r • thursday t t a t o V o l. 68 N o. 82 Feb ru ary 6,1 9 8 6 A riz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity - ; • .. , ........ i îM T e mp e , A r i z o n a " © Copyright, State Press, 1906 Larger budget expected to help ASASU elections B y K AR I B LA N D State Press Associated Students of ASU elections w ill run more efficiently this semester because of a Senate decision to increase the election budget by $1,956, the ASASU elections director said. Laurie Levin said the budget increase, which w as approved Tuesday, w ill result in more polling places and tighter securityThe original elections budget was $1,300. ASASU Campus A ffairs V ice President Amy Young said she introduced the budget increase because additional money was needed to pay poll workers and increase advertising efforts. University is eligible to run for an executive position but must meet certain ASASU requirements. Potential senatorial and executive-office candidates must be foil-tim e students with a minimum grade point average of 2.2. “ T ypically, it is someone who is involved in student government, and understands the work that is involved, who runs for an executive position,” Levin said. But there are no obstacles to keep anyone from running, she said. E ach candidate also must deposit $20 with the elections director. “ The object is to have as many students partake in the elections as possible,” she said. ‘Th e object is to have a s many students partake in elections as possible.’ — Am y Young The pp«R»ge of Senate B ill 35 provided college councils with the authority to operate polling booths outside their in­ dividual colleges. Levin said there w ill be approxim ately 13 pniiing booths outside colleges, and another three booths w ill be strategically placed around cam pus. ASASU elec tirais w ill be held A pril 2 and 3. Potential candidates for executive offices must gather 750 student signatures by M arch ?. The executive positions are: president, executive vice president, campus affairs vice president and activities vice president. Petitions w in be available beginning February 26. Vicious cycle MaM pM obyTaM Om William Wright, a University police officer for the bicycle safety division. Impounds s Wke Illegally parked In front of Noble Betones Library. A8U has six officers pahcWng on Wcydes. E ach college council selects Senate candidates for the ballot, and thé college council president m ust forward the names of foe candidates to Levin by M ard i 7. Any student currently enrolled at the Police neglect to cite ex-officer Betar illegally permitted to park in Lot 46 without vehicle decal B y V IC K IE C H A C H E K E . * State P ress A SU students lost a chance to have the last laugh Friday when University police did not ticket form er ASU Security O fficer Deanna Betar for failin g to display a parking decal. B etar, «dip gained a University-w ide reputation for ticketin g campus bicyclists and illegally parked cars before leaving her University job this fa ll, was allowed to enter Lot 46 without a decal. She also wa# not ticketed for an ASU Code 10 parking violation and did not receive a $6 fine. Lot 46 is located on University D rive, adjacent to the ASU police department and the P hysical Sciences Center. The yearly fee for a Lot 46 decal is $90. The incident took place Frid ay morning when Betar w is visiting frim tli a t the U niversity police station and parked bn- white pick-up truck in Lot 4* a t about 10:15 a jn . The* truck had a validation sticker but no m ovable decal that goes with the sticker. M arge M cGough, a chem ical stores clerk in the Dewing of the P hysical Science Building, said B etar had bean waved ttw a fr b y the tot attendsrt, even though no parking d ead er tamporary decal w as displayed. Levin said the $20 is used to pay fines if a candidate violates the election code. For exam ple, cam paigning within 50 feet of a polling booth carries a $5 fine. An accum ulation of $20 in fines results in the disqualification of a candidate. Destroying an opposing candidate’s poster alone is a $20 violation. If a candidate has no violations, the money is returned at the end of the election process. Levin said two candidates traditionally run for each executive position, except activities vice president, which attracts throe or four cam fidates. For Senate elections, Levin said each college council has its own criteria, but the candidate m ust be a member of its council. Candidates cannot begin cam paigning until M arch 16. Executive candidates m ay spend up to $500 on their cam paigns, but Senate can­ didates can spend only $100. Levin said cam paign funds usually are raised through contributions, but each executive donation cannot exceed $50 and each Senate donation cannot exceed $10. A ll candidates must submit their financial records and receipts at the end of the election, Levin said. Because of more polling booths this year, Levin said she is hoping to see a larger voter turnout. “ The polling sites w ill be open longer and be more accessible to students,” she said. Students can vote for one candidate for each executive position, and for the Senate candidates from their own college. OT o d a y s AIDS education is the only route to understanding the epidemiology and communlcabitty o l the deadly disease. Analysis. Pags 5. “ 1 called police to give her a ticket and they never cam e,” McGough said. “ And that’s B .S .” BetV said she left the movable decal in another car and she believed she w asnot parked illegally. “ I don’t do thing» like that,” B etar said . “ If I’m not going in do it legally, I’m not going to do i t ” Computer disc swapping is not a major plagiarism problem at A SU , though other universities have had ' -h% I '' p ater said employees, at. the chem istry stores complained because “ there was a guy at the chem istry department that was alw ays parking illegally. He knew it, and I knew i t Lubbock Ctwtstlanoffers little réstetenos as the A SU baseball toim com pletes s three-game swaep with a 15-4 win. fisga 13. Richard Landreth, assistant director of parking, said Wednesday the attendant had been “ dealt” w ith, and has been instructed to prohibit any vehicles not displaying decals or temporary decals from entering the lo t ASU weather — Partly cloudy today with a 10 percent chance of rain. The expected high is 60' degrees. The expected tow is in the mid-40#. Landreth said the com plaint against B etar was retaliation by the chem istry department employée whose ca r had been rihno booted several tim es by B etar. “ There is no reason why Deanna B etar was hot ticketed,” Landreth said. “ It should not have happened. J f you are not displaying a decakyou should not be let in .” Analysts..’. . .................................. .. LL C raig Em anuel, a University police officer, said there are no special parking regulation enforcement policies for fonner University employees. “ We are most anxious togive citations to anyone deserving th a n ,” Em anuel said. Bloom C o u n ty.................... . 5 11 Classified . 25 . ........................... Collage Crossword puzzle.. . . . . . . . IvoryTpwers ...................... . Ä tfN a tio n / w o rld ........... ........ Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . y ï f ‘M i Police report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . h Sports ................... 12 11 MÉ mW “1 fir ■m ■*m P h ilip p in e e lection ca n d id a te s trade insults at ca m p a ig n ’s e n d M A N ILA , Philippines (AP) - President Ferdinand E . M arcos, at Ids last rally before the election, Wednesday accused his opponents of sowing hatred and revolution A iring the U tter presidential cam paign. Opposition candidate Corazon Aquino called Urn ah old dictator whose tim e has passed. Speaking in a M anila p a ît during a heavy rain, M arcos said to Aquino and her supporters: “ Slow down, you children 'of little brains, you’re no m atch for the ad­ m inistration. i . ~ “ I ask my opponents to stop what they have begun. Y ou have sowed an atmosphere of hatred, anger and revolution. Now I say to you, the government of the Philippines is not defenseless,” M arcos said on the last day of cam paigning. Aquino, 53» a crowd in her home province o f’Iferiac: “ M arcos is jh y only enem y.” She blam es him for the M83 a ssassin atio n « her husband, Benigno, who had been the president’s m ain political foe. ’S tar W arn’ to co n tribu te to w ar with S o vie t U n io n , expert «ays j TUCSON (A P) — President Reagan’s so-called “ Star W an ” initiative ultim ately w ill draw the United States into a nuclear war with the Soviet Union, a former m ilitary expert on die subject said Wednesday. Robert Bowman, a retired lieutenant colonel who directed the A ir Force “ Star W a n ” program from 1976 to 1978, said Reagan has been “ taken in” by what he called “ right-wing ideologues. ’ ’ Bowmen, now president of the Potom ac, M d.-based Institute for Space and Security-Studies, said they either do not understand what they’re doing or thefr true aim is to prevail over (he Soviets at a ll costs. * Bowman said the United States should seriously con­ sider Soviet Prem ier M iB iail Gorbachev’s offer to elim inate nuclear weapons by the year MOO. U n d e rse a rob ot ca m e ra s lo ca te shuttle’s p o ssib le ro ck e t b o oster C A P E C A N A V E R A L, F la . (A P) N ASA trained un­ dersea robot cam eras Wednesday on ad object that could be Challenger’s suspect right rocket booster, as agency officials prepared to disclose for the first tim e what they think raiMad the shuttle to explode in flam ee. Sources reported, meanwhile, that ships had recovered 17 feet of explosives from a “ destruct package” that was on the side o f Challenger’s m ain fuel tank when it lifted o ff. The explosives had not been detonated, the sources said, removing them from the listo f possible causes of the catastrophe. ■ ' ' ' JÊ Ê ■ ' % 4- N u cle a r plant shutdow n c a u se d b y fa lse sig n a ls W IN TER SB U R G (A P) - F alse signal« apparently set off alarm s that led to the Unit 1 shutdown of P alo Verde N uclear G en eratin g Statio n , o ffic ia ls said Wednesday. The prim ary reactor shut itself off autom atically Monday after receiving a signal that its steam generator wasn’t receiving sufficient w ater. 'Don Andrews, a spokesman for the Arizona Nuclear Power P roject, said technicians had elim inated a number of systems which m ight have caused the problem and were still checking the feed water pump controls. U C L A to c ra c k d ow n o n dorm itory se cu rity “ But it looks like right now that false signals were apparently setting o ff the alarm ,” he said . “ We’re double-checking everything and adding additional in­ strum entation.” LO S A N G E L E S — Because of recent violent abductions near and on the University o f California a t Los Angeles, the Security Comm ittee for Residence H a ll? has hastened program s to m axim ize student safety. Since the first week o f Jan u ary, doors to a ll Residence H alls are locked every day from midnight to 6 a m . A ll visitors are required to present identification to an “ entry monitor.” They also m ust sign their names and write the nam e of the person they wish to visit before entering thebuihfingl “ There’s the feeling that we should Palo Verde officials had said Tuesday that tiie problem appeared to be somewhere within a control system that regulates the amount of water supplied to the steam generator that produces electricity. > The unit had been operating a t 70 percent power when the shutdown oc­ curred. ft cam e three days after operators had begun what they hoped would be 100 consecutive hours of trouble-free operation at full capacity. keep doors locked not only at night, but also during the d ay,” said Tom V ani, associate adm inistrator of residence halls. “ On G ayley (Avenue), two people were abducted in a public a re a ,” he said. “ U C LA has a good environment. We want to keep it that w ay.” Future security plans to be effected before summer include installation of telephones so that entry monitors m ay c a ll residen ts to double-check “ le g it im a c y ” of a particular visitor. Room keys that open entry doors w ill also be distributed, Vani said. A system of electronic access is a possible option as w ell. '■ 'm i . —The D aily Bruin THE ASV REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATION IS HAPPY TO A N N O U N CE ITS FIRST MEETINÔ OF THE SEMESTER > P la c ^ t p m r ^ STATjEPRESS THURSDAY, FEB. 6, 1986 AT 4:30 P.M. IN B A 241 g rrf CA R L W ARREN a t th e VICE PRESIDENT OF OFFICE DEVELOPMENT FOR GRACE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, WILL SPEAK ABOUT THE MARKETING AND LEASING ASPECT OF OFFICE BUILDINGS. M H APPY HOUR WILL FOLLOW E M O R I A L U N I O N IN SIDE THE NORTH EN TRAN CE . . . A c r o s s f r o m the R e s i d e n t L i f e O f f i c e .v#ri TeamXerox W h a t w ill separate y o u fro m all th e ca n d id a tes w h e n y o u interview ? E x p e r ie n c e ! T e a m Xeroxj/vill b e in te rv ie w in g fo r n o n p a y in g T n ie rn sh ip s (15-20 h o u rs p e r w e£k) F e b ru a ry 13 & 14,1986. P h o n e fo r an in te r­ view a p p o in tm e n t. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Daily M O N D A Y TH R O U GH FR ID A Y r O r . .. you can place your ad D A IL Y 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.: 1 / ^ •By calling 965-7$?2 a^|Chaigfe|t| -.¡r, •By visiting the State Press counter ... North Basement, Matthews Center .^wherefbu may pay by cash or use your VISA OR MASTER­ CARD. / VKW |f||l S ta te P re ss W a n t A d s W ork ! 96& 7S72 * _£ g e 3 Thunday, February 6,1966 iP a cM ASU Greeks raise $30,000 for famine-relief effort B y D A V E RO O K State Preaa ASU Greeks have raised more than 130,000 in ,10 months to help a nationwide faminerelief effort for E ast A frica through the United Fraternities and Sororities Against Fam ine. 1 Steve M cCarley, a mem ber o f Sigm a Nu fraternity, is president of U F S A F , which was founded a t A SU in A pril. “ So fa r, it looks like we’ve raised dose to 1100,000 (nationally),” said M cCarley, a senior communications m ajor. “ Hopefully, that’s ju st the beginning compared to the potential o f what we could raise in the spring.” $20,000 for fam ine relief through car washes and various corporate donations during Greek Week. H ie money collected by U F SA F goes directly to M ercy Corps International, which buys food and necessities. He then took the idea to the Western Regional Greek Conference in Lake Tahoe, N ev,, where it was adopted. ‘T h em ajo r significance o f U F SA F is that this is the first tim e that fraternities and sororities have ever pulled together for one purpose,” M cCarley said. M cCarley said the idea fa r U F S A F began in A pril after ASU Greeks raised dose to M cCarley said his original plan was to raise money through W estern universities, but “ I started getting calls from across the country, and it unoffically opened up nationwide.” M ercy Corps International then sent M cCarley to Sudan and Ethiopia during Ju ly and August because, “ They wanted us to see what we were getting into before we started. It was an am azing trip .” Other universities that have contributed to U F S A F include U A , which held a volleyball tournament, the University of Pittsburgh, which held a carn ival, and San Diego State, which h d d a G reek party. H e said that many universities are waiting until spring to start fund raising “ in order to allow am ple tim e and manpower/’ Regents consider advice from ASU police to ban skateboards By T H E R E SA W ILLEFO R D State Press The A SU police department w ill enforce a skateboarding ban on cam pus this week despite a hick of approval from the Arizona Board of Regents, L t. C raig Em anuel said. . “ We’ve put a proposal before the Board of Regents to ban skateboarding,” he said. “ We’re kind of in a gray area right now because, skateboarding hasn’t been officially forbidden yet. " ' , i; , “ We’re sure it w ill be passed. For now, we are monitoring it closely and we w ill ask anyone skateboarding to stop. “ If they refuse, we can’t stop them at this point.” . Em anuel said the police department is concerned about ‘ ‘a safe environm ent,” adding that he believes skateboarding has caused a lot of dam age at the University. “ The new brick fountain by the new business building has been dam aged as a result of skateboarders riding through the a re a ,” he said. Skateboarders have lost control of their boards and broken windows, run across the feet of pedestrians and caused p o lic e r e p o r t; U n iv e rsity p olice reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period confused traffic on cam pus, Em anuel said. However some of the riders claim that banning skateboards would lead to m ore, not less, confusion. “ I think (the police) are wrong,” said Chris M cCauley, a sophomore finance m ajor. “ I’ve never beard of an accident involving skateboards. “ You hear about bicycle accidents a ll the tim e, and still I Bee the bicycles zooming by me a ll the tim e. “ I really don’t think they’ll enforce (the new ru le).” Another student said the new skateboarding code w ill mean switching to two-wheeled transportation. “ I guess I won’t ride it anym ore,” said Fritz Sybrant, a senior advertising m ajor.” Holding, his black board to his side, Sybrant said he is unaware of any skateboarding accidents on cam pus. “ I guess I ’ll start riding my bike from my parking {dace in Lot 42,” Sybrant said. “ But I really prefer to skateboard. It’s convenient. I’ve seen bike accidents, but no skateboarding accidents. " I guess the perfect thing would be to get everybody to w alk.” ending at6:30 a.m . Wednesday : □ A student’s room window was broken Friday evening at Manza nita Residence H all, police said. The student told police she 'heard a crash and found the window damaged. She told police she found a broken beer bottle outside ber window. SKI B R E A K THE CREATIVE WRITING STUDENT ASSOCIATION IN contiaUy Invites l She said she waited to report the ifr* cident because she believed the Housing O ffice would take care of the m atter. Dam age was-estimated at $185. □ A student’s beige Western E lectric telephone valued at $40 was stolen sometime between Friday and Saturday from his room in M anzanita, police said. The owner told police the room oc­ casionally had been unlocked during the time of the theft. □ A black 12-speed bicycle valued at $500 was stolen between Monday and Tuesday from the racks at Sahuaro Residence H all, police said. —T H E R E SA W ILLEFO R D •Professional Chauffeurs •Reasonable Rates •Presidential Stretch Cadillacs TV’s, Video Recorders, Stereo, Telephone, Moon Roof, Bar, Privacy Window Coformrà S k i S D if f e r e n t A r e a e anyone interested in Créative W riting who would like to participate • Roundtrip Air with United Airlines in an energetic organization that is actively producing • Roundtrip Ground Transportation • 6 Nights Lodging in Luxury Condos • 5 Days Lifts • 1 Demo Ski Day • 6 Breakfasts & 6 Dinners • All Taxes and Tips •m onthly new sletters • a National Literary magazine •weekly non-credit poetry & fiction workshops •student readings in poetry & fiction Please join us the first Friday o f every month in: IX C 313 at 4 p.m . Special Services For AH Occasions S e cu rity L im o u sin e Services Call Co llect D T C TR A V E L • (303) 770-9800 Next m eeting: Feb. 7 ,1 9 8 6 6721 North Black Canyon Highway Phoenix, A Z 85015 • (602) 242-9813 .A r t h u r A n d er sen ULTIMATE PROTECTIVE DEVICE Now you and your loved ones can defend yourself against muggers, drunks, animals, or any kind of offenders without deadly force. > H o w th e stu n g u n w o rk s. On* short burst from the units delivers a high voltage-iow amperage charge through an assailant's body. This charge keys Into the nervous system causing the neuromuscular system to short circuit. The effect is à temporary loss of voluntary muscle control resulting in instantaneous disorientation and loss of balance lasting for several minutée, that can't bis resisted. v Staff photo by Todd Groan Brett Goble, left, a freshman photography major, and Rick Hunter, a freshman business major, do some manuvers on Cady Mall. A b s o lu te ly sa fe . T h e stun gun unit* will not cause any permanent damage or side effects. The total amount of power available Is the power produced from s nine-volt battery. The unit simply modifies the nine-volt battery power through solid state micro circuitry. This high voltage doesn't cause permanent damage due to the low amperage. T h e international accounting and consulting firm of Arthur Andersen & Co. mill be on campus Morch 3 and 4, 1986. They mill be interviewing for positions in their audit, tax and management information consulting divisions. Interviews will be held for altoffices located in the United States. Graduates with degrees in the following fields ore encouraged to sign up for interviews: A T T E N T IO N : D E A L E R S & D IS T R IB U T O R S Mail this coupon and save an incredible $40 per unit with this limited offer. For additional Information caU: ($02) S2S-1292. Send Check or Money Order to: Abboud Industries, Inc. P .O .B o x 25201 Temp«, A Z 85281 M ini Sparkle Maxi Sparkle Lightning Zapper (Add $3 shipping) Next Dey Delivery ■ $40 OFF w /coupon Name:. City; ' Stats, Z ip :_ 2— . .at $79.95-$40.00 = . . - — .at $89.95 — $40.00 = —— .at $89.95 m $40.00 » TOTAL COST: $ $39.98 sa. $49.95 «a. $49.95 sa — ---------- ------ If not com pletely satisfied return within 90 days for a full refundI -----------COUPON ---- ---- •Accounting •Computer Information Systems •Masters Business Administration •Quantitative Methods •Moth •Anancè Interviews are for M a y 1986 and summer o f 1986 graduates. p = i J a PI □ .□ □ B 1 slate press We are not afraid to tolerate any efror so long as reason is left free to com bat it _ } — Thom as Jefferson o p in io n Tolerance fundamental to ethical, free society Michael Adamson Opinion Editor Tolerance is something which is not found in abundance in contemporary Am erican society. Surprisingly, it is not a quality found on many university campuses. In fa ct, today’s intolerance is due in part to ideas spawned at these in­ stitutions of “ higher learning.” ^Tolerance has a negative connotation To m any people, tolerating someone is equivalent to putting up with them . This is contrary to the positive notion of the word meaning acceptance. A free society depends on accepting the fa ct that people who pursue lifestyles with which oine does not agree have a right to peacefully carry on. Theyh&ve- Modern-day plague Education important in dispelling myths concerning AIDS By P A T R IC K J . K U C E R A State Press Although Acquired Immune D eficiency Syndrome is considered an epidem ic nationwide, the number of cases in Arizona and on the A SU campus is quite low or non-existent. D r. Monty Roth, director of the Student Health Center, said that while A ID S is not prevalent on an y college cam pus, the center currently is developing an educational program to get inform ation out to students, faculty and staff. “ We are circulating guidelines concerning A ID S,” Roth said. “ We {dan to target not only students, but the staff and faculty as w ell.” Roth said the recent hysteria surrounding A ID S is un­ founded and the Student Health Crater is going to do a ll it can to quell fears or concern surrounding the disease. “ My perception is that there has been some excellent education program m ing on A ID S ,” he said. “ There is probably less hysteria now than there was six months ago. We plan to have a much larger cam paign to educate die community about A ID S .” Roth said no one who has visited the Student Health Center has been diagnosed as having A ID S. However, one form er A SU student, who wished to rem ain anonymous, said he left the College o f Business because he had been diagnosed off-cam pus as having A ID S and Was afraid his declining health would interfere with his class work. Roth said if a person were to com e into the health center and be diagnosed as having A ID S, the center would provide a number of confidential services. ./ “ Our biggest concern would be to help the individual victim with that disease,” Roth said. “ We would be required to report ft to the county health departm ent.” He said, however, that the health center would never release die nam e of the student, teacher or staff member to other parts o f die cam pus because of the confidentiality factor. . Once a student turns to the center, Roth said counseling would be provided. “ We would counsel that student about the risks they m ight be exposed to ,” Roth said . “ We would let them know that they are susceptible to m any com m unicable diseases.” Roth said that a student would not be excused from the University, according to University guidelines, because that student would not be a threat to others on cam pus. “ I think one of the m ajor thrusts of the guidelines is that you don’t cateh A ID S from casual contact with people in dorms, classroom s or swimming with them ,” Roth said- “ I would assure the students at this University that there is not a possibility o f getting the disease through casual contact. We know very specifically how the disease is spread. You have to transm it blood or bodily fluids from one person to another.” D r. Steven Englender, director of the office of infectious diseases for the State of Arizona H ealth Departm ent, sup- AID 5 Tw o epidem ics present in the United States today ported Roth’s statements about the com m unicability of A ID S. “ Over half the country believes that you can get A ID S by casual contact,” Englender said. “ We must dispel the m yths. You don’t get A ID S from a restaurant because your waiter m ay be g a y .” He said he believes there is a bigger epidemic than A ID S in Am erica. “ From m y standpoint, we have two clear epidemics — A ID S and the hysteria surrounding A ID S,” Englender said. “ A ctually, there is a disease called A FR A ID S, which stands for “ a fear regarding A ID S.” He said that being around a person who has A ID S or who has tested positive for the antibodies related to A ID S w ill hot result in the spread of the disease. Englender also said the virus that causes A ID S dies very quickly outside of the human body and a sim ple 10 percent household bleach solution w ill destroy the virus. Regardless of the fears of people, Roth said the University w ill try to educate a ll students, faculty and staff about the epidemiology and transmission of A ID S and groups on cam pus are helping in the educational process. “ I think that letting die people know how A ID S is spread is most im portant,” Roth said. “ I know that the gay groups around the Valley have been educating people around the V alley? “ What we are proposing is that we have a campus task force which has a representative from Student Health Ser­ vices, the residence halls and the Student U fe O ffice. Our intent is to monitor any m ajor recommendations or changes concerning A ID S and let the campus know about them. ” A spokesman for A SU ’s Lesbian and G ay Academ ic Union said Mobilization Against A ID S, a national educational network, w ill be coming to campus to provide inform ation about the disease. “ It is an organization that goes around to schools and tells individuals about safe sex practices,” the spokesman, who asked not to be identified, said. “ They are going to be going to the L G A U to talk to them within the next three weeks. ’ ’ Although the LG A U is trying to educate the community, the spokesman said that because the incidence of A ID S is so high among the gay com munity, many people harass those men and women who come out of the closet, even if it is to educate others. / “ The worse thing about it is the phobia that goes with A ID S ,” he said. “ Concerning A ID S, it is a very tough situation. We have to consider putting ourselves on the m all and doing this (providing educational m aterials).” He said that if the A ID S epidemic spread to the ÁSU cam pus, members of the LG A U m ight sacrifice their anonymity in lieu of education. Regardless of the current situation, the LG A U spokeman said the homosexual organization w ill provide counseling to anyone who is diagnosed with A ID S. “ The L G A U , besides being a support group, is a place where they can find com fort.” Roth said one of the main objectives in dealing with A ID S is not to become overly concerned with the disease or patients. “ We Want to make sure that there is no discrim ination against. A ID S patients or groups,” he said. “ We want to m ake sure we don’t discrim inate against gay groups or those in­ volved in homosexual lifestyles. And we want to be reassuring that you can’t catch A ID S from being in die sam e room with the person.” Despite the epidemic status o f A ID S, both Roth and Englender said the rate of occurrence of A ID S is decreasing. W hile Roth and Englender are encouraged by die drop in incidence, both are cautiously optim istic and Englender said safer sexual practices are necessary to prevent the disease. “ When we consider the fact that A ID S is a sexually transmitted disease, the changes used to avoid STDs can be applied here,” he said. “ Know who you are going to bed with first. Do not just jum p in the sack with anyone.” Key to treating AID S is treating those without it its com m unicability. For a disease that By S IE V E W ATERSTRAT reaches from San Francisco to New Y ork, State Press 17,001 cases is not a staggering outbreak. It has been a long five years since die first So for the moment, the pivotal question in A ID S cases started turning up. the crisis is not how to treat those who have Modern m edicine has not found a way to A ID S, but how to treat those who do not cure the disease. Victim s of the disease can only w ait and The government and employers are hope their health stays intact while doctors struggling with policies concerning it. search for a way to rebuild the human Society has ngt found a way to deal with it. immunity system enough to fight off the A person who has Acquired Immune A ID S virus. It’s a battle in which the human Deficiency Syndrome only knows one thing players have little control over the fight. for sure. There is a dam n good chance he Rut die vast m ajority of the unafflicted w jlldiesoon. population has nearly total control over The sim ple statistics are very sobering for whether to enter the battle. anyone with A ID S. There have been 17,001 cases of A ID S Homn«e«»ai and bisexual m ales account reported in the United States since I960, for 72 percent of all A ID S cases. Another 17 according to Centers for Disease Control, a percent are traced to intravenous drug federal agency based in Atlanta, G a . O f users. these, 8,801 have been fa ta l, a survival rate So lifestyle m odification can play a big o f less than SO percent teat leaves 8,200 part in stopping the virus in its tracks. And it Am ericans in a very uncomfortable has. A ID S cases are still increasing, but not position. * as quickly as they w ere from 1961-83. That includes 38 Arizonans who have “ We were experiencing a doubling survived the disease, out of the 84 in-state phenomenon in the first couple years, where cases reported through the end of 1985. the number of A ID S cases would double E xactly h alf of the 58 M aricopa County every six months,” said Kathryn Lord, a A ID S victim s have died. / spokeswoman for Disease Control. “ Now it The numbers add up to a long list of tragic w ouldtakem ore than a yew to double.” life stories. No A ID S victim h as ever Disease Control has no way of estim ating recovered. Btft the affliction has been fairly what tiie A ID S toll m ight reach in any given well contained, as fa r as epidem ics go. The year in the future. It ip estim ated that fatality df the disease is m ore alarm ing than between 500,000 and one m illion Americans have been exposed to the virus. The lucky ones w ill have im munity system s strong enough to defeat the virus. Others, however, w ill be in foe some devastating news in the future. Once one is exposed to the A ID S virus, it can take five years to develop the syndrome itself. The average incubation period for the virus is two years. Public anxiety over bring exposed to A ID S is the distinctive characteristic of the epidemic. Not too many Am ericans worry on a d a ily b a sis about developing pneumonia or influenza, but these m aladies kill 50,000 Am ericans annually — more than 50 tim es the number of deaths that A ID S has caused in its entire existence. Y et A ID S represents the unknown, a m icroscopic rem inder of our own m ortality. First isolated in the lab by the French in the spring o f 1983, the virus that causes A ID S, clinically referred to as H TLV-H I/LA V, was not isolated in U .S . laboratories until spring of 1984. But in the cases-reported category, the United States leads by a long shot with 17,001. France is second with only 466 cases. In fa ct, only 1,573 A ID S cases have been recorded in the rest of the world, according to a report last fa ll by the World Health Organization, an inform ational arm of the United Nations. So it is largely an Am erican problem , and the answers must be found here. The federal government hesitated to m ake the problem a research priority, but has since poured billions into studying A ID S. It w ill never be enough, until a cure is found. But in a short tim e,, scientists have managed to proride pretty effective detection techniques, and in the last 18 months p ractically have taken the A ID S worry out of blood transfusions. U ntil a cure is found, if that day ever com es, prevention w ill continue to be the principle weapon against A ID S. The heart o f prevention lies in age. Less than h alf a percent of a ll A ID S victim s have been between the ages of 13 and 19. Twentyone percent have been 28-29 years old, and the sam e percentage holds for the 40-49year-old age group. The great m ajority, 47 percent, have been between 30 and 39. The teenagers, who haven’t been getting the virus, w ill soon be in the high-risk age groups, so one key to AID S prevention seems to be in educating young people. “ We need to im press upon them to avoid indulging in high-risk sexual practices or iwing drugs,” Lord said. “ Then m aybe we can wipe out A ID S .” p jniured a^ftbn j2^6^ ^Ä _ Cheating unaffected by computer age, prof says By LIN D A COULSON v State Press Although computers have resulted in more incidents of cheating on some university cam puses, several A SU professors said they have not noticed an increase in plagiarism . A College Press Service report from die University of Washington said the increase in home computers has con­ tributed to a rise in plagiarism in the school's political science department. Cheating is increasing because sharing computer discs m akes another student’s work easily available and editing commands speed up alterations, the report stated. George Watson, a political science professor, said, “ P la giarism has been long-standing even without com­ puters, even though computers m ake it easier to rearrange work and harder to detect the changes.” Watson, who teaches computer usage and research methods courses, said more students copy large pieces of already published m aterial rather than exchange computer discs. / “ If a student is going to cheat, he is going to do it regard­ less of com puters,” be said. rh iirk Riden, a computer science professor, said: “ Word processors are a m ixed blessing. They allow for creativity in work, but they also allow for creativity in copying. ” He said that although he has not noticed a measurable increase in the amount of cheating, assignm ents in his beginning computer course are structured to minimize disc swapping. . “ We fry to keep the number of points passible on each project sm all so there’s no real advantage to copying another person’s d isc,” he said. Hiiden said, “ It’s not like we’re asking them to w rites fivepage paper on their own, or som ething.” In «Hdfflnn, the computer science department is able to run a com puter program to check for sim ilarities in two assignm ents, he said. “ The computer checks line by line and sees how many are the sam e,” Riden said. “ If takes a lot of computer tim e to do it, but we w ill do it if we need to.” Riden said cheating is more likely to take place in the lower-level classes because students in upper division courses are more confident of their computer abilities. “ When they get to that level they don’t need to copy,” he said. Riden said the penalties for cheating “ are up to the in­ dividual professor. ’ ’ , i b y M ichael B i t t e r Ivo ry T o w e r By the College Press Service A recent campus poll at the University of M ichigan found 51 percent of the students responding hadn’t even heard o f the South A frica n governm ent’s segregationist law s. f. □ O □ The O ffice of C ivil Rights is failin g to prosecute “ serious violations” of law s banning thscrimination a g a in s t black, handicapped and fem ale students, a House Intergovernm ental Relations subcommittee reports. Since 1980, the O CR has prosecuted wily 50 of the 2,000 school and college civ il rights law s violations reported to it, the subcom mittee said. □ □ □ Duke University students have formed a Discordtan A lliance dedicated to ridiculing campus authority figures and groups. □ □ □ M usic m ajors ranked m usic, a good m ovie, natural beauty, art, physical contact with other people and opera as more thrilling than sex, according to a Stanford University study published in the Decem ber issue of Psychology Today m agazine. % M E X IC O DISTINGUISHED TEACHING AWARD NOMINATIONS Spring Break • March 10-14,1986 College o f Lib era l A rts & Sciences Air, Hotel, Transfers, W elcom e Cocktail M a z a t la n Nominate your MOST DISTINGUISHED TEACHER Eligibility: D eadline: •301 A n y C o lle g e o f L ib e ra l A r ts & S c ie n c e s F a c u lty M e m b e r an d a T e a c h in g A ssista n t/ A sso c ia te P u e r t o V a lla r ta per p a rso n •368 p er p e re o n CALL FOR MORE INFO F eb ru a ry 14, 1 9 8 6 d iv e r s if ie d t r a v e l in e . Nomination form s can be picked up at the Memorial Union Information Desk, in the Office, o f the College o f Liberal Arts & Sciences (SS 107), and in each department office in the College. J?67-7855 B r o a d w a y & Mill U n ic e d B a n k B u ild in g JM Welcome back to A SU and the largest; m ost modern tanning salon in the state o f Arizona!! Sl)N D EVIL TANNING SALON IUi,L" - ' Y o u r C a m p u s H a ir C a r e C e n te r S P E C IA L S P R IN G R A T E S : ™ 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe North of University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square 968-5946 $ 4°o O F F With This Ad E x p ire s M a rc h 15, 1986. R E G U LA R PRICES • Sham poo • Precision Cut «Condition »Blow Dry M E N $13 • W O M E N $15 OPEN M O ND AY TH RO UGH SATURD AY T U E S ., W E D . & T H U R S . T I L L 9 P.M . IRft’fti 15 W EEK U N L IM IT E D ........ .$ 1 5 0 15 W EEK UNLIMITED (w ith ASU ID .) . . . . ----- $ 1 3 5 M O N TH LY U N LIM IT ED ..................... ............. ; . . • • $ 5 0 M O N TH LY UNLIMITED (with-ASU L D .) .................. $ 4 0 10 Session M em bership......................... $52 5 Session Membership............. .............. $17 Single Session....................................... $4 (Prices are based on 30 min. sessions) •BUILT-IN HIGH SPEED FACE TANNERS •PIONEER AM/FM CASSETTE STEREO •AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT N O W F E A T U R IN G : N ew State-of-the-Art RUVA System the R eflector tubes give yo u 40% more tunning!! K i CALL NOWAND GET THATHEALTHYLOOK _ d 9 v 0 " 4 0 l l L O C A T E D IN T H E A R C H E S M A LL CORNER OF FOREST & UNIVERSITY _______. NEXT TO THE1WAREHOUSE DELI 1 p jj ''. % ÎW « f f f f f ; / “# • f i, \ ' ■ V « ’ r à f f i .. ; _____________ . .‘a ì ì l * Thursday, F e t > m a f y ^ _ 1 9 t 6 _ ^ _ _ ^ _ _ ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^ ^ _ _ _ ^ - _ ^ — HAPPY HOUR S P E C IA LS MON.-FRI. LUNCHIMMER 10:30 *.m.-7 p.m. IMPORTS — 94* DRAFT BEER MON>FRI. 10:30-2 p.m. Sandwich ' of the Day with Homemade Fries Pitch« $2.35 Olws 52* WINE ONLY $2.35 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY BR EAKFAST (No Conor. No Min.) SERVED MON.-FRI. 6 ».m.-10:30 Am . 130 E . U N IV ER SIT Y D R . A rra n sT 3 E G G S, H O M E S T Y L E P O T A TO E S , TO A S T , B U T T E R & JA M 0 6 6 -7 7 8 8 • T E M P E , A Z CHECK OUT OUR OTHER BREAKFAST ITEMS Y our H o sts: “T h £ F a m ily " SERVING A SU SINCE 1972 Papa Jay’s Pizza . /' FA ST FREE D ELIV ERY •Lim ited D elivery A re a 8 0 4 S. A s h (2 blks. W . of M ill on U niv.) Right Next to A SU 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 o r ) I 5 J "966-1003 --------------------------------------------------------------- 4 ANY 2 LARGE C H E E S E P IZ Z A A tribute to Elvis Presley Janis Joplin Buddy.HollyTheBeatles Jim Morrison and the DOORS Sunday, February 9th only S a w $2.00 I *8.50 Good on delivery, p lu t ta x take-out or dine-in. Expires j3-10-86. (With Thi* - iu - bo .^ This Coupon) #1 Sun Devil Combo ! #2 Sun Devil Combo Any large pizza with a Any medium size pizza with your choice of up to4 toppings. S your choice of up to 4 toppings. O N L Y $ 7 .5 0 p /u s tax i G ood on delivery, take-out, or dine-in. Expires 3-10-86. star oi "ro cky iv I S a w $1.65 $9.75 50%¿oeeb oU n ig h t ten# FO R ' *On Regular, Not licilian Pizza Sicilian Pizza 8pm I JAMES m om S a w $1.60 #3 Sun Devil Combo Any small size pizza with yourchoice of up to 4 toppings. O N L Y $ 6 .5 0 p / u s tax O N L Y $5.50p/ l vote Thursday night, making the city the first in Arizona to pass a smokihg-restriction law. It w ill require non-smoking areas in enclosed public areas such as restaurants with more than 100 seats, grocery stores, shops, schools, waiting rooms, public restrooms and places of employment. B ars, bowling alleys, paid rooms and other recreational areas are not siioject to the law . people. I don’t smoke in other] “ I don’t think legislation smoking. I would be against prohibit sm oking in a restaun smoking and non-smoking sec1 groups, including the Am erican C ivil Liberties Union. The law was passed to protect non-smokers from having to lnhale secondhand smoke from other’s cigarettes, cigars and pipes, Fairbanks said. The Environm ental Protection Agency estim ates 500 to 5,000 non-smoking Am ericans die o f lung cancer each year from breathing secondhand sm oke, be said. The Jan u ary 1906 issue of Am erican Review o f Respiratory Diseases, a journal of the Am erican Thoracic Society, puts the figure dosa* to 5,000, Fairbanks said. i . H ie Am erican Cancer Society said last November at its annual m eeting, “ No longer is there any doubt that Side-stream smoke causes lung cancer in nonsm okers.” Fairbanks said secondhand smoke also causes sinus and brain cancer in invduntary smokers and “ Come back and ask m eags Charles Cheers, an account! it violates smokers’ rights. “ But in some places, Ilk restaurants, it’s appropriate.’ Linda Trennert, a registri don’t appreciate it a t a ll. “ I realize (smoking) is off and can sympathize with thei offensive to me, top, lik e di people and women wearing toe “ Nobody’s passing laws aga “ In a public place, you’re a l that w ill offend you. You take) “ I think it’s more of an econ didn’t includebowling alleys o places would go broke. “ I’m not defending smokinj filthy h abit.” p *900 Student Appointment Special (Alter 4th cut get 5th cut FREE) mile? Private Booths Cali Today M o n .-S a t 9:30-9 Su n d ay 11-4 966-6111 Please C a ll for Appointm ent Across Iront the Cornerstone 9 3 3 E . U N IV E R S IT Y Tempe Towne Plaza (S.E. Cornar Rural A Univaratty) After March 1, smoking in one of the restricted spots could cost the violator as much as $25 the first time and $50 each time afterward. After M arch 1, smoking in one of the restricted spots could cost the violator as much as $25 the first time and $50 each time afterw ard, ASU policy follows a 1973 state law that prohibits smoking in elevators, theaters and classroom s. There has never been an arrest made fo r violating the law , which was the first of its kind in the country. Under the Tempe ordinance, employers w ill have until M ay 29 to establish smoking and non-smoking areas to accommodate the preferences of employees. Failure to do this could result in a $500 fin e for the employer. D r. Lee Fairbanks, chairm an of the Public Health Committee of the M aricopa County M edical Society, said sim ilar laws passed around the country have stood up w ell against challenges from civ il rights aggravates symptoms in people who suffer with bronchitis, asthm a, emphysema and allergies. Several A SU students, both smoking and non­ smoking, thought the tim e for such a law had com e. " I think it’s great,” said a student who asked not to be identified because her husband does not know she smokes. “ Cigarette smoke bothers m e when others smoke and I’m not having one. I’m sure I’m not m aking him happy over there,” she said, pointing to a student eating across her table as she smoked in the M U basement. Esther Fran k , a student with an undeclared m ajor, said, “ I have m ixed «notions because I’m trying to 'q u it “ I can understand their reasoning in m aking the law . . . because (smoking) is an intrusion on other Fairbanks said «a poll tal Research Center inM aricopa showed that 7$ percent of tl requiring non-smoking section percent would require protect» The poll also showed that i M aricopa County smoke, he sa In the summer of 1903, a ca which restaurants were awan Health Department for volu smoking sections. Two-and-a-half years later, in Tempe had non-smoking sec There are also three bills ii Representatives to m ake this a “ Som e people say . this wil police state — that’s ridiculou Fairbanks said. “ H ie law w ill $ v e courage t wouldn’t say anything to a smo EETHEART SPECIAL Let you r heart do the talking with a V slate press “Valentine's Day Personal" Deadline: Friday, Feb. 7 • 10 a.m. Must be placed in person at: STATE PRESS Matthews Center or MU Classified Ad Booth Cash/check »refinance restricting smoking in public areas ie . I don’t m a k e in other people's homes, don’t think legislation w ill stop people from ting. I would be against legislation that would ibit sm oking in a restaurant, but it’s fine to have cing and non-smoking sections. BEST PICTURE LOS ANGELES FILM CRITICS ASSOCIATION I f s o n ly a sta te o l m in d . hme back and ask me again after I’ve q u it.” / arles Cheers, an accounting junior, said, “ I think fates smokers’ rights. ut in some places, like grocery stores and rnrants, it’s appropriate.” ida Trennert, a registration worker, said, “ I appreciate it at a ll. realize (smoking) is offensive to som e people can sympathize with th a n , but some things are sive to me, top, lik e diesel fum es, unwashed le and women wearing too much perfum e, obody’s passing laws against them. 1a public place, you’re alw ays exposed to things will offend you. You take your chances, think it’s more of an economic issue. Notice they t include bowling alleys or bars in the law . Those is would go broke. m not defending sm oking, thbugh. I think its a rhabit.” ^ ^ N3ELEC1H>1»*ATI«S A UNIVERSAL Release LOTuvueioakii&t irbanks said «a poll taken by the Behavior arch Center in M aricopa County last Decem ber ed that 76 percent of the population favored ring non-smoking sections in restaurants and 64 sit would require protection in work places. ; poll also showed that 26 percent of adults in eopa County smoke, he said. the summer of 1963, a cam paign was started in 1 restaurants were awarded certificates by the th Department for voluntarily providing noning sections. o-and-a-half years later, only eight.restaurants mpe had non-smoking sections, he said. ¡re are also three bills in the Arizona House of esentatives to m ake this a state-wide law . •me people say . this w ill turn Arizona into a t state — that’s ridiculous. It’s self-enforcing,” tanks said. % >e law w ill $ v e courage to people who norm ally in’t say anything to a sm oker, " he said . 3* -- SMRPi TOMORROW HARKINS CAMELVIEW 70th St. nto Camelback 945-6178 AMC METRO VILLAGE 6 MANN SUPERSTITION On 31st Ara sto Morta S. Longmore/ Sprstn. Fwy. 997-7483 834-5767 Staff photo by T JL Keugun Jennifer Abraham demonstrates heratttude toward Nick Beeler’s smoking. Both students are In the graduate program Ingeology. Students never had it so gi I-, iFä-a ■ Bi M (jgtMiiit a s ' piMli I M '.'iZr-'jr.' »* K r. U n til the luxury and convenien ce o f U N IV ER SITY T O W E R S. These unique and exciting co ed u catio n al student residence suites com bine the b est o f apartm ent and dorm itory living. Id eally located w ithin 2 b lo ck s o f A rizona State U niversity acad em ic fa cilitie s, and a cro ss from Sun D evil Stadium . U.T. offers furnished 2 bedroom residen ce su ites including utilities; h ill kitch en and m any extras. •24 h o u r se c u rity • E sco rts if req uested • 2 4 h o u r em ergen cy m ain ten an ce • G arage p ark in g • P o ol, ja c u z z i, v o lle y b a ll, elevated su n d e ck • S a te llite C a b le T elevision Sto p by o u r le a sin g o ffic e today o r c a ll 894-2300 U N IV E K S n ’Y lo ca ted o n 5th Street betw een C o lle g e an d Forest 525 S . Forest T em p e.A Z 85281 SOM ETHING NEW IS CO liflN G TO A^.11 A p riva te student housing developm ent. V ,1966 CARPET REMNANTS THE MENAGERIE Earrings 506apafr I Over 5,000 pair hi stock lt26WHaa*aw replacem en t so ft CONTACT LEN SES N EA R A SU aAmsOf •American Hydron •Aosoft •Bausch & Lomb •Cibasoft • Durasoft 829-7565 m h h 3161«.Sts Art' f u w S f lw Q | B 9 3 268-3261 5 « sa !8 K « W a lotlteualMn { B flB M iH M W Fo r O ver 4 0 Years The Standard o f Excellence In Test Preparation. PREPARE FOR: D R E * « PSYCH • « » • « M t PCKI • O CH $ 1 .0 0 E C fM G • R E X • M Deadline: $57/pr. $45/pr $67/pr. ' S97/pr *57/pr $55/pr $87/pr. i u IF YOUR BRAND IS NOT LISTED HERE. SEN D A C O PY OF YOUR PRESCRIPTION A N D WE WILL ft p u n y o u AO U OTE.-------_ J « t t n u u « i n *1.19 4QDu ae ienni l D E N IM . M M D S (WITH COUPON) Flexible Programs and Hour* t n D o u b le D e lig h t! t Visit hay Cutter tad Sm Fir f i t - THTidlf WhyWl MMuTMWCfnsset TEST PttEPAltATION SPECIALISTSSMCC IMS I Custer CostorolaIMar18Ckiaa Puertolice«Vfortuito.Cosate * W e ’re h a v in g a real s a le o n a real treat. T w o m o u n d s o f s m o o th & c re a m y D a ir y Q u e e n * s m o th e re d w ith o u r d e lic io u s H o t F u d g e & H o t B u tte rs c o tc h a n d t o p p e d with 2HRS. FREETUTORING c h o p p e d p e c a n s . T h e D o u b le D elig h t! 967-2967 W eigh lit F o r H ealthy Bab ies Support the Dost Doctor ptaase sa n d m a a copy of m y latest son contact Ians prescriptio n P taase com plete th*s an d ma** a a s soon as p o ssib le Thank you vary m uch i c m - sm p n u m m i Must be placed in person at: S TA TE PRESS Matthews Center or at MU Classified Ad Window (Casb/cbecb onlyplease) D -fatsudad Wear leu* s - N P O D U n iY D O W D S - N U R S I N G B O N D S Friday, Feb. 7 10 a.m. *63.97 pair M il i o n - M S K P -w n m a n m (10 word maximum) • Bausch & Lomb Natural Tints • Cibasoft Colors • w r • ssur-psK *sn-KNHEMHns-acT 10 words for ■Tinted Lenses T R I Â T . YO U R SELF ROYAUX MCAT'DAT'ISAT STATE PRESS “ Special Valentine's Day Personal" $41.93 pwr •Durasoft 3 •Genesis A •Hydrocurve Owned end operated by E t o n Carpet M ills with warehouses throughout the U.S.A. V *D aily W ear L e n s e s •csrr s 887-2703 ¡ A g a W S S S E WESTSIDE Lety o u r ▼ d o th e ta lk in g w it h a Rapine# test, Dnmngad, or Discolered Laases at o \ Fraction of thoir Originai | __ J Casti •Bausch & Lomb •GooperVision Permalens m iC M C M i SWEETHEART SPECIAL , ° 6 5 ”/0 •A O S o ftc o n 880-1152 NORTHEAST I Tam pa A Z 35 “ t M ad PriaCM 215 E. 7th St. j ! •Wa Deliver I k M | Cosmetics, Flags and • Unbelievable Discounts I on Avon Products S A V fc rem nants — $29-168 H ER \ Affordable Jewelry, ! •Thousands in stock — 30%-70%0« •Hundreds of room-size WE MANUFACTURE OUR OWN CARPET AND SELL IT DIRECT TO THE PUBLIC, NO MIDDLE MAN. March of Dimes ■■ ■W ITH 06FfCB FOUNDAIIONBBB* W f TREAT Y O U RIGHT - O ffe r ex p ire s 5-8-86. 950 S~ Mill (Across fromGammage) 966-1957 £ Patroni Signatura Fiftar’t Sognatore | I 1 0 2 4 M im iM w i n e tea »••*» Md •n ouppliod oro aup ulwd la Hu orifinol lactar. E A S T I Contact Lons Supply, Inc. S06S0 Carter ad. J Qsveiand, Ohio 44139 216/241-2416 ' "Contact Lens Suppliers for 25 years." Msesssend---------------------pairs at | only_____ a pair. • TaMl far louoao, • SUfftafSHaadSo 2.80 •TutelF II In m m m R ywywmat hothe fsHewioig eaththe (Personal Checks must be cleared poortoshipment) •Far anco is had aad add t IN . «U «n ksap aS rraacrirtem SUMs •M% al Sia loSous tedaoad uru lu u u rl laoaataoy aad road, tu ka akiupad in i à t e i) . B R O A D W A Y 9 6 7 -8 8 7 5 .j I M B l . I FOLLOW THESE 5 EASY STEP. S 1 I I .Acquire your complete contact lehs prescription 1 2.Complete the order below 1 3 Make check, money order or corTpiete credit card intormaion paya-1 ■ bietoC LS. me «. 1 4 .Enclose name, address & phone I number with order 1 5 Mail all information to: BRILL [PRANKSTER’S —orders to go— Serving our BEST BOOD & FEVIRAQi )N WEDNESDAY FRIDAY Happy Hour! CHICKEN WINGS 12« EACH —orders to go— SUNDAY Every Sunday 2 for 1 PIZZAS Free BBQ Ribs, Buy A Large Get A Large FREE Free Corn on Buy A Small Get A Small FREE the Cob, Free From11 a-m’ Potato Salad All Day, All Night A L L DAY & menu A L L NIGHT until 12:10 HOT, 8 80. : * MIXED OR PLA IN EVERY 4 -7 p . m . n HAPPY HOUR DIP EM YOURSELF 10 p.m.-1 a.m. . NIGHT! _____________ ___________ BUYOREGETTHENEXTONEOF EQUAL [ D C r I I M P I I ORLESSERVALUE FREE EVERY DAY11-4 M n r i L l U i I i a i l U l i ■ G O O D T H R O U G H F E B . 7 ,1 9 8 6 . ’s G ar & Brill, 1024 E. Broadway • 967-8875 Pase 11 iw i n e u « lo o m COUNTY DIRECT DIAMOND IMPORTERS b y B e r k e B r e a th e d The Puzzle LONDON GOLD ■ M san m sm M M > W 'Re HOUPmo m tuo cune* John a sms f ' ACROSS 1 Sim ian 4 Spanish for “yas” 6 Degree 11 G o a l 13 Angry outburst 15 Conjunction 16 M usical dram a 18 Dillseed 19 In favor of 21 M oslem prayer leader 22 Chinese distance m easure 23 Rigorous 26 Uncouth person 29 Escape 31 Break suddenly 33 Sun god 34 Babylonian deity 35 Snake 38 Affirm ative vote 39 Negative prefix 40 Part o f "to be” 41 Form 43 Quarrel 45 Fem ale ruff 47 Tell 50 Sym bol for tantalum 52 Fuel 53 P riest's vestment 56 Sem i-precious stone 58 Dress protector 60 Chaldean city 61 Iterate 63 Puzzle 65-Plague 66 Note of scale 67 Choose DOWN 1 Above and touching 1 V U a i a V a rr la 2 3 4 5 d 0 IN s n ü Y a V d Í U V 0 1 3 N a V a d a d 1 N ■a N0 d d 1 y O I V d d S 0 a A V d V N S 0 1i ÍÑ V i V V d d 11 o 0 S Young salmon Teutonic deity Cuttlefish Newspaper paragraphs ” 1 FINE JEWELRY s V a X V a d 3 d] i V d 0] V X a 3 d N WV 0 w ü ;3 8 V a a ■i d S V & a W f o d d d o a d o X a o d V X i s 3 d V a X V 0 V T d T M S 6 M 0 m * e i' < m rco w m tr ?.. m o p u m m r h h m /y youpeone 6 Endurance 7 Roman 101 8 Spoken 9 Sudden fright 10 Dutch town 12 Proceed 14 Latin conjunction 17 Rodents 20 Poem 24 Paper m easure yz SO 60 O N ' SHOOTM NI6SIUS! snoot/SHOOT/ stterr.' MOUTS Solo Arrow Fright Crippled Nuisance Offspring Appease Let fall Edible seed Public storehouse 48 M ore unusual 49 By oneself 51 Name for Athena 54 Protuberance 55 Unruly child -56 Conjunction 57 Fondle 59 Sym bol for nickel 62 Equally 64 Proceed M We guarantee our prices — in writing — to be the LOWEST in the valley. Bring us any quote of comparable quality and we ll DISCOUNT it by at least 5 percent! i am e fm m / 2 5 L o w is la n d 27 28 29 30 32 36 37 42 44 46 153 seeN *MCKYE '? m e ow c a n t ee peremep... v o u -w m e M K * •Extensive Collection of Loose Stones •Custom Work •Repair Work In Store s n jp w w i PHOENIX TEMPE SCOTTSDALE 936W. Camelback 1814 E. Southern 8320 N. Hayden W est o f M cDonald's in Southern ft M cQintock , Cam el back V illage Square Behind the Jew elry Exchange in M ercado Del Logo Center Mon.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-5 Mon.-Fri.10-6 Sat. 10-5 Mon.-Sat. 11-6 Thurs. 11-7 277-7080 820-3909 991-4814 1984 United Feature Syndicate C o lle g e Press Service DONORS WANTED VALENTI NE CARDS ; A R IZO N A SPERM BAN K A - Division of Arizona Fertility institute, Inc. ft T R U FFLE S P a y m e n t M o n th ly o Fee N e g o tia b le ~ FAN C Y BO XED w CH O CO LATES » w ETHNIC DONORS O PREMIUM FEE PAID VALENTINE SW EETS initial application fee $20, refunded upon acceptance into program. Must pass _ complete physical a n d . testing. BRING THIS AD FOR A FREE KISS! ALLOONS Appoin tmen t Necessary ¥ H EA R T SH A PED * B A LLO O N B O U Q U E T S * M YLA R S 501S. Mill 968-2610 • \\ ■' . -.'■sív v’.-ä-’'' ì-ìfe - ' ’ >* " . V ‘ - 266-3129 Or 279-2941 >**u* «•»»« titu» ■ . äsateSSSSS^' sponsor a speech by Carl Warren, vicepresident of office development for Grace Development Company, who will speak about marketing and leasing of office buildings at 4:30 p.m. in the Business Adm inistration Building room 241. University Toastmasters will meet at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room featuring speakers and “The Impor­ tance of Communication Skills." Episcopal Cantebury Fellowship will meet at 6 p.m. in Danforth Chapel for celebration of the Eucharist and for prayers. Amnesty International will hold a general business meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the MU Rendezvous Lounge. America-Japan Association will hold its first general meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU. College Democrats will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU Gila Room. Delta Sigma PI Business Fraternity will meet in the MU at 7 p.m. for a Junior Achievement volunteers meeting. The Wildlife Society will meet in Life Science Building room 183 at 7 p.m. and will feature guest speaker Dr. Baida from NAU who will speak on “Special Memory' in Seed-Catching Birds.” Phoenix L5 will meet in the MU Pinal Room South at 7:30 p.m. for a speech Collage, a free public service pro­ vided by the State Press to announce meetings of legitimate campus organi­ zations and clubs,'is published every Tuesday and Thursday. To be included, please obtain a form at the State Press reception desk in the basement of Matthews Center. For Tuesday's paper the insert must be filed by 10 a.m. Mon­ day and for Thursday’s paper the dead­ line is 10 a.m. Wednesday. No entries will be accepted after deadline. One item per event will be accepted. Collage entries are subject to editing due to space limitations or content. / ') TO D AY Baptist Student Union will meet at noon at the Baptist Student Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave., for a fellowship meeting. Information Systems Club will spon­ sor a speech by Pat Holmes, a pro­ grammer and analyst for Intel Corpora­ tion, at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Pinal Room. Black Student Union will meet at 3:45 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room for a program on blacks in theater, mgsic and literature. ASU Real Estate Association will Gino’s delivers. We’re open for lunch! FR FF FREE Q U A R T ■ OF COKE 12” C H E E S E P IZ Z A G et a free 12” cheese pizza valued at $3.60 with purchase of a large pizza with this coupon. Not valid with any other coupon. ■ ! Free quart of-C oke with the purchase of a large or m edium pizza with this coupon. Not valid with any other coupon. Expires Feb. 18,195%. Expires Feb. 18,1986. G IN O ’S PIZZA 966-4666 822 S. M ill Avenue We 've been delivering in Tempe since 1970. Open M o n d ay........... 3:30 p.m.-Midnight Tuesday-Thursday. . . . . . 11 a.m.-Nfldnight Friday & Saturday.............11 a.m.-2 a.m. Sunday........................... Noon-Midnight on life support systems in space colo­ nies by Prof. All Kurala. FRIDAY Re-Entry Connection will meet at noon in the lower level of the MU for a support, discussion and networking group for re-entry students. Student Health Canter will sponsor a CPR program every Friday at 2 p.m. in the Health Center room 158. Interested parties can register at the Student Health Center Information Desk. Center for Indian Education will meet at 3:30 p.m. In the Farmer Building room 302. Spirit of the Senses will meet in the MU Montgomery Lounge at 8 p.m. for a lecture and slide presentation, Allelulah Lutheran 8tudent Center will hold a dance at 8:30 p.m. at 1034 S. Mill Ave. " • SATURD AY ASU Snowdevll Ski Club will meet at noon at After the Gold Rush on the Hawaii Promotions. „ Hlllel Jewish Student Center will spon­ sor a “Las Vegas Night” at the Hlllel Center, 1012 S. Mill Ave., at 8. Admis­ sion is 4 for students and 5 for non­ students. Gambling money and two drinks are included in admission price. SUNDAY American 8oc!ety of Women Ac- countants will meet at noon at Indian School Park, northwest corner of Hayden and Indian School Roads, fçr volleyball and potluck. Please sign up in Business Administration Building room 297. Recreation Majors Student Associa­ tion will meet at Hooters, Rural Road-* and Apache Blvd. at 7 p.m. for a general business moating. ..r-. Residence Life will meet in the Best C Study Lounge for an information about resident assistant positions for Fall 1986. M ONDAY Coalition for World Peace will meet at noon in the MU Santa Cruz Room for a speech by Louis Rhodes, former director of the Ameriçan Civil Liberties Union, who will speak on “War and Its Meaning for Civil Liberties." , Anthropology Club will hold a lec­ ture by John Hohmann, a doctoral stu­ dent, who will give a slide presentation on “An Overview of thé Besh-Ba-Gowah Archaeological Project, at 3:30 p.m. in Anthopology Building room 6204. American 8oclety for Parsonnel Administration will sponsor a speech at 4:30 p.m. in the MU by Jerry Chadwick from Motorola. Arizona Outing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room for a general meeting. A, SUNDEVILHONDA V ARIZONA’S FIN EST MOTORCYCLE & SCOOTER DEALERSHIP Insurance Full Line of Parts and A ccessories Lowest M onthly Paym ents Free First Service (on scooters) SUNDEVIL HONDA 2620 W . Broadw ay M esa 921-0199 (Between Price & Dobson) (Your Parking Worries Are Over) Lunt Ave. Marble Club Says: W ELCO M E BACK ! - ju4( ß P r e se n ts faEyaUJi Christoum -Tower Ptaxa-W estridge MaU Tropical ThursdayslU E very T hu rsday Every Thursday, grab your surfboard and catch the W AVE over to Surprizesfor our ‘SP R IN G F U N G GIVEAW AY to the new CLU B M ED in Guaym as, M exico." Be one o f the fir s t 500through the doors a t 8:00 and get “leid~and th efirst 1OO w ill receive P a cfflc E y e s S T s “W AYFARER" sty le sun glasses. This w eek you could be in our “Banana R ela y" or the “Winter Tan Con test" an d win M alibu Tees, M alibu Signs'. Beach Wardrobes and European Designer Su nglasses, from Pa cific B yes flt T s , “Phoenix's Su n g lass Ldader.” Pius you could enter the drawing fo r a Spring Break a t Club M ed in Ouaym as, M exico. A ll M alibu Rum Drinks are81 and tropical drinks are$1.75 a ll n ig h t Club M ed “SPR IN G F U N O " trips w ill be fo r sa le in the club lobby I S o , th is Thursday, head over to Surprises' Tropical Thursdays!! Be there, Aloha// You’ll find the same delicious food and dynam ic drink specials, all at marbleously low p r ic e s .. .p lu s, this term’s program includes an action-packed happy hour and the hottest patio scene in town! -Extra C re d it Sp e cialElring in this coupon and enjoy an order o f our fam ous deep-fried ZUCCHINI AND MUSHROOMS ABSOLUTELY FREE! Expires Feb. 28, 1986 - Limit 1 per person Not good w ith any other offers or special prom otions. Lunt1212 Awe. Marble Club ‘ E . A p ach e • 967-9192 cv. ■SS4 cMM. Secretary's H appy H our Every Friday a ll beer, wetl and wine is Ju s t V4 priced til 8.-00. Com plim entary hors d ’oeuvres and win an adventure. 919 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, Arizona 966-7772 gn P a » 13 Catching fly ball is a pleasure, but knowing what to db with it after you catch it is a business. — Tomm y Henricb state press Sweep L u b b o c k C h ristia n g o e s d o w n sw in g in g ag a in B y TOM B LO D G ET T State Press The scorebook showed five errors Wednesday for the Lubbock Christian baseball team , but it left out a possible sixth — scheduling A SU in the first place. The Sun Devils shellacked the Chaparrals again , 15-4, running its season-opening winning streak to six gam es. The A8U second baseman Bryan Beals fires a ball to first base during a double play as Lubbock Christian first baseman Ronnie Ortegon slides in. ASU shortstop Mike Ben|amln looks on. victory com pleted A SU ’s second straight three-game sweep. The Sun D evils won the first tth» gam es, 7-6 and 23-7. “ With this many young players, we were afraid of this happening,” Chaparral coach Larry H ays said. “ When you have a lot of young players, you have to pay for it.” A SU did not gain a lot from sbch a lopsided m atch, either, if you listen to Coach Jim Brock, who, like H ays, is coaching a young team this year. “ I wasn’t worried about either the N A IA or Division n ,” said Brock, referring to the affiliations of Lubbock and earlier sweep victim C al Poly-Pom ona. “ It’s the P ac (Conference) I was worried about. “ I don’t know what you get out of this sweep, except some inflated batting averages to scare the opposition with a little. The club probably feels better about itself. ” A ctually, Brock said, Lubbock Christian’s hitters did give his pitching sta ff a test. “ Their bitters do have some punch,” Brock said. “ Our pitchers did a decent job against first-line hitting. I give them more credit than our hitters, because our hitters didn’t face first-line pitching.” The Chaparrals lost two pitchers from academ ic ineligibility last Decem ber, creating a void in the pitching staff, H ays said. “ We had very poor pitching,” he said. “ We thought we had a pretty good bullpen, actually, but we never got to use it. Our pitching went com pletely out of the house.” In contrast, it took an inning for Sun D evil starter D avid Cassidy to enter the house, but he sailed once he did. Cassidy (1-0) gave up three runs in the first inning on three hits and two w alks. Consecutive doubles by Barry W ilkins and Sonny Collins highlighted the outburst. But Lubbock’s defensive woes allowed the Sun D evils back into the gam e without getting a hit. Three errors gave ASU two runs in the first. Two w alks, an error and a groundout tied the score in the second. Shortstop M ike Benjam in broke the tie in A SU ’s favor that inning w ith a two-run single to left field. The D evils buried Lubbock for good by tallying five runs in the fourth inning Another two-run single by Benjam in was followed by a R ick M orris three-run hom er. When Roger Sm ith followed with another single, H ays yanked losing pitcher D ale Holligan. M eanwhile, Cassidy picked up steam . He allowed only one run and four hits in the next six innings. Relievers Je f f White ASU baseball coach Jim Brock has watched his team do a lot of winning so lar thls year. and Tony H arris then cam e on to mop up. ASU scored single runs in the fifth and seventh innings, and closed with three in the eighth on a Jo e Kem p home run. Much of the offensive production cam e from the bottom third o f the batting order. f “ That says to me everyone’s capable of hitting,” said designated hitter Dwight Thom as, who went 3-for-3 with four runsscored. “ This gives us a lot of confidence,” he said. “ I’m surprised we’re 6-0.1thought after six gam es we’d be 5-1, hopefully.” ASU next travels to Haw aii for a three-game series star­ ting Friday. T h e H o ya s are com ing! A S U ca g e rs find new hole Bob Heiler A sst Sports Editor ASU basketball is desperate. Not exactly an original observation, but it has the am iable quality o f not placing nm out on a lim b. ' The latest evidence comes from the athletic department. It is incredible just what A SU is willing to go through to improve the situation. The team is going to get its own P R cam paign. There w ill be special deals on tickets. And to top it a ll off, special efforts are being made to schedule big-nam e basketball powers on our non-conference schedule. That sounds great, a t fir s t B ig nam es are fun to watch and they come trailing T V contracts in their wakes. But there’s more to it than that when you consider the possibility of facing Georgetown in the Kactus K lassic. That’s rig h t Georgetown vs. A SU . THE H O YA S A R E CO M IN G . Something to think about. It seems fair to assume that not much thought has gone on so fa r. In fa ct, thought has apparently been tossed aside by the adm inistration in the quest for bigger crowds. Not that the quest is unneeded. The last tim e ASU sold out two gam es in a row was 16 years ago, in a facility that held 5,000. A t most ASU gam es in the m odem era, the only people cheering are the band members and four guys in the front row. Those four have been in the sam e front-row seats for so long , they have a cable hookup and an option to buy. So the idea of boosting attendance is a good one. B ut this lofty goal w ill hardly be m et by bringing in Georgetown, one of the best college basketball team s in the country, Cooper gets 3 more players’ commitments to tear our lim bs off and beat us with the bloody stumps. The problem here is really quite sim ple; in fa ct, for some it m ay be painfully sim ple. In the realm of basketball, the Pac-10 is trash. The best .team in the Pac-10 would be lucky to beat any team in the Atlantic Coast Conference or the B ig E ast. Out of the ten team s in the Pac-16, m e team , U A , got one top 20 vote. And we all know where that cam e from , considering that U A coach Lut Olsen gets (you guessed it) one vote. And even in this trash conference, A SU is near the bottom of the whole unsavory heap. Pac-10 basketball, then, is not exactly the® hottest gam e hi town. In addition, ASU hngin»th«ii has to fight for fans in an en­ vironment replete with entertainm ent op­ tions. The weather and availability of other .diversions combine to m ake attracting fans even more difficult. W atching tw6 poor basketball team s compete is not a lot of ton, even for fons of State P ress Sports S taff The Sun D evil football team has received five verbal commitments from four Arizona high school players who say they w ill sign national letters of intent with ASU next W ednesday. Joinin g M cClintock’s record-breaking quarterback Kent K iefer and F la g sta ff H igh’s star running back D a v id , W haley are Sabuaro wide receiver Steve M artin, Cam elback linebacker Je ff Johnson ami Amphitheater offensive linem an Ted F ried li. A SU has not lost any in-state player recruited yet, aithmigh not a ll the players had com m itted as of Wfdn n idny. ^■ — 4 r M cClintock safety Cleveland Colter, J r . and running back A rt Greathouse are expected to announce their college choices som etim e before next W ednesday's signing date. Colter has narrowed his choices to ASU and Southern California. He has visited Brigham Young and Nebraska. the gam e. But watching one outstanding team ■ system atically destroy a mediocre team is downright painful. What the athletic department seems to have forgotten is that the basketball program at A SU has to stand on its own. Bringing good basketball team s to the Activity Center does not compensate for A SU ’s ineptitude. In fa ct, it serves only to point up the reality. hi order for the basketball program to im prove, it m ust, first of a ll, stay out of recruiting trouble long enough to get its sanctions removed. Then, if it can come up with some good players who can avoid foiling school, an adm inistration that plays foir w ith coaches and some fans that c a r e in that order — it m ight get somewhere. Trying to bypass the first two steps and jum p straight to the hordes of adoring fons w ill land us in a hole even deeper than the ctm»m we currently inhabit. And on top of that, we’ll look pretty ridiculous getting there. Greathouse is believed to have narrowed his choices to A SU and U A . H e has already visited Notre Dam e. Greathouse is one o f ju st three players in Arizona who wore recruited by both the Sim D evils and Wild­ cats. A SU has commitments from the other two, W insley and M artin. M artin (6-foot-l, 170 pounds), caught 25 passes for 550 yards and 11 touchdowns in the 1965 regular season, although he missed five gam es w ith an ankle injury. In three playoff gam es, he caught 21 passes for 479 yards and three ID s . Cam elback’8 Johnson (6-1, 215) participated in 119 tackles last year and was recruited as an outside linebacker by most schools. There are rum ors that A SU would lik e to use Mm at tight end. Friedli (6-4,245) was not recruited by Arizona. The only other school he looked a t was Northern Arizona. He canceled trips to San Diego State and T axas-El P aso. D iver from Z im b a b w e le a d in g D e v ils to s u c c e s s Association in 1985. “ Everything was new (last season)," Cbx said. “ This year In diving coach W ard O ’Connell’* opinion, “ She’« definitely - I know what is expected of m e.” Cox’s tether, G eoff, started coaching her in A frica when (he best diver we’ve ever had at A SU since I’v e been here (12 she w as eight years old until She cam e to the United States in years). She’s a w orld-class d iver.” Tracy C ox, a native of Zim babwe, has ignited in the 1986-86 the spring of 1984. T racy began international competition at age U and has been age-group champion since that tim e. season and put a ll her competition to sham e. O’Connell said Coot, who has swept first place in every P rior to leaving A frica, Cox was mimed the Zimbabwe event of every m eet except one, has an excellent chance to Sportswoman of die Y ear in 1983 at 17 years old. She said win the N ational D iving Championship this M andi. receiving the aw ard w as a high honor in her country. “ I think she’s got a great chance a t winning the N CAA’s ,” “ I w as the first sportswoman ever,” she said . “ It was he said. “ I ’ve never been this excited about having a NCAA really g reat.” champion a t A SH .” The competition in A frica was somewhat inferior to that in Coot’s top performances include two first-place finishes over Stanford and Cal-Berkley in the one- and three-meter theUnited States, according to C ax. “ It’s npt as tough as it is here,” she said. “ When I’m over dives. She took two firsts against U C LA and in every other dual m eet this season with the exception o fa one-point loss in there I know who I ’m going up against and actually, it’s boring.” ' the three-meter dive against U SC . Cox’s diving career has not alw ays been a bed of roses, In N t h the Las V egas Invitational and the Rebel Classic, however. In 1984 she w as selected to die Zimbabwe Olym pic Cox won the one-and three-meter titles. team but six weeks prior to the Olym pics she was replaced Cox knows the NCAAs are within reach, but she does not twniMu» of political reasons. Cox said her lifetim e goal was want to get overconfident. ■ erased. “ M y coach thinks I can do it and a lot of other people think I “ 1984 was m y goal for the O lym pics,” she said. “ We had a can .d o it, but I don’t want to say yes and then do really badly,” she said. “ I haven’t seen what the others are diving trial, and I made the team . Unfortunately, I didn’t get to go. ” By C H R IS M CK A Y SR I State Prets Dlnr Tracy Cox practice* her form at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center. « lik e.” ‘ As a freshm an in 1985, Cox finished 10th in the NCAA Championships and received all-Am erican honors. She was an eighth-place finisher in the 1985 World Gam es and was selected to the second-team all-Women’s Collegiate Athletic A s for living in A m erica, Cox said she doubts she’ll ever be totally com fortable here. “ I don’t think I ’d like to ever live in the United States, she said. “ I’m only here for m y four- or five-year education. Then m probably go b ack.” Coaçh Littlewood: speed, power to help softball team win By ANDREW D ELO REN ZO State Press This is the conclusion of a two-part preview on the A SU softball team . Today: a look at the offense and the season outlook. Speed, power, and aggressive baserun­ ning. ASU softball should feature all of those attributes as they kick off their 1986 season Friday, hosting an invitational tournament at the Sun D evil Club Stadium . “ We’ve got a little of everything this year,” coach M ary Littlewood said. “ I’dlike to be an aggressive baserunning team because we have the speed to get away with it,” she said. littlew ood said she prefers a team loaded with singles hitters and speed over a power- hitting team . “ With a speedy team ,' we have a better i-hnn«» to beat out a lot of infield hits,” she said. “ That is much better than having the lineup fu ll of power hitters because they tend to strike out a lo t.” littlew ood said her top hitters are Kathy F.m»nrr«»ga (.274 last season), Angie LoSasso (.258), and Jo d i Rathbun (.256). A ll three were named to a 11-conference and all-region teams last year. “ Kathy and Angie have both been hitting very well in practice,” littlew ood said. “ Jod i won’t be joining us until the middle of M arch (because she’s currently playing on ASU’s women’s basketball team ) , but she is an outstanding hitter, also,” she said. f if i Kappa K r a ir m it g Arizona Srta (Eijaptpr w Congratulations To O ur New Pledges ERIC CEDARBURG BENJAMIN GOODSITT THOMAS LYNAM GERALD COFFEY SHAWN GROOM GEORGE RAMSAUER JAMES COURALL JOHN HALE STEVE SANDECK RUDY EVANGELISTA MICHAEL HEATH EDWARD TUCKER SVERRF FREDHALL JEFFREY HEITHOFF RANDY VOS BRYAN GERSHAW MATTHEW IRWIN Among the recruits, Littlewood said M ichelle G ravatt a n d Y v ette B altazar are top hitters, and she expects Tracy M cCarron to be A SU ’s power threat. “ M ichelle is one of the better hitters and Yvette is a versatile natural athlete,” Littlewood said. “ T racy is where our power is going to be this season.” Littlewood said the Sun D evils’ speed lies in the legs of Linda Neeley, Sheila Winchell and E scarcega. “ They are a ll sm art baserunners, and all three have outstanding speed,” Littlewood said. ASU is a member of the newly formed Pac-W est Conference, which includes U C LA , Stanford and U A . “ Even though we have a young team , we should do pretty w ell in the division,” Lit­ tlewood said. “ I think we have as much talent as we’ve ever had, and the com­ petition is pretty even in the Pac-W est,” she said. A SU begins the Campaign with a tour­ nament involving junior colleges, and Littlewood warns they are not pushovers. “ We play against Arizona Western for the first gam e,” she said. “ They should be a' contender for the N JC A A championship so we can’t afford to take them ligh tly.” “ We are really anxious to p lay,” she said. “ The key for us in these first few gam es is to establish cohesiveness on the infield and get them adjusted to playing together.” TEACH IN JAPAN Persons with a degree ond job-experience in such fields o s advertising, publishing, engineering, business administration, pharmacology, linguis­ tics and languages wishing to teoch €nglish to Japanese adults for one or two years In Tokyo and other ports of Japan should write to: Senior Supervisor Personnel Departcnent International Education Services Shin Taiso Bldg. 10-7, Dogenzaka 2-chome, Shibuyo-ku Tokyo, Japan 1SO Personal interviews will be held in flnahelm in early March, 1986. Further information on the position, qualifications, salary, benefits, transportation and housing con be obtained by airm ailing o detailed resume with o recent photograph to I.E.S. SW EAT SA LE •Comp. Value $12 •Latest Hottest Colors •For Guys & Gals •American Made •50% Cotton-50% Creslan •Crew Neck Tops/Bottoms •Some Slightly Jrregular •Limit 10 Per Customer •With this coupon through 2-9-86. *500... SA TU R D A Y FEB R U A R Y Hanes Sweats printed and unprinted S t 1» S tO O p o . , $9" to *12" M IL L A V E N U E Values to $17 $4 with student I.D. $5 without student I.D. PRICE IN CLUD ES $100 PLAY MONEY AND TW O W ELL DRINKS ROULETTE GRAPS BbAGKdAGK PRIZES Thousands of Sunglasses tochoose frani pacrpcfycs jr]3r Lmt Thm CxptrtB Probet Your Cym - Chrlstown Mall (By Diamond*) • 433-2948 West ridge Mall (By Diamonds) • 873-2807 Tower Plaza (38th St. & Thom as) • 244-9118 Largest ft Best Selection Anywhere $3(300 2¡SSm 9 Í m Tho 8TATE PR ESS M c W im a ll raspóna lM llty for q uality and prie«* o f good* and aawtoaa ottarad in botti oM aaiflad and dtapiay sdvsrtlslng by Ha adran Autom obile» F u rn itu re Je w e lr y R oom m ate wanted A u to m o b ile » ¿ 1879 VW SCIRO CCO . 6 »peed, A.C.. 12.800. C e ll 986-8789.__________ _ SO FA A N D Io r ««est, tan. two y n oM. Moan, fira o t or ooo. 3228.8176.966-3106. CASH FO R gold, diamond* and silver M ill Ave Jew elers 414 S. M ill A»* Suit* 104. FEM ALE NON8MOKING. fu lly furnished townhouea, d o e s to campus, like new, 1228 per mo. ntue 1/3 u tilWes 094-1973. 1*72 PLYM O UTH DUSTER, • cylinder, autom atic, air, pow er stsorln g. dlac brattea, radial tlraa. Excellent condition. ■Sa^OSS, S ta r« .___________________ 1974 FIAT wagon, 47,000 mil««. $300. 907-410* after 8:30._________________ 1278 131 FIAT, RUNS good, excellent bod» 31,000 964-8727. _____________ 1879 TOYOTA CELICA, Hft-back, A-C. p-B . P-S, white, etereo, cloth Interior, 89.000 mito». $2860 948-6490.________ 1982 HO NDA XL600. low m ila*. Excellent condition, aupertrap. exhaust. extra*. $980. CaH 967-8474. i 1982 RABBIT LB. ehowroom condition, A -C, A-T, lu ll electron ic Instrumentation, etc. Low book 38860. muetaoN tor 33700. 320 0038 Ubu ___________________ ■80 CO U G AR (CLASSIC) corn. A C . P8, PB, stereo'cats. Very good mech.. bur­ gundy toothor MIL, W indsor 351. 83.300 - OBO, eortoue o nly piss««. 034-0040. OVER ICE CREAM FLAVORS FROZEN YOGURT SPECIALTY DESSERTS D E U SANDW ICHES ICE G U A M CAFE flU E E Value NOT VALID WITH * ANY OTHER PROMOTION OR DISCOUNT Sm all Sundae Uten Yon Buy Tint at Regular Price. Expira* 3-31-88. 915 E. Broadway Daily Sandwich Special With Medium Soft Drink S.E Com er Broadw ay & Rural $ 2.49 Tem pe • 966-8950 «Ü[ GOOO TRANSPO RTATIO N, Fiat 1318, Sspd, o riginal OWhar 3980. 007-2242 or 986-8800 aak for Mark. ___________ movie* being film ed on locatto/tln Phx. Extras also n*««|«d (no acting experience needed.) Send'feeum e. Photo to Video Movie Makers. 4413 N. Scottsdale Rd. no. 700. Scottedol« ,«8281.______________ ADVERTISING SALES. Award winning, prospering Vfeekty new spaper seek* energetic, sett m otivated 4alae person. sstsbllsttod territory, C«l! Pom ,670-9470 AIRLINE H IRINS Boom l *14-$39,000t Stewards»»««, reservstlonlstsl C a ll tor 'G uide, Casotto, NOwssqrvica. (816) 944[ «444 X ' ' :________ _ 819... EARN BIG bucks by w orking tor the ASU Tetofund. jSraai bonuses and Inconthras plus good ^Msmarkietlng axparIsnce. C a ll Sherry M cIntosh at 5-8754 A h sr 1 p.m."_______' -______ BU SIN ESS STUDENT needed to assist with hiring seniors Preferably a jock or active fraternity member. Position w ill lead to * very exciting lo n g term career with unlim ited high incom e potential tor the right person. Must bo energetic, pop­ ular, welt liked and a permanent Phoenix Area resident C e ll Tony at 287-4828. RALEIG H lO apaed, com petition, 20 lb»., 2300-847-0832, ______________ CHRISTIAN PR E school day care. Fultpart time. 996-0221._________________ B u s in e s s O pp. C R U ISESH IPS HIRING! $18-830,000 Caribeeen, Hawaii, W orld! C a ll tor Guido, Ceeeotta. Newsservice! (310) 944-4444 X. A risons State Crule«.____________ _ RENTING M AKES you rlcM Apartment renter? Ten nUnutee makes you up to 3780 m onthly. Eooy-m onoy renter'» secret. O n ly 34.36. Guaranteed. O rder nowl Brooks Com pany Suite 356-D 3104 E. Cemetboob Phoenix. A Z 88018. OISABLED 32 YEAR old gentleman needs .som e weekend assistance. W ill train, please ca ll and leave your nemo and phone number m 994-1300.___________ ENGINEERING TECH N ICAL lu ll ttme. Minim um o f one year M E. or M.E.T. Some related experience desired. Salary commensurate with experience. 980-0200. 1878 TO YO TA C ELIC A 87. white, two door, autom atic, AC, stereo. $1,500 or beet otter 267-7730._________________ *rà I r o^ 6? ARARTM ENT FO R rent, 1/3 m il* from ASU, furnished, u tilities Included, pool, negotiable. Contact Lorry, C arol 987»178 608-1880.________ ; _ J _________ ATTENTION FACULTY end graduate atudantal Luxury condo* for le ase w ith fl re­ place. washer end dryer. Unique designs, Dobson. U niversity Rata* from 3300. 3398311._____________ ____________ BEAU TIFU L TH R EE bedroom, two bath­ room townhouea near Southern and Hardy. Unfum lahad, appliances Included. 3628 per month. 287-2782.____________ ,< b ¡ctl® HOT TU B spa aultee. by hour o r over­ night. F ill your own trash water. K ing water bod, ca llin g m irror, refrigerator, bathroom . TV. m usic. VCR-* end movie* fo r ra n t Tem po Hot Tub Spa, 2144 E. Apeche 8tv*(b*hlnd Guerrero's M exican R e«» »87-8888 __________________ EXCELLEN T FOR Special Ed-P.E. work with SM H adults. Monday through Frldsv. Cob Sue 278-7921. o x t 400. FU LL AN D part tim e, hour* flexible, four sorvloa w riters. If you're energetic and people oriented you con earn 810 per hour end up. com m ission sale*. Broad­ way C ar Wash 1010 E. Broadway, apply In person 10:00am to 4:00pm too E ric or Kan. G R AD U ATE STU D EN T in E le ctrica l Engineering or Physics to tutor high school student In Mesa. Transportation ; needed.946-2003.____________... GRAD U ATING SEN IO RS In Finance. Marketing, o r Ineuranco. O pportunity for early start on earner. Permanent Phoenix are* resident, professional, energetic end In need o f high Income potential, ca ll for «o L L S A 990-4626. ____________ GRO UND S KEEPER. P rin t shop needs reliable part tim e person. Muat have raf•rancaa and be a oommon sense person, $4 per hour, '20 plus hdura week, sttsrnoons end Saturday. C e ll Mark 835r0995H O STESS/SW ITCH BO AR bxtour dej/s week. W orking directly with setoe'pereonnst M ust hove clear speaking voice, be peraonabl* and en*fg*tto. Fravtou* personable and energetic. Previous experience helpful, som e typ in g C ell Howard A lter 999 9922.______________ N EAR ASU tw o bedroom . 111 baths. condo. Com m unity pod . $480per month. W ill consider lease purchase. Geraon Realty C o. 031-8866. _______________ * ** * * . Expira* 2-14-88. NEW M O TEL. S atellite TV. special rale, single 8 28 b o s movie channel, everythlno new. CaH 131 0208 COUPON i Stereo Tricotres thinncl Sound >HARKINS I11 C O LLE G E C Y C L E ia cleaning housel 1985 Treka and Nlahikle priced to go! 1985 Sport and Pro model Q ltanes at out­ standing values. Many quality com po­ nent«, rim e, tire* up to 80% off! Hurry, w h ile su p p lie s last! 909 E. Lem on 900-0842,________________________ _ G ITA N E S7CM . C ritérium , excellen t condition. 3800 new.$360OBO 945-9322 «her 9:00 Pm. ___________ ■ TWILIGHT SHOW S2 50 ■m . H, , N* *■ • "O n e of the year's 4 best fHmsI Mlchttttl Ventura, U A . WEEKLY " Intelligent, tunny, sparkHngl A cau se tor g ood cheer an d loud 'applause." MleliMl Wilmington, L.A. L J TIMES TW O BEDRO O M on* bath ASU condo. 700 Wool U niversity. Q u ie t Mean, p o d spa, w asher and dryer $428 m onth 936-3068 ____________________ IM M EDIATE O PEN IN G S tor students Interested In earning up to $7 par h our gain valuable experience In PH end fund ra isin g look* greet on your resume. Cam paign to r 9t. Lujtee Poison M anagsnrant C*nt*r poll 291-9919. F o r S a le 1(84 H O ND A A ero 128 Red. 4300 m ilee. «078. obo. C e ll »04-2016. Keep Hying. DMSO PR IC E S aM ehodlSoi «pray wtthO oz refill. $18 Lab grade, 70% strength. Trainer'* apaMM. 1 pt 90% strength. $8. A dd 32 PAH . Anise, box 243, Stuart* Draft V A 24477. LADIES TO aofl ro*** Feb 9th thru 19th, fle xib le hour*. CMI N ick o r Tammy 948-9347._____________________ ___ M AKE M ONEY and h*fp In * good cause Arizona Residents only. Beet If politically «were. CMI Ju lie. 344-1339.___________ FRAN KLIN 1008 S4K memory, two disc drives. AM dak c o lo r m onitor, Hay»* modem, printer, must e*N. *1500. obo. P ti8 946-9628 lomio meeeego________ IBM X T*. Now IBM X T * w ith c d o r m oni­ tors, tw o d isc drive*. 286 K: *2300. Lotus 123 end d base III avalWMe. C a li C h ris at 845-000» (work) 840-023» (home). M ARKETING ENTREPENEU RS, oppor­ tunities avallabia to help market product and yourselves, h ou rly p lu s bonus 991-1270.________________ ,_________ FREE HAIRCUTS, m odel call, ultra mod­ em Scottsdal* salon. PI**** ca ll for appts. Rumor* H air Design 9204 N. Scottsdale Rd. 999-1998_____________ : ■ PART TIME Hoataaa-waltrasa. Apply in Parson, 8940 2 Indian School. Scottsdal*. 994-0060. Start Immediately. KAW ASAKI K LR 80019*8 with 300 mile». 32200. Phone «39-7840.____________ LO O K LO O K thro* used m obile home* below 308 P*r month. C a ll Rex, Phoenix Broker. 833-4812 _____________ __ M O BILE HO M E, two bedroom in Tampe. Furnished, washer and dryer. Four star perk 18900 830-7829.____________ NEW M O BILE home*. Double w ide under $129per month. Now two bedroom under 9123 p er m onth. P h o o n lx B ro ker, 833-4912________ __________________ _ PIO NEER SPEAK ER S 180 watts, brand new, never been ueed. C oal *800 w ill take 1126 tor the p e lf »37-7910.___________ RELIABLE STUDENT to do housacleening work In evening $800 per hour, 948-2008 • '■ ______ SUM M ER W O RK-chack In to It today-w* . a rc looking tof jpdapendant. hard work**Ina students, earn 13.760, ca ll 240-2116. SU ZUKI 4001978 3*00 or beet offer C a ll.s 033-8008 ' ___________________ ■ VERY N IC E tw o bedroom, two bath, condo, otooo to ABU, only 32880 down. Paym ents *028 per month. Win consider lease option. Ha* pool, laundry, covered parking C a ll 68