Arizona State University s t a le p r e s s Voi. 6 8 No. 10 Tempe, Arizona © C o p y rig h t, S ta te P ress, 1906 Tuesday, September 9 ,1 9 6 6 Tempe man charged in death of student By LAUREN MILLETTE State Press A Temp6 man has been charged with firstdegree homicide and aggravated assault in connection with the slaying of ASU student Vincent Nieland. Roy Young, 850 S . R iver D rive, will enter his plea a t a prelim inary hearing Sept. 17. Young, 36, is being held at the M aricopa County Ja il on $548,000 bond. Young lived in the sam e town house complex that Nieland did. Nieland, a 20-year-old sophomore justice studies m ajor, was fatally stabbed in the chest and left rib cage during a fight at about 3:51 a.m . Sunday at the west pool of the Questa Vida Town Houses. After he was stabbed, Nieland fell into the deep end of toe pool, residents of the complex said. Nieland was taken to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival. ' Bradley Knutson, 23, also was stabbed twice during the brawlA m anat toe com plex, who aaked not to be identified, said he,w as visiting friends of Nieland in a nearby apartment when they were told that Nieland was lying on the bottom of the poof. H ie source said the group ran to the pool, but Knutson had pulled Nieland out and had started cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The man said he arrived about 30 seconds aft«- Nieland had been pulled from toe pool and immediately placed his hands oyer Nieland’s chest wound to apply pressure. , “ I tried to apply force to the wound to help stop the bleeding but it didn’t work,” the source said. “ As air was being breathed into. him , Vinnie (Nieland) exhaled a gurgling sound that sounded as if his lungs were filling Up with Mood.” “ I realize now that he (Nieland) was probaMy already dead when we were trying to revive him , but at toe tim e, we tried to do everything we could to concentrate on keeping him alive.” He said Knutson told him that Nieland had been in the water for about one minute before he was pulled out. ” Other residents at the complex, who also asked that their names not be revealed, said they slept through the fight and knew nothing about it until Tempe police knocked on their doors for questioning. The residents said after questioning they went out to the pod area and saw broken beer bottles, a Moody T-shirt hanging on toe side of toe pool, garbage cans toppled over and furniture scattered throughout toe pool deck. “ The deck was a m ess,” one woman said. “ It was obvious there had been a fight. I ’ll never forget how the blood-stained pool looked with a chair thrown to the bottom of it, where the guy who was killed was taken from .” Another man said he had seen Nieiand, Knutson and others gathered around the pool earlier in the evening listening to m usic, drinking beer and having a “ good tim e.” He said the group was acting rowdy but no rowdier than any other college students. He said he saw two couples walk by the group and the group whistled and made a few remarks to toe women. He said: “ I didn’t want any part of it, so I didn’t listen to exactly everyhing that was said, but I’m sure it was just your usual comments that young men make to young women. “ One of the ladies was offended and cam e up to the group and started yelling at them. She spoke rough to them , like she had come from a part of town where she had been harassed before. She told them she would be back with someone ‘to kick their ass.’ ” V, n il m mt Reading along Jill Tockl, a Junior Justice studies m ajor, does some early m orning reading alone with h er dog AJa, a 10-m onth-old Golden Labrador Retrelver, who faithfully accompanies Tocki to school alm ost everyday. R e g e n ts v e rd ic t u p s e ts g o v e rn o r By KIM MATTINGLY State Press Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt is disappointed with the Board Of Regents’ decision to reduce his 6 percent budget cut to 3.24 percent, and the state’s three universities eventually will have to cut spending anyway, Babbitt’s spokesman said Monday. Scott Phelps said: ' “ He’s clearly disappointed. Our best guess is we need 6 percent from the state. It’s a ll well and good for the regents to say we’re going to out 3 percent, but fly» hnitnm line is 3 percent is not good enough. ” Babbitt requested in Ju ly that A SU , NAU and U A set aside $24 million to help offset an anticipated revenue shortfall of $60 to $120 million. Instead, the regents have agreed to set aside about $12 million of their $400 million budget. ASU will lose $4.5 million under the regent’s proposal. “ When the university budgets were put together, the revenue forecast was a bit rosier than it is now," Phelps said. " It looks like we’re not going to have that much money to spend.” Phelps said Arizona’s economy was growing at an 8 percent rate, but recent readings show only a 4 percent base. “ It’s all just paper work right now, but the bottom line is (he state isn’t going to spend what it doesn’t have to spend. “ If the board goes with the number they’ve set on, that would turn out to be $12 to $15 million that we were looking to save that ain’t going to get saved.” He said Babbitt’s request is “ not actually a cut at this point but rather a mid-course correction.” Unlike other state agencies, the university system does not have to comply with the governor’s request. “ If that’s what the regents think is fa ir, (Babbitt) can’t tell them what to do;” Phelps said. “ A ll we can do is go back to our own agencies and ask for a 7 or 8 percent cutback. “ Keep in mind, every agency thinks they’d be better off not to be included in the cuts.” If thè regents refuse to cut the full 6 percent now, the state Legislature will sim ply (fictate the cuts in January, he said. Regent Ja ck Pfister said the revenue shortfall can be made up with a 3.24 percent cut by all state agencies. “ We believe we have a meritorious argument to m ake, and we hope die governor and the Legislature will understand and giveit a serious consideration,” he said. “ The governor is a very persuasive individual, and we will seriously consider his response, but we hope he will give our position a fair hearing. ” Pfister said Babbitt’s original request does not affect primary and secondary education, the Legislature or the Department of Economic Security. The regents are asking that the governor “ broaden the base” and include more agencies in his cutback request, he said. ■ '.■-.>'<3® ^ . . t inside today R IC H A R D KIM BALL Congress would not have a budget problem if it spent money on education rather than defense, candidate says. Page 5. ASU W EATHER Fair skies with a high of 96 degrees. Expected low is 76. Cartoons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . .1 2 C la s s ifie d .. . . . . . ....................... .. 18 N atioh/w orid........... .. ; ............................ 2 Opinion . . . . . . . . --------- -- i----------------- . 4 Police report. . . » , ........................... .. 7 Sports. ...................... .............. ............ .......... .. 15 arizona natíon/w orid Escape o f c re w during h ijackin g stirs d eb ate LONDON (AP) — The escape of Pan Am ’s cockpit crew at the start of the 17hour hijacking in Pakistan has stirred debate over whether the ancient rule that a captain never abandons ship should apply to jetliner hijackings. An inform al Associated Press survey Monday found disagreement on the issue among pilots, airline officials and the hijack victim s themselves. Opinions ranged from one survivor who called the cockpit crew ’s action “ absolutely superb’’ to a spokesman for a competing airline who said it was “ unthinkable.” B y escaping through a hatch in the roof of the Boeing 747 soon after terrorists boarded the plane Friday, the three-man flight crew effectively grounded the jetliner at Karachi Airport. But it left the nearly 400 passengers and rem aining crew without an authority figure and confronting four terrorists, who in the end blasted them with grenades and machine-gun tire, killing 18 people. “ If (me refers to the m aritim e world, where the tradition would have the captain of a sinking ship be the last to leave the deck, one could find quite cowardly the conduct of this crew/’ Le F ig aro , a leading French d aily, editorialized Monday. T e rry M id d le to n , e x e c u tiv e administratin' of the London-based International Federation' of A ir Line Pilots Associations, which represents 60,000 pilots in 66 nations, said the advantage of keeping a commandeered airliner grounded could outweigh all other considerations. A British Airways pilot, Chris Orlebar, said he had no doubt what he would do in the sam e circum stances. “ I would stay on board and somehow disable the aircraft,” he told London’s D aily M ail newspaper. But Shuli Naor, a captain for the Israeli airline E l A l, quoted in the Tel Aviv newspaper Hadashot, disagreed. “ Look, if you drop the heroic business of the crew being the last to abandon ship — here it’s the plane — when the crew abandons the plane, the plane becomes an unattractive object for hijacking,” he was quoted as saying. “ It’s like you’ve hijacked a building.” T estin g on alcohol to fin d possible p o llution W ASHINGTON (AP) — Alcoholic beverages from several foreign countries are being tested for radioactive contaminatimi from the Chernobyl nuclear accident, the government announced Monday. Sam ples of alcoholic beverages being imported from countries affected in some degree by the radiation accident w ill be purchased at retail for testing, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm s said. The bureau said it will obtain samples of beverages produced both before and after the Soviet accident, and send both to the University of Georgia for testing to compare radiation amounts. Testing will continue over several years and any beverages found with unsafe levels will be ordered withdrawn from sale, the agency said. Bureau officials have divided thè countries into three risk categories for testing. They are ; High risk: Soviet Union, Poland, East. Germ any, Greece, Yugoslavia, Albania, B u lgaria, H ungary, Rom ania and Czechoslovakia. Possible risk: Italy, France, West Germ any, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Austria. Illegal entrants caught by new patrol system YUM A (AP) — In the last three weeks of August, four television cameras linked to a computerized, closed-circuit system near San Luis contributed to the apprehension of about 550 i^egal entrants into the United States, a Border P a t r o l s p o k e s m a n said Monday. “ Our rate of apprehensions has continued since then,” said Dale Cozart, chief of the agency’s Yuma Sector, we are very pleased. It looks like the system is goingto be very successful.” In th# Nogales area, two of the four cameras planned for the sector were installed the last week of August, and an estimated 50 aliens were stepped, said Michael Sheehy, who runs the Border Patrol office at Nogales. He said the cameras have proven so effective that an attem pt was made last week to knock one off its 55-foot steel tower. An agent foiled the attempt by a halfdozen men to scale the tower or to topple it, but not before he was “ suckerpunched” and the men escaped, Sheehy said. Once two new cam eras are installed by mid-September, the Nogales unit will monitor three m iles of the international border. He said technicians were still working on the $400,000 Nogales scanning system, which includes motion-detecting sensors, the two additional cam eras, and a computer. “So we haven’t started assigning people to monitor the cam eras yet, but when we do, I ’m sure our apprehension rate is going to extrem ely high,” Sheehy said. pac-10 Com m erical fast-food could establish a t USC LOS AN GELES — A survey that showed a preference on University of Southern California campus for fast food has prompted Dining Services to explore the possibility for a fast food outlet this school year. “ We wanted to have a hamburger restaraunt within the campus that will provide consistent, quick service to its customers,” said Gene Lawless, director of Dining Services. Lawless said Dining Services has already met with Burger King and McDonalds, but neither company was interested in the arrangement the university wanted. He said Carl’s Jr . may be, however. At this point they are negotiating. Are you a A random one-to-one survey was conducted during the summer by the reasearch m arketing department that found most people on campus would like a com m ercial fast food service to move on cam pus, Law less said. Of the 200 students, faculty, and staff members surveyed, 59 percent preferred commercial food service to the services provided Hy the university dining service, the survey found that the average customer eats at a fast food restaraunt approxiam tely 2.2 times a week. The negotiations with C arl’s Jr . may be complete sometime this spring, but Lawless said nothing is defihite. — D a ily T ro ja n M^M *p The producers of “CAMPUS MAN” are looking fo r A S U M E N to appear in a major motion picture to be filmed here this fall. IN T E R V IE W S W IL L B E H E L D W H E N : Tuesday, Sept. 9,1986 T IM E : 10 a.m, to 5 p.m.. W H E R E : Memorial Union Gold Room #203 South c o m e in summer wear Ci.e., shorts, tank tops in whites, greys and blacks ... not mandatory] ' THE: T h o s e in te r e s te d s h o u ld l\IO ACTING EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Slate Prés» Page 3 Tuesday, September 9,1986 Voters n a rro w g u b e rn a to ria l ra c e to d ay in p rim a rie s By MICHAEL ROWELL State Press , Arizona officials are_ expecting a 29 percent voter turnout today in the state’s primary election, a Maricopa County Elections Department spokeswoman said. Barbara Lebsch said Tempe polling sites will be open from 6 a.m . to 7 p.m . for registered Democrats and Republicans. In th e D e m o c r a tic p r im a r y , Superintendent of Public Instruction Carolyn Warner will face Phoenix lawyerbusinessm an Tony M ason for the nomination for governor. Although Warner has been leading in the polls with 35 percent of the vote, Mason has captured about 31 percent of the Dem ocratic vote, according to a P hoenix Gazette poll. Burton B arr and Evan M echam are competing for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. The big racé in the Republican primary is a battle between four candidates for the Congressional ;seat vacated by John M cCain. The candidates are Bob Edens, Rick La vis, John J . Rhodes III and R ay Russell. In Tempe’s District 27 a four-way battle for two Republican nominations for state representative is under way. Peter Gorski, Bob Nixon, Jenny Norton and incumbent Bev Hermon are the four hopefuls. Both party prim aries have candidates vying for the position of superintendent of public instruction, a post held by W arner for the last 12 years. Both the governor and the superintendent of public instruction are voting members of the Arizona Board of Regents. Lebsch said that in an area such as Tempe where many people work, the busiest voting tim es are in the morning before people go to work and in the evening. Vandals dam age trams; buses provide service for day ■'-¡j ft***' By TINA DAUNT State Press ASU ’s tram service was stricken by vandals this weekend causing $1,300 damage to two trams and forcing students to ride buses from Lot 59 Monday. Richard Landretii, assistant director of parking and transit services, said the damaged tram s have been repaired and will be running again today. The windshilds, headlights and taillights of the tram s were broken early Sunday morning, m arking the second tim e the tram s were vandalized since school started, Landreth said. “ Usually we keep the tram s locked up in the location where we’re building the new parking garage, but since we’ve started constuCtion we’ve had to park them in Lot 40,” he said. “ After the tram s were vandalized again this Weekend, we made room for them again in the construction zone. ” Landreth said the tram s were first vandalized in Lot 40 when the air hoses and the brake lines were disconected on Aug. 28. “ The first tim e was just horse play. Someone was just jum ping up and down on the tram s,” he said. “ This time it was a case of real property dam age.” Charges are pending upon investigation, however, there are no suspects or leads at tins tim e, Landreth said. “ I hate to think an ASU student would have done this, but we just don’t know,” he said. “ If anyone saw the incident, we’re hoping they’ll come forw ard.” Manuel Figueroa, the program coordinator for parking and transit services, said three buses were used to shuttle students from the parking lots. Landreth said tram service was a little slow until the buses were borrowed from Agan Bus Company at 8:15 a .m ., but after the buses arrived, there was “ plenty of service. “ Everyone was very patient and understanding,” he said. today Meetings •Re-Entry Connection will meet at noon in the MU Gila Room. The discussion wilt be on the election of officers. •The American Indian Science and Engineering Society will meet in the MU Santa Cruz Room at 6 p.m. It w ill be the first general meeting. f8lta Sigma Pi— Professional Business Fraternity w ill m eet at Stuart Anderson’s Black Angus, located at 507 W. Broadway Road. The meeting will begin at 5 p.m. Room 101 at 5:30. The club meets every Tuesay and Thursday. •A lp h a Kappa P al— Professional Business Fratenity will meet at Dean’s Patio Business Administration at 7:30 a.m. It is spring rush for all business m ajors In terested in joining a professional business fraternity. •C ircle K International will meet in the MU Navajo Room at 7 p.m. There will be 9 special guest speaker on Walk for Mankind Project. Lectures and Seminars •SKA Shotokan Karate Club will meet at Physical Education Building W est •W alter R. Courtenay Jr., current Maytag Professor, visiting from Florida A tlan tic U niversity, w ill discuss “ B io lo g ic a l and M an ag em en t Im p lic a tio n o f E x o tic S p e c ie s Introductions.” It will begin at 4 p.m. in the Life Sciences Building, Room C—496. Recreation •Billiards tournament for students, faculty and staff will be held in the MU Recreation Center starting today. For information call 965—3642 ASASUIs P roud To Help Sponsor WORLD RECORD ATTEMPT MUSICAL CHAIRS GAME . -This Sunday, Sept. 14, 1986 / ASU B utliykeld (next to Cornerstone) 9:00 TO 11:30 mtESS W O R L D R ECO R D ATTEM PT ATTEMPT^* Become a p a rt o f ASU h isto ry!! R A F F L E P R IZ E S ! opinion September 9.1986 Teen sex not result of contraceptive availability Now that Congress has returned from recess, the nation’s birth-control advocates had best be prepared to do battle if toe advances they have made are to stand. The Senate w ill consider the reauthorization of the nation’s fam ily-planning program , and some abortion opponents hope Tom Blodgett to dismantle services that provide contraceptive information to teen-agers. E d ito r On the surface, their logic seems faulty. If you don’t want abortions, then why wouldn’t want contraceptives to prevent pregnancies? nation’s greatest problems. A friend provided the answer at lunch recently. Teen-agers What the anti-fam ily planning faction is missing that sex should not have sex, she said. does not need the encouragement of contraceptives. On the We’ll take that point for granted here. High school kids, in surface, it is attractive enough to teen-agers that they will general, fa il to understand the full meaning of their actions partake even if no form of birth control is readily available. when they make love. They also fa il to know their own bodies. Planned Parenthood — a group that makes pro-lifers M y friend further reasoned that if contraceptives are made positively hiss, despite toe fact that its primary aim is to easily available to them, then teen-age girls w ill feel free to prevent unintended pregnancies before they happen — has havesex. found that couples do not come in for birth-control counseling O K , so her reasoning is, in fact, not faulty. However, it is *on average have been sexually active for six months. not a true reflection of what is going on out there. Furthermore, a focus-group study conducted by the Alan Supporting my friend’s reasoning is the belief that teen­ Guttm acher Institute suggests that the fear of pregnancy is agers won’t have sex if they are scared of becoming more likely to regulate how often some girls have sex, rather pregnant. She as much as said that this would be the m ajor than if they are going to do so. reason for girls to avoid having sex. Consider the comments of one participant in the study, an Contraceptives take away that fear. Thus, take away the Indianapolis teen-age girl: contraceptive, you reinstill the fear. Reinstill the fear, and “ ff I did (use a contraceptive), then I’d have sex m o re .. . ” girls stop permitting boys to sleep with them. Read it again. The girl is having sex, justmot as often as Fear is a reason for some girls not to have sex. But many she would if she were using a contraceptive. more still have sex without the safeguard of contraception. If This girl runs an extraordinarily high risk a t getting you doubt that, look around you. Teen pregnancy is one of the pregnant. She, like many teen-agers, subscribes to the belief that her chances to conceiving are sm all because she has sex infrequently. Many more girls are just going ahead and having sex regularly without any form to birth control. Their reasons vary: fear to looking im m ature or losing the guy, not planning on having sex or not thinking about the use of contraceptives. On average, 80 out to 100 of those girls will get pregnant. Therein lies the true problem. Teen-agers are having sex And many, in spite of the risk, are doing it without birth control. If contraceptives are not available, most will continue to have sex. End result: A slew of unintended teen-age pregnancies top to toe ones we already have. This is what we must address. It seem s that if we really want to prevent such teen pregnancies, then we must ask how can we get more girls to use birth control, including the ultimate form , whichis to say, “ N o.” A few successful programs are already out there. A Johns Hopkins University study released this summer showed that one such program reduced toe number to pregnancies, abortions, even absenteeism. Pro-lifers are on the wrong battlefield if they believe making contraceptives available w ill reduce the number of abortions. We are wasting tim e wondering if we should restrict the amount to information available. Ignorance is toe problem, not the solution. letters Fired custodian states case Editor: but because it is laughable. To see a bear On Ju ne 23, Delbert C . Overstreet J r ., the dressed like a general is a good joke. To see new director of the ASU Physical Plant, sent a custodian in a uniform is not particularly a ll Physical Plant employees a memo funny, but the underlying perception is the outlining a new uniform policy. He stated in sam e. Here is what Joseph Addison, the essence (and I paraphrase), “ From now on British essayist, has to say in the early let’s everybody except me wear the exact years to the 18to century: “ A fine coat is but sam e shirt. To avoid confusion we will put a livery when the person who wears it your name on your shirt.” H e also made up discovers no higher sense than that to a a few rules to supplement the idea like footman.” Substitute uniform for livery and nobody could wear anyone else’s shirt, you custodian for footman and you see what I mean. Brilliant as Addison was, he fell into could only wear them for official University business (not out to the movies or a dog the classic error to classifying people by fight) and you better keep them dean. I occupation and then ranking the classes. don’t know why he dedded to get the shirts In my youth I knew a boy who ranked his first. Maybe he thought everyone’s name friends according to their bestness. Instead would look funny on pants. to thinking about wholesome things like After I declined to get measured for my baseball, Davy Crockett, or M arilyn new shirt he sent m e a personal letter Monroe, he spent a lot to time shuffling his stating that I was “ expected to com ply,” I acquaintances up and down his friendship expected him to fire m e if I didn’t comply. hierarchy. He told me once that if I didn’t H e expected wrong; 1 didn’t comply. I eat lunch with him I would be demoted from expected right; he fired m e. Another letter I fifth to sixth best friend. I regret to inform the reader that he grew up to be a mid-level got justified m y firin g thus: “ His explanation and basis for such actions are bureaucrat who spends a lot to tone invalid and unreasonable.” This made me deciding what color clothes other people wonder since I never gave anybody an should wear. Henry David Thoreau tells this story: “ I explanation. A ll I ever said was “ no.” M r. have heard to a dog that barked a t every O verstreet m ust have guessed my explanation. And if he is no better at stranger who approached his m aster’s premises with clothes on, but was easily guessing than he is a t expecting, I guess I better spell it out. quieted hjr a naked thief.” Addison, my schoolmate, and Thoreau’s dog a ll made the In this Manichean universe to ours, all is sam e big m istake. Some footm eir uncover duality: good and ev il, light and dark and enough sense to throw tea into a harbor, bicam eral Congress. Uniforms are also to a dual nature: toe necessary and the some naked men w ill steal y e a : money and unnecessary. Whenever men band together your clothes, and I didn’t eat lunch with that kid. If our collective purpose is peace, love to effect the outcome to Jife or death situations, uniforms are necessary. When and understanding, we w ill not be able to you have to kill someone you never met accom plishK it by a dog-like fa ls e before and have no personal hate for, it is classification to individuals according to race, sex, religion, age, occupation, good to be reminded that you are not acting bestness or nakedness. Once humans are as yourself, but rather as an agent to the state. classified, it is fa r too great a temptation for the members to one class to consider B ill the soldier does-hot k ill, a uniform themselves better than the members to does. Jo e the policeman does not k ill, a uniform does. A uniform serves to remove another. Once again we have apartheid, the individual responsibility. That’s what few and the m any, peasant and nobility, Brahmin and untouchable. It’s no way to ,n e c e s sa ry u n ifo rm s do — they deindividua lize people so they can do the run a country and no way to run a terrible necessary things they could not do university. as individuals. It is a loathsome thing Thomas Jefferson’s better idea was. deserving of respect. I owe my freedom to country based on the value to the individual, reject an unecessary uniform to my not just politically but as a way to thoughtful forebears who dies wearing necessary ones. living-* Jefferson also said: “ The tree Of Because to them my- refusal to comply liberty must be refreshed from tim e to time results in the term iniationto my job, not my with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is life. its natural-manure.” This other uniform, toe one being forced - As for m e, I am not going to put his shirt down the throats to the Physical Plant on my back-1 hired on to sell my labor, not workers, is the unnecessary uniform. It is my body.' I ’d rather be an non-uniforaed the play uniform, the toy uniform, the mock man without a job than Thoreau’s dog with a paycheck. u n ifo ra, used to remind toe wearer of his or her lower station in life. Daneing bears in Lr Jonathan Whitehurst the circus wear little m ilitary jackets and Form er employee, absurd shakos, not toe security purposes, ASU Physical Plant STATE PRESS TOM BLOOGETT Editor ANDREA HAN Managing Editor :::::; Nawa E d ito r.. * * * * EOrrOWfc * ? . L“ * - < *< > *" * • * > " • Bob W il.cn. TRACY SCOTT W AFF ARTISTS: Jon Haaaiona, Miehaal RM tr. ?P!?l? !lEdW?f - V ......... .................PATRK3( J. KUCERA EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Robbia MaMo«. Sport» EdaorJ : . . . .................................. BOB AaatBFO tn E d ito r......... ...................... CAROL • • • • • • • . . . . 5^ . . .................... j u d ie Ga illa r d HEILER ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES O anM Ia C arbon* Tod BOOS Chrlatanaan. Amy Fallnar, JannWar H u g h ** Tom Hutchlnaon, M art.Pataraon,CraigW acaaar, J u li* W aia*T racyw m . Aaal Ai t »Edi t or ! ! . . . . . . 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Th# now» and Vi»*» Publlahad in HU* nawapapar a t* n o ln* o****riiy > h o « *o lth * ASU adm inistration, faculty, ata ll o r sludant body Tlta SW a Praaa ia publlahad M onday Btraugb Friday during Statt Prêts Tuesday, September 9,1986 Page 5 Senate candidate says defense spending im prudent By KERRYFEHR He said he does not distrust the technical aspects of SD I, but the program would cost approxim ately $30 billion and wouldn’t even protect against bombers, cruise m issiles and submarine warfare. State Press Congress’ shift from educational to defense expenditures is dangerous because “ a ll great societies have had their success anchored in education,’' U .S . Senate candidate Richard Kim ball said Monday. “ If people think education is too expensive, they should find out how much financing ignorance will cost,” Kim ball, a Democrat, told about 15 people on Cady M all. “ Great empires have fallen because they have forgotten to invest in the inside,” he said. Kim ball was on campus as part of’ his campaign for the Senate seat vacated by Barry Goldwater. Kim ball said if the federal government would stop spending so much money on national defense, and instead fund services for the general population, the budget would balance. “ This is the first generation that says its children should pay tomorrow for today’s defense buildup,” he said. 'Star Wars is possible, but it’s not prudent.’ “ Star Wars is possible, but it’s not prudent,” Kim ball said. He added he doesn’t understand why the government would commit itself to a $700 billion national defense. -Richard Kimball “ There is no return on an M X M issile.” Kim ball said he supports a test ban treaty and arms control. Also, Kim ball said he supports sanctions against the South African government for its policy of apartheid because it is eventually going to be overturned. Kim ball said the senators who support the Strategic Defense Initiative know 78 percent of the money will be spent for research and development of SD I systems in their home districts. He said the United States will look foolish when apartheid finally fails, and it is still doing business with the South African government. ASU clim atologist dow nplays effects of nuclear w inter By EDSCHUBERT State Press Nuclear winter may not be as serious a consequence of nuclear war as has been previously believed, an ASU clim atologist said Monday. “ What I believe is that there will be clim atic effects (from a nuclear w ar), but the social chaos would dwarf the clim atic effects,” Robert Balling said during a meeting of the Coalition for World Peace in the MU. Balling said a nuclear winter could occur if nuclear exchanges could kick enough dust into the atmosphere to significantly reduce . the amount of sunlight getting to the earth's surface. He said that in speculating on nuclear winter, scientists had to deal with “ a gigantic set of assumptions” and a lot of unanswerable questions. Balling said one of those questions would be in which area of the world the nuclear exchanges would take place. He said that for the purposes of his research, he is assuming the exchanges would take place between 30 to 60 degrees northern latitude — or roughly the north- south distance between Houston and Leningrad. B alling said questions about what type of terrain would be hit by nuclear weapons would also be raised .. If prim arily rural areas were hit, such as states in the Midwest where many groundbased missies are stationed, a different kind of smoke would be put into the air than if urban areas wore hit, he said. Balling said that in urban areas there is “ all sorts of refining that sends a sort of sooty smoke into the air. “ Are we going to see Nebraska on fire or the Eastern Seaboard on fire — or both?” Explosions is the atmosphere would ignite fires that would send smoke into the lower atmosphere, while explosions at or below ground level would blast dust into the stratosphere, he said. Balling said another question would be if dust in the atmosphere would cool the earth by keeping out the sun or have a “ greenhouse effect” by trapping the earth’s heat. Balling said either effect was possible, depending on all the other variables. He said whatever the effects of a nuclear "war, they would be the result of the earth trying to m aintain its balance of energy and to obey the laws of physics. Axford said Kim ball, a Dem ocrat, “ is running against a man whom I define as a warm onger: John M cCain.” “ Our planet has to obey those laws, even in a nuclear w ar,” he said. “ The energy of the earth must always be in some sort of balance.” Kim ball was critical of the Reagan administration’s failure to respond to Soviet proposals for arm s control. He said he became interested in nuclear winter in 1983 when he was devoloping a computer study of the possible clim atic effects of a Kracatoa-sized volcanic eruption. In December of that year, Science magazine published an article on nuclear winter which started a rash of research on the topic, he said. Balling said his attitude at the time was “ The heck with volcanoes, let’s study nuclear w inter.” A s. B a llin g was concluding his presentation, U .S , Senate candidate Richard Kim ball entered the room and was introduced by Roger Axford, chairm an of the CW P, as “ the man who’s going to prevent nuclear winter.” n a t io n w id e v i/io n c e n te r 933 E. University *105 in Tempe Towrie Plaza Across from Cornerstone Mall • 966-4991 5130 N. 19th Avenue ( One block n orth o f Camelback) Phoenix • 242-5292 437 S. Gilbert, Mesa • 844-7096 5030 W. Peoria, Glendale • 937-1047 c o n ta c t/ “ The answer to a peace proposal should never be a blank ‘no,’ ” Kim ball said. Instead, unsatisfactory Soviet proposals should be met with counterproposals, he said. “ We are the leaders of the free world, and as leaders of the free world we should be the ones dragging the Russians kicking and scream ing to the negotiating table,” Kim ball said. He attacked the m ilitary-industrial com plex, saying 70 percent of the money allocated for Star Wars research “ is being spent in the home districts of congressmen who voted for the projects. “ If you just follow the dollars, it will clear up a lot of the hogwash that goes on in politics.” Back To School SALE e y e g b //e / gm i ' ♦CONTACTS FREE _ v . sunglasses when purchased with contact lenses DAILY WEAR . Two Pairs $ 3 9 - 5 0 FR EE CONTACT LENS CONSULTATION EXTENDED WEAR . . Two Pairs $ 6 9 .5 0 O u tsid e P re scrip tio n s W elcom e COLORED SO FT , . . Two Pairs $ 7 9 .5 0 >ne colored, one clear ALL NEW COLORED )ne colored, one dear, M A R K A . H E C H T M A N , O .D . N E A L A - W E IN S T E IN , O .D . *Some restrictions apply, licen sed Doctors o f Optom etry. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT C O N T A C T S., Most contact prescriptions available the same day. Twp Pairs $ 9 9 .5 0 100% Refund within 30 days if not completely satisfied with your contact lenses. ♦e y e g l a s s e s Free tin t on second p a ir — any combination of regular or sunglasses, same or different styles. EYEGLASSES . . . . . . . . . Two Pair $ 3 9 .5 0 BIFOCALS --------- --------. Two Pair $ 7 9 .5 0 DAILY WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES . . . . . . . . . Both Pairs $ 3 9 .5 0 EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES . , . . Both Pairs $ 6 9 * 5 0 EYE E X A M . , . . . . . ______ __. . . . $ 1 8 .0 0 Includes Glaucoma test, Contact lens fitting and follow -up rare are additional. Drug lests Home kit has limitations; accuracy questioned By TRACY SCOTT State Press When home drug-test kits become available over the counter lite r this month, buyers should be aware of their restrictions, said the director, of ASU ’s New Choices Program in the School of Social Work. Robin Knox said, “ People who use the kit need to be aware of its lim itations, the test’s margin of error and need to have a plan of action if the results are positive.” The kit will contain an instruction manual and a vial for a urine specimen. The specimen must be sent to Chicago to be tested. The kit is being marketed prim arily for parents to test their children, which raises some serious questions, Knox said. “ How can you force someone to give you a specimen?” he asked. A urine specimen must be obtained in a somewhat voluntary m anner, Knox said. “ And what are parents going to do when they get back tests results that are positive?” he said, adding parents will not be prepared to handle the situation. Rosanne Perricelii, a senior business m ajor, said she would not use the kit to test her own children. “ I don’t think drug tests are reliable,” Perricelii said. Knox said help of a chem ical dependency specialist should be sought from the start of testing. He said mandatory drug tests, if the results are positive, often are used by corporations to fire employees and by universities to ban college athletes from competition. But Knox said, “ Parents will not be able to fire their children.” The philosophy behind the in-home kit is to deter children from using drugs, he said. Corporations and universities use fee drug test as a monitor, and the consequence is the deterrent, he said. “ But the drug test will not be used as a deterrent by parents, but a threat,” Knox said. Alan Matheson, a College of Law professor, said parents subjecting their children to mandatory drug tests involves constitutional rights. The Fourth Amendment protects against illegal search and seizure, but the court has not determined whether people have the personal right of choice to use illegal drugs, Matheson said. Perricelii said, a test is not the best indicator of drug use. She said, “ 1 have experienced children on drugs, and there are signs to determine drug use.” Knox said once the specim ans are analyzed, there is no way to ensure test result accuracy. “ There is a 7 ¡Percent m argin of error under ideal circumstances, which is controlled laboratory conditions ” he said. The problem of m ailing specimens complicates the process because it increases the chances of mix-ups, Knox said. The laboratory must be able to handle the specimens on a nationwide level. Perricelii, a form er lab technician, said once the specimens are m ailed out there is the possibility of mix-up. “ There is also a chance that results will come back as false- positive andfalse-negative,” she said. A false-negative means the test registered no drugs in the specimen when actually there w as, and a false-positive means the test registered drugs in the specimen when there was not. “ Often times diet pills and sleep aides will show up as positive in some drug tests,” Knox said. Since only one m anufacturer produces the kit, it is impossible to get a second opinion. Bomb dem olishes Paris post office killing 1, injuring 19 P A R IS (AP) — A bomb exploded Monday in a post office on the ground floor of Paris’ ornate 17th-century city hall, killing a woman and injuring 19 other people. The bomb blew out the windows and window fram es on one side of the building and devastated the interior of the post office. It came four days after a bomb failed to explode on a crowded commuter train in central Paris. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the latest attack, which occurred about 7 p.m . Paris police chief Je a n Paolini said the bomb at city hall had been placed “on or under a bench in the post office. ” One witness said he saw two men leave the area just before the explosion. “ I saw two Arab-type men flee the post office just before the explosion,” he said. “ One of them was about 35 and wore a mustache. ” The fire department placed the casualty toll at one dead and 19 injured, one of them seriously. A witness said the woman who died was “ completely blown ap art ” The plaza in front of city hall was littered with glass shards and wood splinters. Inside, panels from the post office’s ceiling were hanging down, criss-crossed with ripped out wiring. Furniture was smashed, wood was burned, and the carpeting was ripped to shreds. Premier Jacques Chirac, who also is mayor of Paris and maintains ,an office in the building, ironically was forced to interrupt a meeting of his internal security council at the premier’s office to go to the scene. In a statement later, Chirac called for a war against terrorism, “ this leprosy of modern times. He called on the public to help police by reporting suspicious conduct or objects. The premier said the government would use all means at its disposal to fight terrorism , “ and this w ill not be without consequence for those who are linked directly or indirectly to terrorism .” In a m essage to Chirac, President F ra n co is M itterran d expressed his sympathy to the fam ilies of the victims and said, “ We m ust a ll witness the resolution of the country in com batting without mercy the terrorism that threatens our lives and our liberties.” A group calling itself the Committee for Solidarity with Arab Political Prisoners and the Middle E ast claim ed responsibility for that attempt and said more attacks would follow unless its demands were met. 8 W ed tike to lend students a helping h an d Financing a good education can be a costly undertaking. That’s why, at First Interstate, we’ve been lending students a helping hand for nearty 20 years. O ur Student Loan Departm ent is dedicated to providing responsive, personal attention and assistance, and students know they can count on First Interstate’s full range of banking services for all their financial needs First Interstate Student Loan Departm ent Tuesday 9000 W T S O F TOTAL R O CK M USIC ■ — from 8 pm ’til 10pm: $ 1.00 Bottles of Bud & Bud Light $1.25 Jack Daniels Street Address: 114 W. Adams, 1st Floor Mailing Address: P.O.B. 53427, Phoenix, AZ 85072-3427 Telephone: 271-1693 and 271-1771 Toll Free Number: 1 (800)221-7043 F i r s t I n t e r s t a le B a n k FIRSTINTERSTATE BANKOFARIZONA. NA. Member F.D I. C. • Federal Reserve System Equal Opportunity Employer Free Admission before 8 pm lih Devil House S ta te P r e » Page 7 Tuesday, September 9,1986 ASU providing curriculum developm ent to Bhopal victims By DAVE HODQES State Press Friday’s multimillion dollar lawsuit filed against Union Carbide Corp. by the Indian government for the 1984 toxic gas leak in Bhopal is expected to cause “ m inim al” harm to an ASU vocational training center located in the city , a program m anager said. B ill Lew is, m anager of the training center and an ASU professor of engineering and computer science, said vocational training is being offered to victim s in Bhopal by a joint effort between Union Carbide and ASU . At least 2,083 people were killed and more than 200,000 ware injured after methyl isocyanate leaked from Union Carbide's pesticide plant in Bhopal on Dec. 3,1984. After the disaster, Lewis and K .A . Vijaisim h, a faculty associate in the computer science department and a native of India, wanted to do something to help the Indian people, Lewis said. According to Lew is, after presenting a proposal of a vocational center to benefit the people of Bhopal, ASU received a $2 million grant from Union Carbide in April 1985 to establish the center. After feasibility studies, classes were started for the deaf and blind in Ju ne. “ The center in Bhopal is not an ASU cam pus,” Lewis said. “ It is being conducted by a non-profit organization. ASU is only providing curriculum development. “ A SU is not directly involved in m anagement,” he said. “ Thereat« no state funds being used for this project. ” According to Lew is, only one ASU faculty member is presently in Bhopal. Ernest H irata, director of ASU ’s technology division, is in India developing curriculum for classes in welding, which are scheduled to begin next week. The school is being managed by Bhopal resident Indra Iyengar, a disciple of Nobel Prize-winner Mother Theresa, and is bring staffed entirely by Bhopal residents. About 34 students attend die vision and hearing-impaired classes. Twenty people are expected to enroll in the welding class. , Richard Olson, ASU director of international programs, said thisis an unprecedented project for any university. : “ The prt^ram is unique,” Olson said. “ There’s never been anything; like this by this University and probably any university. A “ It’s ¿ challenge to mount the program and keep it going. I don’t see anything like it being replicated in the world.” Lew is,said, “ It’s not your typical University project, jy “ It (the cent«*) has the potential for a lot of publicity, but we’re hying to avoid it for now. Maybe publicity would be tnore important once we’re established. We’re still just Starting out. y “ ft’s purely a humanitarian gesture.” police report University police reported the following incidents during the 24-hour period ending 7:30a.m . Monday: •A hard boiled egg exploded in a student’s face in Room 225 at Manzanita Residence H all. . ' O' Police said the student was cooking an egg in a cup of water in her microwave oven, and as she took it out, the egg burst open and hurled egg shell into her face. The Tempe fire department responded, and the student was taken by Am erican Ambulance to Tempe S t. Lukes Hospital, where she was treated and released for facial,burns, police said, •Two tram s are out of service because of vandalism , police reported. wo concrete garbage containers located at the Life Sciences Center and Palm Walk sustained $400 in damages, after someone used a blunt object to knock out large chunks of concrete, police said. Tram No. 6 sustained a broken trailer and smashed front windows and tail lights, police said. •The door to Room 1420 at Manzanita Residence H all was kicked in during a party in the next room, police said. Tram No. 7 sustained broken front windows and headlights, police said. The damage is estim ated at $1,380. There are no suspects and nothing was reported stolen from the room, police said. Dam age is estimated at $50. SPEC IA L ‘ Buy one & get next one FREE 4-cyl. Tune-up Only •An unlocked men’s silver Nishiki 10-speed, valued at $100, was stolen from the north side of the M U , police said. •Police said a resident assistant at Palo Verde West Residence H all woke to find her window sprayed with “ Gay R A ” in red paint. Dam age is estimated at $50. •A Mercedes hood ornament, valued at $50, was stolen from a student’s Mercedes while it was parked in Lot 51, police said. -L A U R E N MILLETTE T H E P r o f e s s io n a ls on cam pus INCLUDÊS: $ 19 9 5 Spark Plugs Points Set Timing & Dwell Adjust Carburetor Parts & Labor; I Come visit our table at the Business Dean’s Patio Sept. 8 - 12, 1986 Most import cars and trucks. Exprès 9-30-86. Most import cars and trucks. McClintock Expires 9-30-86. TEMPE IMPORTS T ,m p , Im parto X «Bist. Hacienda Includes Oil Filter Labor 966-6680 *1836 E. 6th St., Tempe University O FFICE PRO DUCTS W AREHOUSE IT™ E ß “O PEN $400 Where you get name brands at warehouse prices! O F F •SHAMPOO •CO NDITION •PRECISION CUT •BLOW DRY REGULAR PRICES Full S e t......... Regular .. $95 $45 Acrylic Overlays. $35 Regular $55 |¡ m SM ITH CO RO NK H EW LETT m L tim P A C K A R D VICTOR Fill-Ins. F ill-In s ................ $18 W om en $15 M en $13 brother also in tro d u ces N a ils b y S u e WITH THIS AD TO THE , T exas In s t r u m e n t s 709 S. Forest A ve., Tempe North o f University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square Call 968-5946 1755 W. University Dr. Open Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday evenings till 9 p.m. 968-1198 1 ’/? miles west o f campus P a g ^ v _ _ —■»— —>-• “ ■“ ■■“ ■‘" “ ■“ “ “ “''^"■‘“ "“ ■"'“ “ ''•^'‘■■“ ■“ ■■■»■■SS J u d g e d en ies new tria l fo r pilot convicted of m anslaug hter By DARRIN HOSTETLER State Press A pilot convicted of m anslaughter in a 1965 m id-air collisim i that killed two ASU students has been denied a new trial, a Yavapai County deputy attorney said. Ethan W olfinger said Ju dge Jam es Hancock refused the request of Robin S . Thompson, 21, for a retrial in Yavapai County Superior Court. W olfinger said Thompson will appear in court again on Sept. 19, for a m itigation Bjornstadt, Kim M arble, Samantha Fraser and Timothy Streit. Suanne R udley, an attorney for Thompson, said that no decision has been made on an appeal. hearing. “ Thompson w ill attempt to persuade the judge to be lenient on the sentence,” W olfinger said. “ In a mitigation hearing a d e fe n d a n t s u b m its le t t e r s of recommendation and such with that aim in m ind.” Thompson, who will be sentenced on Sept. 29, faces up to 10 years in prison for each m anslaughter charge and more than one year for each charge of reckless endangerment. Fraser and Streit were thrown from the Cessna’s fuselage and plummeted 6,500 feet to their deaths. Thompson was convicted on two counts of manslaughter and two counts of reckless endangerment on Ju ly 2, stemming from the collision on April 14,1985, near Camp Verde. Bjornstadt and M arble were injured when the rem ainder of their plane crashed into a hillside. The Piper Cherokee 140 that Thompson was piloting struck the tail section of a Cessna 172, carrying ASU students Paul Thompson and his three passengers were not injured. W e ll G ive You 25% O ff KAYPRO P C H ow Y ou G e t ¡¿tbelR cggfe U p |to Y ou. . WMâ m 4 e tm tc , § îfm Ê Ê Ê Ê Ê K Ë H , x i t t o ■ iM lflM i) A I ít *Èà&L. B K lr ^ P ^ à S U B l ¡ 1 **"* i f a « f o * « * * p wf a l ^ f II * 4 v ® * ÿ * «* D elivery Available to the Tempe/AS U Area alifoMiia, l-áüO-322-7890 M- ■ ■ A£0C4 J TimxtUv Upateiwhpf Q 1QftA State Press What goes great with morning coffee? %» % C A R E E R SE R V IC E S ASSISTANTS TH E STATEPRESS W HO? every weekday morning Second-semester Sophomores, Juniors and M ay * 87 Graduates. FO R W HAT? A service/support group which actively assists Career Services professional sta ff,, company recruiters and students. \ \ HOW ? B y sponsoring campus-wide activities like Career Fiesta '87 and the Junior F air, by aiding the daily on-ca'mpus recruitment process, and by assisting professionals in organizational and classroom outreach activities. W H EN? Organizational Meeting W ednesday, September 10th, 4:00 pm. W H ERE? Academic Services Building #102. W IT H ASASU/ASU PU BLIC EVENTS— Anne Murray N1 & 2 Bedrooms •Lush Landscaping, Ponds & Beautiful Courtyard >Racquetball Courts, W eight Room & Sauna P rice re d u ce d to “ I f surrogate motherhood turns out to be useful,” the m m m ittM said, “ a change in the law would be appropriate for assurance that the couple who contract with a surrogate mother are viewed as the legal parents.” The committee said in vitro fertilization is m orally acceptable and offers benefits that outweigh risks to both the couple and the offspring. The method is used when a woman’s eggs cannot reach the part of her body where they can be fertilized and implanted in her womb. This technique involves removing an ovum from a potential mother and fertilizing it outside her body with sperm. The fertilized egg then is put into the woman’s womb where it may grow into a fetus. STOCK UP FOR f f l l l CIRSSCS NOW We offer 1 9 8 6 experimental guidelines recommended by the com mittee, shesaid. If surrogate motherhood becomes more common, the onmmittw recommended action to settle custody conflicts. In a recent New Jersey case, a surrogate is seeking custody of a child conceived by artificial insemination after she agreed to take $10,000 from a couple to carry the child. • Blueprinting • Xerox Copies • larg e scale reductions and enlargements. • ' Open Saturdays 8-12 • Open Cvenings A S K A B O U T O UR I -B R SPECIALS P h o e n ix & T e m p e s to r e s o p e n M - f 8 :0 0 a m - 8 :3 0 p m •Wet Bar, Washer/ Dryer Hook-up & Walk-in Pantry -Enclosed Patios/ Balconies, Exterior Storage $395 (1BR)« c ■ on« m n n th s p e c ia l o ffe r $480 (2BR) Which includes a $2 0 discount fo r a 12-month lease and also the Bay's tim ely rental paym ent plan and move-in allowance. M e s a s to r e • M - f 8 :0 0 a m - 5 :0 0 p m iD co m m cn a m . b lu cp r iîit c o jn c . hhoenbe - 4700 North 12th Street Tempe -114 Cast 7th Street Mesa -100 UUest Hoover, Suite 10 C a ll 9 6 9 - 3 3 8 0 264-4568 967-1400 890-8300 •Student I.D. Required Sale ends September 30,1986 2121 W. Main Street Mesa M « W A IO EXCHANGE Personalized Service ►Fewer Missed Classes »Convenient 'Inexpensive Buy • Sell • Trade tempe. 968 University O'- 227 vi * # Wake up on the right side of the bed. C A L L 9 6 7 -7 3 2 2 AWAKE INC. WmÈÊÉÈàKÊÊÊKÊÊim gaiNMMMHWIMHMilMHB s p o rts State Pits» PageJJj T^gda^Sertefnber^jJteó Dedicated Parker hopes to get to Rose Bowl By STEVEN ADAMS Contributing W riter In Division I college football, experience only comes through dedication. Practicing hours a day in 100-degree-plus temperatures and being put through grueling workouts at Camp Tontozona would cause m ost people to pack their bags and leave, but these are realities that Anthony Parker must face as a member of die ASU football squad. “ It’s rough right now working so hard,” Parker said, “ but we will definitely be ready for the home opener.” The football opener against Michigan State is not the only gam e Parker has prepared for this season. Last year, in the U A contest, Parker was involved in a play that proved costly for the Sun Devils. Parker was deep to receive a punt. The turnover he made resulted in a UA score that lost the game for the D evils, costing the team a Rose Bowl berth. “ A UA player pryed the bail out of my hands,” Parker said. “ It rolled into the end zone. “ I think about it a lot, and it is still a very sensitive issue with m e. It has made me work a lot harder." Parker said this year the whole team is ready for U A , as well as for the rest of the schedule. “ Our No. 1 goal is to get to the Rose Bowl this year,” Parker said, adding that beating U A was crucial to achieving that goal. “ We have to beat U A ,” he said. “ They have always been an obstacle for us, but we have to beat them this year. ” Parker added that, looking at the teams statistically, ASU is much better, but that U A always seems to find some way to win. U A has defeated the Sun Devils the past four seasons, but it w ill not be a crucial gam e this season unless the Devils defeat some of the other Pac-10 teams on their schedule. “ H ie key gam es will be against U CLA , Washington and U A ,” Parker said. If the Devils can get by these powerhouses,' Parker thinks the Rose Bowl is well within their grasp. “ O f course, that’s a long way down the road,” Parker said. “ I just have to concentrate on one gam e at a tim e.” Parker added that freedom from injury is a key factor in the Devils’ Rose Bowl hopes. “ The offense is much improved over last year, as well as the defense still being Turn to PARKER, page IS . Tailback and punt returner Anthony Parker, shown here In action last year, hopes the Sun Devils can make It past UA to the Rose Bowl. lit last College, pro football season eturns: thank God Thank God football season is finally here again. 1 1HIMIC I H E A R my. mom caluma B aseball is a ll righ t, but the season seem s to last forever, and when there are no close races le ft, it really m akes the “ G am e o f the W eek” seem more lik e the “ G am e of the W eak,” esp ecially when it’s the D odgers and the M ets fo r six weeks in a row . Don’t get me wrong. I like baseball, and when the playoffs start, even though the Giants won’t be there, I ’ll watch with quite a bit of interest. But baseball is still no substitute for football. And after a close analysis of the first full-fledged weekend of football action, with both the pros and colleges in action, there are some things we can surmise: Those who said U CLA had a chance to win the national championship were slightly off base, to say the least. The Bruins were horrible in Saturday’s 38-3 drubbing at the hands of Oklahoma. And Oklahoma is at least as good, probably better, than people expected. The national championship should be decided Sept. 27 when the Sooners travel to Miam i to meet the Hurricanes. U A proved once again that it can run up a big score on a mediocre non-conference opponent. Ho-hum. P lay a real non­ conference schedule, then pop off, W ildcats. Viimy Testaverde will win the Heisman Trophy this year. He has been outstanding in his first two gam es, including Saturday’s 23-15 win at Florida. His only real competition should come from Michigan State’s Lorenzo White. There are those who are touting Michigan quarterback Jim Harbaugh as the best in the land, but I don’t think he can ca n y Testaverde’s jock. Think about it — a M ichigan quarterback winning the Heisman? G et serious. But the colleges were not the only ones in action this weekend. The pros got things going in earnest, and there weresome things that were readily apparent. Buddy Ryan is in big trouble in Philadelphia. The mouth that roared got his rear end handed to him by the Redskins, 41-14. The E agle defense gave up 433 yards in total offense, and Ryan still predicted a playoff berth for his club. They must be laughing hysterically in Chicago, where the Eagles have to play next week. Look-for the Bears to come awfully close to the 50 point mark against the Eagles. Ryan’s 46 defense only works when you have the kind of personnel the Bears do. Speaking of the Bears, they looked good, but far from unbea ta b le . The offense was very good, but last year’s Bears would not have given up 31 points to the Browns. However, Chicago is still the team to beat in the N FC. One team that should challenge is San Francisco. The 49ers have a revamped secondary with two rookies starting at the corners. Sunday they intercepted seven of Tampa Bay quarterback Steve DeBerg’s passes en route to a 31-7 win. Now granted, nobody is ever going to confuse DeBerg with Johnny Unitas, but the Niners had to be doing something right. The 49ers will find out how good they are Sunday when they play the Ram s in Los Angeles. A team that was not good Sunday was M iam i. They broke up the “ K iller B ’s ,” but alas, they forgot to replace them with anyone, and the 50 points the defense gave up was the most ever for a Shula-coached team. San Diego went through the Dolphin defeme like water through a sieve, but look for the Chargers to do that to a lot of Turn to TAYLOR, p ag * 17. Page 16 State Picas Tuesday, September 9,1986 Parker. Continuad from p aga 15. strong. But if we get lots of injuries, that could play a big factor in how far we can go this season.” PaHcer, a native of l Tempe, has been playing with the Sun Devils for three seasons, two of which have been as starting tailback. He feels the best thing he has to offer the team is his experience. “ Since I have been playing here three years, I think my experience is m y best asset,” he said, “ especially over a player who is just starting and learning the system .” But Parker doesn’t let his game experience go to his head. “ Last year I had a lot of pressures," he said. “ I think they really started getting to m e. But this year I have just reshaped my thinking and look ahead to doing my best in each gam e. “ I am just a team player. I ’m & hard worker willing to put in the time to make m yself better.” Parker also added that he was a coachable player. Someday, Parker would like to go on to play professional football, but right now he has two more seasons at ASU to concentrate Red badge o f courage. on before he can think of that. “ Sure I would like to play in the pros,” he said, “ but that isn’t something I really think about too much right now. ” One thing Parker is thinking about right now is the possibility of breaking the NCAA record for best average punt return. “ It’s not a goal I’ve thought about too much, but it would be, nice to accom plish,” he said. Parker is. currently working on a degree in physical education. “ For now I ’ll continue to do my best in both football and school, and worry about everything else later, ’ ’ he said. A Public Service of This Magazine & The A dvertising C ouncil Don't com pete w ith a Kaplan student— b eon e. ONE MONTH FREE A erob ics, Stretch & Tone, N on-Im pact A erob ics w ith purch ase o f tw o m onths $ 4 0 V a lv e A c h ie v e m e n t s , L S A 2 | EscapeThe Dorm Special! 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There are also skills in areas like air defense, armor, or avionics. U sing equipment that utilizes lasers, computers, radar, or sophisticated electronics, A 2 > e future X io n gs to with high-tech knowledge. A n d a i ave 12:30.230.4:30.7:00.9:15 9 6 7 -1 6 1 1 STARIIY ME |M| 11:45.1:45.3:45.5:45.7:45,9:45 2020 S. MILL AVE., TEMPE Tir lim itai 1230,2 :& 5:00,7:30.1030 BUELLEVSIPS-1S) 1230.2:15.430.7:00.930 THRASHIN' IM 11:15,3:15,5:15 SUNNING! ¡SCHEDISI 7:159:30 ■NSMNNNMMMMMUft 5 « t » SULLIES M 1215.400.7:45 KROATE KMN|PG| 11:45,2:15,4:45.7:15 9:45 STAFF SERGEANT JACK TAYLOR J , ARMY B£ALLYOU CAN BS. Stele Press Tuesday, September 9,1986 Page 1 7 T aylor____ _______ Contlm M d fro m p«ga IS . teams. With Dan Pouts, Wes Chandler, Gary Anderson, Lionel Jam es, Charlie Joiner and Kellen Winslow, San Diego has a lot of ways to make the opposition look bad. H ie era of good team s in Pittsburgh is over. The Steelers are just brutal, and will finish last in their division, and their 30-0 loss to Seattle is an indication of just how bad they are. Mark Malone is not going to blossom into a ehampinna^p quarterback, and Louis Lipps and John Stallworth can’t do anything without someone to get them the ball. It couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of guys. Keep a close eye on the Browns, who could win the A F C title. Their defense is strong, and Bernie Kosar is much improved over last year. Nobody has a better running gam e than Cleveland. There is no more question about which division is the strongest. It’s the A F C West in a landslide. A ll five team s are strong enough to go to the playoffs and three of them probably w ill. The worst division is the N FC Central, hands down. With the Bucs, Lions, Vikings ami Packers in their division, the entire year will be just a warmup for the Bears. You’ll never go broke underestimating the teams in this division. Regents approve deletion of NAU hockey team Travel expenses for team too costly FLA G ST A FF (AP) — Acting on the recommendation of a departing athletic director, the Arizona Board of Regents approved the dissolution of N AU’s hockey program Friday. Athletic Director G ary W alker, who resigned ever the weekend, said Monday he recommended deleting hockey because of escalating costs and Gov. Bruce Babbitt’s request for 6 percent budget cuts at the state’s three universities. At their meeting in Tucson, the regents approved reductions of 3.25 percent at each unit. The Lum berjacks’ icers made their varsity debut in the 1981-82 season. f ------------------'•------------I DOMENIC PIZZA j & ITALIAN FO O D I B U Y • S E L L • TRADE Buy any m edium , large or extra large ahd receive a FREE liter o f Pepsi. DORMS, APTS., VANS ALL SIZES USED R O O M SIZES *10 ft UP j Carry Out or FRCC Delivery j 829-7341 NEW CARPET TOO! I 2535 E. U n iv e rs ity 1516 E. Van Buren Phoenix W ITH T im C O U P O N I______ .__________ . . . Experience &it¡«S 4r Your books at Changing Hands. For q u a lity clo th and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% o f our re-sale price in cash o r 50% in tradein -cre d it w hich may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on S a t o r Sun.) Browse through o ur three flo ors of: •N ew & Used Books •A rt P rints & Posters •C alendars & Cards •H andbouod Journals M -F 10-9 SAT 10-6 The team enjoyed some success — improving from 6-18 in its first season to 21-6 by 1983-84 — but the program ran heavily in the red from a lack of spectator revenue, a suitable ice arena in Flagstaff, and road trips to points like Anchorage, Alaska, and Marquette, M ich. survive only if the student body voted for a campus arena, and if boosters and other Lum berjack fans contributed $1 million for the arena and an additional $175,000 annually for three years to defray expenses. Walker said he was stepping down to spend more time with his fam ily and for other personal reasons. Hughes said W alker will not be replaced. Instead, he said, form er Walker assistants David Brown and Tom Ju rich will be given additional responsibilities to cover for the absence of a single administrator. The squad played its home games in Tempe last season, and NAU President Eugene M . Hughes suspended the program in M arch for one year. Hughes said then that NAU hockey would 1 NAA National Association o f Accountants Pirst organizational m eeting WED, SEPT. 10 • 4:30 P.M. MU Coconino Room £ 1 C a n a r io X 2 X IC A X FOODS 1250 E. Apache 967-9283 S1.00 OFF any com plete dinner W ith th is c o u p o n , e xp ire s 1 0 -3 0 -8 6 . SUN 12-5 C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 MIN Avenue 964 0203 OM Town Tempe Steve Mason on "Careers in Accounting” Always 10% discount fo r student w ith I.D . “ WE HAVE BEER" the unique atmosphere at at RURAL and AFNCHE ia u p n t MILLER LITE NIGHT 506 Drafts • $2 Pitchers $1 Longnecks (Lite) HAPPY HOURS 2-7 p .m . six days a w eek Su n d a y 4-7 p .m . FREE POPCORN T hings M other Never Told Ybu... It pays y o u .. . THIN IS IN A t D iet Centeryo u can lose 10 p ou n d s in tw o w eeks, . . b e tw o sizes trim m er in three w eeks. It’s q uick. It s sa fe. A n d perhaps best o f att, yo u w on t see the w eightyo u tost com e back. D o n t fa ce w eight lo ss alone. You can w ork w ith a D iet Center counselor everyday o f yo u r diet. C a B fo r yo u r fir st con sultation..It s fr o s t YOU’RE GOING TO MAKE IT THIS TIME TEMPE • 967-1371 911 E. Broadway Rd. Lucky Shopping Center Open daily 7 a.m .-6p.m . “ Don’t get s ic k — o r hurt in an accident. Because if you do — y o u have to pay the bills!” ¡ » IIS ® But w ait— don’t panic The NEW ASU Student Health Insurance Plan is better than ever . . . and easier to understand! • Money for Student Health Center X-ray and lab services with no d e d u c tib le • Money for preadmission hospital tests • For Major Medical expenses up to $25,000.00 — for each accident or sickness— including services, supplies and am bulance service • Money for mental or nervous disorders Stop in at the Student Health Center and ENROLL TODAY O r call 965-2411 during regular business hours, Monday through Friday for details. Don’t wait — enrollment ends 4 5 d ays after the first day of classes for this semester! See your Student Insurance Brochure for full details of coverage and benefits. The A SU Plan is underw ritten by: Mutuol4T\ 3 'O m a h a .x L / People you can count on... M utual of O m aha Insurance Com pany Hom e O ffice: O m aha, N ebraska Approved and recommended by the Arizona Board of Regents and the Student Health Advisory Committee. Page 1 8 State Press Tuesday, September 9,1986 Bears’ McMahon to sit 3 weeks . due to right shoulder separation C ia s s iT ld iS LA K E FO R E ST , 111. (AP) — Quarterback Jim McMahon will be lost to the Super Bowl champion Chicago Bears for at least three weeks because of a shoulder injury. McMahon, the team ’s “ free spirit,” suffered the injury in the fourth quarto* of Sunday’s 41-31 victory over the Cleveland Browns in the N FL season opener for both team s. “ It’s a second-degree separation in the right shoulder,” trainer Fred Caito said. “ He did not dislocate it. He w ill miss about three weeks. ” Caito said X-rays were negative and that McMahon had movement of the arm . “ A t the end of this week he will begin to work with weights, and in 10 to 14 days he will do some throwing,” Caito said. “ There was no damage to the rotator cu ff. It is tender and sore and we will treat it with care.” Caito said that a first-degree shoulder injury is m ild and takes about a week to heal. A second-degree injury has pain and swelling and takes three weeks, and a third-degree injury is a severe separation that can take six weeks. Coach Mike Ditka said Mike Tom czak, a second-year pro, will start Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles. “ Three weeks is optim istic,” Ditka of the recovery tim e for McMahon’s injury. “ If he can pop it (the ball) in three weeks; be’Q be back in there. ‘T m disappointed for Jim ’s sake; it’s not a good situation for us,” Ditka said. “ Hopefully we’re not a team that depends ‘Let's get on with the treatment, get well and get back to work ’ — Jim McMahon on one man that m uch. But so much revolves around the quarterback. “ Jim is not injury prone, it’s just that crazy things happen to him .” McMahon has had a history of injuries. But in gam es that he has started, the Bears have a 27-4 record. McMahon was in cam p early Monday, but left for New York to appear bn a talk show Monday night and was not available for comment: “ He said, ‘Let’s get on with the treatm ent, get well and get back to work’ when he learned of the situation,” Caito said. Caito said McMahon’s arm would be in a sling for several days for comfort and that he would receive anti­ inflam m atory medication. McMahon was injured when Cleveland defensive end Reggie Cam p fell on him . He remained in the gam e for two more plays before taking him self out. College gridders battle to lead AP poll ranking B y The A ssociated P ress Oklahom a rem ained a runaw ay leader M onday in the Associated P ress’ first regular-season college football poll while M iam i, F la ., nosed out idle M ichigan for second p lace, setting up a possible shootout between N o. 1 and N o. 2 later this month. Oklahoma’s impressive 38-3 drubbing of fourth-ranked U CLA earned the Sooners 55 of 59 first-place votes and 1,175 of a possible 1,150 points from a nationwide panel.of 59 sports writers and sportscasters. Meanwhile, M iam i upped its record to 2-0 by defeating No. 13 Florida 23-15. The Hurricanes received one first-place vote and 1,050 points in climbing from third place to second. Oklahoma visits M iam i on Sept. 27 in an attempt to avenge the only loss the Soooers suffered en route to the 1985 national championship. M ichigan, which opens its season Saturday at Notre Dam e, slipped from second place to third with one first-place vote and 1,026 points. U CLA ’s embarrassment at the hands of Oklahoma dropped the Bruins from fourth place to 16th. Alabam a, a 42-10 winner over Vanderbilt, moved up from fifflH o fourth with966 points. Penn State crushed Temple 45-15 and rose from sixth to fifth with one first-place vote and 952 points. The other first-place ballot went to Nebraska, which trounced No. 11 Florida State 34-17 and jumped from eighth to sixth with 896 points. Texas A & M , which gets underway Saturday night at L SU , remained in seventh place with 868 points while Tennessee downed New M exico 35-21 and went from 10th to eighth with 713 points. Auburn, No. 14 in the preseason poll, cracked the Top Ten by whipping Tennessee-Chattanooga 42-14. The Tigers received 509 points. That put them seven points ahead of Ohio State, which slipped from ninth to 10th with 502 points after losing to Alabam a 16-10 in the Kickoff Classic on Aug. 27. The new rankings include the sam e 20 teams as the preseason poll, with some rearranging of positions. The Second Ten consists of Brigham Young, Baylor, Florida, L SU , Florida State, U CLA , Washington, Arkansas, Georgia and M ichigan State. The preseason -Second Ten listed Florida State, B aylor, Florida, Auburn, L SU , Georgia and Washington tied for 16th, B Y U , Arkansas and M ichigan State. & B arber. Sp ecializing in all types o f h air. For men & w om en. Evenings by appt. Huntington Square Plaza 3 1 19 S. M ill Suite A -8 ST A T E P R E S S “C L A SS IF IE D AD D E A D LIN E S A R E 3 P.M . 2 D A YS PR IO R T O IN SERTIO N / — 30% -70% o ff •H u n d red s-o f room size remnants — $29-$69 •W e D eliver •B u y D irect from our Factory MESA tanni. im*nr AV lIn Q S , 967-6005 PagelH Stale jM e s d a ^ S e p tc m b e r ^ J W ó Press Bears’ McMahon to sit 3 weeks r ia « c i# i* rfc due to right shoulder separation LA K E FO R E ST , 111. (AP) — Quarterback Jim McMahon will be lost to the Super Bowl champion Chicago Bears for at least three weeks because of a shoulder injury. McMahon, the team ’s “ free spirit,” suffered the injury in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s 41-31 victory over the Cleveland Browns in die N FL season opener for both teams. “ It’s a second-degree separation in the right shoulder,” trainer Fred Caito said. “ He did not dislocate it. He w ill miss about three weeks.” Caito said X-rays were negative and that McMahon had movement of the arm . “ A t die end of this week he will begin to work with weights, and in 10 to 14 days he w ill do some throwing,” Caito said. “ There was no dam age to die rotator cuff. It is tender and sore and we w ill treat it with care. ” Caito said that a first-degree shoulder injury is m ild and takes about a week to heal. A second-degree injury has pain and swelling and takes three weeks, and a third-degree injury is a severe separation that can take six weeks. Coach M ike D id » said M ike Tom czak, a second-year pro, will start Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles. “ Three weeks is optim istic, ” Ditka of the recovery time for McMahon’s injury. “ If he can pop it (the ball) in three weeks, he’ll be back in there. “ I ’m disappointed for Jim ’s sake; it’s not a good situation for us,” Ditka said. “ Hopefully we’re not a team that depends ‘Let's get on with the treatment, get well and get back to work.’ — Jim McMahon on one man that m uch. But so much revolves around the quarterback. “ Jim is not injury prone, it’s just that crazy things happen to him .” McMahon has had a history of injuries. But in gam es that he has started, the Bears have a 27-4 record. McMahon was in cam p early Monday, but left for New York to appear on a talk show Monday night and was not available for comment. “ He said, ‘Let’s get on with the treatm ent, get well and get back to work’ when he learned of the situation, ” Caito said. Caito said McMahon’s arm would be in a sling for several days for comfort and that he would receive anti­ inflammatory medication. McMahon was injured when Cleveland defensive end Reggie Cam p fell on him . He remained in the gam e for two more plays before taking him self out. College gridders battle to lead AP poll ranking By Ik e Associated Press Oklahoma remained a runaway leader Monday in the Associated Press’ first regular-season college football poll while M iam i, F la ., nosed out idle M ichigan for second place, setting up a possible shootout between No. 1 and No. 2 later this month. Oklahoma’s impressive 38-3 drubbing of fourth-ranked U CLA earned the Sooners 55 of 59 first-place votes and 1,175 of a possible 1,180 points from a nationwide panel , of 59 sports writers and sportscasters. Meanwhile, M iam i upped its record to 2-0 by defeating No. 13 Florida 23-15. The Hurricanes received one first-place vote and 1,050 points in clim bing from third place to second. Oklahoma visits M iam i on Sept. 27 in an attempt to avenge the only loss the Sooners suffered en route to the 1985 national championship. M ichigan, which opens its season Saturday at Notre Dam e, slipped from second place to third with one first-place vote and 1,026 points. U CLA ’s embarrassment at the hands of Oklahoma dropped the Bruins from fourth place to 16th. Alabam a, a 42-10 winner over Vanderbilt, moved up from fifth to fourth with 966 points. Penn State crushed Temple 45-15 and rose FULL SERVICE SALON &. B arber. Sp ecializing in all types o f h air. For m en & w om en. Evenings by appt. Huntington Square Plaza 3 1 1 9 S. M ill Suite A -8 from sixth to fifth with one first-place vote and 952 points. The other first-place ballot went to Nebraska, which trounced No. 11 Florida State 34-17 and jumped from eighth to sixth with 896 points. Texas A & M , which gets underway Saturday night at LSU , remained in seventh place with 868 points while Tennessee downed New Mexico 35-21 and went from 10th to eighth with 713 points. Auburn, No. 14 in the preseason poll, cracked the Top Ten by whipping Tennessee-Chattanooga 42-14. The Tigers received 509 points. That put them seven points ahead of Ohio State, which slipped from ninth to 10th with 502 points after losing to Alabam a 16-10 in the Kickoff Classic on Aug. 27. The new rankings include the sam e 20 teams as the preseason poll, with some rearranging of positions. The Second Ten consists of Brigham Young, Baylor, Florida, L SU , Florida State, U CLA , Washington, Arkansas, Georgia and M ichigan State. • The preseason Second Ten listed Florida State, B aylor, Florida, Auburn, LSU , Georgia and Washington tied for 16th, B Y U , Arkansas and Michigan State. •Bears & Rabbits • Wine & Champagne •M uch m uch m ore! We can custom ize . a B ouquetfor yo u ! C an 9 6 8 - 4 4 4 6 1974 SUPERBEETLE G ood co nd itio n. Tape deck. A ir. $1300.947-4066. Autom obiles 1970 VW Fastback, runs good, new tire s, auto trans, am /fm cassette. $800. 829-1818. __________- . 1972 VOLKSWAQON “ B u fl", e xcellent co n d itio n , radio, tapeplayer, $1500. 897-8868.________ __ __________ _ 1973 MUSTANG 351 C leveland, aL ac, ps, pb, am -fm cassette, $1000, runs greet. Flynn, 941-49S9.__________ __ 1973 TRIUMPH TR6, w hite w ith black c o n v e rtib le . M e ch a n ica lly so un d ! G reat fu n l Arizona o rig in a l. $2300. 829-9552. .______________ 1977 TOYOTA C oro lla SW, o nly 4500 m ile s on re b u ilt engine. A utom atic, pb, ac, am /fm stereo. E xce lle n t co nd itio n. $1850.962-4316.____________________ 1981 TOYOTA C oro lla 4-door, 5-speed am /fm cassette stereo, 45,000 m iles, $3000. C all 965-5175 o r 829-8390. Ask or leave m assage fo r Pave._____________ 1982 CAVALIER, silve r, co ld air, nice In te rio r, autom atic fw d, ps, am /fm cassette, real cute, $2000.829-8421. 1963 PULSAR. M ust s e ll! E xcellent co n d itio n , red, ps, pb, ac, sun-roof, $5950.820-3237.____________________ 1984 MITSUBISHI C ordla Turbo, low m ile s, tin te d w indow s, cru ise , sunroof, 5-speed, e le c tric m irrors and w indow s. 839-5602. Babysitter» waned 965-7572 TO PUCE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD. CARPET REMNANT •Thousands in stock —30%-70% o ff •H u n d red s-o f room size remnants —$29-$69 That's right! Now you can place your STATE PRESS classified ad over the phone if you have a VISA or MASTERCARD. Just cail 965-7572 and ask fo r classified advertising. •W e D eliver •B u y D irect from our Factory 1978 FORD P into, 65,000 m iles, $550 OBO. New engine, transm ission, autom atic. Phone 965-5359 o r 921-0638. RESPONSIBLE LOVING a d u lt to care fo r ch ild re n in o u r hom e. Nonem oker, fle x ib le h ou r*. C all 829-9033. ST A T E P R E S S ^CLA SSIFIED AD D E A D LIN E S A R E 3 P.M . 2 D A YS PR IO R •IN SERTION / MESA 8am to S pm DAILY n iw a i U M m /M . K-aait e t M a CM ST A T E P R E SS 890-11S2 15 MATTHEWS CENTER NORTH BASEMENT ASU NORTHEAST iW LC aaC ne 887-2703 965-7572 WESTSiOE .m u m « « T EM P E, A R IZO N A PICKS Babysitting Wanted BABYSITTING PROVIDED SO yards from ASU, U nive rsity and Forest. 921-1668 evenings. ____________ B icycles____________ 23” CENTURIAN Super Lem an8, new fram e, q u a lity com ponents. Includes rack, generator, $220. Bob, 690-2027 e ven in g*. ______ CUSTOM BICYCLE c lo th in g m ade o f lycra apandex. Shorts, s h irts , and su its made to order. B rig h t co lo rs and fancy p rin t*. T erry, 838-8017._______________ B u sin ess Opp. BE D IFFER EN T. I f y o u 're s e lf m otivated and w ant to make an unusual Incom e. C all fo r appointm ent. C hart»*, 244-2331. BUSINESS MAJORS, te s t book theory w ith re a lity . Learn business netw orking firs t hand. S ta rt yo ur ow n business p art-tim e, on o r o ff cam pus. C all 024-2837 fo r appointm ent. __________ COULD YOU use $500-$f000 extra per m onth w ith very little Invested? If so, c a lf 8206702. A y -' D ayCare a iM ilU n 280-3281 BALLOON EXPRESS W e sp e cia liz e in B a llo o n B o u q u ets a v a ila b le w ith : FREE LECTURE: Learn about sexually transm itted diseases end how to prevent them . M onday. Septem ber 15, 7:30p.m. Sponsored by the Phoenix Qay Youth Q roup. C all 897-8989 o r 938-3932.___________•. _________ _ CHILD CARE wanted fo r tw o g irls ages 9 and 10, 3:30-9:00 p.m . d a lly. C all 829-9820. ________________________ 829-8192 PIZZA Autom obiles D O N 'T FO R G ET! M A M A G E L A R D rS 8 9 4 -M A M A 106 E . U N IV E R SIT Y Announcem ents □Bills vs. BengalsD □Colts vs. DolphinsD □Browns vs. OilersD □Chiefs vs. SeahawksP □Raiders vs. Redskind □Chargers vs. GiantsG □Cowboys vs. LionsD □Eagles vs. Beard □Cardinals vs. FalconsD □Packers vs. SaintsD □Vikings vs. BochaneersD □49ers vs. RamsD □Patriots vs. JetsD SEMESTER COUPON: Name Buy a 14” pizza fo r $ 4.95 and get tw o FREE Liters o f C oke, W e Deliver. 894-M A M A . Then fill out Mam a's Pizza Pick Coupon. G ive A d d ress it to your driver. Best picks draw n Tuesday follow ing Sunday's gam es. W inner gets a $100 gift certificate. G ood luck and go fo r tt. O ffer good Mon.-Wed. Deadlines fo r picks Wed.. 12 m idnight before game. N ot veUd w ith any other coupon. One coupon per delivery. Ties settled by draw. - |L _ . Phone No. THE CHILDREN’S C enter located tw o b lo cks south o f ASU has openings fo r 3 and 4 year otda. Five day a week program ; fu ll o r p a rt-tim e . C a ll 894-8370. ________ ~ F o r Rent or Lease 2, 3, 4 bedroom condos, tow nhouses, houses, near ASU fo r re nt and sale. C all Alum nus R obert B u llo ck, Trencor R ealty, 9980919941-7041. 2 BLOCKS ASU, one bedroom house, $380, unfu rnish ed , lease o n ly. 839-2961, 967-2457. _______ '_______ A CONDO fo r rent. Tw o bedroom , fu rn ish e d , w asher, dryer, overlooks pool, w alk to ASU. $500 d e p o sit, $595 m o nth ly, e le c tric I* o n. C all 9450995 6-9 p.m . weekdays, 9 a.m .-9 p.m . weekends.________________________ APACHE VILLA A partm ents, now re ntin g 2 bedroom , fife bath, $430 m onth. C all 829-1860. One b lo ck from BEAUTIFUL NEW large tw o bedroom , w alk to ASU, pool, laundry, 8 th S treet and G ary one b lo ck south o f U niversity on 8th S t. betw een R ural and M cC llnto c k 968-5238.___________________ _ CONDOS: SALE- lease- by th e u n it o r by th e room - A rt M acLeren, ERA V qlley M atro, 834-7853. _________ _ NEW, LARGE one and tw o bedroom apts. G reat com plex, many am enities, 3 m ile s from cam pus. P elllcan Bay A partm ent*, 2 1 2 t W . MaJn/Apache 989-3380. _____________ PAPAGO ONE, tw o bedroom , tw o bath condo fo r ra n t A ll appliances, $600. 8479180 a tta r 8:00p.m ._______ ,_______ ROOM FOR re n t In S c o tts d a le tow nhouse, G ranite R eef/M cDonald area. K itchen p rivileg e s, w asher, dryer, fu rnished o r unfu rnish ed , sm oker o.k. $250 In clud in g utlH tee. Phone Jerry, M-F, 9:00 a.m .-4:30 a t 994-0818, 945 8830 a fte r 5 0 0 p.m . and w eekends. state Prew Page 19 Tuesday, September 9,1986 classifieds__________ For Rent or Lease one BEDRO OM , one b a th , $275/m onth, u p sta irs; tw o bedroom , one bath, $350. 1136 E. Spence. American ERA. 968-9030._____________ SHARP TWO bedroom , tw o bath. Washer and d ryer inclu d ed . M ini blinds, dishw asher, pool. W alk to ASU. $595 per m onth. Thom as A lla n Prooertles. Athena, 994-0906.____________ THREE BEDROOM, tw o bath condo, close to ASU, $525/m onth. 839-1783. THREE BEDROOM, tw o bath house, close to ASU, appliances, pet o k, nice house. 894-8302,994-5829.___________ TWO 3 bedroom hom es near ASU, unfurnished, lease o n ly. $650.839-2961, 967-2457. TWO BLOCKS ASU, 2 one bedroom unfurnished e ffic ie n c y apartm ents, lease o nly, $3S0fm onth. 839-2961, 967-2457. ______________________ For Sale A BEAUTIFUL c o lo r te le visio n , 25" $115.; 19” co lo r TV, $80.; console stereo $80. Cash. C a ll 253-5016. IBM-XT COMPATIBLES, 640K m em ory 2-DSDD drives, A T -style keyboard, m onochrom e m o n ito r, + so ftw a re , F.C.C. approved, $725. 968-5128, 9 43 5652. Q uantity d isco u n ts.____________ KRAMER GUITAR, th e Focus 3000 w ith Floyd rose and case, tw o w eeks o ld , m ust se ll, against apartm ent ru le s. C all now and save, a fte r 5 0 0 p.m . 8298427. PIONEER SPEAKERS, 100 w a tt, brand new, never been used. C ost $600, w ill take $100 fo r th d pah. M oving, m ust sell. 954-0627. RETIREES SPECIAL sale,’ fo u r bed­ room hom e, spa, 1614’ boat, 18V i' cabin cru ise r, le t ski, 68 Falcon. 9630942 fo r In to . __________ _ SEARS M ANUAL porta ble typ e w rite r, $35. New Cannon Typem ate 10 e le c­ tro n ic typ e w rite r, $125. R oyal m anual portable typ e w rite r, $65. A ll In p e rfe ct w orking co n d itio n . 8290268.______ . TYPEWRITER; S M f f t 'r e O . e le c tric poriabl iw K llC C - W ^ u s e d . $50. 9 5 1 -3 6 8 ***V ____________ USED CARPETS $10, fo r dorm s, vans, cars, apartm ents, and e tc. New re­ m nants to o l C arpet H ouse, 1516 E Van Buren, Phoenix. _____________ Furniture ALL NEW sofa, loveseats, assorted colors, fa b rics, $199.95. Can d elive r. B8Z, 520 E R oosevelt, 254-4144. BED'S BED’S. A ll sizes: Tw in $49.95; Full $59.96; Queen $89.95; K ing <129.96. Never used. B 8Z, 2544144. CHEST OF draw ers fro m $30. Paradise Bedding, 4013 N ! B lack Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian S chool exit). 2630600.______________________ COMPLETE 7-plece bedroom w ith fu ll size bed, $196.96. P rice Includes 6dr dresser, fram ed m irro r, 2 dr nig h tstan d , headboard. B&Z, 520 E. R oosevelt. Can deliver. 254-4144. ______________ COMPLETE TW IN bed, $79 a t the factory. A ll sizes available, regular, extra long. Paradise Bedding, 4013 N. Black Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian S chool e xit). 2930600. _______ FOR SALE* O ne so fa $100; loveseat $60; Steelease desk $270; Steelcaae desk ch a ir $125; Karastan woven natural w ool area ru g , 1014x1514, $750. 3431304.__________________________ FULL SIZE bed, never used, s till In factory w rapping, $59.96. Can d eliver, B8Z, 520 E R oosevatt, 254-4144. MATTRESS S A LE T w in se ts from $49.95, F u ll seta fro m $59.95, Queen sets from $99.96, K ing s $139. 7 piece bedroom s e t com plete $195. 7 piece livin g room se t $259. 5 draw er cheet $39.65, sleeper so fa s fro m $249 p lu s much m ere. 3332 F u rn itu re , 30 W . M ain, Mesa, 844-1991; 3332 W . M cD ow ell, 2332235 __________ THREE PIECE co ffe e ta b le se t. New *79. Paradise B edding, 4013 N. B lack Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian School e xit). 2630600._______________ WAREHOUSE S A LE desks from $44, chairs from $ 5 end ta b le s and co ffe e tables from $ 10, typ in g ta b le s, com pu­ te r ta b le s, bookshelves and m ore. 437-2224. . Help Wanted $1000 FINDERS fe e paid to locate $10,000 In ve sto r fo r B ible audiotape recording p ro te ct. 8 2 3 2 2 3 3 .___________ APPOINTMENT SETTERS: part-tim e, close to cam pus, fle x ib le hours, salary Plus bonus, no s e llin g , great stu d e nt job. C all M a tt. 864 0030. H elp Wanted H elp Wanted Motorcycles R eal Estate S e rv ice s ALL MAJORS: part-tim e w ork w ith e xcitin g , rapidly expanding- publishing com pany. Choose own hours. Un­ lim ite d earning p ote ntia l. For inform a­ tio n co nta ct S ally, days and evenings, 821-1953. _____________ SALES OPPORTUNITY: Be yo ur own boss, set your ow n hours, earn 30-40% com m ission oh sp ecia lty cleaning item s. For m ore inform ation ca ll 9637271.___________' 1977 HONOA Express. G ood co n d itio n . $125.784-8653, ask fo r Jim . ’________ CONDO FOR sale by ow ner, no money dow n, assum e m ortgage o f ju s t under $40,000. Pay tra n sfe r fee o f $400 and it’s yours. One bedroom w ith washer, dryer, dishw asher, re frige ra to r. 700 W. U niversity, b ikin g distance to school. A . Benora, M.D., 251-3112, days._______ TERRIFIC BARGAINI U nlim ited long distance phone c a lls, $100 per m onth, plus cash fo r sponsoring others. 9638944. EARN W HILE you leafn. New concept bookclub netw ork p ublishing. Earn $9000 a m onth w ith no investm ent, no Inventory, no m eetings. Founders share In m u lti-m illio n d o lla r referral cam paign. Phone 897-7485 Sundays and a fte r 6:00p.m . w eekly. ________ E N G IN E E R IN G T E C H N IC IA N (m echanical). Second o r th ird year m echanical engineering o r technology. Some related experience desired. M ust be availble m inim um o f 20 hours per week fa ll and spring sem ester. Flexible schedule, $4.50 and up, 9538200. ENTRY LEVEL part-tim e p ositio n s w ith Associated Bloscience. A p p lica tion s w ill be accepted between 9:00 a.m.-5 p m, M onday through Friday In the fo llo w in g areas: (4) phlebotom ist; (1) re ceptlonist/screening. Previous ex­ perience not required. A pplicants m ust be able to w ork a ll Saturdays. 1015 S. Rural, 9636139. EOE EXTREMELY INTERESTING part-tim e p o s itio n w ith great p ote ntia l I Phoenixbased* human resources and develop­ m ent, co nsu ltin g, and tra in in g firm . Need a dm inistrative assistan t to schedule classes, do bookkeeping, and a ssist In program developm ent. Some o f th e w ork can be done from home. For appointm ent, c a ll S cott at the F a cilita to rs, 241-1932._______________ FEMALE MODELS wanted fo r casual wear, sp orts wear, and sw im wear. Send p o rtfo lio s o r p icture s to : C hasin’ R ainbows, 6925 F ifth Avenue, S uite E437, S cottsdale, AZ 85251■__________ GRAPHIC DESIGNER: A d ve rtisin g agency seeks student Intern capable o f handling p roje cts from a rt d ire ctio n and design to th e production o f fin ish e d a rt. M ust have e xcellent p o rtfo lio . 20 hours per week, $6 per lib u r. 2938012. _____________ SECURITY OFFICERS fu ll o r part tim e , car and phone required. F it hours to your needs. In te rn a l S ecurity Agency 8 2 3 1 9 1 9 .________ _________ , SET YOUR ow n w orking schedule, part-tim e o r fu ll-tim e . Set your own Incom e. C all fo r appointm ent. C harles, 244-2331,______________.__________ _ STUDENTS EARN $6 to $1Q p e r hour. Leads make o u r telem arketing easier. Part-tim e e ve n in g ' hours available im m ediately. S outh S cottsdale o ffic e Is close to cam pus 947-0505_______ . PART-TIME clean up person fo r anim al h osp ita l In C handler, 6 days a week. C all 9632340. ____________ WANTED: FU LL and part-tim e C hild­ care w orkers to w ork In sh e lte r/ re sid e n tia l tre a tm e n t fa c ility fo r abused g irls . A ll s h ifts available. C all 931-4348. _______ WORK-STUDY PARTICIPANTS needed, part-tim e at Q u a lity Day Care. Finger prlntayTB te s t required. 894-1092._____ ____ PHONE INTERVIEWERS needed, no sales - w ill tra in . $4/hour, part-tim e w ork In evenlngs/weekends. 277-5907 betw een 9-3- ___________ ARE YOU g e ttin g th e m ost o u t o f life ? Q uo V adls. Books, 122-B U niversity, Tem pe, The A rches.9633693._________ FREE PUPPY! M ale, 7 w eeks o ld , Vi registered Standard Poodle, V i S heltle. 890-1964. _______________ __ WATER SKI In stru ctio n and o utin g s. C om petition M aster C raft ski boat and equipm ent provided. H alf days, fu ll days a vailable.9634185 _________; THE AHT THERAPY INSTITUTE OFFERS ATWO-YEARGRADUATE LEVEL PROGRAM WITH A COM­ PREHENSIVE COURSE OF PRO­ FESSIONALSTUDY IN ART THER­ APY. DIRECTORS ARE REGIS­ TEREDWITHTHE AMERICAN ART THERAPYASSOCIATION. FOR MORE INFO CALL *68-1567 258-6437 952-2806 L o s t» 9/9 FUN FOR a ll In S tudent A lum ni A sso cia tio n ! Everyone w elcom e at firs t m eeting today, 3 £ 5 M;U.____________ _ GUESS W HAT Theron Jones? I found ye t a no the r w ay to show you how m uch. I love yo u l I -Love, M elody.____________ LOST: ANTIQUE brooch w ith baby p icture . S entim ental value. Reward $25. Jam ie, 9 9 3 2 0 7 ft leave m edia n s. LOST: TAN purse, o u tsid e S ocial Science B u ild in g » 3 9 6 around 1530 a.m . W a lle t and keya. R ew ardl 9636613,8 ta cy.___________________ FEM ALE ROOMMATE(S), (nonsm oker) w anted to share three bedroom , tw o bath condo. 2V i m iles from ASU. $250 per m onth, u tilitie s included. C all Pam, 8938678. _________ __________ _ FEMALE ROOMMATES w anted to share tw o bedroom , tw o bath condo at Q u e s ts V id a . F u rn ish e d , w /d , m icro w a ve , tw o p o o ls ,- ja c u z z i, ra cqu e tb a ll co u rts, m any extras. K elly, 967-6345 __________ FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted. Re­ sp on sib le nonsm oker, fo u r bedroom tow nhouse, com m unity pooL w /d, $147 p lu s ’A u tilitie s . $165 d e p o s it 8332549, 984-9112.__________________________ SIG M A PI, thanks fo r h e lp in g me out w ith M om m y D earest th is m onth. Your bro, S c o tt._________________________ I NEED a room m ate. Tw o bedroom , tw o bath, p a rtia lly furnished tow nhouse, w asher, dryer, fenced yard, private Carport. M aster su ite large enough fo r tw o , If needed. $250/m onth p lu s Vi u tilitie s . 3 m ile s to ASU, 4330535 STUDENTS: BE p a rt cd ASU, jo in S tudent A lum ni A sso cia tio n . C all 9635276 fo r data!la 1 ______________ W ANTED: BUSINESS stu d e nts in te r­ ested In p rofe ssio n alism . M aks frie n d s and gain valuable business experience. D elta S igm a PI. Dean’s p a tio th is week. M ALE NO NSM O KIN G room m ate needed to share tw o bedroom , tw o bath, fu ll kitch en , d in in g , liv in g room condo. B e a utiful pool, jacuzzi in com plex. One m ile from ASU. $225 . + v i u tilitie s /m onth + <225 refundable d ep o sit. C all J e ff, 9631895__________ . W ANTED: CAREER S e rvice s A s­ s is ta n ts . O rg a n iza tio n a l m e e tin g , W ednesd ay, Septem ber 10th, M O p.m ., ASB t1 0 2 .3 se to d a y's advertisem ent! M /F NONSMOKER. Share n ice 4 bedroom home. PooL WD, pool table. B ike to ASU. $210 -$225 m onth 14 u tilitie s . 9490043._________ _________ WEEKEND GESTALT therapy group fo r w om en. N o charge. Learn m ore about yo u rse lf/ Increase personal g row th/ help yo u r problem areas. 8233925 NON-SMOKING STUDIOUS tam ale room m ate to r 2-bedroom tow nhouse loca te d 10 m inutes from ASU. $200 p lu s V i u tilitie s . C all Laura, 2439191 3 6 p .m .____________________________ NONSMOKING FEMALE room m ate w anted, th a n one bedroom apartm ent. 9189/m onth p lu s 14 u tilitie s . W alking d istan ce to ASU. 967-7295___________ RESPONSIBLE FEMALE, furnished p riva te room , nice house, good neighborhood, 4 m ile s ASU, $250 m onth, fre e u tilitie s , non-sm oker. M ardell. 831-5505___________ Admission Only 15% TO 60% OFF ALL $1.60-62.00 ON SC0TT8QALE NO. One Block North o f Afc/CeNpe ’ Juat Acro»» Th» M m 9712 On Scottsdale Rd. tust Scornane ha. mat north «am» ol Menante B FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share 2-bedroom , 2-bath apartm ent. $280 m onth. U tilitie s included. Vi blo ck from ASU. 9438117, _________ ■ FURNISHED, OWN bedroom , pool, Broadw ay and M ill, garage, $250 a m onth; V i u tilitie s . 9035217, E ric. SUMMER BLOWOUT S FEMALE NONSMOKER to share 2 bedroom , 2 bath tow nhouse, available Im m e d ia te ly , fu lly fu rn is h e d , m icrow ave, fire pla ce , w /d, very nice com plex. $200 m onth -f V i u tilitie s . 844-9692.__________________________ SEAN BEGGS, but how d o I co nta ct you w ith o u t seem ing to o fo rw ard and/or aggressive? 3 ______ _ KÊÊLMU THEPHWEIPNUSTNY MIMMI VELVET B FEMALE NONSMOKER to share 2 bedroom furnished duplex. 5 m inutes to cam pus. $175 plus V i u tilitie s . 921-9143.________ __________________ FEMALE TO share 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo. N ear M cC IIntock and U nivers­ ity . Furnished. $300 per m onth p lu s 1 i u tilitie s . 9631729. _____________ Show ing enough Sunduyt E FEMALE NONSMOKER to share room In three bedroom , three bath condo. F u lly furnished w ith extras. 9635378. LOVE LIN E fo r $.80 a m inute. C all 1-973L0VE and m eet som eone special o r add to yo u r frie n d sh ip lis t. Give Love U n e a try .______ _______________. A BEAUTIFUL c o lo r te le visio n , 25” $10 5 ; 19” c o lo r TV; $ 8 5 ; co nso ls stereo $75. C ash. CaH2535015 E Roommate wnBd FEMALE, SHARE 3-bedroom , 2-bath condo. Furnished, 2-poolv, 3 te n n ls co u rts. New pain t, carpets. $22S/month + V i u tilitie s . M ust see. B e tty, C arol, 890-2376._______________________ __ M iscellaneous H LOVELY 3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. M any am enities. C lose to ASU. Qreat Investm ent fo r fa cu lty o r parents o f stu d e nts. $105,950. M arilyn Stone, eves, 840-7091 days 994-1458. Real E state P rofessionals. __________ I C A N T keep th is secret any longer! I’ve lo s t 19 pounds In 3 w eeks! I can’t w e ig h t to te ll you h ow l Lynn, 9433504. TO A LL th e wom en o f ASU, thanks. G lad to be beck. M ark Anderson.______ Found LOST AND F bund ads are fre e everyday) W s lim it tlw m to 20 w ords and run them lo r 2 days. J u s t c a ll the STATE PRESS cla ssifie d departm ent, 9637572, M onday through Friday, 5 0 0 a.m.-5-OO p.m ._____ • ____________ _____________.— 8339136._____________ _ ANOREXIA, BULIM IA, com pulsive over e a tin g , p riva te and co n fid e n tia l coun­ se lin g . G ennle M onroe, ACSW, recovered b u lim ic 437-9420 o r 2438204. MASTER SELF-HYPNOSIS and change your life . Sm all groups o r Individual sessions available. C all Jim Lane, Ph.d., 9638815______________ _ _ _ _ _ PART-TIME SECRETARY $448 per hour + expenses -»-bonus. M ust have tran­ sp orta tion . C all Greg Johnson, 994- PART-TIME WORK, fem ale, w orks w ell w ith ch ild re n . Tuesday and Thursday. Personal ERIC ANDERSON, your radio an­ nouncem ent was appreciated by your P hi Sigm a L ittle S laters. Thank yo u l PART-TIME AND sales p o s itio n s available. Good pay. S cottsdale area. C ontact th e Arizona R epublic between 9:00 a.m .-6 p.m . 271-8688.____________ PART-TIME CASHIERS. G reat jo b fo r stu d e nts. Various s h ifts available, e spe cia lly weekdays, noon-6:00 p.m . A pply a fte r Id » p.m . U niversity Theaters, 1025 E. Breedway.__________ HONOA SCOOTER, brand new , E lite 80, w h ite , 1st $800. takes. S co tt at 244-1440days. ______________ Instruction PART-TIME WATERBED sales, w ork around your schedule, w alking d is ­ tance from cam pus. A pply In person a t The Bedroom , 825 N. S cottsdale R d„ M-F, 10dWa.rn.-5 p.m . ___________ 2200. HONDA 150 E lite D eluxe scooter. A sking $1000. o n ly has 1500 m iles. Com es w ith three year p ro te ctio n plan. U ke new . C a ll evenings, 9732062. MOPED: MOTORCYCLE s tyle , excel­ le n t co n d itio n , low m ileage, fin e engine, rad, luggage rack, $296. 894-9542,9931181. JOBS. FLEXIBLE hours, part-tim e, fu ll-tim e . $ 595 per hour. M ust have neat appearance, basic m ath s k ills . Tem pe, Mesa: 967-5670. Phoenix, G lendale: 241-1063.8 to noon.________ OFFICE CLEANERS needed 1320 hours per week. Evenings. M ust have car. $4 per hour a fte r tra in in g . Bonuses, pay raises, and advancem ent ofrportu n ltle s . Leave message. 274-0999. 1984 AERO 80 scooter, 3600 m iles, $550. C ontact Am y at 9639102._______ TEMPE MAGAZINE is loo kin g fo r 'a m ulti-faceted ind ivid u a l. If you Can w rite and e d it copy, typeset and paste-up ads, and know how to type and answer a phone, I w ill h ire you. C all 9638625.____________ . . . HOUSEKEEPER WANTED. M-F 3hrs afternoon. L ig h t housecleaning, cook­ in g , som e errands. M ust have car, references. R ural/Southem area $60 week p lu s errand m ileage plus supper. C at-lover preferred. C all S tefanle, days 244-7613, evenings 8331643, a fte r Aug 27. _________ ‘_________________ ’ NEED EXTRA money? Let Avon help. C all Terry. 8339227. ________________ 1983 HONDA Shadow 500 o nly 800 m ile s, e xce lle n t c o n d itio n , $1350 Includea helm et. C all 8338135._________ HONDA AERO 80, blue, 1985, great c o n d itio n , 2156 m iles. C ontact 963 4645, ______________ * HELP WANTED part-tim e, perfect fo r stu d e nts, 20 hours/week. A pply 2242 N. 24th S t., Phoenix.___________________ MALE MODELS: V ersatile m ale m odels needed by photographer w ho w ill be in Phoenix In O ctober. Those selected w ill earn to p d olla rs. Send recent photos, e tc., to J.G ., 5509 C rosscreek Lane, S uite 1075, F ort W orth, Texas 76106. ____________ __________ 1980 PACER m oped, 500 a ctu a l m iles, $175.899-1954. , _________ __ SUNGLASS MERCHANDISER needed, part-tim e, fle x ib le hours. Job requires a c a r. R e s p o n s ib le p e rso n w ith know ledge o f th e m etro area. H ourly wage plus m ileage reim bursem ent. C all 9438444, leave massage.'________ HELP WANTED, need cooks ex­ perienced o r n o t who love to cook, part-tim e basis. Need apply at 1024 E. Broadway, Tem pe, Prankster's. MAKE HUNDREDS w eekly m ailing c ircu la rs! No quotas, lim its ! Rush self-addressed, stam ped envelope: Am -M ar, 256 R obertson Blvd., Dept. G, Beverly H ills , CA 90211.________ ' 1979 HONDA CB750F, Im m aculate co n d itio n , fresh tune-up, new tire s, great tra n sp o rta tio n , m ust s e ll, $975. John, 9935177,947-4211._____________ » SALE SWIMWEAR SHORTS, SKIRTS& SHIRTS 2191 Baseline • OS-MI Between Rural & M ill 9/12 Motorcycles_______ 1974 HONDA C8360, m in t co n d itio n , $ 4 5 5 9 6 3 4 9 6 1 . ___________ 1977 HONDA 5 5 5 w in d sh ie ld, fa irin g , side-bags, runs good. A sking $800. 9631796 o r9931944.____________ ___ SCOTTSDALE CONDO, o n * bedroom , one bath a d iilt com plex. For sale o r lease purchase. A sking $46,900. C all M ary, ERA V alley M etro, 9484)900 o r 991-6636.__________________________ SHARE CONCEPTS shared housing. W s have num erous tenant and landlord placem ents end ere open to r m ore. V alley w ide service. References re­ quire d , M on-Sat, 9 a.m .-7 p.m . 990-8488, 9 43 0 1 95 _________________ SPACIOUS 3 bed room condo w ith 2 room s to ra nt. A ir co n d itio n in g , pool, jscuzzL m odem decor. R ent between <2739305 Includes u tilitie s . C ell Ju lie , 9033834.__________________________ Transportation CARS AVAILABLE - 21 o r older. A ll S tates Drlve-away, 992-5200.__________ Typing______________ $ 1 .5 0 /P A G E , w o rd p ro c e s s o r, m allm erge, p rofessional ty p is t, same day service. C all Marge W illis 834-4583. A-1, GET your papers laser typeset a t K io to 's . 9632035.___________________ AAA WORD processing service. Q uick, guaranteed, professional services. Reasonable fees. Rush job s ok. G raphic services available (charts, graphs, etc.). D iscount w ith th is ad. Ron, 8335532._________________ ____ AA TYPING - w ord processing, $1.50 per double spaced page. C all C athy, 8938191.__________________________ ACCURATE CONVENIENT. R eason» bie. M rs. Oaklay. 967-0805__________ _ ALWAYS AVAILABLE fo r typ in g . C all Susan at 6330373.________ __________ A + PROFESSIONAL typ in g and re­ sum e service In my hom e. G ram m atical e d itin g available. Reasonable rates. 9638413.__________________________ CEREUS WORD PROCESSING. Q u a lity g u a ra n te e d . T e rm p a p e rs , m a rk e tln g fte c h n ic a l, d is s e rta tio n s , th e s e s , fo rm le tte rs , re sum e s. 947-7796._________ ________________ FAST RETURN. Professional ty p is t w ill e d it sp ellin g , punctuation and gram­ mar. Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, 6330773 ___________ ___________ PROFESSIONAL, ACADEMIC, w ord­ p ro c e s s in g , b o o k, th e s is , d is ­ se rta tio ns, d isc storage, le tte r q u a lity. Reasonable rates. Taytor-Lyndsay 964PROFESSIONAL TYPING Service: term papers, theses, ate. Low rates. Q uick tum -around. Pat M o tte t, 897-1832. RUSH JOBS no problem I Term papers, theses, e tc., $1.50 p er page. Sharp, clear type. 8 33 9 1 03 ________________ S AVE T IM E , c a ll me f ir s t. W ordprocessing- theses, disse rta tio n s, resum es. P rofessional ty p is t. Mesa Secretarial. 962-6694.________________ SHORT OF TIME? I can help. Re­ asonable. P rofessional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academ ic. C all Jessie 9435744.________________ ._______ __ THESES, TERM papers, reports etc. $1.00 page, typed a t hom e, 30 years experience. M arian 431-0618._________ TYPING BY R oadrunnar S ecretarial Service. Reasonable rates. Pick-up and d elivery available. 9623403. ______ TYPING - S P E C IA LIZIN G In d is ­ sertations, term papers, resum es e tc. C ost Is .11 ce nts per lin e 9430671. W ILL DO typ in g , w ord processing. Q u a lity w ork. F ifteen years experience. 897-0013. ____________________ . WORD PROCESSING and storage to r d isse rta tio n s, theses and term papers. Nancy 830-6675______________ _ WORD PROCESSING/Secretarial ser­ vices, 23 years experience, student disco u n t. 5 W . com er M ille r and Chaparral 904-8145._________________ WORD PROCESSING, m anuscripts, leg a l docum ents, resum es, te rm papers, and th e sis. C lose to ASU. 4388664. TYPING SPECIAL!!! Show ASU I.D. and receive a 10% Discount on •Typesetting •T erm Papers •Resum es •W ord Processing laser je t p rin tin g •Professional •F ast •A ccurate •Same Day Service Available No ¡ob too large or too smell !$u Typing center 122 E. University Tempe • 967-0900 Just a 5 min. walk from Hayden Library la TheArckes• Garav of Forest &Uaiwsity Offer expires 9-22-88. Services ATTENTIO N D ISABLED stu d e n tsN ew l A ttendant ra fsrra l service. De­ pendable, q u a lifie d . Screened atten­ dants available now . 24-hour em­ ergency back-up service. For more Info rm a tio n, 921-1875_______ ________ COMPUTER TERMINALS to r ra nt o r sale w ith m odem . Do your hom ework from hom e. $35 per m onth. 2436175 Wanted NEED TUTOR fo r QBAS01. C a ll Eve, 9530680(w ork), 4837490(home). TUTOR IN h ig h sc h o o l -c o o d year A lgebra needed fo r o f tw o sessions P i ' - f i V - 1* negotiable. F le x Ib lr 'f.K je V ja y s , c a ll M aggie, 963353. k J ^ n in g s , 967-8006. State Prg« HNAUYA .' r b ì v ju s R o iM b ì YOU WON'TGETA BREAK UKETHB ONCEYOURE OUT IN THE REALWORLD. HfTRODUCMG COLLEGIATE FUGHIBAML FROM O r the grand prize, for the num ber one student referral cham pion in the nation: a Porsche and one year o f unlim ited I f you’re a full-tim e student at an accredited college or uni' co ach air travel A n d how do you get to be the referral cham pion? Ju st sign versity ca tty yyou ou c a nn jo . _in cxff C ^ o lle ^ a te FligjhiBank.8“ You’ll receive up as m any friends as possible, and m ake sure your m em ber­ a m em bership ca id an d num ber th at w ill allow you to get ship num ber is o n their application. In order to be eligible for 10% o ff C o n tin en tal and N e w York A ir ’s already low fares. In addition, you’ll get a one-tim e certificate good tor $25 o ff any any prize you and your referrals m ust sign up before 12/31/86 an d each referral must fly 3 segments o n C o n tin en tal or N e w dom estic roundtrip fligh t. Plus, you’ll be able to earn trips to Ybrk A ir before 6/15/87. A n d y o u ’ll n ot only get credit for the places like Florida, D enver, Los A n geles, even Itondonand the S o u th P a cific Because every tirrre you fly you*ll earn mile- enrollm ent, you’ll also get 50u bonus miles. . S o cu t the coupon, and send it in now. B e sure to include age towards afcee trip. A n d if you sign up now you’llalso your current full tim e student ID num ber. T h a t way it’llo n ly receive 3 free issues «Business^Xfcek Careers magazine. fornirNini ANRMWYORKMR. referral forms, will arrive in 3 to 4 weeks. K yo u have a credit card, you ca n call us at 1-800-255-4321 an d enroll even fester. N e w more th an ever it pays to stay in school. SIGN ME UP NOW! (Plow printortype) Q ITfear($10)O 2 Years($20)□ 3 fears ($30)Q 4 Years($40) Must besubmitted by 12/31/86. Nan*— ------------------------------ --------------------- naterfRigK C o lle g e . -A ddress-Z ip - Permanent A d d r e s s Full tim e student 1D 4 L - Z ip _ Year o f G raduation- O Check/M oney Order Enclosed P L E A SE D O I T S E N D C A S H □ Am erican Express □ V isa □ M asterCard □ D iner’sC lu b Introducing Collegiate FlighrBankT Earn free crips to New York, San Francisco, Boston, 'Xfoshington , D C .,M ia m i, Chicago, or Denver. Plus, Australia, Honolulu, London, an d M e xk a A ll mid, 74 cities worldwide. ;AND EARN A PORSCHE. B u t w hat’s m ore, for the 10 students o n every cam pus w ho enroll the m ost active student flyers from their college there are some great rewards: 1 free tnjp wherever C o n tin en tal or N e w Ybck A ir flies in the m ainland U .S ., M exico or C an ada. A ccount N um ber- .E xp iratio n D a te - Signature X _______ F Q R M E M B E R SH IP A P P L IC A N T S U N D E R T H E A G E O F 18: T h e undersigned is the parent/ r a n d a n o fth e membership applicant named hereon, and I consent » his/her participation in the Collegiate H ightB ank program. s * « u J L _____________________________ ' Send this coupon to: Collegiate FlightBank P O . Box 297847 H ouston, T X 77297 Compiere lem » and conditions of program will accompany mwnhenhip jit. ^ ________________________ 21 •CONTINENTAL <3NEWK)RKAlR Som e blackout year o f