Park o fficials cut lawn size in h a lf By VICKIE CHACHERE . State Preaa The ASU Research P ark Spent an extra $1 million on landscaping because Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt ordered officials to reduce law n space by m ore than SO percent, the park’s director said W ednesday. Reginald Owens said a request by B abbitt and die Arizona D epartm ent of W ater Resources last year to elim inate 22 acres of lawn space has cost the park an additional $1 million to in«*»» gravel m aterials and “v ertical elem ents,’’ or trees. Owens said the park directors bad planned for 42 acres of lawn a t the facility. “We have lost w hat we feel is very usable recreation space,” Owens said. “G rass is the cheapest thing you can put in the project.” The park is a private, non-profit organization created by the Arizona Board of Regents in 1983. It is located a t P rice and ElRot Roads and covers a 333-acre a n a . In a report presented to the Arizona Board pf Regents Friday in Tucson, park officials listed the dem and for a cut as die “ biggest disappointm ent” during the park’s first year of construction. thursday In the year-end report, park officials: said the redaction required a vconcentrated effort to reduce the lawn and add trees and landscape to keep a ‘people-friendly’ atm osphere.” Owens said the project has been, completed for several months now, but added th at he believes research park officials were singled out to replace the lawns by the governor’s office. “We as a project were somewhat singled out,” Owens said. “We recognize that is not unusual because we are linked with ASU." But Dick Wells, chief deputy director of the D epartm ent of W ater Resources, said the park was not being singled out when state officials insisted on the lawn reduction. “At the tim e the original plan w as m ade, it was discovered that (the park) had rath er lusfc landscaping,” Wells said. Ja n u a ry 23,1986 gate p re ss He said park officials agreed to reduce the size of the three lakes a t the pdrk and to construct a landscape that would use w ater efficiently. Tnmno Arivnna T em pe. A rizona A rizona S ta te U niversity Wells said the departm ent originally had requested that no m ore than to acres of land be used as town space, but later compromised with park directors for a 20-acre lawn. Vol 68 N o. 72 “As a (state-related) agency they should be setting the way for w ater conservation, not w ater w asting,” Wells.said. Copyright. State Press. 1985 Legislation that w ould nab p ro fs book profits rejected By JOHN CONWAY State Preaa A bill th at would have retained professors’ local textbook profits for their universities was bypassed by an Arizona House of R epresentatives com m ittee Wednesday , but several legislators called for action by the Arizona Bowd of Regents. The House Education Committee will ask the regents, who had voted to oppose House Bill 3058, to form ulate a policy governing textbook profits. Knee the com m ittee did not vote to transfer the toll to the House Rujes Committee, it rem ains active and c o u ld be reconsidered a t a future time. Sponsored by Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, the toll requires any state or community college professor to subm it to his institution royalties earned from their books and sold on the cam pus a t which they teach. A spokeswoman for Cooper said no further action probably would be taken on the toll. f Jane Hull, R-Phoenix, said a “strong” m essage should be sen t to the regents and universities to look into the student concern. Henry Evans, D-Tolleson, prom ised to subm it the ton next year if no corrective ’ste p a a re taken by the regents. Jack Kinsinger, ASU vice president for academ ic affairs, said neither UA nor ASU has a policy regarding this issue, but NAU does. K insinger inform ed the com m ittee that the NAU faculty voted. to direct all university royalties back to the cam pus and into a scholarship fund. An ASU profess«- who wants to use his book in a class he is teaching m ust receive the approval of the dean. SUS alíele by Todd Oreen R eflections Graduate brterdtocIpBnary studies student Susan Brantley enjoys a quiet moment away from toe crowd while g o in g out the window upstairs on Bio west side of toe MU. Kinsinger, Odus E lliot, the regents’ associate d ire c t« for academ ic program s, and students from the UA presorted their p o sitio n « the MH to the committee. Cooper encouraged the students present a t the hearing to pressure the regents into e s ta b lis h in g a s ta te -w id e p o lic y implem enting the requirem ents of the toll. Foreign TA prospects improve English P ro sp e c tiv e fo reig n teach in g assistan ts Who took an E nglish proficiency te st la st sem ester m ade a 29 percent im provem ent over students who took toe te st last sum m er, an ASU official said W ednesday. A lbert tta n ftg , a s s is ta n t v ice president for academ ic program s and services, said 34 percent to foreign students who took the test between October and D ecem ber a re failing the m andatory test. K arnig said 32 percent of those taking toe te st dem onstrated enough English «peaking proficiency to w o k as inrtructors in U niversity classroom s. Another 94 percent of last sem ester1* p ro sp ectiv e teach in g a ssista n ts, qualified for non-classroom positions but did into dem onstrate enough speaking ability to instruct other students. pass toe test. th o se students will be placed as laboratory assistants or in jobs that do not require contact with students. th e num ber of students failing the th e , exam , which m easures a :. te st i t not having a negative im pact on departm ents with large num bers of student’s proficiency to speak English, toarhlng assistants, toe chairm an ot was ordered by ASU President J . A8U’s m ath departm ent said. Russell Nelson in May and later required a t NAU and UA by the Arizona Philip Leonard said his departm ent Board of Regents. has not suffered from toe reduction of teaching assistants. The first test results indicated th at 63 Leonard said th at about 10 percent of percent of ASU’* prospective teaching th e teach in g a ssista n ts in his »«¿ktawfai, who m ight have been departm ent w ere affected ky toe exam. allowed to in stru ct students a y ear ago, ; - -V IC K IE CHACHERE could not speak English well enough to Cooper, said during the meeting th at he was “appalled” to learn th at toe UA Faculty . Senate had pigeonholed a UA student senate request w ritten la st year th at would have disallowed university professors to profit from book sales to their students. Rep. Jim Skelly, R-Scottsdale, who said the students w ere being “ripped off” by sam e textbooks prices, opposed the bill because it would penalize “good professors Writing good texts.” “I sym pathize with students, but I don’t think this is the way to handle this problem ,” he said. P at W right, RrGlendale, said she agreed . with Skelly and th at the universities should restove this problem rath er than the state. The three UA students who spoke to the 14 com m ittee m em bers present included a junior electrical engineering student, a senior m anagem ent inform ation system s student, and Associated Student of UA p resid en t John H eigl, a chem ical engineering senior. . .. v ;; ■ Junior M ichael D alrym ple said, “I don’t know if the professors a re after the money > or not, but from a student’s ptontpf view it seem sflkea money m akingschepe.” One of the three boQks'JJW ymple had brought w ith him to show the com m ittee m em bers sold for $35 and included the sam e typographical e rro rs found in the unbound volume from which the book was reprinted. This example reflects an “attitude to not correct erro rs,” he said, D alrym ple, who d iscovered th a t professors do not profit from unbound instructional m aterials said, “The norm al student, who would not go to these lengths to find out these things, thinks they are getting ripped off.” Kinsinger defended the professors’ right to sell his students a textbook he has Kinsinger said he opposed the bill because it infringed on a professor’s individual freedom and a bureaucracy would be 4 needed to track and collect in-class book ro y a ltie s.. 0Tod ay V “Ivory Towers,” a new weekly campus comic strip, m akes its debut today. Page 7.< ; Ï The men’s basketball team hosts Oragpn tonight ,i la th e Unlvordty Activity Center. Pago 13. ASU weather — Variable high clouds with an expected high of 75 degrees. The expected low Is / / J . . . . ! ___...1 0 .............................vi io 9. Collego............. ..................... ................... Nation/world---- .....................................; ......... 2 Opinion............. .......................................... . . . 4 Police report___ ................................................10 S ports. . . . . . . . . P ese fi Ml i s t a t e Ä ffe Sp ««§■&• n a t i o n / w o r l d ■% . 1II. .;|fi .;: |§ p’ press $¡0$ Weight determined by genet, f not eeting habits, study says Legislators reluctant to comment on soldiers' presence in Vietnam Three Sikhs sentenced to death for 1 9 8 4 murder of Indla'e Gandhi BOSTON (AP) — W hether people grow up to be ta t or skinny depends in targe p eri on their genes end seem e to have nothing to do with the eeting habits they learn as children, a new study concludes. The research helps explain why some people rem ain chubby even when they S e t constantly, addle others stay trim no m atter what they eat: Fatness and thinness a re in their genes. The findings were based on a study of adopted children. They often grew up to have the body builds of their biological parents. Slim offspring frequently had elender natural parents and overweight children had ta t ones. There was no evidence th at they m irrored the shape of the adoptive parents who raised them. Many experts believe that heredity plays a t least Some retain obesity. But they also often theorize th at ta t people get th at way because they learn bad eating practices early in life. . ^ WASHINGTON (AP) — M embers of Congress who visited Vietnam and Laos “did not receive anything” to encourage the belief th at American servicem en a re still being hektprisoner there, the head of the delegation said Wednesday. “ I don’t w ant to raise any false hopes," Sen. Frank Murkewski, E-Alaska, told a new* conference. Murkowski, chairm an of the Senate V eterans Affairs Committee, said the panel win hold bearings next week on the possibility A m srtaan prisoners rem ain in captivity inSoutheast Asia m ore than a decade after the end of the NEW DELHI, India (AP) — A Judge seated behind bulletproof glaaa convicted three Sikhs on W ednesday and sentenced them to death for the m urder of P rim e Minister Indira Gandhi in 19M. M are than 900 riot police guarded the Jail to prevent a pooaibie attack by Sikh m ilitants and to enforce a 48-hour ban on public assem bly th at authorities imposed Tuesday in surrounding neighborhoods. One of those convicted, a m em ber of Gandhi’s personal guard, wa* accused of firing the shots in the garden of the prim e m inister’s residential compound, along with another guard who w as killed a t the scene. The other two defendants w ere found guilty of conspiracy. No date w as sat for the executions, which in India usually a re by hanging. Gandhi waa assassinated Oct. 11, 1984, four mortths a fter she sent the arm y into the holiest Sikh tem ple to route out Sikh terro rists who w ere using it a s a refuge. a r i z o n Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., another m em ber of the delegation who returned la st week from the nine-day overseas tour, said Wednesday: “It is my belief that it is vary, very likely th at there a re some Americans th ere.” But DeConcini refused to say w hether be believes these Am ericans actually are prisoners. p a a c - T O -•r • JiT-v Rally marks anniversary of abortion legalization PHOENIX (AP) — A state lawm aker led the Arizona House of Representatives in prayer for the “millions of babies” aborted, and pro-choice spectators responded with boos from the gaitary Wednesday as Arizona m arked the isth anniversary of a Supreme Court decision making abortion legal. E arlier in the day, a pro-choice streettheater group chanted “ one step forward, three steps back” and “uppity "women repent” aa it satirized abortion OSU students receive precautionary vaccines opponents. “Push us beck, push us back, way back,” the women chanted as they circled between the House and Senate buildings, dressed in styles from the 1950s. “Mommies, mommies, don’t be commies: stay a t home and fold pajam taa.” CORVALLIS, Ore. — An estim ated SO Oregon State U niversity students have received shots for hepatitis A after fearing contraction of toe disease from eating a t a local restaurant. The group, p art of the Plutonium Players, a 'San Francisco repertory company, paraded under the nam e Ladies Against Women and announced that they would hold "consciousness­ lowering sessions.” As m any a s 6,000 people who ate a t the restaurant between Dec. SI and Jan . S m ay have been expooed to the disease, according to the Oregon State Health Division. .■ Officials said eight of the restau ran t MC PRODUCTIONS ^ ’X f* “ V t'*-] l employees already have contracted the disease. “Quito a faw students called in . . . asking w hat to do if they had eaten a t the restau ran t,” said Cheryl G raham , OSU H ealth Educator. The shot, called immune globulin, has antibodies th at fight against the hepatitis virus. “Once the shot is given, it is higMy unusual for a person to contract bepatitto a fter a period of two weeks,” according to Susan S p an g h r, com m unicable disease nurce for Benton County. — The Daily Barom eter UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GRADUATE PROGRAM S IN ADMINISTRATION: presents S P Y R O G Y R A COURTS e LEGISLATURE FEDERAL, STATE, LOCAL GOVERNMENT Live in Concert 8:30 p.m. Sunday JAN U ARY 26,1986 C E LE B R lfŸ TH E  T E R R E S E R V E D S E A TIN G The U n iversity of Southern California School of Public A dm inistration offers a program leading to a M a s te r in Public A d m in istration degree including su ch sp ecialization s aa ¿Judicial A dm inistration, Public Financial M anagem ent, H ealth S ervices Adm inistration, Applied Behavioral Science and Intergovernm ental M anagem ent. A ll Seats $12.75 Ticket* Available at all DIAMONDS O U TLETS PhonsOrders m m m ij i& m m c Dr. Donald Fuller, of the U S C Ju d icial A d m in istration Program , w ill be on cam pus January 28, 1 9 8 6 to speak w ith in tereste d students. C all C a re e r S ervices a t 9 6 5 -2 3 5 5 fo r m ore inform ation. OW ON $2oo OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA W ith 3 Toppings B E fcK & W I N E \<)W SERVED A T T E N T I O N any s tu d e n t in te re s te d in applying fo r T H E N A T IO N A L H O N O R A R Y Ixpfee* 1-30-SS. FAST D E L I V E R Y \ I: ' :! tn ( I hi rI fi v 968-8575 UNIVERSITY A H ARDY TEM PE HOUE* M a a^ T b an . 11 M t- U *•■ Fri. a ta t. II a i* a i* b t ■ aa. I ,.a > U p.m . W H O ’S W H O am ong stu d e n ts in A m e rica n C o lleg es and U n ive rsitie s, m ay p ick up th 6 ir a p p lic a tio n in ro o m 2 0 8 - J o f th e M e m o rial Union o r th e O ffice o f S tu d e n t Life. v f T h o se s tu d e n ts applying m u s t h aye a m in im u m o f a 2 .2 G P A and no le s s th a n 6 0 h o u rs. ; f t| The deadline for applications is i p.m., Jan* 3 0 ,1 § M . ••COUPON Thuwctoy. January 83,1986 Page 3 Kahane: violent fanatic or heroic prophet By THERESA WILLEFORD S tateP ress To an ASU professor and two students who w ere thrown out of his speech, the m an is a fascist demogogue. To others who attended the speech, he Is a prophet and a symbol of hope for Israel. When Rabbi Meir Kahane, an Israeli K nesset m em ber who has called for the rem oval of Arabs from Israel, spoke a t the H yatt Regency Tuesday evening, the controversy that surrounds him was also present. “I think he’s a prophet in his own tim e and only a few people recognize it,” ASU graduate Sara K rrim er said. “He holds (he solution for the Jew ish people and for the Arabs as well. "(H is Ideas) hopefully will be heeded so we will be spared the bloodshed." For Bob Shuch, ASU Junior and the chairm an of the Israeli Action Committee, Kahane is more of a th reat than a hero. “I think he is using the A rab/Israeli conflict to promote his own form of fascism ,” Shuch said. P rio r to his appearance, m em bers of the A m erican-A rab A nti-D iscrim ination Committee picketed outside the Regency in protest of Kahane’s appearance. E ric Niman, an ASU graduate student and m em ber of AADC, carried a sign saying “M eir Kahane is a latent human bring.” “I’m here to exercise my rights as an American citizen and to m ake the point that I disagree with everything M eir Kahane stands for,” Niman said. O ther protesters carried signs th at read “Meir Kahane for F ührer,” and “Hell is em pty, Kahane is here.” Kahane. spoke for two hours to a mostly Jew ish audience of m ore than ISO. During his speech, he said the high Arab birthrate represents a threat to Israel, and If elected prim e m inister, he would remove all Arabs from Israel. “There are two kinds of Arabs — clever A rabs and stupid A rabs,” he said. “The stupid ones come right out and say what iteff ptioto toy Km Hi J. UvMn Rabbi Meir Kahwie Is restrained by ■ member of the Hyatt Regency Hotel security •toff after the rabbi attempted to attack A8U student Danny Ben-QIgl during a speech given by Kahane. Kahane, a member of the Israeli Knesset and running for election lor prime mlnieter, tried to attack ben-QIgi after the student repeated^ Interrupted Kahane’s speech. they want (the destruction of Israel), v “The clever ones know if they say nice things to Jew s, the Jew s will throw money at them —even the Sinai.” The Sinai Peninsula was captured by Israel in the 1967 Six Day W ar, and returned to Egypt under the term s of Hie Camp David Accords. Kahane said there a re no m oderate Jew s, only “Jew ish fools” who are “guilt-ridden and cowardly.” Kahane said Israel caters to the Arab population. “We’re a psychotic people,” he said. “We need a national couch.” He also said Israeli women tend to be liberals who do not produce babies a t a sufficient ra te to compete with the expanding A rab population. “Arabs multiply a t a higher ra le (than Israelis), and we pay them for each baby,” he said. Danny Ben-Gigi, an Israeli exchange student visiting ASU from Haifa U niversity, attem pted to question Kahane several tim es during his speech. Kahane told Ben-Gigi to w ait until the speech was over. When interrupted for the third tim e, Kahane, red. in the face, dashed from his podium and attem pted to grab BenGigi. Cries of support, both for Kahane and the student, arose from the crowd as security men led Ben-Gigi out of the room. Ben-Gigi later filed a report with the police saying Kahane cam e a t him in a threatening m anner and a K ahane su p p o rt« had struck Mm. Also during the scuffle Ed Schubert, an ASU graduate student and a state Preet reporter, shouted “L et him speak” in support of Ben-Gigi. Schubert was Mt on the back of the head by a Kahane supporter and asked to leave the lecture by a H yatt Regency employee. Sfchubert said he cam e to the rally as a mem ber of Peace Now, and not on assignm ent for the State Press. Peace Now is a movement in Israel wMch favors ipoderation, including territorial compromise with the Arabs and recognition of Palestinian rights, he said. When Malka Ben-Pechat, an ASU professor of modern and biblical Hebrew, voiced her objections to the removal of Schubert and Ben-Gigi, she too was forced from the room. Ben-Pechat said she did not come a s a representative of A$U, but as an interested Israeli citizen. “ I’m concerned with (Kahane’s) danger and I think he’s a very im portant elem ent to be concerned w ith,” Ben-Pechat said. “Every Israeli citizen has to be alarm ed by Mm and Ms growing popularity. “I think he has to be protested everywhere he goes. ” Hussein Mukaled, a Lebanese student at ASU, sat through the speech and cam e away with some definite opinions of Kahane. “ I wanted to listen to Mm and get a better idea of the controversy,” Mukaled said. “This confirms w hat I thought of Mm. “He is a fanatic, he has no m anners, he’s violent—you nam e it.” Kahane denied any prejudice against Arabs or m oderate Jews. “I don’t hate A rabs,” Kahane said. “I love Jew s, and th at’s not easy.” sassi. U M & | , ^ f rJ •’ 0 £ ‘K I,‘ ( w ould sooner fail than not M am ong the greatest. , —John K eats K press y- ■ o p ■ i n i o n IS A e d ito r ia l ■n» evowneii or aw As u srutsWT:.. . Ih * . Residents' interests are students’ hassle The indigenous population has risen with Justification against the ASU off-campus parking situation. The streets south of campus are indeed c lu tte m r with m asses of cars. This m akes for quite a mess. Not one-tenth as bad as Boston or New York, but pretty bad for the Valley. Tempe has tolerated these conditions reasonably well. That is, until now. Beginning either in February or March, only residents with deeds will be allowed to park an pertain streets around campus. One can understand Tempe’s interest in protecting its neighborhoods. Those who scram ble to 14th and 15th streets each day will be incensed. But this is an ASU problem and it should be solved on cam pus. Tempe is hardly a college town in the spirit of Berkeley, Madison or Ann Arbor. People actually drive to school here. Tempe is Tempe and ASU is ASU. F a r be it that ever the twain should meet. How then should the adm inistration approach the problem? There are a fixed num ber of on-campus parking spaces that are allocated by price. The observation can be m ade that, on average, the prices for parking decals are too high. Some of the core lots rarely approach being full. Those cars th at occupy these lots are more likely to be 1964 BMWs than 1976 Pintos. Someone could m ake toe rash insinuation that only a few well-financed students o n afford to purchase the exclusive U niversity parking decals. Of course, we won’t even imply that here, l i e fact rem ains, however, th at the currently poor parking situation at ASU will become acute alien Tempe begins requiring the decals to park on residential streets. The quality ofmBucation surely will suffer if students can’t even reasonably get to campus. Can students expect that em ergency m easures will be taken to rem edy this situation? Probably not. But perhaps something will be started that will resem ble an effort to find a long-term solution to the problem. Given the red-tape a t ASU, it likely will take even longer to fix this problem than it will for the City of Tempe to fix the railroad crossings between Mill and Farm er. ,)FRESHM4N TH E a) LON SU / p ) WORRIED e> «T U PIO » * a} R < l& jfc> U / tfrOu KSO»N6\t 1« $ e,} fm m * tn \f The S e n io r A $ « I « ( f ir s t A ) U M CD W SpO U S.. . (« ¿C O M P 7 E À IÙ *(§> a ') L O N E iy W O R R IE D ¿ ^ • s r u p io o i..- . Chasing dreams: D on't forget to have a Plan 2 “What an em barrassing exercise,” a girl behind me giggled as our professor scam pered barefoot about the room rapidly m uttering w hatever popped into her head. She was dem onstrating our next in-class assignm ent. The class was called “Stretch and Strength.” Form erly titled’ “Dance for A thletes,” the original purpose of the class was to improve burly ASU athletes’ flexibility, speed, and coordination. Women took an interest in the class, and now dominated this class of about 40. The particular exercise for that day in fall of 1964 was designed to teach spontaneity, with the verbal p art adding the challenge of using your mind while swinging limbs recklessly about. At tim es the class was, as my fem ale colleague pointed out, dow nright em barrassing. It’s not easy for young people of norm al awkwardness to express them selves through the perform ing a rts in mixed company. The athletes in the class, mostly football players, didn’t take the class too seriously. They enjoyed it, but it didn’t seem to carry qpite the sam e relevance as, say, pumping * This certainly seem ed the case with Fulcher. ^ Iro n or doing wind sprints. So the class was a As I saw No. 7 on the last Bob Hope good tim e to clown around for m ost of them. Christm as Special with all the other allWhen it cam e tim e for us to take turns A m ericans, repeating the honor for the practicing dance steps across the floor, they second tim e, I w as proud to have been in the spent m ore tim e laughing a t each other than sam e class him. trying to learn the routine. T h ai cam e this week’s story. Fulcher But one player was different. A tall, evidently hadn’t been such a winner in the m uscular man, he worked a t the steps as classroom and got the boot from the dem onstrated by- the teacher, not overly U niversity for low grades, along with nose worried about w hat everyone elsfe thought. guard Dan Saleaum ua. It was only later th at this difference in It may seem ironic that the athlete least in need of improvement worked the hardest at these funny little dance steps, taught by a lady built like a bean sprout attitude and effort m ade sense. I eventually found out th at the player was David Fulcher, the all-Am erican safety on the football team . It m ay seem ironic th at the athlete least in need of improvement worked the hardest at these funny little dance steps, taught by a lady built like a bean sprout. But then, the willingness to learn and test yourself, w hatever the task, is the m ark of m ost great achievers. Coaches, athletes and teachers have expressions like “To be a winner on the field you have to be a winner off the field. ” STATE PRESS STEVE WATERSTRAT Editor TOM BLODGETT Managing Editor City Editor W. TIM AHL AaaL City Editor MICHAEL KONZ Now* Editor PATRICK J. KUCERA Opinion Editor MttHAEL ADAMSON Aaat Managing Editor LINDA COULSON Photo Editor KEVIN J. LARKIN We’ve all heard of athletes being used by the system , then thrown away. F or every case like that, th ere’s a sim ple case of lack of academ ic discipline on the p a rt of the player. Anyone can blow off classes, collect failing grades and be kicked out of school. Throw in the burden o f playing big-tim e collegiate athletics, and it isn’t too hard to catch the attention of the folks who keep, track of our academ ic standing. Considering the sm all percentage of college football players who actually ever m ake a living a t th at trade, it’s a w ise move for them to take full advantage of their 8porti Editor DEAN OBENAUER AaaL 8pons Editor BOB HOLER Copy Chiaf JACQUIE CIROU Arti Editor CtNOY PEARLMAN AaaL Art» Editor KHALI CRAWFORD Editorial Aaaiatant ROBBIE MATLOFF REPORTERS: Vicki# Chachara, John Conway. Ed 8chobart. RoMa Kakonga, Kart Stand. Day. Rook, T ta n u WHMotit Andrea Han. Rob KeHon. T h fr Seed. Bob MMoon. Lauren MMobo PHOTOGRAPH6R8: Ron Kucook Jr- Rtefc Wltay. Thorooo Keegan. Todd Green tenure in higher education. But when you’re chasing a dream , like making it to the NFL, it’s easy to push aside less crucial things like preparation for a backup career. We’re taught by lead en , movies and slogans to go all out for w hat is im portant to us, so it’s not surprising th at athletes, like the rest of us, don’t alw ays set up an adequate P lan 2. Indeied it can be a sad story. But in Fulcher’s case, I’m not too Worried. Without too much trouble he can get back into good standing with the U niversity and finish his degree while helping the Sun Devils beat the heck out of the U of A next year. A fter that, playing in the pro ranks is a very likely p art of bis future. Fulcher doesn’t even have to come back to ASU and (day out Ms last year of eligibility in a maroon jersey. Those are only Fulcher’s on-the-field possibilities. If football doesn’t work out as profession far him, I’m still not w orried about him. R eporters who have interview ed him know Fulcher as an intelligent person. He ju st isn’t toe kind of guy who doesn’t m ake it out there. But unfortunately we aren’t all cut from the sam e mold as D avid Fulcher. Not all of us have as many options to fall back on. For the other dozens of football players who aren’t all-A m ericans, planning an alternate career isn’t planning for failure, it’s showing good sense. Coach John Cooper had a m eeting with the players on Tuesday to stress the im portance of academ ics and the help available. I hope the coach was successful. A few dozen futures are on the libe. SPORTS REPORTERS: Brad Hatvorean. Ctata McKay. Jon Wlta,. Andrew OeLorenzo COPY EOrrOR^JudtaORMaid, Karry Fahr, Carolyn Nataon STAFF ARTISTS: Jen OeaWiw, CNp Sheean The Stata Praaa lapuMtahod MondaySwousb Friday during the academic year. aaeapl hoddaya and aaaai parioda. at Madhawa Canter, Room IS Arizona Sttta UtavaraKy, Tamper AZ SSH7. Mowotoooi: S»0 T tti- Advackatnfl A Ptoducdon: »00-7872. ■ . ' i t The Stata Pri l l tadtaoidy naaapapar aaotaataaly pnhkaharl ter and nlroutatad on Sw ASU compuo. The now# and vtewo pubdahed In Site newapapot Of# not nooaooorty taooooTbtaASUodwtatabollon.taouby. otaSom uOonl h.d y. Thursday, January S3,1986 New budget law may lower college enrollments By DAVE ROOK State P rêts A new federal balanced budget law m ay cost ASÜ nearly SO percent of its student population over the next five years, a university official said. Paid B arberini, ASU’s financial aid director, said: “ According to the GrammRudman legislation, within the next five years, one-third to one-half of the students who a re here won’t be. “It’s a Cadillac without wheels. The G ranun-R udm an legislation h as the greatest of intentions about doing something th at is needed, but it won’t w ork.” According to the Gramm-Rudman bill, introduced by Senate»« Phil Gram m , RTexas, and W arren B.^Rudman, R-N.H., $11.7 Ullion will be trim m ed from federal spending for the 1986 fiscal y ear. The law, which becomes effective on M ardi 1, will cut a variety of government appropriations in an attem pt to wipe out the deficit by 1991. Thé am endm ent also m akes significant cuts in education appropriations for the 1986 fiscal year. » “It’s probably the m ost complex political and economical piece of legislation I’ve ever seen,” said B arterin i. “ The best estim ate from what we can understand for next year will be about a $260 million reduction overall (in education).” we know about Gramm-Rudman, the 1986-87 fiscal years’ cuts would be in the area of 30 percent.” B arberini said the cuts for 1986 are significantly sm aller than thqge for 1987 because of the upcoming election year. In addition, the sm aller cuts will serve as According to the bill, the governm ent will .charge an additional .5 percent to every a “tria l balloon” for public reaction. student who receives a G uaranteed Student “Political reaction will be forthcoming Loan after M arch 1. from state groups, and I think Congress will react to public sentim ent,” B arberini said. “In addition, it’s likely th at Pell G rants will be reduced and undergraduates will be Congressman Mike Synar, D-Okla., has the only eligible applicants,” B arberini1" already filed suit in a d istrict court against said. if * i . the Granun-Rudm an law. Synar argues th at the autom atic budget According to a linear-reduction plan, only cutting provisions of die legislation, which those students who qualify for a maximum can only be enacted if Congress delegates its grant would have th eir P ell G rants fully legislative authority to the president, is funded next year. unconstitutional. O ther students will face significant According to legal processes outlined in re d u c tio n s^ the Mil, the three-panel district court in Washington is expected to rule very quickly. “When you combine these cuts with rising In addition, an im m ediate appeal m ay go tuition costs, it will only become more directly to the U.S. Supreme Court for a difficult for students to afford an decision before March 1. education,” B arberini said. “U nder what Paid Barberini Computerized exchange lets students bypass bookstores By KARI BLAND State P rete v A new ASU book exchange is allowing students to buy or sell used books without w aiting in long lines or being told the books are “too used” to be resold. Bill Brown, student director of the exchange, said students can look up titles on a com puter printout, which lists books being sold by students. He said the list, which provides the book’s price and the seller’s phone num ber, will be posted outside the MU Inform ation Desk. H ie books a re listed by college, class and book title. To have a book listed in the printout, students should either call 965-1248 or go to the Associated Students of ASU offices on the second floor of the MU. There is no charge for the service. B U N D LE’S 730 S. MILL Corner M ill A U niversity Ave. $2.97 ¡ $1.99 $1,89 $ .94 H u g c n O a n Natural lea Cream. Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice. Wines, ovar 40 Importad Bears. 997-9079 ‘There are people willing to buy the books. Our biggest need is to get books into the computer for them to buy.’ — George Pisaruk money, but the student selling the book also will be able to provide another student with inform ation about the class. George Pisaruk, student assistant director of the exchange, said the new program also will help students when a book is not available in the cam pus bookstore. Brown said that although the exchange is providing “an option to the bookstore,” the bookstore is very supportive of their endeavor. He said the computerized system is best for a university of this size because it elim inates inventory and only students exchange money. Pisaruk said the response to the book exchange has been good, but there are m ore buyers than sellers. “There a re people willing to buy the books," he said. “Our biggest need is to get books into the computer for them to buy.” The exchange information is stored on an IBM PC in the ASASU Senate office. The com puter program was w ritten by a friend of Brown’s a t Columbia University. SUN DEVIL HAIRCUTTERS LIQUORS a MKT. >AÑORECHAMPAGNES tsi m TROPICOWINECOOLERS i MEISTERBRADBEER h * [. PLAYBOYUsed Magazines Campus Affairs Vice President Amy Young, who initiated the project, said the process was designed entirely “to save the students money. ” Brown said a student exchange not only saves students "Stylists who care enough to listen" R e g u la r P r i c e C. t) r . /•\0 * Shampoo \ $¿00 Conditioning \ Precision Cut ? ^ iBlow Dry / i I M en $13 W om en $15 H rs M o n . - F r i 9 -6 S a t. 9 -5 130 E. U n i v e r s it y Dr. "In The A rc h e s ' L im ite d Otter. Call N ow ! 96 6 -5 4 6 2 ^ i e ® T 4 Th u rsday, Jan. 23 BUMPER BLUES? TURNTHEM m O YESTERDAY’S N E W S ... SHARE THE RIDE TO ASU The ASASU Tenants/ Com m uter Students Association in cooperation with the Phoenix Transit System .. offers a free rideshare program. Come by our o ffice to d a y and fill o u t a n / application, w e're located in th e Memorial Union in Room 210-A. «S ■" w Call 965-6246 Morning — Non-Teohnioal Manufacturing! Haalth Sarvloea V estal Labs Frito Lay Kraft, Me. Conoco Phoenix B aptist Hospital & M edical Center ^American Pharmaseal Co. A Div. of Amer. Hosp. Supply Aftarnoon —Mor hendlaing, Distribution, tllltlaa, Tro naportatlon Publio Borvleo Am erica W est A irlines Arm strong W orld Industries. Inc. Broadway Dept. Stores Broadway Southwest Bullocks Dept. Stores A tlantic Richfield Co. M artin M arrieta May D & F Dow Chemical VjUSA fir s t Investors %orp. H.E.B. Foods/Di V estal Labs Mountain Beil Arizona Public Service Conoco AT&T (W estern Electric Products - Phoenix W orks) J.W. Robinson s K M art Corp. Kraft, Inc. Sav-on Oruga. Inc. Macy*a of Calf. Pacific Gas & Electric Co Southwestern Telecommunications. Inc. Also: “Dress For Success” Fsshion Show, 1 p .m . M U P im a R o o m Courtesy of Peppercorn, Pom eroy’s & Plaza Three " T r a n s la t in g Y o u r E d u c a t io n s ! E x p e r ie n c e I n t o A J o b ” M U R m . 2 1 3 S a n t a C r u z , 2 - 3 p .m . Representatives will be participating in informal round table discussions in the Arizona Room of the MU. M em bers of Baseline R otary club will be available each day representing various employment areas. Tom orrow , Frid ay, Jan. 24 Morning' —Cultural Entertainment Organiacatlona, A rta Aftarnoon — Government Agenoiee, Military Also: “How To Plan For The Future," 1 2:30 p.m, MU Room 211 Yuma “Discrimination ip The Job Market," 1 2:30 p.m. MU Room 213 Santa Cruz Sponsored by: Career Services, A S A S U Graduate Student Association, M inority A ffairs Board, Special Events, W om en's Services For More Information Call 965-2350 jffp Thwsda^Janu«y22^22L 'Smart Styling with PHD" W IT H T H IS A D O R A S U OQ n Have you Heard? HI »a c l I 9 ] n Q >is having a "super" ID. III ^5=^3 Perm . . . . *30°° & U p C u t s . . . . . . . . .. *9°° Student Appointment Special (After 4th cut get 5th cut FREE) Eyelash & Brow T in tin g . . . . *8** ^ a tt B Private Booths Call Today 966-6111 Please C a ll for Appointm ent Across (ramtha Corinrstone 933 E. U N IV E R S IT Y Pitchers ......$ 2 .5 0 Longnecks . . . . .909 Mugs . . . . . . . . . . 6 0 9 __ x 5-pc. Brass & G lass Dinette W P jH f FREE PRIZE DRAWINGS GIVE AWAY (Hat Shirts, Mirror) PLU S ... Look at the deals the Double C Ranch has every w eek -BCD SALS- r, (NO COVER) rO ip )■( Coors Specials Î1 4 Ç 9 S K ' .H Sopor Bowl Sudayl lil IS ^ (Rssom blv Required) Mon.-Sat 9:30-9 Sunday 11-4 0 m 4-Draujer Tuiin Set Chest full Set *29.95 Queen Set Tempo Towns Plaza *69 *79 *119 H ap p y H our — Every day 4-7 p.m. Mon. — Pitchers just $1.50 Tues. & Thurs. — Ladies Night well drinks 50$ for the ladies Wed. — Well drinks 50$ witlryour business card Fri. & Sat. — Live music from Concorde 2 0 7 7 E. U n iv e r s ity T e m p e • 9 6 6 -6 2 5 2 (S.E. Comer Rural 6 University) University So Let's Party ■ ★ TODAY ★ Public Relations 1420 E. APACHE BLVD. • 968-0375 O N L Y $ 4 .4 9 c* For any 12" m edium 1-item pizza. C O K ES ONLY 259 1st meeting (Limit 3 per pizza) 6 p.m. MU Gila Rm. 214 / o° Additional items Only 755. Just ask for the . Special. Good 11:00am-12:00mld. on Sunday ifiW only for a limited time. No coupon necessary —no other offer accepted with this special. Price subject to tax. HOURS: 11:00sm-1:30am Sun.-Thurs. 11:00am-2:30am Fri. & Sat. 1 •1985 Domino’s Pizza, Inc. Lim ited delivery area. V V - Be There! Public R elations S tu d en t S ociety lof A m erica -----■ The Pizza People of ASU 968-5555 SUPER BQWL SUNDAY at DOHM O’S PIZZA DELIVERS' 9 0 3 S . R ural GREAT FOR LUNCH $1.00 OFF any 12" medium 2 or more item pizza ordered tram I 11:00am - 3:00pm only. I One coupon per pizza. Expires: 2/14/86 ■ $1.25 OFF a 16" extra large Sun Devil Special or 3 or more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. Expiras: 2/14/66' i $ 1 .2 5 Fast, Free D d M ty ” Feet, Free Delivery” 968-5555 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. i 003 S. Rural SP11-3 SP11-1 r p C C ^ ™™ H o t D ogs C h ili 3 Free Cokes with any 16” 3 extra large 2 or more item | COKES*™ One coupon per pizza. y Expires: 2/14/86 ty fy / 2 fo r 1 S H O T S _> $2.95 P I T C H E R S Fast, Free D elivery- 968-5555 903 S. Rural $140 O FF any size pizza ordered from 5:00pm — 8:00pm only. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 2/14/86 =•* V -T- ? J '• j ’ fV Fast, Free D elivery" 968-5555 , 903 S. Rural SP11-2 125 E. 5th St • 966-4438 | DINNER SPECIAL ¿Pn-4 Thursday, January Mi. 1986 Page 7 2 d ean s to so lv e tran sitio n a l problem s By LINDA COULSON * State Press The ASU College of Education is recovering from a negative reputation, and professors a re anxiously aw aiting the arriv al of a new dean in Jidy, the college’s acting dean said. - > “We have a healthy college, and m orale is on the rise,” said Raymond Kulhavy, who tem porarily took over the college in July until a perm dnant dean could be appointed. Gladys Styles Johnson, an education v professor a t R utgers University, was named to the position in November otter a nine. month nationwide search. She will Join the ASU faculty on July i. Until b e n , Kulhavy said he will be working closely with Johnson to build new program s and continue positive growth in the college. “People a re looking forw ard to the future and Johnson’s arriv al,” he said. Kulhavy agreed to replace form er dean Robert Stout, who resign«! in February, for one year. Kulhavy, the form er chairm an of ASU’s educational psychology departm ent, said he Raymond w. Kulhavy is still baffled by the education college’s negative reputation. I’m m ystified as to why we have that “Sure we have problem s like everybody reputation." T else, but I don’t feel any need for this In a phone interview from Nqw Jersey, pessim ism ,” he said. “ ASU is the sixth . Johnson agreed with Kulhavy and said, largest education college in the United “ASU’s College of Education is a t a point of States and the largest this side of the transition, but it has a group of top-notch faculty and program s th at are on p ar with M ississippi, i the re st of the nation.” “The claim- that ra i ¿btiege- is falling She said there w ill be a “ total ap ar^is ju st not true —I t never w as true. reorganisation” of the college when she „ arrives but declined to nam e specific changes. “It’s a little prem ature an d fragile to discuss the changes I plan to m ake before I have addressed the faculty about them ,” Joijnfeon said. “I want to work w ith the faculty, and I can’t do that until Fm there. ” Kulhavy said he is looking forw ard to Johnson's arriv al and hopes to m ake the tr a n s itio n s m o o th e r th ro u g h communication. Johnson’s frequent trips to ASU and constant phone conversations are a m ajor p art of the transition process, Kulhavy said. Kulhavy said he and Johnson will be working together to form ulate next sem ester’s budget and develop the posti baccalaureate train in g program , the college's latest project. The post-baccalpureate training progrant: allows people who have a bachelor’s degree in any area to spend a year taking basic education courses. A fter Johnson takes over as dean, Kulhavy said be plans to tfk e his wife and three daughters to Italy ^ ' :. “ I ju st found out today tin t I’m a finalist for a Fullbright scholarship ; the U niversity of Rome in Italy,” he said. The F u llb rig h t sch o larsh ip is a governm ent scholarship given for research. “ I’d lite to see .«bat-students a re like in other places,” Kulhavy Said. “Even if I don’t get the scholarship. we’ll probably go anyway. Dote gives honorary degree to la co cca 1* dsepite controversy By the College Press Service WASHINGTON, D.C. — Somewhat m otivated. by the specter of Richard Nixon, Duxe University says it will grant C hrysler ch airm an and business superstar Lee lacocca an honorary degree after^all. Officials say there was never a question about giving lacocca a degree, despite a nationally syndicated column th at claim ed they were going to refuse to grant him one. The school’s A cadem ic Council recently approved giving a degree to lacocca, with “only a few negative votes.” In November, nationally syndicated columnist Robert Novak claim ed some m em bers of Duke’s Academic Council w anted to prevent lacocca from getting a d e g re e w hen h e d e liv e rs th e commencement address next spring. N o v ak lik e n e d .th e a lle g e d dissatisfaction with lacocca to Duke’s 1963 decision not to te s t the Richard N ixonPre^dentialL ibrary. Nixon hanself dropped Duke from his lilt of locales w h& Duke w anted to insure public access to the Nixon records and to scale down-thesize of the museum attached to the library. The library is now being built in San Clemente, Calif., with help from a foundation associated : with Chapman College. I / — Ivory Towers PLACE: .— -— I MUST BE NUTS/ MERE>i I AM TRANSFERIN& TO A COLLEGE 1500 MILES AUWV FROM HOME/ IVORY TOWERS DORM., M IP STATE UNIVERSITY SUBJECT: NO PREN D S, NO FAMILY. A LO N E AND DOOMED MICHAEL EPWARPS, INCOMING FRESHMAN = STATUS: A by Michael Ritter ' SEVERE ANXIETY ATTACK! IQN/gHAN FAST, FREE FREE LITER OF SOFT DRINK WITH ANY PIZZA PURCHASE. COKE, (HETCOKE, SPRITE, DR. PEPPER. 9 3 3 E . 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A X 3 6 2 3 1 . ■ On-Campus Interviews ■ ■ February 5 , 1986 ■ SKI PACKAGES FROM $149°° MAZATLAN TRIPS FROM $ 19 9 00 S e e y o u r P la c e m e n t O ffic e to d a y A n Equal Opportunity Employer US Citnenehip Required . travelmore T h e C o rn e rs to n e Rural Sf U niversity 967-7545 HAVE DONNA STAY IN YOUR ROOM FO ‘andforan additional .50$ our model w ill sign a very personal message to anyone (even you!) and for any occasion (birthday^graduation, etc.) you specify — great for gifts! This high quality 16x20" black and white poster is suitable for framing and will be delivered right to ybur mailbox. Please specify poster #69 and send your name and address along with $3.00 + .50$ P&H (+.50$ for personal message) AZ residents add 6.5% sales tax—check or money order to: BIG LOUIE PRODUCTIONS Suite 123-260- 3370 N. Hayden Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85251 WELCOME BACK TAN NOW ASK US HOW (Bring in this ad.) ?aci(*fyes ( f J t p re sen ts Club Med Tropical T h u rsd a y, J a n u a ry 1986 This Thursday p u t on yourTbopical prints, grab your shades and headoverto Surprizes jbr The CLUBMED 1topical Thursday! Be one o f the first500 thru the doors a t 8KH) p m a n d g et leid and the first 100 wiU also receive a pair o f Pacific Eyes St T's ''Wayfarer'' style sunglasses. This w eek play our tropical gam es and ypurcould have a chance to w in Malibu Tee Shirts, Malibu Signs, Beach Wardrobes and European Style Sunglasses from PacificEyes St T's "Phoeruxs sunglass leader!'Hus yo u could enter a drawing for a windsurfer to b e drawn a t every four w eeks! This w eek win a trip for tw o to CLUB MED in Quaymas, Mexico. All night'Malibu Rum drinks are $1 and all Tropical drinks are ju s t $1.75. So this Thursday everyone g o tropical aft th e CLUB MED Tropical Thursday! B e there. Aloha!!! 9 6 6 -2 1 5 0 55 E. B ro ad w a y (Com er o f B ro ad w a y & M ill) Mon-fit 8 am-io pm Sat 8 am-€ pm Sun 12 noon-5 pm 919 E. A P A G H E , ; ; C t: T E M P E , s E 5 u P aa* 9 JhuRda£jamjary23t^986> Ac New, expanded bus routes ease to ASU from South Phoenix. By ANDREA HAN K eating said the new Route One will elim inate residents State Press A new Phoenix T ransit grid system will m ake it easier tar from “backtracking’’ to downtown Phoenix and taking the ASU students commuting by bus, an agency represenative Route 22 bus back to Tempe. Route 44 will run every half hour, traveling south on 44th said. .¿N . Helen K eating, a public relations representative, said thé Street, east an Broadway Road, north on Mill mid east on Phoenix T ransit System has simpHiled the bus numbering Fifth to College. Route 44 will take students who a re currently using Route a s te rn , changed existing routes and added new routes. Bob Hancock, Associated Students at ASU com m uter 22 to Tempe and Mesa, she said. The new Scottsdale Connection will run every hour on student coordinator, -said about 15 percent of the ASU Scottsdale Road south to ASU, population th at commutes to tbe U niversity uses the Phoenix The bqs system will charge 75 cents and run Monday bus system . through Saturday from 6 a.m . to7 p.m. K eating said Phoenix is restructuring the num ber system K eating said some com m uters have accepted tbe changes because routes will be designed on a new grid system . Bus routes will be num bered according to the streets they and think the new route system is easier, but added that m any people a re confused. run on, she said. “ We sim plified the num ber and route system to m ake it F o r exam ple, the bus th at runs on Seventh S treet will be easier to get around the Valley, especially (o the other called "Seven. * ~ cities,’'’she said. j Buses nam ing east-w est on streets like Camelback Road will be num bered according to the block. Cam elback is on the “ It is ju st going to take aw hile for people to know and get used to the system . ” 5000block north and will be num bered 50, she said. In order to handle all questions about die changes, the Among tbe changes, Phoenix canceled Route 22, which ran Phoenix T ransit system has advertised the, changes on the from 67th Avenue and Camelback Road to ASU, because of ^ radtto and printed 200,000 bus route booklets, she said. tbe new Scottsdale bus system , K eating said. The booklets contain route and Inis inform ation to all Route 22 has-been renum bered Route 50 and will run along Camelback Road to Arcwfia Road. The route will no longer routes in Phoenix, Tempe and Mesa, K eating said. Hancock said the booklets and other route tim etables are extend to ASU, she said. available a t the ASASU Tennants Commuter Association, Students will now have tbe option between taro Phoenix which is located in the MU room 210A. routes and a Scottsdale route, Keating s a id ,^ The com m uter association has been working closely with Route One will run every half-hour from Phoenix to ASU the Phoenix T ransit System and Scottsdale Connection to and will ru n east on W ashington Street, south on Mill Avenue, inform students about the changes, Hancock said. and east to Fifth S treet and College Avenue. Phoenix T ransit had a booth on Cady Mall on Tuesday and “Route One will give residents in south Phoenix easier access to ASU and give them m ore direct service1,” she said. W ednesday answering questions and handing out route The current Phoenix system does not have a route running schedules, he said. C ollaga, a free public service provided by the S ta te P ress to announce m eetings of legitim ate campus organizations and clubs, is published every Tuesday and Thursday. To be included, please obtain p form at the State P ress redeption desk in the basement of Matthews Center. For Tuesday’s paper the insert must be filed by 10 a.m . Monday and for Thursday's paper the deadline is 10 a.m . W ednesday. TODAY . Child Share will hold a discussion, support and networking group for parenting students at 11:30 a.m. In the Student Life. Conference Room (tower Bugs Bunny easy favorite of collegians By the National On-Campus Report -It is tough to reach the C b lle g ia te m a r k e t, advertisers say, because college students don’t watch television. H ie problem , however, m ay be in the tim ing of the ads, according to a study by a Radford U n iv e r s ity . b u sin ess* , professor. A lbert C. Smith surveyed the television viewing habits of students a t Radford, Em ory and Heny Colleges, New R iv er C om m unity C o lleg e an d V irg in ia Interm ont, and found that 82 percent w atch Saturday m orning cartoons. More than a third w atch a t least every other Saturday. “Prim e tim e hours a r e ■ sp en t d atin g , a t club m eetings, intram urals or sporting events . . . (but) Saturday is m ore relaxed, and cartoons’serve a s an escape from tbe reality of the past school week.” The “classics,” such as Bugs Bunny, a re heavily favored by students over the new er “high-tech” cartoons, according to Smith. Stanford— n Vermont— aa BM Campbell Indian School F em inists United for A ction and the s. _ ! sS • ----- 5 St. — University - Broadway Phoenix Tran sit wilt begin operation o f R o u te 44 on M onday. T h e route w ill sendee 44th Street and provide shuttles to A S U . T h e circled num bers indicate Intersect!ng routes. J “The booth was a trem endous help,” Hancock said. “We figured we reached about 500 people each day.” MONDAY The Biofeedback S ociety o f Arizona Woman’s Studies Student Association will sponsor "Ladies Against Women,” a street theater group, which will appear on Cady Mall at noon. Students A gainst Apartheid will hold a general meeting in the MU Apache Room at 7 p.m. will have its annual meeting from 8:30 am . to 5 p.m. in the Phillips Auditorium of Phoenix St. Luke’s Hospital, 525 N. 18th. St. The meeting will cover “Updating Your Biofeedback Skills.” FRIDAY hold a worship service at 10:15 am . at 1430 S. McAllister Ave. Hillel Jew ish Student C enter will sponsor the free United Jewish Appeal Campaign Brunch at 11 am . at the center, 1012 S. Mill Ave. Those attending will be dpked to make a pledge. Hide! Jew ish Student Center will hold Shabbat services followed by the showing of “Yentl,” "Zelfg and the Astronauts” and “American Comedies of Religious Quest.” The services will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the Hillel Center, 1012 S. Mill Ave. N Thomas SATURDAY level of the MU). t wmm\Camelback for W orld P eace will sponsor a lecture by Mazda, an ASU student from Iran, who will speak on “Building Peace-4^ the Middle East.” The lecture begins at noon in the MU Santa Cruz Room. C oalition SUNDAY ASU A m erican F ed eration o f Teachers and University Employees Good Shephard Lutheran Church will Local #2050 will hold the first meeting of the spring semester at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Apache Room. All University faculty and staff are welcome. Arizona Outing Club will meet in the MU Pima Room at 7:30 p.m. and show the climbing / skiing fl(m “Fall Line.” PRANKSTER’S 1024 E A S T B R O A D W A Y -orders to go— 967-8875 ,, B E S T B O O D & F E V E R Ä G E IN T E M P E ! WEDNESDAY CHICKEN WINGS 12* EACH A L L DAY & * A L L NIGHT ' H O T , BBQ, MIXED OR PLAIN DIP EM YOURSELF SUPERBOWLSUNDAY p iz z a s B£»y A La rg e G e t A La rg e FREE B u y A S m all G e t A S m a ll FREE SO our unbelievable 2-for-1 Pizzas on Sunday FRB LUNCH SUN DAY Every S u n d a y 2 fo r 1 T W O G I A N T B IG S C R E E N T V ’S 4 -orders to go— From 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Alt Day, A ll Night , HAPPY HO UR 10 p.m.-1 a.m. BUY ONE GET THE NEXT ONE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE EVERY DAY 11-4 GOOD THROUGH JAN! 31,1986. P r a n k s te r ’s G a r & B r ill, 1024 E. Broadway * 967-8875 7 p o lic e A man who allegedly exposed him self to a woman in Lot 1 m-wp-ri capture Tuesday evening after leading U niversity police in a high-speed chase through Tempe, police said. _ A woman who refused to be identified told an ASU officer she saw a man wearing a T-shirt and nothing else standing by a gold truck in Lot 1, located south of Tempe Center. The officer went to the lot and saw a m an who fit the woman’s description sitting in a gold truck. noticed the policeman, he drove from the area and headed west on 13th S treet a t high speed. ■Hie efllee r ta w ed on M e ¡p fe and sirens and pursued the truck, which stopped in the Tempe Center parking lot. Police said the officer walked up to the driver’s side of the c a r. a t which point the m an drove rapidly out of the area. The policeman pursued the m an, who sped through two stop signs and one red light before heading into a suburban area. The m an allegedly drove onto the lawn of a residence on Farm er Avenue and crashed into an orange tree. When the officer arrived a t the residence, the m an had disappeared and left die keys in die ignition. The officer knocked on die door of the house. The woman who answ ered said she was unaw are of the incident The officer said she seem ed unconcerned. Police said they are investigating the incident The m an fa c g c h a rg e s of felony fleeing, and_pow iM ydiargM j>^ crim inal dam age. .A. In other activity, U niversity police reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period ending a t 6:30 a.m . W ednesday: •A wom an's class ring valued a t $225 and a m an’s class rin g valued a t 1250 w ere stolen from a display table in front of die ASU Bookstore Tuesday afternoon, police | said. ^ : % An employee of die A rt C arved Company, who m akes th e rin g s , told police she did not notice anything unusual before discovering the loss. •A VCR valued a t 9560 was stolen from the lecture hall in the F arm er Education Building between Monday, Dec. 16, and Tuesday, police said. An employee told police die room w as secured during the tim e period. There were no signs of forced entry. — THERESA WILliEFORD J o b p r o s p e c t s c o n s id e r e d ‘flat* fo r c o lle g e g r a d s . . . . . By the College Press Service EVANSTON, III. — Spring grads' job prospects m ay not be quite as positive as previous reports predicted, the latest testing of A m alean businesses’ hiring plans indicates. The p rev io u s re p o rts, m oreover, suggested only slightly better job prospects than students had last year, when the job m arket was a t a nadir. “I expect it to h e flat, m aybe phis or minus 1 percent compared to last year,” said Victor Lindquist, supervisor of N orthwestern U niversity’s Endicott Report, the m ost recent of the three m ajor surveys on job prospects for graduating seniors. And previously “ hot” engineering, com puter and chem istry grads are going to have a much harder tim e finding jobs than counterparts of the last few years. “Students are going to have to com m it to a longer job. search and be satisfied with fewer choices.” Lindquist said. In late November, the College Placem ent Council (CPC) projected firm s will m ake 2 percent m ore job offers than they did last spring, while in December, Michigan State’s national survey of business hiring plans predicted a 1.4 percent rise in job offers for ’86 grads. The three surveys asked companies throughout the country how many first-tim e job seekers they plan to hire from die next graduating class. Lindquist said his report was less pnHmigtic because it polled firm s three months after the CPC did and because it does hot sam ple governm ent agencies’ plans like the CPC does. “Our report is pretty close to (John) HBHefWflN mm emmous RETO RT -mmtestH/m I HA'S HAPA w o m e shock. Mpremo? HAPMWep. And liberal arts grads have b etter job b y B e rk c B re a th e d BLOCK# C O U N T Y OPUS'TMK10 U S' HM 'moeeN jocrep tm o fW K ' WHATPO YOU f& Œ M K K? . / T01Ü. 7HX US about Your A cu& nm / . . Shingleton’s a t Michigan (S tate),” he said. , “All three surveys sam ple different populations,” said Rhea Nagle of (he CPC. For only the third tim e in 20 years, Lindquist’s “population” had a declining interest in hiring engineering m ajors. There Will be 6 percent few er job offer» for th a n this year, die report said. The Endicott Report also predicts a 9percent decrease in offers to chem istry m ajors. The other reports anticipated a “slight” increase. The N orthwestern survey does agree th at com puter m ajors will suffer a 5-percent decrease in employment opportunities. Not all the news is gloomy, however. ^ There is, Lindquist found, a continuing employer interest in busness and m arketing mb mm. V -- — tk n a n n rl prospects i.t.1 this. year, the Endicott DReport found.. | ¡1 >f Firm s planned to m ake 12 percent mane job offers to liberal arts grads than they did last you:, M ndquistsaid. Companies think liberal aria m ajors are “ m ore able to deal with disparate thoughts and ideas. Their thinking is m ore holistic,” Lindquist said. “We need people who can translate com puters into usable term s,” said Steve B arnett, author of “Playing H ardball with Soft Skills,” a soon-to-be-released book about how liberal a rts m ajors can break into ^the job m arket. Lindquist said American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) recruits liberal a rts m ajors as m anagers because they perform better thani I From the creator of 'Love Connection' SO MANY STUDENTS CHEAT — often by paying proxies to.take their exam s — th at in large classes, an O klahom irState U niversity professor is using a video cam era during his tests. A fter the exam , students file by the lens, state their nam es and drop off their papers. Although no cheaters have been caught, the professor says the cam era provides a “high Muff factor.” Students a re com plaining th a t the cam era invades their privacy, m akes them anxious and even slows down the test. Serious Sidew alk Sale! ' We’re phasing out Winter to make room for Spring! Serious savings on the following examples plus much, much more! Today thru Saturday! SALE 20%-30% SAVE S25% SAVINGS ShetlaiKl wool, lambewool, cotton and cashm ere aweatar*. i cotton rA madras sport shirts. SAVE 20%-30% 28% SAVINGS Winter stocks In wool tlsnnsl, brushed cotton drill doth A corduroy. Leather, wool A cotton shell outerwear ledeste. Í 706 South Forest • 967-8747 • Tempo On# block north of University Monday thru Saturday • 10-6 Thursdays until 8:30 M astercard • Visa • American Exproas Similar discounts on fine cotton dress shirts, all­ silk neckwear, seasonal suits & sport coats. 4m I Page 11 Thundey, Januwy 93.19B6 transplanted in th e new nursery, “sa n e will probably find their way to the west side (of cam pus) and some will be used fra* replacing dead plants around cam pus,” W arner said. “Curtis Schultz is in charge of operation and will care for die plants while we find places for them. ” A team of five students has been tem porarily hired to survey the cam pus grounds, and m ap and m easure areas th at need landscaping work, he said. ‘ “This is p a rt of a recent program that utilizes students with m ajors like architecture, business or graphic a rts, or other m ajors that relate to the work that needs to be done around here,” he said. -The money to support the student w orkers comes from a fund called salary savings, or money the U niversity saves on wages when a long-time ASU employee leaves and a new employee comes in on starting salary. By LAUREN MILLETTE StateP ress A donation-from the Ppradise Valley W ater Company will bring new life to cam pus, ASU’s acting supervisor of grounds and m aintenance said. Keith W arner said, “Around the first of die year we w ere given a donation of 10,000potted trees, shrubs and flowers.” The plant life comes from a companyowned Scottsdale nursery which is located off of M iller Road. Everything from eucalyptus, pine, palm and palo verde trees to spring flowers and desert cacti will be transported to a six-acre lot on die northeast end of cam pus within the next 30 days, W arner said. The plants will be stored in a new nursery area near the anim al research center th at previously had been used for property salvage, be said. Although m ost of the plants will be College enrollment falling among blacks 2 ASU scholarships available from education alumni group By the CoOege Press Service ATLANTA, Ga. — There will be few er black students in college in 1990 than today if the present trends continue, says a new study by the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB). Since 1976, w hile a g re a te r percentage of college-aged students have been registering for classes, black students’ ra te of increase for college attendance has trailed the total enrollm ent growth by a larger and larg er m argin. And since 1962, growth “has been a t a standstill,” says Joseph M arts, author of the SREB study, “The Enrollm ent of Black Students in Higher Education: Can Declines Be Prevented? ” M arks found th at while m ore black students are going to college each year, th eir enrollm ent growth ra te actually declined by over 8 percent from 1976 to 1962. ByEDSCHUBERT State Press An alum ni organization is offering two scholarships of a t least $250 for qualified undergraduates in the College of Education. Pam Gomez, program chairwoman for the College of Education Alumni Association, said two scholarships of $250 or m ore will be available each sem ester. “We would like to let people know there are scholarships available to education students through the a lu m n i association,” she said. Lisa W right, the a lu m n i association’s secretary, said die scholarship money cranes from the interest of the College of Education Alumni Association’s tru st fund. W right said one scholarship will be aw arded strictly according to academ ic m erit and requires a minimum grade point average of 3.0. Another scholarship would take the student’s financial need into account and requires a minimum GPA of 2.5, W right said. Students interested in the scholarships should contact die Development Office a t the Alumni Center. u 9 )\> - =t - n m £i ■) A T f 'i t , / * - W f i At the sam e tim e, white students’ college-going rates increased, even though w hites’ high school enrollm ent and graduation rates suffered a greater decline thanblacks’. M oreover, the number of Mack students completing college increased only 9 percent from 1976 to 1982. But from the mid-1960s through 1970, Mack students’ graduation rates grew a whopping 60 percent, thanks to “successful integration” and “people realizing the door to education was open.” M ark b lam es black stu d e n ts’ inability to obtain financial aid and better job prospects for making “the college-going ra te plummet. ’’ Financial aid also played a m ajor role on black students’ dropout rates, the SREB found. It is also said a scarcity of m inority professors and adm inistrators m ade black students feel m ore isolated and less com fortable b it RECRUIT U S.A., INC. Sr 'tfcEWflMB Ç» t~ < # f c i '£ # * T v - i T .c ' f Z T .i L IWT0>;1t Uâ r< n X \ Z Jan.29* READING COURSES FEBR U AR Y 3 THROUGH M XR CH 6 , 1 9 8 6 A sp e cia l five-w eek co u rse , based on th e S a ck-Y o u rm an Speed R eading P ro g ra m , w ill be offe re d to gra d u a te s, undergradu ates, fa cu lty , s ta ff and th e com rnunity. T h is sp e cia l p ro g ram re q u ire s p ré - and p o st-re a d in g ra te te stin g , reading o f tim e d p a ssa g e s, and developm ent o f college levé! vocabulary. REGISTRATION: ’• Memorial Union, Rm214 iiiij j o lp p ;— ^Ifunable to attend, please c a ll our to ll free number. '-¡ 4 : i * RECRUIT U .S.A ., INC- 700 S. Flower St., Suite 3210 Los Angeles, CA 90017 0 1 -8 0 0 325-9759 01-800-423-3387 (In California) ta a staying in school. The SREB’s report said that it hoped to improve high school retention levels and to “give students a better college prep education while in high school. ” Secondary schools should also provide better college advice earlier in high school, M art recommends. The SREB’s concern, M art says, is “educating students well enough so they can handle college academ ics once they’ve been recruited. ” The SREB feared the school reform movement, begun in the mid-1970s, slowed the growth of Mack enrollm ent. M arks found higher adm issions standards did indeed keep some black students out of college. Id a paper published separately last week, Stanford professor H arry Levin found m any of the school reform m easures adopted in recent years ignore the needs of as many as 30 percent of the nation’s students. 1 { » t *** * # ' £ fr Man anale by t j *. Megan Don Dlckarman, acting assistant director of the building and grounds section of the Physical Plant, looks over som e of the shurbs donated to ASU by Pared!*# Volley Water Company. ’ 1. i January 27-January 3 1 .1 9 8 6 M onday-Friday — 10 a.m .-2:30 p.m. Payne HaH — Reading Education — Room B -1 12 ^ „ jj A. M o n d a y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 p.m .-9:00 p.m. B. Tuesday*. , 1 ; . . . . . . . . . . ; .............. 6:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. C. Thursday.......................... ......... . 6:30 p.m.-9:0Q p.m. FEE: $ 3 0 LOCATION: C L A S S E S H ELD IN F A R M E R BUILDING, R O O M 101 O N TH E A S U C A M P U S to o R E C R U IT U S A . , INC. FOR M O RE INFO R M ATIO N: CALL 9 6 5 - 7 7 6 6 P a g e in SBSLussz I 1000’s of EARRINGS Direct frofci New Y o rftC U y W * ^ ,' - -■ .sfe&LyatJ 50# to $1.00 -■* r/-«5^ * S u n g la s s e s $3.00 D o lla rs F a s h io n A c c e s s a r t e s % Now at two Tem po locations: 414 S. Mill (aboveSpaghetti Co.) 120 E. University (at The Arches) 820-1127 We just don’t self sny earrings. Our jewelry is carefully selected for quality and style. Comparison shop and you’ll see. the Educated Consumer is our best customer! SERVING ASU SINCE 1972 P ap a Jay’ s P izza ^ A ll S a in ts Q atholicJ'levtm an C enter] We Also Deliver Ice Cold Béer Serving A rizo n a S tate University since tpjtz F A S T FRËE DELIVERY 'Limited Delivery Area 230 E. University • Tempe, AZ • } 8 0 4 S^ A s h (2 blks. W. of Mill on Univ.j Right Next to ASU ANY 2 LARG E 966-4292 or! 966-1003 I I I c h e e s e p iz z a FOR f -I *On Regular, Not Sicilian Pizza only $8 . 5 0 i plus tax Sava 92.00 #1 Sun Devi Combo Any large pizza with I your choice of up to 4 toppings. | ■ (W ith This C oupon) Good on delivery, take-out or dine-in. Expires 2-17-86. Sawa 91.65 S a ve $ 1 .5 0 #2 Sun Devil Combo | #3 Sun Devil Combo ONLY $8.50»«», I ONLY $5.50p/us tax Good on delivery, take-out or dine-ln. Expires 2-28-66. Good on delivery, take-out or dine-in. Expires 2-2S-86. Good on delivery, take-out or dine-in. Expires 2-26-66. | STAFF: Fr. A lbert Felice Pace, O R , S.T.L., M A — D irector Fr. G regory G arcia, O.P., B A , M.Div. Fr Denis Reilly, O P , S.T.B., M A ' Dr. M aun Rooney, I5lD. , ** Sr. jovsnna Stetn,O .P., M A MSl Br. Gregory Tatum , O.P., B A Rose M arie GUb, B A , M A (can d .) — D irector o f R eligious Education R obert Leone — D eacon Nancy Bond — A dm inistrative A u ic ta n t Adelaide Smith — Secretary * ’ s ‘;. f. M ASS SCHEDULE: Saturday — 5:30 p.m. Sunday — 8 :0 0 ,9 :3 0 and 11:00 a.m.; 6 0 0 artd 7:30 p.m. D aily— 11:40 a t D anforth Chapel A 4:45 at th e Newm an C enter Any medium size pizza with a Any small size pizza with your choice of up to 4 toppings. 2 your choice of up to 4 toppings. ONLY S 7 .5 IW 9 6 W T 8 Ì5 & . 6 Confessions — Saturdays 4:00 to 4:30 p m . o f by appointm ent CHARISMATIC PRAYER GROUP — Every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. I .1 EVENING PRAYERS (VESPERS) - Monday-Friday at 4:15 p m CLASSES: RITE OF CHRISTIAN INITIATION FOR ADULTS— Monday, January 27 a t 7:30 p .m for all those w ho are in terested in becom ing C atholic Christians. Classes conducted by f t . A lbert. CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE PREPARATION — W ednesday, January 29 at 7:00 p.m . A six-w eek course conducted by Sr. Jovanna and G uest Speakers. CATHOLIC UPDATE— Tuesday, January 28 at 7:30 p m . fo r ali Baptized C atholics w ho a re to be Confirm ed and open to all w ho w ould like to know m ore about th eir C atholic beliefs and practiced •% „ t f » $ 5, JP* BIBLE STUDY:Every Sunday after th e 6 0 0 p .m Mass. L etters o f St. Paul — W ednesday, January 22 at 7:30 p.m . conducted by Br. Gregory. RETREATS: Students’ R etreat at Lake Pleasant on January 3 1 , February 1 f t 2. C ost 625. Take tim e o u t to rest, reflect and pray. 4; , /* Young A dult R etreat at Pine Summit Bible Camp, P rescott on A|»U 4-6. Cost 625. LIFE IN THE SPIRIT SEMINAR — Tim e and date to b e announced. Tw ilight R etreat at th e Newman C enter on Friday, M arch 21 tfO flil p.m. LENTEN SCHEDULE: ASH .WEDNESDAY, February 12: M asses are at 7:00 a.m ., 1 2 0 0 noon, 4:45 and 7:30 p u t Stations o f th e Cross every Friday at 4:15 p m . Two Spedai Lenten series p resented by Pr. D enis and Pr. Gregory. H olyW ede Palm Sunday, M arch 23 to Easter Sunday, M atch 3 ft (S pedai services w ill b e announced late r.) SPECIAL EVENTS: D iscussion about w om en’s concerns fo r th e Bishop’s Pastoral L etter, Tuesday, January 2 1 ,7 0 0 p.m Annual Blood Drive on Sunday, January 2 6 from 9 0 0 a.rit to IOO p m . C ontem porary Ch ristian C qncert by Reach O ut Singers a n Friday, January 31 at 7:30 p.m . Free adm ission. Everyone w elcom e. / MARDI GRAS INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL startin g w ith a Polka Mass on Sunday, February 9 a t 11OO to 5 0 0 p m . i -; ; ; • „ Second Statew ide Young A duft/U nhcrsityC aU ege Student Assembly on Friday, February 28 and M arch 1. M ore info at th e Newman C enter. TH E STU D EN T COUNCIL PLAN S VARIO U S A C TIV ITIE S. ^ J S H E C K SU N D A Y BU LLETIN FO R INFO . AA MEETINGS — Wednesday evenings at 8 0 0 p.m. AL-ANON MEETINGS — Fridays at Noon, Gammage Center Friday January 24,1986 » 7 p.m. YbuVe seen him on ‘The Tonight Show," guesting with David Letterman, and on “Saturday Night Live"... now see and hear America's newest and most brilliant young comedian, Steven Wright, in a special Gammage appearance. Tickets are $11.50 and $10 and are on sale at the Gammage and Diamonds Be« O ffices. For information call 965-3434. SU NRISE C O fiFEESH O PA T TH E N E W M A N CENTER — Open class days from 7:00 a m. to 1:30 p.m. IntaEM suuid lunch served. Reasonable prices that you can afford. THY OUR HOME COOKING. NEWMAN CENTER OFFICE HOURS: Monday through Thursday — 8:30 a m to 9:00 p.m. Friday — 8:30 a.m to 500 p.m Sunday — 9:00 a.m to 12 noon and 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. T h e N ew m an C e n te r is o p e n daily fo r p ray er, stu d y an d relax atio n . ; T h e N ew m an C e n te r is w h e elch air accessib le. The N ew m an C en ter is Ike Cm tkoH cFnrtak servin g ASU sin ce 1932. CHECK m E W EEKLY SU N D AY BULLETIN FOR SPECIFIC DETAILS O N HAPPENINGS A T THE NEW M AN CENTER. Comeback Basketball team could even i! By JON WILEY State Pres» The ASU m en’s basketball team will try to better its record tonight a t the Activity Center as they go up against Oregon. Head Coach Steve Patterson said- he is concerned with Oregon guard Anthony Taylor and forward Je rry Adams. “Anthony Taylor is one of die m ore gifted players in the conference,” he said. “He’s a great athlete and his size and quickness will present a nroblem. “Je rry Adams is their leading rebounder, so we will try to keep him aw ay from the boards.” P atterson said he will stick prim arily to the team ’s m an-to m an defense. “We believe in man-to-man and we’re good a t it,” he said. “We take pride in that sort of defense and when you good a t it, you stick with it. “W e're going to keep it sim ple.” The team recently suffered the loss of 6-foot-6 forward Chris Sandle, the leading scorer who was dism issed from ASU because of academ ic deficiency. Patterson said guard Steve Beck m ight help m ake up for this. “We’re a little shorthanded a t the front line right now with the loss of Sandle, so I m ight put Beck a t forw ard,” Patterson said. P atterson said he is not sure w hether he will sta rt A rthur Thomas or Bobby Thompson a t guard. “Bobby has beeffplaying vary well lately,” h e ja id . “A rthur has had a little back trouble lately, but bottrof them a re going to see a considerable am ount of action. Patterson said the Sun Devils hope they will not have the full court press against Oregon, a tool they employed in the recent USC game. I “We only like to use it if we’re down late in we need to pick up the tempo a little. I hope necessary,” Patterson said. V ^ -:Á; j SM I photo by Kip WMam Spark plug guard Arthur Thomas has been haring back trouble, but he will play tonight against Oregon. ASU also m ight ha v e rte com pensate for the possible tem porary loss of forw ard E ric Holloway, who has been sick yrith a bad cold lately and also suffered a groin pull last Saturday against USC. A source close to Holloway told the State Press that Holloway had m issed several practices this week because of conflict with Patterson, but Patterson explained his absence was due to the injury. SM I photo by Han Kuczok Jr. Guard Bobby Thompson,Is expected to see plenty of action against Oregon tonight Just some^more Superitiype to m ake your day Dean A. Obenauerj Sports Editor The Super Bowl is big. In fact, it’s bigger than big. You can’t go anywhere, read anything or talk to anyone without getting caught up in all the m edia hype. And you’re going, to get m ore erf it right here. F irst off, I’ve got a few predictions for this Sunday’s Super Bowl gam e. •If Chicago wins, B ear fans will never let non-Bear fans hear the end of i t They will say: “We knew the B ears woulddo it. They truly represent the qualities of the people of Chicago. They «Mdn’t do i t because they’re greedy, they ju st did it to feed the peedy.” signal will come a c ro ss' the television screen. The purpose is for viewers to have the opportunity to get up and use the restroom without m issing any of the pre­ gam e show. With millions of people running to the bathroom and relieving them selves all a t once, I wouldn’tb è surprised i f . . . I’ll leave it up to your imagination. •B ear quarterback Jim McMahon will w ear a headband and it won’t have NFL Commissioner P ete Rozelle’s name’ on it. The headband will instead read Shiriashi, which is the last nam e of McMahon’s acupuncturist This week, to the dism ay of B ear m anagem ent McMahon and other Bears w ere tre a te d by Tokyo’s fam ous acupuncturist Hiroshi Shiriashi to relieve stress. ‘ * •Some Supèr Bowl-crazed person will buy a 50 yard line Super Bowl ticket for $375,000. There w ill be a national disaster attributed to the minute of dead air prior to the official start of the Super Bowl. I’ll say: “I couldn’t help but pick them. The B ears a re a g reat football team , but le t’s not get too carried away. I hope tills doesn’t m ean th at W alter Payton will be elected a s the next m ayor of Chicago. ” •If New England wins, people will say: “ I knew the B ears would choke. Chicago team s always choke. It knew th at darn Super Bowl Shuffle video would jinx them. ” I’ll say: “T hat’s too had. T hat will teach people to dotibt the caliber of a team making it to the Super Bowl. T hat will teach Las Vegas to c re a te s 10-point underdog.” •There will be a national disaster attributed to the m inute of d e a d a ir prior to the official sta rt of the Super Bowl. NBC has planned a m inute in' which no The 475 Super Bowl tickets a re being scalped for some m ajor money. R eports out of New Orleans say tickets a re going for anyw here between $750 and $1,500. Reports gp on to say people a re even scalping hotel room packages for up to three tim es their face value. . I’ll settle for a beer and a comfortable living room seat any day. New Orleans is a dump. •NBC will use its am azing technology and show viewers the insides of local hare in Chicago and Boston. How exciting. pil * |§y ¿¡mB •NBC com m entator Dick Enberg will say, “Oh m y!’’every other nlay. •The New England P atriots will be called a “Cinderella” team several hundred tim es during, Sunday’s telecast. E veryone, including young children, will be tired of the term . •P atrio t coach Raymond B erry will bp called a ‘‘m iracle worlfer.’’ •B ear <^ach Mike D itka w ill be referred to a s a “slow tight end in his day.” | ,• ’ {. •Headbands with RozeOe i nted on th a n a re being sold as sou venirsi • five dollars a piece in New Orleans. McMahon has reason to believe th at The Super Bowl Shuffle was somewhat of a shady deal. . There is no telling yet w hether or not revenues from the record have gone to the needy of Chicago. The record is Making money forxomebody and is expected to sell It has-Jjpen. 68 years since team s from Bostori? agd Chicago have m et for a championship. In IMS, the Red Sox and B ears facegeacfc other. Let’s hope a fter the Super Bowl, it’s another 68. JÀjiÈ Former Bears manager still influences football NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Underlying the tactful denials is an unavoidable them e this Super Bowl week: There, but for a failure to compromise, would be Jim Finks. All b at two of the B e a n ’ 22 s ta rte n for Sunday’s NFL championship gam e against New England w ere acquired during Finks’ decade as general m anager at Chicago. L ast week, Finks was hired as general m anager of the New Orleans Saints, given the task of duplicating the job he did in Chicago. He left the B ears in 1982, after team founder George H alas hired Mike Ditka as coach without consulting Mm. • “It was tim e to move on,” Finks said l Tuesday a t the Saints’ Superdome offices, high above the field w here hundreds of reporters clustered around Bears players he signed. “I gritted my teeth quite a bit, but I have never regretted leaving. “ Sure, I’m proud. And I’m envious. I think success they’ve the business far. “But it w as tim e to leave. I felt I had done everything I ’d been there to do.” « The hiring of i Ditka was ju st die cuhnination of a aerie* of events th at convinced Finks it w as tim e to go. Jim Dooley was rehired as ah assistant coach without Finks being consulted. “That was the first action,” be said. Then cam e the death of George “Mugs” H alas, president of the team and son of the founder. “That interrupted an established chain of command,” Finks said. Then came the hiring o f D itka, opposed by Finks because of DHka’s lack of experience. Finks admits now he w as wrong about that one. “The proof of the pudding is in w hether the head coach can bring die team together, and he’sdooe th at,” he Mid. •A sso it •B au sch & Lom b •O basott •Durasoft M l.« S p a ir * T b t r i Isa a a s • Bausch & Lomb Natural Tints • Obaaoft Colors * * 3 .9 7 p ä r •AO Sottcon •B au sch & tom b •CooperVislon Perm alens •CSIT •D urasolt 3 •G enesis 4 •Hydrocurve S57/pr. $45/pr $67/pr $97/pr $57/pr $55/pr $87/pr IF YO U R B RAN D IS NOT LISTED HERE. SEN D A CO PY O F YO UR PRESCRIPTION A N D W E W ILL SEN D YO U A QUOTE.------------- OtarOoctor Pleasesendmeacopyo*mytawsisoft contactiw pmacnpuowW ssii tawpitu PMwniSignature •aseC«na> AN ara n i N. NM ffrlfiûl lacttry FO LLO W T H ESE 9 EA S Y S T E P S 1 Acquire your complete contact lens prescription 2 Complete the orcMr below 3.Make check, money order, or /com plete credit card informaion paya­ ble toC tS. inc 4. Enclose name, address & phone number with order 5. Maii aN information to. C o n tac t Lb m S upply, la c . M iM Carter M . OavakaO, Okie 441I t I I 6 /M I-M U "Contact Lens Suppliers . for 25 years." H aasasaa ri-_______p f f t i f **«*• aahr_____ s e e k . «M u ta r basas 2.00 I have anclaaa* fa ta l ana (PsrsorW Checks must ba daaisd prior to stvpmsnt) r The great beers.of the world go by one name: Löwenbräu. Brewed in Munich, to England, Sweden, Canada, Japan and here in America for a distinctive world dass taste. 3 m W O U D C A LLS FO R LÖ ¥ßN B R Ä U s i m t w M u c C s ia iiis n w t f ta e i5 WW*1— transfer >vfjjg ig .' Singleton bound for Division *»; %>>■%»; II; Taylor’s plans fall through By BOB HEILER State Press . Form er ASU basketball players Ron Singleton and Jon Taylor announced ¡dans Tuesday to transfer to Grand Canyon College in Phoenix, but Taylor was informed late Wednesday afternoon that his four years of eligibility had been used up. Singleton had been dism issed from the ASU squad for academ ic reasons last sem ester, while Taylor was dism issed m ore recently for disciplinary reasons. Singleton’s acceptance in the school will m ost likely be on academ ic probation, according to G rand Canyon basketball coach John an im ate. But Singleton was not worried. “There shouldn’t be any problem with the tran sfer,” Singleton said. Taylor informed the State Press he would not transfer to the four-year college since he cohkl not play on the basketball team . Before Taylor knew of the eligibility problem, he said he thought he would be happier a t Grand Canyon than he was a t ASU. “A lot of people m ight consider it a step down, going from a m ajor college to Division II,” Taylor said. “But I figure I’ll be a lot happier playing a t Grand Canyon than riding the bench a t ASU.” Shum ate was happy with the prospect of Singleton Upcoming p art of his squad. . “I believe in this young m an,” Shumate said. “ I think be can contribute quite a lot to our program . How much (he) contributes is up to (h im )/’ Singleton has one year of eligibility left, which he will use a t G rand Canyon next season. Because of the transfer, he m ust sit out 16 weeks of actum, so he will be unable to [day for • M l plwto ky Itan K u o * Jr. John Taylor was going to Grand Canyon College, but Iw w n G rand Canyon this season. “I think young people deserve a second chance,” Shumate informed that N s aNgHMHtywas used up because he ptayad 63 ; minutes for ASU thl« yaar. K> said.. NOW THE MENAGEBIE @ Staff photo by Ron Kucmfc Jr. Senior Ron Singleton is doing paperwork to transfer to Grand Canyon College, a Phoenix Division II school. S U P E R D E S IG N E R S $4000 F F Earrings THE DISGUISEDJEW IN AMERICAN FILM: FKOM CHAPLIN TO WOODY ALLEN 506 a pair , Over 5,000 pair in stock T hursday, Jan u ary 2 3 ,1 9 8 6 • 8 p.m . Affordable Jewelry, Cosmetics, Flags and Unbelievable Discounts on Avon Products YENTL, ZEUG, AND THE ASTRONAUTS: AMERICAN COMEDIES OF RELIGIOUS QUEST Friday, Jan u ary 24, 1986 • 8 :3 0 p.m . F ollow ing 7:3 0 Shabbat S ervices 215 E. 7th St. Tem po A Z NEAR ASU 829-7565 all hair services Hair Cut m NOW $8.00 Shampoo, Cut, Dry Reg. $12.00 Starting at $28.00 Perms Con**£§: Frosting, Color, Nail Valid with ad until Feb. 20,1906. B oth lectu res b y P rofessor ira J a ffe A t H ille l: 1 0 1 2 S . M ill A v e . 120L UNIVERSITY, TEMPE • CALL 966-9061 Terrace Road A partm ents W ALK TO SCH O O L! Wm% 1/2 b lo ck from C am pu s, Huge, w ell-furnished 1 -bedroom , 1-bath, and 2-bedroom , 2-baths, all u tilitie s included, cab le TV, p lus m any amenities^ 9 5 0 S. T errace R d. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 ULTIMATE PROTECTIVE DEVICE Now you and your loved ones can defend yourself against muggers, drunks, animats, o r any kind of offenders without deadly force. How Mw stun gun works* One short burst from the units delivers a high voltage-low amperage charge through ah assailant’s body. This charge keys Into the nervous system causing the neurom uscular system to short c irc u it The effect ia a temporary lo st of voluntary m uscle control resulting in instantaneous disorientation and loss o f balance lasting for several minutes, that can’t be resitted. Absolutely sa fe. The stun gun upits w ill not cause any permanent damage or aide effects. The total amount of power available is the power produced from a nine-volt battery. The unit sim ply m odifies the nine-volt battery power through solid state m icro circuitry. T his high voltage doesn’t cause permanent damage due to the low amperage. M E X IC O ATTENTtQN: DEALERS S DISTRIBUTORS Spring Break M a rc h 1 0 - 1 4 ,1 9 8 6 Air, Hotel, Tran sfers, W elcom e C ocktail M a z a tla n M ail this coupon and save ah incredible $40 per'unit with this lim ited offer. For additional inform ation call: ((02) S29-12S2. P u e r t o V a lla n ta B r o a d w a y S M ill U nifend B a n k B u ild in g mm p—WWWCOUPON----- - ------------------— *301 S . m* 368 CALL FOR MORE INFO d to n iflw d travel loiCb L * Çy 967- •COUPON Coupon: Valua $40 Send Check or Money Order to: Name:_________—.—.— Abboud Industries, Inc. C ity:. P.O. Box 25201 State, Zip:. Tampa, AZ 65281 Mini Sparkle _ __ at *79.95 — $40.00 = S39;95eaMaxi Sparkle ___ at $89.95 — $40.00 * $49.96 ea. . at $89.95 — $40.00 ■ *49,95« Lightning Zapper (Add $3 shipping) TOTAL COSTÌ Next Day Delivery Deity ■- ~ > ■Itriot completely satisfied return within 90 days tor a full refund1 per person fo g SMC Presa B B U S Page 16 m Clack impresses pro scouts looks forward to NFL career To secure his eligibility and play another season a t ASU, Clack had to sit out the Holiday Bowl in San Diego last December. Clack said he knew what he was doing when he entered the game. By CHRIS MCKAY State Frees D arryl (Sack, form a: ASU standout, got his first ra d chance to display his talents last Saturday in die Senior Bowl a t Mobile, Ala. After passing up die opportunity to play a fifth season with the Sun Devils, Clack went into the gam e w ith die notion of im pressing pro scouts and possibly earning a higher draft position. Clack adm itted scouts were on his mind and said he had hoped to perform well. “ I had m ade up my mind prior to th at,” he said. “AD I had to do was step on the field and I would lose my eligibility.” Deciding to play in the NFL was not difficult for Clack. He said it was an opportune tim e to leave school. ”1 felt it was tim e to move on,” he said. “I’ve been here for a while and thought I’d take my chance in the NFL. ” Clack is expected to be drafted in the first o r second round, and hopes to follow the exam ple of form er Sun Devil G erald Riggs, who led the NFC in rushing for the A tlanta Falcons. “I jiist wanted to do what I was capable of doing,"hesaid. “Ith in k ld id .” Clack’s career as an ASU tailback had very bright spots, but he was plagued all four years with injuries. ' Clack was the ninth Sun Devil in history to gain 2,000 yards rushing in his career. He was also selected to the first-team all-Pac-10 as a junior after rushing for 1,052 yards on 208 carries. Clack rushed for 41 yards on 12 carries and scored a second quarter touchdown in the Senior Bowl to help the North defeat the South 31-17. Clack was surprised by the m ere appearance of his nam e on the team roster. After being sidelined for nine weeks with a broken fibula, received in the home opener against Pacific, Clack did not expect to be chosen to play for any all-star team . “I was really surprised,” he said. “I had heard before the season that I had a good chance.” I H A R K I N G $ie re o Theatres ' I l / l l i i l l f w 4 Channel Sound ‘A mr w k w movie” Clack said he was not sure where he would like to play but mentioned he has m et with pro scouts from San Francisco, Buffalo, D allas, Pittsburgh!!, Seattleand the Jets. Clack not only m et with pro scouts in Alabama but talked with Htesman Trophy winner Bo Jackson. “He’s a pretty cool guy,” Clack said. Clack’s accomplishments a t ASU will not go unnoticed despite his senior year. Clack was considered to have an exceUent chance a t surpassing Woody Green’s alltim e ASU rushing record of 3,754 yards in a career. He had rolled up 2,561 yards prior to the sta rt of last season, leaving him ju st 1,193 yards to gain, but his injury prevented his biti. TWILIGHT SHOW S2.50 sho w rimes betw een 4.30 * e 30 PnuidOM nby, I WBLYork M l— IB» “ A poignant, o n ib o ra n t sto ry ..." Rjchord Co rlis s , I5gHLi i « g i l iBg " I love th is movie." Jo ssp h Go!mis, N siosdoy "A ro ro an d unewpe r t ed «Wight ” Has Road, New York P o t . "A w armly appealing *‘i la is t lAgsliit, "A te n d e r h s o ft art,8 w onderfully engaging m oms" K athleen Carroll, York Daily N ew s "A film of undaunted hone s t y * and un swe rving intelligence, borne aloft by hum or ." John Simon, N ational Review **A sparkling and original conwdy**” William Wolf, G an n ett N ew spaper» Form er A S U tailback D arryl C la ck hopea to run Into a N F L contract with big num ber*. ALLELUIA LU TH ERAN CHURCH CARPET REMNANTS WE M ANUFACTURE OUR OWN CARPET AN D SELL IT DIRECT TO THE PUBLIC, NO MIDDLE MAN. 1034 S. M ill (Across the street from th e M usic Bldg.) W orship Times 8:15 a.m . 9:30 a.m . 11:00 a.m. B ib le Study at A lle lu ia . W o rsh ip at A lle lu ia W o rsh ip at D an forth (N£ corner by.th e fountain) MESA r a m iiI ■r u OfU u l tU l ei Vt U M n / l t !-«art mifria CM 8 9 0 -1 1 5 2 f NORTHEAST 156811ta« Cm» 8 8 7 -2 7 0 3 C om in g in Fdb. — Alleluia Lutheran Church D edication & Dance, Snow Retreat * **% n iM e / I ) î IC C t l fc) ii r | > e i „ M odern/T raditionalW orship Midweek Bible Study 1T h e w arm est, m o st human comedy of th e year." R ichard Freedm an, N yw hfiutt N ew sp a p ers •Thousands in stock — 30%-70% O ff •Hundreds of room-size remnants — $29-$69 •We Deliver WESTSIDE Owned and operated by E'Con Carpet Mills with warehouses throughout the U.S.A. M Tktwal fetal % 2 6 0 -3 2 8 1 JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE O® ' S v io Reg E X C L U S IV E P H O E N IX EN G AG EM EN T $1*° H « *. le d 'iÔ PHOENIX CRITICS RAVE! “T h e b e st science fiction film of th e ‘80s.” s a le — K ir k H o n e y cu tt, Los A n ge le s D a ily N e w s QUIET EARTH ^ a s O J V -— $ 1 8 .9 5 IIKh s ä s s D @ EX CLU SIV E EN Q A Q E M O m a s“SeS “ “ A D ELICATE. CH ARM ING FILM .' -D a v id D enby NEW YORK MAGAZINE peg D IM S U M a little bit of heart THE G 2S6S86_______________________ W ANT RESPO NSIBLE fem ale, 8150 per m onth ph is.tk u tilitie s, furnished room, w alk to ASU. 967-4563. _________ Services CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or ohm . A ll S tates Drive away, 892-5200._________ HAVE UNW ANTED facial or body h d r removed perm anently by electrolysis. Free consuttdfon, located In Tampa. C d l Sharon d Desert E lectrolysis Center826782» .___________ ’ SIX YEAR S photography experience, opening own studio, peed wedding sam ple«, super d e d t now, c d l 946 9442. M ention thl« ad. _____________ Transportation Start A ny P a y T erm s A v a ila b le AAA ORIVEAW AY. Cara to m od m ater cilia » . U d riv a -F k d te n k lra a 277-0979. 275-MIXX 4035 e. mcdowell Minutes From Campus 1/23 Jewelry AIR TICKET. Phoanlx, Chicago, Buf­ falo. 97» Jan. 2 6 9 3 0 am (968079 P d o Varda E a d room 127._______________ Typing CEREUS WORD Processing. OuaUty guaranteed. Tarnt papan, engineering, scie n tific, d laaerid ton * theses, tetters, resum as, 947-7796 9966136 CASH FO R gold, diam onds and stivar. M ill Ava Jsw tsrs 414 a MUI Ava Suita 104. ____________ , ■ EDITING TERM PAPERS, dteaartdlons. WIH perfect your Engllah, grammw, sentence clarity and flow , paragraph­ ing, organizdion, form d, plus. Profesalond. Inexpensive. Susan, M.A., COM PUTERS FO R rant. IBM com pati­ 83*0006________ b le 640 M S pfm om W . C a ll 341-S7S4. PRO FESSIO NAL ADM N. B e ly w ill type reports, thesis, m anuscripts M e. »1» P « hour I» m inimum, Ente 9676628, 27*8226 1906 YAM AH A 120 a co to « m ud sa il ASAP. 9NH under warranty. Asking SHORT O F TIM E? I can help- Re­ »900.00c d l 9643467. _____________ asonable. Protesslond. Guaranteed. Experienced In academ ic, c d l Je ssie '84 HONDA ARRO W 126 Excellent 9468744.___________ ;_____________ condition. Moving, m u d sell, 8760 ■363370. TYPING AT home, laaL accurata, o d i M arian 9»63e»7.____________ - M iscellaneous Motorcycles_____ Personal PME. rae, rae Spring brask Daytona TYPING DONE, raaaonahla rate* Expartancad In raauma'aaw dp rsg w iii« o f study. C d l Jacqueline »261171: O hm to ABU. _________________________ TYPING, W ORD proceeatog. »139 per doubt« epaoad page. CaH CsShy »»»»»»t.________’_________■ SCOTTY, H APPY Anniw n a ry! It's baan tour yuan and R atUI to d s l)ks naw. Thank you lo r tha ptantog. U H M a g rad surpris« n H u m a n if f Butty._______ ra ■*- W ILL QO typin g to my bom s. Dshhte l l t m i g i lite riig tois his _________ ACCU RATE W ORD PR O CESSIN G . fa a llu Hulease Suada'Maaurelar 1640 sq. ft. 982,200. «666340, Chrla. LARG E O N€ bedroom co o p *13,600, FA8H W H MERCHANDISING, clo se «a ASU, haatad pool. Contact tosM oasbte young woman I V á jfe tfÓ W O B M á fta rS p rii________ ■ - «PS«ra l torete««* O6»d10». Pggg 80 Thuwday, Jtouwy 83,19*6 ) . .......... * ■ fg f f lf tll GROUP TRAVEL SPECIALISTS IN C O M O H A T * 0 p re s e n ts Spring Break Iravel Programs MAZATLANIEXPRESS DURING S P R IN G ^ R E A K $199.00 March $ 7 DAYS 7 NIGHTS T h is year, spend spring break on the b eautiful beaches o f M azatlan w ith thousands of other co lleg e students from a ll over the Southw est. Y o u 'll have the tim e of your life parasailing, sw im m ing, p articip atin g in coed beach activities or just tanning on the beach! A s the sun sets, you’ll fin d you rself at som e of M azatlan’s finest d isco s like, El C id , S en or Frogs or V alentino’s dancing and partying with old and new friends. S prin g Break ’86 prom ises to be one of the m ost fu n -filled tim es of you r colleg e career on the beaches of M azatlan. TRIP INCLUDES: # £ M «Round-trip train transportation from NogalesMazatlan. «Five nights hotel (4 to a room) at beach front hotels or near beach front. •P arty at M azatlan’s newest and best disco, the El Cid Country Club and Resort. •Discounts at local liquor stores throughout Mazatlan. »Choice of roommates now ouaranteed if all deposits are made before January anuary 31, 31,1986. •GUARANTEED, NO INCREASE IN RATES. •M azatlan Express T-shirt. •Beer and Sandwich parties at two of M azatlan’s finest hotels. •Party at Joe’s Oyster Bar. SPRING BREAK TRIP INCLUDES: •R ound-trip airfare from departure cities. •S ix nights hotel accom m odations. •Flow er le i greeting upon arrival. •R ound-trip airport/hotel transfers. • A ll ap p licab le taxes. MARCH 8-16 NOTE: C re d it c a rd u s e rs m u st m ake p a y m e n t in fu ll If you have any further question« on any of these packages, or have any Other Individual or group travel heeds, contact your Group Travel Specialists — Campus Representative or our office at 957-4400 or 241-1000. CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVES: Karen Berry ............... Steve B re n n a n . . — 285-9830 .. A n n a Burke ■*.. ........... 985-0907 968-4786 B ra d G o lic h P I . . . . . . . 987-2369 Debbie O lsh e fsk y . . . . . David Usem . . ____ 9654564 890-2523