hair brushes N Who offers real challenge for innovative accounting, tax and consulting professionals who want to be in the forefront of this dynamic, new era? INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS OCTOBER 21 AND 22,1985. |Coo Coopers &Lybrand Page 9 ThuwdJ^OçtobeMTjJW S^ VALUE COUPON' Director: state’s bilingual policies OK By JO N A TH A N H IG U E R A Contributing W riter A federal government policy shift on bilingual education w ill have only a minim al effect on-such programs in Arizona, according to state specialists in the field. Eugene G arcia, director of A SU ’s Bilingual Education Center, said Secretary of Education W illiam Bennett’s pro­ posals open the door for local school districts to determine which method is the most effective way of teaching lim ited and non-English speaking students — something Arizona school districts have already been doing. “ It w ill have no effect on present programs that are one or two language dominant,” G arcia said. “ But it m ay have more of an effect on those with a large number of distinct languages.” ‘ Currently, Arizona school districts can provide any pro­ gram they want, as long as they are addressing the needs of lim ited or non-English speaking students. G arcia suggests that the English-intensive program may be better suited to districts with a large number of distinct languages, while the native-language program m ay be more effective in a district with one dominant language. “ (Bennett) wishes to get away from the notion that there is only one way to teach these children, ’ ’ G arcia said. But Bennett made it clear in a speech last month that he prefers the English-intensive method, which does not allow any instruction in the student’s native tongue, over the native-language program , which allows instruction in the student’s native language and gradually switches to English. “ I tend to agree with him that the needs of lim ited English speakers in which there are m any distinct languages should be addressed,” G arcia said. “ But he’s certainly not calling for the defunding of transitional bilingual education, if only BLOOM COUNTY B e rk e B re a th e d YES.-HK36 FtoNMYP&R, IH A sumess.KJCK- ume sumset? ausano uve so uose-nrm .m i, ■m » eiem rr- OROW EAT because of law .” Currently, the most widely-used program is the nativelanguage method since Congress only has allowed 10 percent of its federal funding for bilingual education to go to alter­ native programs such as the English-intensive method. Bennett indicated he m ay try to change that. The new direction Bennett is asking for, G arcia said, sim ­ ply places more emphasis on alternative program s. “ He’s just responding to the 1984 legislation to identify areas that need alternative program s,” G arcia said. “ It’s not negative and it doesn’t exclude present operations of pro­ gram s that are transitional.” ' V a rn a Pastor, a bilingual education specialist for the state, said Bennett’s rem arks are nothing new. She says it is just a m atter of differing philosophies between Bennett and his critics in bilingual education. “ Which means is going to get you m ore?” she said, refer­ ring to native-language instruction versus English-intensive instruction. “ Why eradicate a language when they already have it. Why not develop both? ” Pastor favors the native-language program and cited the successful bilingual program of the Sunnyside district in Tuc­ son as an exam ple of its capabilities. “ I f a non-speaker is immersed in an English-only setting, he m ay not be growing cognitively speaking,” she said. O f course it’s all relative, Pastor said. “ E very program , no m atter what kind it is, is only as good as the teachers that implement it ,” she said. Robert Sosa, another bilingual specialist for the State, said, “ Critics of bilingual education need to realize they are also criticizing education in general. M any things that are wrong in bilingual education are also the things that are wrong in a regular classroom .” tWP-WHrre, fusmess u rte © BAKERY OUTLET (1115 W. Broadway Rd. Tempe, AZ 85282 (one coupon pe r person) >. ■o (0 X Broadway Good 10-17-85 to 10-24-85. HOURS: 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 967 -87 0 5 FREE loaf french bread or rolls just for visiting our store. r< i i i« I Daini Q ueen I I I I I I I I I ■ i i i i i i COUPON! M e te Press z o & o 5. y Banana Split TH£RB 60Ë3 I I I I I I I * 1 .0 9 Reg. $1.65 Offer good only at (Across from Gammage) 950 S . Mill (with coupon) NOW. . . ACCEPT TH E CHALLENG E of starting your own fraternity ' Place your T h e D e lta C h i F ratern ity is co m in g to A S U . N a tio n a l R ep resen tative R ob C h a p in w ill be on cam pus n ex t w eek. For more information, contact Marty Farris at 965-8007. STATE PRESS WANT ADS at the M E M O R IA L U N IO N IN SID E THE NORTH EN TRAN CE . . . Pictiufe P la ce E N LA R G E M E N T S P E C IA L W ITH T H « C O U P O N T ha Id a a i C hriatm aa F a m ily O m 8 x1 0 5x7 • NIELS Of YOU* 8MMMOVIES OR S REELS OF SUPER 4 CAN ME CONVERTO TO M W . 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ISS. /pj—Mtite la/»»/» COUPONMUSTACCOMPANY—OCR r2o% 10 % OFF W St lap—mm Pro— 8 Print k O FF IN O— IMMI y s.ss S.SS O r . y o u can p la ce your ad D A I L Y 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.: • B y calling 965-7572 and C h arge it! 4 Prints 3 X 5 ALL KODAK 4.SS 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Daily M O N D A Y T H R O U G H F R ID A Y Values MEMORIAL UNION LOWER LEVEL 24 Exposure Pro——8 Print A c r o s s from the R esident Life Office Announces Fall Sem ester Qv .............. "F .............. ' F IL M Á M M M • B y visiting the State Press counter ... North Basement, Matthews C e n te r ... where you may pay by cash or use your V IS A O R M A ST E R ­ CARD. State Press Want A ds Work! U CanwniaMca « 1 Day Sarviea • 24 Hour Film Drop • “ H yout pictures tr .n ‘1 te a m in g lo you, H t Additional Inform ation M S-4322 roo «fioold da cornine la aa." 965-7572 I .J Graduate to a ViigVipr degree o f railing convenience. Now you can chaise long distance phone calls easily, even though you don’t have phone service in your name. Introducing the Tbll-Only Calling Card from Mountain Bell. W ith this special card, you won’t need a pocketful of change to make a call from a pay phone. And you can forget the hassle of having to call collect or billing a third party—on all the long distance and local calk you make. N o other calling card offers you the conven­ ience and range of service this card offers. With the Tbll-Only Calling Card, you can call from anywhere, at any time, to any place inside and outside your long distance calling area. Better still, you’ll be billed separately for your calls. That means you can call whenever the spirit moves you, and pay for the call at a later date. And save yourself and your roommates a lot of time and trouble trying to figure out who owes what on the monthly phone b ill For more information about the Tbll-Only Calling Card,* call your local Mountain Bell business office. Find out how you can enjoy a higher degree of calling convenience te & S T •Subject to a one-time charge plus a credit verification and/or a refundable security deposit. ( Q ) Mountain Bed Page 11 Thursday, October 17,1985 State Press /ry: Coming home Aggies Bell, Ipsen return to stomping grounds By JE R R Y BROWN State P ress Although m any of the Utah State Aggies w ill be m aking their first trip to Arizona When they m eet A SU Saturday night, two im portant members of the offense know the area very w ell. Wide receiver M ickey B ell and quarterback Brad Ipsen, who were junior college opponents in Arizona, are now team mates at Utah State, which brings a 2-4 record into Tempe to battle the 3-2 Sun D evils. B ell, an all-state star at Cactus High School in 1981 and a wingback for two seasons at G len dale Com m unity College, suffered a broken bone in his foot two weeks ago but still leads the Aggies with 18 receptions for 279 yards. B ell said he expects to be ready to practice again in about two weeks. all he wanted of B ell in the A ggie game film s. “ He (Bell) is about as good a receiver has we’ve seen this year in film s,” Cooper said. “ He is a quality player. ’' B ell saw .lim ited duty when Utah State visited ASU in 1983 and wanted both to play another gam e in front of old friends and scouts who don't normally follow the Aggies. " I was looking forward to playing back home this y ear,” B ell said. “ ASU is a Pac-10 team , and it’s good exposure for us. This is it for m e, so I want to get back on the field and finish the season w ell.” Western Athletic Conference schools New M exico and B righam Young showed interest in B ell before he decided on Utah State. “ I was recruited by New M exico and ‘I hadn’t played a defensive back that had stopped me this year, and then I run a sim ple out pattern and the bone in my foot Snaps.’ — M ickey Beil Quarterback Brad Ipsen will run the Utah State offense when the Aggies visit ASU Saturday night. “ They put two screws in the foot, and I’m just w aiting and hoping now,” Bell said. “ Things were going really good for me this year until the injury. Bell said he was a victim of a freak accident. “ That’s what really hurts,” he said. “ I hadn’t played a defensive back that had stopped m e this year, and then I run a sim ple out pattern and the bone in my foot snaps.” A ggie coach Chris P ella said B ell’s absence has hurt his team ’s passing attack. “ M ickey goes to the ball very well and is able to run with it a fte r,” Pella said. “ We have missed him and will continue to m iss him . ” ASU coach John Cooper said he saw Cal was interested, but they didn’t offer a full scholarship,” B ell said. “ I probably could have had a shot at B Y U , but I didn’t pursue it. “ The PCA A (P acific Athletic Coast Conference) is a lot of fun. It’s a wide open conference, all we do is throw the ball 40 or 45 tim es a gam e. It’s exciting to be around.” Ipsen, a standout at Scottsdale High School, led Scottsdale Community College to a 14-2 record over two seasons before transferring to Utah State. Injury also hampered Ipsen’s career as an Aggie. After winning the starting job in ’84, Ipsen went down with a knee injury in the season’s fourth gam e and was lost for the season. Mickey Bed Pella said Ipsen lost valuable experience last season. “ Brad has very little m ajor-college playing tim e,” P ella said. “ The more tim e he has to get used to the passing gam e, the better he w ill be. He is still developing right now, and that has hurt u s.” Bell said Ipsen has had his moments. “ It seems like he goes however the team goes,” Bell said. “ He’s had some problems, but so has the, rest of the team .” Utah State, play its fifth road gam e in seven weeks, is com ing off a wild 32-30 loss to Fullerton State a gam e B ell said the Aggies should have won. “ We gave the gam e aw ay,” B ell said. “ We fumbled a punt in the end zone fqr a touchdown, and then we fumbled the kickoff on the next play. They had the momentum after that and we couldn’t hold them o ff.” Netters Ingram, Norris to play in South Carolina tournament By BRAD H ALVO RSEN State P ress Two members of the ASU women’s tennis team , Allyson Ingram and Sheri N orris, left rainy Arizona for sunny South Carolina today to begin play in the Burger K ing AllAm erican tournament in M yrtle Beach. The tournament, featuring a 32-player draw of returning All-Am ericans and other top collegiate players, runs today through Sunday. Norris received an invitation because she earned All-Am erican honors last year as a junior. Ingram , who played only h alf o f last season at Oklahom a, was invited because of her past collegiate record, ASU coach Sheila M clnem ey said. Trinity (Texas) College has been seeded No. 1. Beverly Bowes of Texas is the No. 2 seed, followed by third-seeded Ronni R eis of M iam i, F la . Other top players are Leighanne Eldridge of Stanford and Wendy Wood of R ice. This w ill be Ingram ’s second tournament representing A SU after she transferred from Oklahom a. In her first' tournament, the Kachina Open, she reached the sem ifinals before losing to team m ate and eventual singles champion Laura G litz. “ Allyson’s getting stronger every d a y ,” M clnem ey said. “ She’s been playing more lately which is what she really needs to do. She needs to compete and get back into ‘Allyson’s getting stronger every day She needs to com pete and get back into tournam ent play.’ — Sheila M clnem ey L ast year, Ingram made the sem ifinals of the tournament after defeating Norris in a close quarterfinal m atch. M clnem ey Said she does not know what to expect this year. “ To tell the truth, it’s really hard to sa y ,” she said. “ A lot depends on the draw. In a tournament like this, the first round is the toughest round, because everybody you play is going to be good. But once you get by that first round, everybody’s even-Steven. “ I think they’ll do a ll right. They’ve been playing hard in practice and they’re ready to g o .” Defending champion Gretchen Rush of tournament p lay.” Norris missed the Kachina because she was playing in a U .S . Tennis Association satellite tournament in H aw aii, where she reached the quarterfinals before losing to Karen Sm ith of Australia. “ That was a good tournament for Sh eri,” M clnem ey said. “ She was playing against pros, and to reach the quarterfinals in a tournament like that is great.” Norris played No. 1 singles and team ed with Carol Coparanis for No. 1 doubles last year. Ingram held the No, 1 spot while she played at Oklahom a. S tatt photo by Non Kucz«t Jr. A8U senior Sheri Nords w ill play against fallow all-Americans at a tennis tournament In 8outh Carolina this weekend. She w ill be joined by Sun Devil Allyson Ingram at the tourney. Ifltf State Press Thuraday, October 1*7,1985 Page 12 Selcine happy to return home; denies problem with ex-coach By C H R IS M cK AY State Press With a sm all squad of just five runnero depleted even further by injuries, the women’s cross country team ’s chances of being a m ajor force in the Pac-W est have diminished. But the first bad sign for the team cam e before the season began when Ju lie Seleine, one of A SU ’s top distance runners for two seasons, returned home to Southern California and transferred to U SC. Seleine was recruited and coached at ASU by Roger K err, who ended his eight-year tenure with the Sun Devils when he quit after the 1964 season. Kerr’s successor, Ken Lehm an, has had to do without Seleine’s presence. Although rumors were spread that Seleine’s move was due to discontent in the track and cross country program s, she said her relationship with Kerr and ASU was a good one. “ I liked Coach K err. We got along w ell,” Seleine said. “ I was sad to see he lost his job. “ I really m iss the people at A SU ,” she said. “ Wendy (Sihner) and Susan (Radford) were like fam ily to m e. ” Seleine said she had no problems with K err’s coaching and it was not a factor in her decision. “ We had a good understanding of one another,” she said. “ I didn’t really understand the problems he had.” In her third year of school, Seleine is redshirting this season at U SC . Under collegiate rules, an athlete can not participate in competition for one year after transferring. Seleine said she w ill m ainly concentrate on running, not the uniform she is running in. “ Once you get out there on the line you’re running for that team ,” she said. At A SU , Seleine broke the record for the 1,500 meters as a freshman and finished 20th A QUALITYTAN ATA COMPETITIVE PRICE j Featuring W o lff System aeilarlum "S " Bulbs in our 6 Suntan Beds • * Don't settle for Less than the Best! J 9 6 6 -2 1 5 0 Serving ASU Students for over 5 years. Jude Seleine in the 1964 D istict 8 Championship in Tucson her sophomore year. Seleine said she was more than satisfied with her performances at A SU . “ I felt like I accomplished a lot over there,” she said. “ Now that I’m here (USC) it’s neat to see all the records I can shoot fo r.” A native of southern California, Seleine returned to Los Angeles to complete her college career at her fam ily’s alm a mater. “ M y dad, mom and uncle attended U S C ,” she said. “ I ’m excited to run here.” Seleine said her move Was made with no regrets. “ I ’m glad I made the decision I m ade,” she said. “ I feel great. “ I have a much more positive outlook,” she said. “ Now that I’m back at home, I feel more confident.” Seleine said she is very content with the program at U SC . Cross country coach G reg Laplante has been a great influence on her. “ He’s a great coach,” she said. “ He knows how to deal with athletes.” LOOMING for a career in Jew ish Education, Jew ish Communal Services, tike Rabbinate? B A , M u i, and M .B A programs are available at the UNIVERSITY OF JUDAISM in Los Angeles. M iriam Prum , D ire cto r o f A d m ission s, w ill b e at H IL L E L Je w is h Stu d en t C e n te r o n Tuesday, O c to b e r 2 2 , 9 a.m . to 5 p .m . Please call in advance to schedule an appointment. 9 6 7 -7 5 6 » Papa Jay’s Pizza We Also Deliver Ice Cold Beer FAST FREE D ELIV ERY 'l i m i t e d D e liv e ry A re a 804 S. Ash (Univ. & M ill) Right Next to ASU * anyT larg e 966-4292 o r 966-1003 O N E IT E M P IZ Z A FO R *O rr R e gu lar, N o t S ic ilia n Pizza O ne discount per rental. Not valid in conjunction w ith any other discount, special rate, prom otional offer or as part of any tour package. Car must be returned to original renting location. 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Montebello • 433-2949 i Page 13 Thurtday, October 17,1985 State Press Clark’s 9th-inning blast gives pennant to Cards LO S A N G E L E S (A P) — Ja ck Clark hit a three-run home run with two out in the ninth inning, propelling St. Louis to a 7-5 victory over Loe Angeles Wednesday and into the World Series. Twice the Cardinals fought back from deficits to sew up the National League pennant in the series’ sixth gam e. The victory earned them the right to meet the winner of the Am erican League playoff between Kansas City and Toronto. The Cardinals thus completed a four-game sweep of the Dodgers after losing the first two gam es. Ozzie Sm ith, the playoff’s Most Valuable P layer who had won the fifth gam e with a ninth-inning homer, capped a three-run seven thw ith a run-scoring trip le that tied the score 4-4, but the Dodgers regained the lead on a lead-off homer by M ike M arshall in the eighth. Facing the Dodgers’ ace reliever, Tom Niedenfuer, the Cardinals started their winning rally with one out in the ninth on a single by W illie M cGee, who cam e into the gam e with only four hits in 21 playoff at-bats. M cGee stole second and Niedenfuer then walked Sm ith, whose ninth-inning homer in Gam e 5 had batten the Dodgers relief pitcher. A bouncing ball to first by Tommy Herr sent the runners to second and third, and Clark, the Cardinals’ cleanup hitter, hit the first pitch deep into the left-field stands as Dodgers outfielder Pedro Guerrero watched helplessly. Guerrero threw his m itt to the ground in disgust and the Cardinals poured out of their dugout to welcome Clark, who had only one previous R B I in the series. The hit put the Cardinals in only their second World Series since divisional ¡day was instituted in 1969. The Cardinals won the 1982 W orld Series over Milwaukee in seven gam es. The winning pitcher Wednesday was rookie right-hander Todd W orrell, who gave up M arshall’s eight-inning homer, and left-hander Ken Dayley pitched the ninth inning to savejt for die Cardinals. This was a contest settled between the bullpens of the two team s. Dodgers starter Orel Hershiser worked 6% innings and St. Louis starter Joaquin Andujar went six innings, neither pitching very effectively. Pick ’Urn Do yourself First prize will be an ASU sweatshirt from University Sporting Goods. Second place w ill get 50 percent o ff any purchase at Poster’s Mostly (excluding P atrick Nagel posters). Third prize is a lunch for two at Bandersnatch and fourth place w ill dig into a 16-inch pizza with a choice of toppings at Gino’s Pizza. Entries must be turned in to the State P ress by 3 p.m . Friday in. the Matthews Center basement. Only one entry per person. The top four entries will be listed in Tuesday’s paper. The Arizona State gam e w ill be used as the tie breaker, so just predict the score. P lace an “ X ” in both boxes to predict a tie in any gam e with the point spread taken into consideration. The team s on the left are the favorites, and the points shown w ill be subtracted from their final score. ¡« l I V 966-6183 9 0 7 E. Lem on CUTS PERMS * 1 1 00 with coupon $4Q 00 NEXUS E xp ire s n -3 0 -8 5 . Redken Predict the score. Home team in caps: V Underdog Favorite 1 1 1 1 1 1 CO LLEG E □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ 6 even 20 even 13 even 28 17 7 6 ALABAMA Texas S.M.U. Michigan OKLAHOMA Illinois Nebraska WASHINGTON OHIO STATE U.C.L.A. □ Tennessee □ ARKANSAS □ HOUSTON (home) □ IOWA □ Miami (Fla.) .# □ MICHIGAN STATE 1 □ MISSOURI 1 □ Oregon State 1 □ Purdue 1 O WASHINGTON ST. (home) j H A R K I N 1 3 even 10 3 D D □ O □ PERIL BUFFALO NEW YORK GIANTS PITTSBURGH DETROIT Seattle EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT! ONE WEEK ONLY! .J YOURLOCAL to fflr -g r f DEALER SERVICE SPECIAL A MERICA LOVES 'MY NEW PARTNER’ ■■e 1 ■ 1 8 ■ 15% DISCOUNT " A funny combination of lunacy, larceny & laughter." bill rocz, kpho tv 5 " I loved it!" DEWEV H O P P E R , K T S P T V 1 0 "M y NEW PARTNER’ IS THE FRENCH BEVERLY HILLS C O P T On Service Work and Counter Parts — Richard Freedman, Newhouse Newspapers TEM PE M IG U E L (e x c e p t n e w air c o n d i ti o n i n g u n it) Sales • Rentals • Repairs Band Instruments & Accessories Drums Recorders ★ Banjos ★ Sheet Music Etc. A student of Andres Segovia Guitar Lessons in Folk & Classical by Miguel FORANYDATSUN « m SERVICE TO ALL ASU STUOENTS, FACULTY. STAFF WITH ASU I.D. CARD • TO BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE. * Authorized Dealer for: ALVAREZ... GUILD... KHONO... YAMAHA... OVATION ... MARTIN GUITARS •Amps •Rhythm Boxes •Distortion Boxes •Mini Mixers •Phase Shifters •Poly Phase •Electronic Metronomes •RAMIREZ »CONTRERAS •BARNABE «CESAR VERA •SANTOS HERNANDEZ 122 E University Dr„ Tempe Open 10 a.a to 6 nm. — 6 Days We use genuine Nissan Parts & Factory Trained Technicians S m itii MESA N IS S A N "H ILA R IO U S!’’ — Rex Reed, NY Post "FUN NY!’’ — Neal Gabler, Sneak Previews I I fl_ s e n I 1= o <-> >e ) H ILIPPI N O IM T THIIRKV LHIttMITTE I ® EXCLUSIVE! 7 1 :3 0 . 3 :3 0 < 5 :3 6 - $ 2 .5 0 ) 7 :4 0 . 9 :4 0 THE M O ST A C C L A IM E D PICTURE OF THE YEAR! " ...SUPERB..." M A R S H A M c C R E A D I E , A R I Z O N A R E P U B L I C " ...M A G IC ." BIL L R O C Z , K P H O TV 5 " ...EXQUISITE..." B IL L J O N E S . P H O E N IX G A Z E T T E A SUCCESS." N I C K S A L E R N O . S C O T T S D A L E PROGRESS ELECTRIFYING." m i c h a e l b u r k e t t . n e w t i m e s " ...PRO VO CATIVE..." Parts Open Sat. 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. " ...STUNN IN G ." max M c Qu e e n , m esa t r i b u n e TO R E Y " ...UNM ATCHED." b " kelly EXUBERANT..." "-l . m a l a t ia andres . ktvk kpnx w a lto n . TV 3 12 tv c it y life KISS OP THE SPIDE& WOMAN THE CRITICS ARE GOING CESpBIT I "A miraculous comedy... • delightful piece of slapstick... hilariously funny... humor th at comes from the heart. - micnmi Burx.it, n.» t™ . "...zany, far-o ut comedy treat." m u not;/ k p h o t v s "S ide-splitting humor... one ot the best comedieg of recent years., the audience actually cheered... "in the Cornerstone" ATTENTION ASU FRESHMEN TODAY & TOMORROW ONLY T h e Y o g u r t O a s is o n th e c o r n e r o f R u r a l & U n iv e r s ity is o ffe r in g fo r a tw o -d a y p e rio d , to all fr e s h m e n w ith an A S U p ictu re I .D ., o n e FREE T r ia l S iz e S u n d a e (value 74t). -Ntck S .l.rn o , S c o lU d .l. P ro s '..« ■Maa McQueen ’...crazy, cross-cultural fun.” M uaa T H E G O D S* MUST ^6 D O N ' T M IS S O U T - r - O N E T A S T E IS A L L IT TA K E S. Offer valid O ct. 16 & 1 7 ,1 9 8 5 . y EW PARTNER Service Hours Mon 7 30 a m 8 30 p m . lues Fri 7 30 a m 5:30 p m S ésbié É h H & — Harry Bowman, Dallas Morning News ■ 1701 W. BROADWAY, MESA • 834-3366 9 6 8-2 310 “DELIGHTFUL, WITTY, WORLDLY A N D W ISE” Nov. 15,1985. C IR C L E ■ I I I I Good through I N ISSA N QU ALITY ★ ELECTRONICS ★ BY ROLAND-fBANEZ & ELECTROHARMONIX & OTHERS fil Rk$ Phone ■ t w ilig h t show s 2.so n u r s be t w e e n 4 30 à a.jo show A flawed lore affair. A flawless crime. Name u . S * * • ■ * » ■ » I f f J 4 Channel Sound PROS □ Indianapolis O Washington O St. Louis □ San Francisco □jDENVER IN THE LITTLE ARCHES SHOPPING CENTER ★ SPANISH CLASSICAL GUITARS'★ favor a __ vs. Utah State. ARIZONA STATE. 1 ■ M f u A n , U C - I. ASU FALL STUDENTS O n« per customer 1 rtbune BE s m x s t* m Jh w jd a ^ t o b e M ^ líg ^ Page 14 State Press By B R AD H ALVO RSEN State Pres» The ASU women’s golf team trails leader Tulsa by 20 strokes and is tied for seventh place after the first round of the Nancy Lopez Invitational in T ulsa, Okla. Second-round action gets underway today and the final round w ill be played Friday. “ I really don’t know what to say about what happened out there,’’ ASU co&£h Linda Vollstedt said. “ I could tell you, but 1 really don’t want to see those kinds of things in print.” ASU recorded a score of 317, good for a seventh-place tie with Oklahoma. Tulsa shot an im pressive 297, only 13 over-par fpr the four-player score. Vollstedt said she has ruled out the possibility of an ASU victory, but w ill shoot for a finish in the top three. “ We still have a good chance to finish in the top three,” Vollstedt said. “ And that would be pretty good.” ASU scores ranged from 77 to 82. P earl Sinn shot the best ASU score of the day with a six-over-par 77. Pam ela W right followed at 78, while Heather Hodur and Danielle Am m accapane each carded an 81 and M ichelle E still shot 82. Vollstedt said pressure got to Am m accapane, the Lady linksters trail by 20 strokes after tourney’s 1st round defending N CAA champion. “ She was putting a lot of pressure on h erself,” Vollstedt said. “ That’s a ll there was fo it. She was m aking it hard on herself to come through.” Tulsa holds a nine-stroke lead on the rest of the field, with Stanford coming closest at 306. Southern California, Southern Methodist and U .S . International University are tied for third at 310. New M exico is four strokes ahead of the D evils and Sooners in sixth place at 313, Tulsa scored two of the day’s best three scores, with Diane Dickm an and M elissa M cNam ara hoth hitting oneover-par 73s. Lorette M aritz of the U .S . International University leads the field at 71. Caroline Keggi of New M exico and LeAnne Hamm ock of Oklahoma are tied for second place at 73. Vollstedt said Tulsa’s play was “ unbelieveable” and most likely nobody w ill contest the victory. “ I would say that nobody w ill catch them ,” Vollstedt said. “ Anything’s possible, but they’re a good team and they’re on their home course. They’re tough.” Vollstedt said the W ednesday’s w eather was “ beautiful” for golfing, but heavy rain is expected for today’s round. ASU polo club off to Air Force for tournam ent By BOB H E IL E R State Press ASU w ater polo coach Ja n Lorant has a tough job. He and other coaches of collegiate club sports have to deal with situations that varsity team coaches never consider. Lack of funds and a place to play home matches are two of the problems plaguing Lorant and the water polo team . Following a recent 6-4 loss to UA in Tucson, the team will hit the road again, trav elin g ' to Colorado Springs for a tournament hosted by the A ir Force Academ y this weekend. A ir Force, U tah, Pepperdine and Indiana, all who sport NCAA water polo program s, w ill join the ASU and UA club teams in the tourney. A SU team m em bers practice in the Aquatic Center, but high rental cost p r o h ib its them from obtaining the facility for home m atches. And when the team trav els for tournam ents like this weekend’s, the athletes must pay their own freight. “ One of the problems is that we alw ays have to travel,” Lorant said. “ And since we don’t have a budget, that is lim ited by the stu d en ts’ fin a n cia l situation.” B ecause of these problems, Lorant and other coaches of club sports would like to attain varsity sport status, but the outlook for that is bleak. “ A ctually I just spoke with (Athletic Director) Charles H arris last week and it doesn’t lode prom ising,” Lorant said. “ B asically, he said that if we add sport one we have to drop two, because of lack of funds.” In addition to the regular m atch against U A , the team played another game in Tucson, matching up the Bsquads of the two team s. ASU won the contest 3-0. The squad also defeated the ASU swim team in two exhibition matches. NOW! You can place your 8 FAIR OPENS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18 THRU SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 Inside the North Entrance . . . Across from the Residence Life office.. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. D A IL Y M O N D A Y -FRIDAY W ILLIE NELSOM S g g a OCTOBER 18 OCTOBER 19 OCTOBER 20 OCTOBER 2 1 - OCTOBER 22 ALL CO LISEUM SHOW S ARE FREE... WITH PRICE OF ADMISSION TO THE FAIR (Except P hoenix Su n s Gam es) MeMOlw. c f LAGOON STAGE GRANDSTAND ATTRACTIONS LA D M O & G E R A LD 2 P.M . & 6 P.M . Saturdays & Sundays 6 P.M. Weekdays OCTOBER 18. 19 G 20 — 8 A M . - 6 P.M. 4H HORSE SHOW 7:30 P.M. COPPER GLOVES BOXING COOKIN G WITH RITA i Live Broadcast 1 October 2 8 .2 9 .3 0 .3 1 & Nov. 10 A.M . OCTOBER 21 6 22 — 3 P.M. € 7 P.M ALL ARIZONA INDIAN RODEO I A A OCTOBER 23 OCTOBER 2 4 OCTOBER 25 OCTOBER 23 — i P.M. 6> 7 P.M. GIRLS STATE FINALS BARREL RACES OCTOBER 24 € 25 — 3 P.M. & 7 P.M. HIGH SCHOOL ROOEO.FINALS OCTOBER 26 G 27 — 3 P.M. G 7 P.M. ARIZONA JUNIOR RODEO STATE FINALS CO CA-CO LA STAGE TH E M dG LE S TO N S M on.-Fri., Noon, 4 P.M . & 8 P.M. Sat. & Sun., 11 A .M ., 3 P.M . & 7 P.M. OCTOBER 28. 29 & 30 — 7 P.M. DESTRUCTION DERBY T H E S H O PPE OCTOBER 31 G NOVEMBER 1 — 7 P.M. FIGURE **8” RACE CAR RACING NOVEMBER 2 & 3 — 7 P.M. MOTORCYCLE SHORT TRACK G A.T.C. RACES M on.-Fri., 1:30 P.M ., 5:30 P.M. & 9:30 P.M. Sat. & Sun.. 1230 P.M., 4 3 0 P.M. & 8:30 P.M. TER R Y STO K E S - Hypnotist M on.-Fri., 2:30 P.M. & 6:30 P.M. Sat. & Sun., 1:30 P.M., 5:30 PM . & 9 3 0 P.M. OCTOBER 26 ^ ■ 4 P .M .& 7 P .M . Robert E. Hughes, Musical Director M E T R E ¡¡■ ■ ■ ¡■ m OCTOBER 27 7 P.M. J P P B |K |i||g |S OCTOBER 28 7 P.M. ^ O N D IS P LA Y D A IL Y I LIVESTOCK. DAIRY CATTLE, HORTICULTURE, FLORICULTURE. AGRICULTURE, COMMERCIAL EXHIBITS and much, much more. SPECTACULAR RIDES • EXCITING FUN! SPECIAL DAYS and SPECIAL WAYS to attend the 1985 Fair... COCA-COLA DAYS M onday-Thursday, O cto b er 2 1 -2 4 $12.00 O ff p rice o f adult a dm ission w ith an em pty can o f cok e. n — Thursday, O cto b er 31 $ 2 . OO O ff p rice o f adult a dm issio n w ith cou pon . D eta ils at aU 7-E leven Sto res. ARBY’S/KSTM DAY “ m ^ Jr M B OCTOBER 2 9 7:30 P.M . 7-ELEVEN DAY W ednesday, O cto b er 3 0 $ 2 .0 0 O ff p rice o f adult adm ission w ith cou p on . D etails at aU A rb y ’s . K D K B /JA C K -IN -T H E BOX FUN Tuesday, O cto b er 2 9 T w o-for-O n e R ides w ith stick -o n badge. D eta ils at aU Ja ck -in -th e -B o x. OCTOBER 30 M S P R S OCTOBER 31 7 :3 0 P .M . SENIOR CITIZENS DAYS Arizona Senior World 6 0 years & o ld e r - Every day o f th e F a ir K N I» 1 9 1 0 A M $ 1 .0 0 a d m issio n at aU lim es com plim ents o f A rizona Sen ior W orld a n d K N T S R adio. VETERANS RECOGNITION DAY STATE PRESS W AMTJW S MEMORIAL U N I O N The Great Arizona Get-Together" / /2 S u nday, O cto ber 2 7 p rice adm ission fo r a du lts an d children w ith sp ecia l cou p o n . ; A D M IS S IO N S Adults M.00 - Regular admission 8200 - Mon.-Fri.. 10 A.M. - Noon Children 7 to 12 years 50C - Regular admission Children 6 years and under FREE Senior Clt laens 81.00 at ail times. Compliments of Arisons Senior \Modd KNTS Radio . & AD M ISSIO N TICK ETS ON SALE NOW At C o lise u m B o x Office And A ll D ia m o n d s F A IR HOURS NOVEMBER 1 7 P.M. NOVEMBER 2 3 P.M . & 6 P J NOVEMBER 3 4 P.M. Fairgrounds: Open — 10 A.M. daily Close — 10 P.M.. Sun.-Thurs. 11:30 P.M..FH.& Sat. Midway G Commercial Exhibits: Open - Noon. Mon.-Fri. 10 A.M.. Sat. & Sun. Close - Same hours as Fairgrounds 2 4 -HOUR INFORMATION LINE 268-FAIR FAIRGROUNDS 19th Ave. & M cDowell * Phoenix ¿V State Press Thursday, October 17,1985 Announcem ents F o r Sale H elp Wanted FRIENDS M EETING! (Quakers) 9:30 a.m . Sundays, silen t worship. Danforth Chapal W elcom e! Peace!_________ CONDO. One bedroom $46,000 Tem pe V illas, 1111 E. University no. 125. W alk to cam pus966-7458,952-1745. HANG G LIDE! Two Saturdays only $50. ■Group rates. C ertified in s tru c tio n .' Easy, safe, exciting . W ind sports 8977121. ■ HP41CX ADVANCED program m able calculator 1200,• OBO calf John 9 6 5 4 5 3 6 .... ' ,■ JONATHANS PIZZA is looking for delivery drivers to staff four new locations in Tem pe and Mesa. Drivers m ust have own insured car. High possible earning potential, apply In person afte r 11:00 daily at-Jonathans Pizza 933 E. University. PHOENIX GAY youth . group offers discussion groups and social events for men and women under 23. Meet new friends! 938-3932._______________ Autom obiles 1969 COUGAR, 351 C l. PS, PB, air, tilt w heel, AM , FM , cassette, clean car. $1,500 OBO 345-1182.________________ 1975 MUSTANG II Interior and exterior in excellent condition, great transportation $1,500 OBO 9455619._______ 1979 CHEVETTE O N E ow ner car, excellent condition. Below blue book at $1,660.966-9506. 1979 PLYMOUTH HORIZON 4 door autom atic, AC, AM -FM , pow er steering, new tires, <1,500820-2626.____________ 1960 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed hatch back, excellent condition, original owner $4,000 evenings 890-6685._________ 1961 HONOA ACCORD hatch, 30,000 m iles, 5 speed, a ir, lik e new throughout, $5,700.633-7935,831-0121. PORSCHE 912 1968 C lassic, superior condition, low m aintenance c a ll Hayden 956-7600,266-3054 $8,500. DATSUN 200SX 1978 excellent condi­ tion , no m aintenance, great gas m ileage, call Hayden 956-7600, 2 6 5 3954. TOYOTA COROLLA wagon, deluxe 1977 autom atic, cruise, AM -FM , low m iles, good mpg super $2,800 9458101. Babysitters ATTN: EARLY Ed m ajors. Full tim e m other needs interm itent child care, good hourly wage 8984)496.___________ F o r Rent o r Lease 5 BEDROOM 2 bath by park and lake, east Los Arcos M all, $575-per month plus u tilitie s and deposit 99Q-1199. DEC W RITER or CRT w ith m odem. Rent or buy. 966-3105/836-2427.____________ HOM E FOR lease, three bedroom , two bath, dishw asher, fireplace, refrigera­ tor, large grassy yard, ^carpeting, solor w ater "heating W m ile from ASU $650 per m onth, long term lease possible 966-7714, or 2665466. NEW 2 BR 2 BA condo near ASU, washer, dryer, pool, Jacuzzi, Richm ond Am erican call 947-6189. ______ ROOM FOR rent in hom e w ith m other and teenage g irl. Fem ale only, South Tempo. $200 includes u tilitie s . 8 3 5 6224. F o r Sale 1978 400 HONDA HAW K, excellent Condition $500 or negotiate,9669675. 1963 HONDA EXPRESS scooter, excel­ lent condition $350 OBO 946-8299 afte r 6 p.m . or leave m essage.______________ 2312 SOUTH FOREST Avenue. Tem pe, Broadmoor Place Condos. Excellent design, quality and location. Three bedroom , den, 2bath. Double garage, over 2200 square feet. $124,000 offered by Pam ela Peacock R eality 224-5720. To see call M ichele 894-6438. $888 & TAX IBM XT •Soft/hardware compatible •256K memory •2 floppy drives •Monitor & keyboard •Graphic card Symphony INTL 1949 E. Broadway Call 829-1350 KAYPRO II .com puter and softw are. $800 call afte r 273-6545. lo ts of 5 p.m. |--- ‘------------------ *------ PIONEER SPEAKERS 100 w atts. Brand new, never used. Paid $600 w ill take $100 for the pair, m oving m ust sell 956-2336.________ : ' ■ SKI BOOTS: Dolom ite for advanced skiers. Paid $280 used tw ice. M ake any o ffe r Barry 968-6449.__________ _______ Furniture FUTON BEDS, fram es and sofabeds. The Futon Store, 2620 W . Broadway. M esa Tem po border986-6031._________ H e lp Wanted ACCOUNTING FIR M needs sales representative. W ork your own hours, generous com m issions, am bition and sales ab ility are the only requirem ents 635-6355. ADVERTISING M ARKETING position. Space Age auto paint store seeks a second or third year student for a perm anent part tim e position. W ork in advertising, sales prom otion and m arketing. M ust be able to use a cam era, a com puter, be personable, sharp and very hard working, call Joe Space Age Paint Store, M esa 6354)971. "ASU IS calling you... to join the ASU Telefund Drive! G ain valuable work experience in fund raising and P.R.; n ig h tly bonuses and in c e n tiv e s available. Call Sherry M cIntosh at 965-6754 afte r 1:00 p.m . fo r m ore infor.” CRUISESHIP JOBS. Phone 707-775 1066 for inform ation. _______ ' ~ PART TIM E sales. M ake $200 plus per week w hile only w orking 20 to 25 hours. C all 839-8854 fo r interview and training, ask for Jeff._________________ LOOKING FOR a good part-tim e job? Disabled student is looking for per­ sonal aide. $5 per hr. Kevin 893-8779 evenings._______ ._________________ ' LOOKING FOR sales reps, m ust be enthusiastic, business m ajors pre­ ferred o r experience in sales, some leads provided, m ake $100 per day plus bonus call Paragon D istributing 9 9 5 2346 M -F 9 5 . M ARRIED COUPLE. Live in free room and board. Supervise three boys as house parents. Salary plus benifits. C all Vernon at 8636400.______________ MCDONALDS NOW hiring for all day sh ifts, cashier and cook positions open, apply w ithin , 1031 E. Apache Tem pe. ______ _______ ■ . ■•••NEED EXTRA $$$ part tim e, home so licitation , for inform ation call Patti at £>8-4357.________ NOW EARN m ore than ever! Plasm a doners earn $30 w eekly, over<$120 per m o. New and return donors, University Plasm a C enter 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tem pe call for apt and further info. 9656139 Special donor program . ON CAMPUS em ploym ent. ASASU night clerk typist. M-TH 4-9 p.m . contact student em ploym ent o ffic e r Job 482H.____________________________ ED DEBEVICS. Have you ever been there? W e need your help! Com e see us Tuesday O ct. 22 and W ednesday O ct. 23 In room 220 2nd flo o r o f M .U . from 11:00 to 12:30p.m . fre e g ift» _______ EXCELLENT EXTRA incom e m ailing circulars. $10460 up w eekly. Send stam ped reply envelope. A-1 M ailers: 11020 Ventura Blvd. S u ite 268, Dept AE, Studio a ty .C a 91604.________________ HOB NOB T h rift Shop needs part tim e, outgoing person, apply 414 S. M ill. IM M ED IA TE O PEN IN G S fo r te le ­ m arketing person. Part tim e, up to $10 to start. Prom otions and careers nationw ide available. Earn w hile you learn the telecom m unications industry. W e represent 3M and M CI among others. C all 150 5492-D A T A ._________ IM M EDIATE OPENINGS for sales oriented college students. $4.00 hr. plus com m ission for subscription sales to the Phoenix G azette- The hours are generally 5:00 to 8:30 pm M onday through Thursday. Excellent opportunity fo r students to earn high hourly wages w ith few hours a week. For m ore details call: Jennefer O wens. 829-7910 or M ark W eakley: 861-1436 3.-00 to 6:00 pm M onday through Thursday.________ ______________. A series o f FREE pre-recorded messages from night­ clubs all over town that let you in on what’s up tonight and every night! 24 HRS. A DAY. PHX./SCOTTS. CLUBS 894-2519 Services CARS AVAILABLE - 21 o r older. All States Drlve-away, 9925200.__________ LOOKING FOR house cleaners, trans­ portation required, given own clientele 2310333. DO YOU have severe m enstrual cram ps? W ant quick relief, fast? 100% guaranteed 100% safe, no gim m icks, call "D ress to Im press U nlim ited 946-6210. _________________________ EASTERN O NION Singing Telegram needs m ale singers, im m ediate em ­ ploym ent. If you have a good voice, good transportation, enjoy entertain­ ing people, Eastern Onion is th e place for you. W e w ill work around School schedule. A pplications being accepted 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . M -F 10443 N orth Cave Creek Road Suita 1019664200. M iscellaneous HYPNOSIS, DEVELOP self confidence, remove inhibitions, control stress and anxieties, improve memory and consentration, stop sm oking or lose w eight. Lindsey A. Brady C ertified Hypnotist 9658671._________ ________ PART TIM E help for housecleaning, filin g and help in general. $6 hr. Evenings and w eekends call 9452003. O FFIC E RUNNER wanted for con­ struction o ffice in Tem pe. Good pay, hours flexib le 20 to 30 hours a week call 966-4424. EARN TW O paychecks, one for working: and one for going to school. C ircle K has a tu itio n reim bursm ent program for any course"s” at any acredited college. W e are presently interview ing and hiring fa v o u r Tem pe and M esa stores from 7 am to 10 am W eds, Thure and Fridays, and from 5 pm to 7 pm Thursdays. Stop by C ircle K Store 1183 located at 516 S. Dobson, near Broadway, M esa Az. _________ ' H elp Wanted PARADICE CREAM. Needs ice cream servers. M ust have car and work both Tem pe and Phoenix stores. Part tim e , flexible hours apply 1044 South Terrace 967-2414. ___________ LIG H T M ECHANICAL job w ith oppor­ tu n ity to advance into m anagerial position, no experience necessary, w ill train call 941-2980. __ DEUVERY PERSON needed. 10:30 to 5 p.m ., weekdays, w ith car. Davidson Travel 241-1957 ext. 60._______________ The Campus lin e TEMPE CLUBS 894-2513 JUVENILE PROBATION officer I. $1, 648 per m onth, salary above entry may be offered dependent upon back­ ground and or experience. Apply at: M aricopa County Personal Dept 111 S. 3rd Ave Phoenix.____________________ Page 15 OVERSEAS JOBS..Sum m er, yr. round. Europe, S. Am er., Australia, A s ia All field s. $9052000 mo. Sightseeing. Free info . W rite IJC , PO. Box 52-AZ3 Carona D el M ar, C a 92625._____________ , STUDENTS PART tim e opening in telem arketing. Enthusiastic and de­ pendable. W ill train. Salary plus com m ission. C all Ann 9685795. YOUTH SUPERVISOR (on call) position located Iri ju v e n ile Detention Facility. AA degree or 64 sem ester hours college. $8.12 per hour. Apply at: M aricopa County Juvenile Court Center Probation Adm inistration building 3125 W . Darango Phoenix Az 85009. ' PART TIM E jobs available in Tem pe and Chandler at In te l Corporation. O btain d etails at ASU Career Service C enter. EOS M /F/H . _____________ PART TIM E secretary wanted M-W -F 155 p jn . $5 per hour (study tim e) contact Jo e9551626 Phoenix location. RETAIL CLOTHING store has an opening for experienced sales person. W ork is on weekend days only, 5 m iles from ASU $4 to $4.50 to start. Call 9715905. “ Leave m essage".__________ Instruction AEROBICS CERTIFICATIO N. Saturday O ct 19th and 26th- Teacher training course at C enter for Body Awareness 8945347. TUTORING SERVICES. ACC 211, 321., Fin 251, 300. Experienced call G ill 968-8066 after 5 p.m.______ __________ EARN EXTRA MONEY Arizona School of ‘ BARTENDING* Job Placement Assistance Start Any Day Terms Available 2 7 5 - M IX X 4035 e . m c d o w e l l Minutes From Campus 10/17 M otorcycles________ 1978 KAWASAK11000. Many new parts, runs great $1350 G lenn 967-9338, 255-4845. 1960 KAWASAKI 1000 LTD recently tuned and serviced, runs perfect $ 1,200 OBO 635 7 6 7 0 Jim . _________ 1981 KAWASAKI K2550 LTD only 7,000 m iles, includes extas. M ust see. $950 obo. C all M ike 9554107; HONDA ELITE 125 Scooter G old excellent condition; only 2600 m iles. M ust sell w ill sacrifice fo r $1000. Hurry! call Dan at 829-8800 betw een 5 5 pm 8251270 afte r 5 pm._______________ Personal HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY Ronald Mercadot I love you! xxxooo M ichelle. KAPPA KAPPA Gamma pledges love th e ir actives! K IM , SO when are we going out? Please, com e oh, when, le t’s go, OK, rig ht now. Love M ark. __________ PREGNANT? CONSIDER adoption! Young, w ell educated couple w ish to adopt an infant. W e can1' provide a loving financially secure hom e. C all our attoum ey collect 405 285710 0. (A-18) PREGNANT? CO NSIDER adoption! Young, w ell educated couple w ish to adopt an infant. W e can provide a loving financially secure hom e. C all our attorney collect 4052857100. SCOTT GEORGE, Happy Birthday, I love you, Karla. ____________ _________ SHERI MOORE. Have a super day, dude. Love in KA your big sis Cheryl. L o s t 8» Found LOST M ENS gold Seiko w atch with square face. Sentim ental value. Re­ ward. C all 8945143, 965-4040. Ask for Jonathon. THERE IS a nonprofit organization that o ffers confidential counseling services and a b etter understanding o f your religion and others. For free inform a­ tion send a S.A.S.E. to Rhonish Law. P.O. Box 17611, Phoenix, Az 85011. W ANTED: TO adopt Caucasian or M exican infant or child. No questions asked. M edical expenses paid, w illing to pay, 10613 W . Butler Dr. Pioria Az 85345 977-3404. H e lp Wanted AVIATION CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Apply now for a permanent, U.S. Govt. (Civil Service) posi­ tion as an Air Traffic Control Specialist. More than 2,000 openings nationwide. Three different specialties. Prestige careers with medical, retirement benefits plus paid vaca­ tions. Entry-level applicants will start at $17,824 per year and could advance to as much as $45,000 per year. Avia­ tion experience not necessary. If selected you will be trained at Govt, expense. Aptitude test required. Three yrs. general work exp. or four yrs. college, or combination. Send your name, address on postcard before Nov. 30,1985 to: FAA, AAC-80/201, Box 26650, Oklahoma City. OK 73126. EOE. tO/17 R ea l Estate FURNISHED TRAILER 8x45 on ASU property behind Dash Inn, 735 E. Apache no. 6. $5,500.9953103.________ TEM PE TOW N house for sale by owner. S ave re a l e s ta te co m m issio n . M otivated seller. Best value in area. See this one, have your term s, three bedroom V h bath new carpeting, newly decorated $62,600 9451843,9453603. Room m ate wanted FEMALE bedroom includes entrance, 9675415 IT’S HOT. $10/H 0U R DURING TRAINING PERIOD Sell industrial tools & supplies to contractors Nationwide via W.A;T.S: telephone stst. EARN UP TO $1,000 PER 25-HOUR WORK WEEK. WE’RE FOR REAL! Come see us. Serious money motivated individuals onlyl A F T E R N O O N S H IF T 3 P.M . T O 6 P.M. M -T H , 2 P.M , T O 6 P.M. F R I„ N O E X C E P T IO N S . C A L L 345-8433 W ANTED: TO adopt Caucasian or M exican infant or child. No questions asked. M edical expenses paid, w illing to pay, 10613 W . B utler Dr. Peoria Az 85345977-3404._________ 10/18 ANYTIME / PART-TIME $5 to $7 Per Hour • We Fully Train T h e nation's finest telem arketing firm is now accepting applica­ tions for the following shifts: 5-9:30 p.m. • 6:30-9:30 p.m. O u r sales people work in a m odern, com fortable business environ­ m ent contacting established customers on long distance W ATS lines. Guaranteed salary or commission, whichever is greater, and averages $5 to $7 an hour. O ur Tem pe office is located approxi­ m ately five minutes from campus. V PLEASE CALL DIALAMERICATOR DETAILS. 829-1140 NONSMOKER share three house, $260 per month unities, private bath and close to ASU call M aria * ___________ FEMALE ROOMMATE or room m ates fo r large m aster bedroom w ith own bath to share 3 bedroom apartm ent at Palm Tree call 9665540.______________ FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted to share three bedroom tw o bath hom e w ith pool. $250 month David 4375180.______ FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted to share tw o bedroom tw o bath w ith sam e, available im m ed. Shawna 9652531. FEMALE TO share hom e. 5 m iles to ASU, fireplace, Jacuzzi, washer, dryer, $275« includes u tilitie s 8353406. FEMALE TO share new one bedroom condo, near ASU. C all Sue 894-2247 any ■tim e.: •. ■■ •MATURE RESPONSIBLE student to share two bedroom apt. near ASU $225 per month plus Vi u tilitie s . C all Daniel 9675815 evenings._____ ^ ________ ROOMMATE W ANTED; w asher, dryer, pool, Jacuzzi, u tilitie s included $250 m o. C alf Jim m y 8958869.______________ ROOMMATE TO share hom e on lake by Park, great view, E. U s Arcos, $200 a m onth plus u tilitie s . Deposit, nonsm oker 9651199.____________________ SHARE FURNISHED three bedroom hom e 1 Vi m iles from ASU. $200 Includes u tilitie s 967-4669. EDITING TERMPAPERS, dissertations. W ill perfect your English, grammar, sentence clarity and flow , paragraph­ ing, organization, form at, plus. Pro­ fessional, inexpensive. Susan, M .A., 8345038. ______________________ PRIVATE M AIL boxes 50% o ff first quarter, also all sizes o f m ini storages M cClintock M ini Storage 1450 South McCBntock Drive Tem pe 4652212. RESEARCH PAPERS. 15,278 available! Catalog $2.00. Toll-free hot line: 1 50 535152 22, Ext. 32. Visa/M C or COD. _____________ ~ RESUME W RITING , typing and print­ ing. Resumes that get attention. Guaranteed satisfaction. 2735857, Transportation AAA DRIVEAWAY. Cars to most m ajor cities. U drive. First tank free 277-9979. Travel AIRLINE TICKETS • U s Vegas, U s Angeles, San Diego, O ntario $30 .. Chicago, St. U u is and other deatlnattons-avallable. 9654694._____ _ AIRLINE TICKETS available roundtrip for use anytim e and anywhere in continental USA. As short as 24 hours notice. 894-2523.____________________ AIR TICKET! R JL Phoenix to Grand Rapids $258 oBo Dec 19 - Jan. 9 Must sell! 9215425 G retchen.______________ CHEAP AIRFARE R.T. LA, San Diego, Vegas, El Paso $59 R.1L Chicago, St. Louis $230 New O rietfS i, K;C. $225 OKC, Tulsa, $220 8335819. DISCOVER ARIZONA now! W ilderness day hikes. Lunch and equipm ent furnished. Ah inexpensive way to see the real Arizona. C all 8352032.________ GUARANTEED CHEAPEST flights! ‘‘No” service charge. “Free" ticket delivery. Hurry, lim ited seats available. "The best D eal!" Holiday travel 9485990. Typing A-1 PROFiGIENT typing IBM selectric, Lorraine 833-8365 at University and Dobson In M esa.____________ . A-1TYPING SEVICE, 15 years ex­ perience $1.50 per page call Linda 962-8075 w ord p rocessin g also ______ ' ■ •' ' . available. AAA W ORDprocessing Service. Term papers, resum es, p erso n alized letters, graphic presentations. Reasonable rates. Call Ron 8355532. ACCURACY SPEED specialties Linda 9655775. ________ ' .. ACCURATE CUSTOM typing, spelling corrected, rush jobs welcom e, reasonable. Linda 8356830._____ ______ ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing. Call Susan at 8335373.___________________ EXPERT W ORD processing/typing. $1.25 double spaced page. Rough draft available. Rural/Southern. Fran 6358027, ._________________________ IBM W ORD processing. Papers proofed $1.50 per page, free delivery on jobs ove* $15 2735657. _____________ PROFESSIONAL WORD processing. Term papers, resum es, etc., $1.25 Double-spaced page, call Shirley Schollm eyer, 8315596. ___________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING - Fast, re­ asonable. Excellent spelling and grammar. C all Jaline 9454647. QUALITY W ORD processing, reasona­ ble rates, spelling and gram m ar assistan ce8357906. _______ ___________ SHORT OF tim e? I can help. Reasona­ ble. Professional. G uaranteed. Ex­ perienced in academ ic, call Jessie 9455744. ____________________. TYPING-TOP quality work, reasonable rates, pick up and delivery available. C all 9925064,_______________________ W ORD PROCESSING, storage for dissertations, th esis’ and term papers. Rush Jobs w elcom e. Nancy, 8355572. YOUR TYPE, a unique typing service. W e can type anything. Reasonable. C all 2452285. W anted MODELS W ANTED. Free makeup and hair style call Sherry for interview at House o f M ichael 9650444.___________ W ANTED: TO adopt Caucasian or M exican infant o r child. No questions asked. M edical expenses paid, w illing to pay, 10613 W . B utler Dr. Peoria Az 853459775404. Page 16 Thursday, October 17,1985 JS m Printshops O f The Future P re s e n ts : S IG M A C H I D ER B Y DAYS 1985 The men of Sigm a C h i wish to thank the p articip atin g sororities: ALPHA DELTA PI DELTA DELTA DELTA ALPHA CHI O M E G A KAPPA ALPHA THETA G A M M A PHI BETA KAPPA DELTA DELTA G A M M A SIG M A SIG M A SIG M A We also wish to thank our sponsors: ALPHAGRAPHICS WESTERN H O ND A COURTESY CHEVROLET TOP'S LIQUORS CRIMPERS LTD. M cG u ir e ' s CONTINENTAL FLOORING CCCUTTERS DASH INN IMAGE MAKERS JOSEPHINE'S JAMS YOGURT TIME ANDERSON'S FIFTH ESTATE TEQUILA D A N 'S STUDENT B O O K CENTER W ATCH OUT! YOGURT OASIS ROOKIE'S VIDEO WORKS KOOLER'S WIN A HONDA ELITE 80 SCOOTER FROM "" hondo of Scottsdale . 6717 E. MCDOWell 994-8400 S E E O U R B O O T H O N C A D Y M A L L F O R D E T A IL S !!! ZSI