state press Voi 69 No. 13 A riz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity T e m p e , A riz o n a I C o p y rig h t, S ta te P ress, 1 98 6 . Friday, September 12,1986 Police, council not yet agreed about security By b e n n y M cCo n n e l l State Press m ■ On the eve of ASU’s first football game of the season, the Interfraternity Council and University Police have not agreed who should be responsible for monitoring Alpha Drive and providing security during home games. Associated Students of ASU President Chris Cummiskey said the taskforce cannot agree “and it’s just going back and forth on who should pay for what. ” Greek Life Coordinator Judy Biggs said fraternity houses have canceled parties as a result of the stalled negotiations so further friction would not occur between the council and police. Interfraternity Council President Doug Ducey said general .terms of the agreement include responsibility of supervision of fraternity houses and lawns and -the cost of manning barricades at both ends of Alpha Drive. Deputy Chief Doug Bartosh said, “Negotiations are not an easy process. I think the fraternities realize there are going to be controls applied, and they’re not going to have a free run over there anymore.” Bartosh said he has been assured by fraternity presidents that there will not be any parties after tomorrow’s game. He said an above average number of officers will be on duty in the area during and after the game. The Phi Theta Delta president said he will “lock up the house” and tell members to party elsewhere after the game, Bartosh said Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Pi Kappa Alpha houses had parties planned after the game, but then canceled on their own. Police barricades will be set up at both ends of Alpha DriYe, and no one will be able to get through without a greek I D. or identification proving they live on the street, he said. .. . . . . JOHN COOPER ASU football coach leads troops into battle against M ichigan State on Saturday.Page 25. ■ ' ' —> , ' Dem ocratic Congressional candidate H arry Braun speaks to a group of students near Cady Mall fountain Thursday afternoon. Braun said he would Mdo everything possible to rebuild our educational system.” Story, page 7. By KIM MATTINGLY StatePress ' 1 |p F ¡ ¡ p i f i r -> '%£ _ Harry Braun Enrollm ent of m inorities reaches record levels a t Arizona schools inside today . Andy Mrozlnskl/Stet« Press - £ “Yqu have to look at whether students went to other (Arizona) universities,” he said. ASU WEATHER Clear skies w ith a high o f 99 degrees. Expected low is 76. C a rto o n s ........ ......................................... 11 C la s s ifie d ........................................... 30 Entertai nment. , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . 15 N a tio n /w o rld .................................... ........2 O pinion . . . — .................. .................— 4 Police report . . . . . . . . . . ----- - r ---------- ... 9 S p o rts .. ; ------- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ■• . . . . 25 City restricts more parking south of ASU American Indian enrollment at ASU declined last year, but enrollment of Hispanics, blacks and Asians reached record levels at Arizona’s three universities, according to a report presented to the Board of Regents. The report said the number of American Indian students enrolled a t ASU fell from 472 in 1964 to 440 in 1985. However, the number of Indians who enrolled at UA and NAU offset the decline for a net gain of 29 students. ' , Miguel Montiel, assistant vice president for academic affairs, said he is not sure what caused the decrease in Native American enrollment at ASU. Montiel said another theory for the decline is that some Native Americans come from weak academic backgrounds. The regents adopted a policy in 1984 to keep track of minority enrollment and graduation at ASU, NAU and UA after minority enrollments at the universities were found low in relation to Arizona’s minority population. The report shows a total of 9,806 minority students enrolled for the 1985-86 school year, up 917 from the previous year and an increase of 1,506 from 1983-84. Of the 1985-86 total, 4,086 registered at ASU, 3,857 at UA and 1,865 at NAU. Despite the drop at ASU, Indian enrollment climbed from 1,371 at the three universities in 1984 to 1,400 the following year. NAU has the largest Native American enrollment with 698 students, a 7.4 percent gam from ham. But NAU also reported the only drops in the number of By KARI BLAND State Press minority graduates — losing ground in retention of Indians and blacks. The regents also required that Arizona’s three universities keep track of minority graduation, and the report found mixed results in comparing 1983-84 and 1984-85. At ASU, the largest graduate increases were seen in blacks and Asian students as their numbers rose from 68 and 94, respectively, to 95 and 130 during die two year span. But ASU graduated about 72.5 percent of its 131 black seniors, and about 93 percent of its 140 Asian seniors. Hispanic graduates also rose in 1985 to 237, up 26 students from 1984, but Indian graduates showed only a 9 student increase and a 65-percent graduation rate. Despite the gains, the overall minority graduation rate at all three campuses “continues to lag significantly behind the non-minority graduation rate, ” the report said. Peggy Jordan, associate director of ASU minority recruitment, said this “lag” could be caused by financial aid and adjustment problems. “ It’s a combination of problems,” Jordan said. “Lack of f in a n c ia l aid, lack of support programs — a combination of situations are created a t no fault of the University or of the students.” Jordan said minority students have a very high dropout rate throughout the Valley. “It’s a problem at all our schools, not just at the universities," she said. “We are working with the school systems and addressing the problem at various levels to arrive at some answers and some solutions.” Railroad tracks, will pay $3 for a decal. Vehicles not displaying a decal will The Tempe City Council unanimously receive a $25 ticket. passed a second residential area parking ASU Assistant Director of Parking ordinance, restricting student parking Richard Landreth said the ordinance will south of ASU. force 400 to 500 students to search out The council approved the permit-area other parking spaces. extension without discussion during its. “They will either move further west, nine-mimite meeting Thursday night. Residents in the area, bounded by further north, further south or to the University Drive, Hudson Lane, Mill parking office to buya decal, ” he said. Landreth said there are still parking Avenue and the Southern Pacific spaces available to the 86 percent of ASU students that commute to campus. “Lot 59 is not filled to capacity, and there are still spaces available in Lot 40,” he said. “I’m comfortable that we could fit the additional four or five hundred on campus, but I personally don’t think they’ll all come to campus.” Landreth said he thinks the council will expand the permit-area again if Tempe residents demand it. « « X guess arizona natìon/worid C ancer p atien ts denied visas by S o viet o ffic ia ls deal with and perhaps die with their disease,” Rosenberg said. The physicians and many of the eight senators present stressed tiiat their request was made in a humanitarian spirit outside the realm of politics. But Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., called the Soviet authorities’ behavior “inexplicable and cruel.” And , Sen. Alfonse D’Amato, chairman of the American delegation to the Helsinki Commission, called the cancer victims’ situations “incredible examples of Soviet intransigence” regarding human rights. WASHINGTON (AP) — Senators and cancer specialists pleaded Thursday for the lives of six cancer-stricken “refuseniks,” pressing Soviet officials to let the victims rejoin their families and seek medical treatment in the West. “The request is very simple: Give them a chance to live,” Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N. J., who has written two letters asking Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to let the patients leave. “H ie tragedy of their illness should not ,b e c o m p o u n d e d by p o l i t i c a l considerations. They should be allowed to leave while there is still time,” said Dr. Bruce Chadner, head of the National Cancer Institute. The six patients, including a 7-year-old with leukemia, have relatives in California, Massachusetts, Colorado, New York, Canada and Israel. All have been denied visas to leave the Soviet Union, some of them repeatedly, with authorities citing security reasons. The victims’ plights were described at a crowded press conference attended by some family members and interrupted by an emotional telephone call from several of those trying to lea ve. “We’re very happy and very grateful ... that you have found the time to be with us and that you are trying to do something for our rescue,” Tatyana Kheifets Bogomolny, a translator who has breast cancer, said over the phone from Moscow. “The best cure for us will be to be reunited with our families.” Dr. Steven Rosenberg, chief of surgery at the National Institutes of Health and the surgeon who operated on President Reagan, said cancer patients have two needs: treatment options and emotional support best provided by families. The Soviet victims “are simply asking to be with the families they loye as they G roup claim s M ex ico c a n 't handle g ro w th MEXICO CITY (AP) — The Mexican Ecological Alliance says the federal g o v ern m e n t is “ p ra c tic a lly incompetent” in dealing with the nation’s growing population. Witii the next 10 years, it is estimated there will be more than 25 million residents in Mexico City and its surrounding area and the country’s total population will increase to more than 120 million, the group said. Currently there are about 18 million people crowded into the capital, one of the worst polluted cities in the world, and there are about 77 million people living in Mexico. The group also said test results of water samples taken from Acapulco Bay about 30 feet from shore show that for every 100 mililiters of water, there were 200 organisms. ' Jorge Gonzalez Torres, a member of the group, said the results indicate a high concentration of'bacteria “which could only orginate from great discharges of untreated sewage into the ocean.” He said those who swim in the water could contract gastrointestinal diseases as well as skin and eye infections. STU D EN TS .. .D on’t m iss our 20-20 offer! Ait, architecture, engineering A d esign students: Shop for your art supplies from The Valley's most com plete selection by SEPTEMBER 20, and save a b ig 20%. Shop any other tim e an d you'll receive our standard 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT. Fine arts m aterials Canvas, paints, stretcher bars, brushes, frames, paper, etc. Drafting supplies Parallel rules, triangles, tem plates, leads, drawing boards, technical pens (all brands) and more. ALSO M an arr®sted in Nevada linked to Arizona killing PHOENIX (AP) - Fingerprints link a man arrested in the shooting of a Las Vegas Nev., police employee with tins summer’s “Good Samaritan m ^ r and sexual assault case on Interstate 10 south of Phoenix, authorities said Thursday. ’ , Police arrested Steven Richard Schaaf, 30, of Las Vegas in the Nevada gambling mecca after a shooting Sunday which hospitalized Carol L. Hoernke, 34. Ms. Hoernke is a narcotics division employee of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department. Maricopa County sheriffs spokesman Cpi. ja y Ellison s a i d investigators in the Nevada city noticed similarities in tiie unprovoked shooting of Ms. Hoernke and the June 4 slaying of Dale Douin, 26, of Las Vegas. He said Schaaf was being held in lieu of $5 million bond. “Right now, we’re continuing our investigation, trying to wrap up some loose en d s... We’re doing the evidentiary types of things — trying to match clothing or anything else to link him back to here. We don’t want to get overzealous now,” Ellison added. Douin was slain and the woman assaulted after their c a r broke down on I10. Hie woman told authorities that a man pulled into the re st area where they had stopped and offered to help. After leaving with Douin, the man returned and told the woman Douin was waiting for h er in Phoenix. On the way to Phoenix, she said, she was raped at gunpoint. Douin’s body was found later. pac-10 Bicycle th efts cause students to fig h t back TUCSON — Larry Hammemess left his $650 bike in the clutches of a Citadel U-lock and went to his 11 a m. class. The Cannondale montain bicycle looked safe, like it would be impossibe to free from the cement post it was locked to. The post stood alone when he returned 50 minutes later. “I came out and ran to the police station. I think it took them 30 minutes to fill out the report.,” Hammemess said. There were 352 bike thefts reported to the University of Arizona Police Department in 1985. By this July, 146 bicycles had been reported stoled, of which less than 1 percent have been recovered, police said. The number of bicycles reported stolen since school started is estimated, from police reports, to be around 15. Brian A. Seas tone, UAPD publicinformation officer, said an accurate figure cannot be determined until school has beat in session a full month. The department no longer has officers working undercover to spot theives, as it did last year. Limited manpower has resigned them to rely on officers to keep an eye on target areas while on regular patrols, Seastone said. Sdine U of A students seem to have taken the problem into their own hands by keeping their bikes in their dorm rooms. The U of A’s Office of Residence Life does not approve of this, but some head residents allow students to get away with it, hall residents said. — D a ily Wildcat Investigate the Tax Benefits — Parents of ASU S tu d en ts Why pay rent when you can own? Luxurious and A ffo rd a b le 2 BEDROOM 2 V i B A tH IN TEMPE, V2 MILE F R O M A S U L os P r a d o s T o w n h o m e s h a s a f in a n c in g p a c k a g e t a ilo r e d to s t u d e n t s a n d p a r e n ts . In q u ir e a b o u t t h e b e n e f i t s o f h o m e o w n e rs h ip . Live a h alf-m ile f r o m c a m p u s in a l u x u r y t o w n h o m e w ith five s e p a ra te flo o r p lan s available, 2 o r 3 b e d r o o m s , as w ell as pools, te n n is c o u r ts , spas a n d s u n d e c k s . C all Los P ra d o s o r s e n d th e c o u p o n b e lo w - f o r i n f o r m a t i o n o n Los P rad o s o w n e rs h ip . W e'v e m a d e t h e m a f f o r d a b le . Airbrush equipm ent & supplies, grap h ic arts m aterials an d books. UNIVERSITÀ 13th ST Please send me financing a n d sales inform ation on Los P rad o s T o w n h o m e s. ■- ....... — Jefferson FLAX 16th Street ★ 2 LOS PRADOS O/IM-P.tl/l, Zi BROADWAÀ MARICOPA FWÀ Maricopa Freeway FLAX CO., INC. 10th Street 8c Jefferson • 254-0840 • Lots of free p ark in g Hours: M on.-Frt 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 (602) 966-1800 Hours: 10-6 Name ,, Street Address _____ U_________________ ____________ City, State, Zip ________ ________ ’_______ ______ _ Phone AaiSsr.iS* , ____ Mail to or call collect for information: (602) 966- 1800. Los Prados Townhomes, 724 W. Fourteenth Street, Tempe, Arizona 85281 State Press Page 3 Friday, September 1 £ 1986 G rad u ate research grants availab le, d irecto r says By KERRY FEHR State Press Applications for approximately $32,000 in graduate research grants will be available Sept. 15, said the director of the Graduate Students Association. Amy Abraham said graduates who submit research proposals will be eligible for grants ranging from $200 to $2,000. But she said the $32,000 is for the entire school year. Semester grants would be roughly half of that, or $16,000. Abraham said the research proposals must be specific so students who are new to the program probably won’t have as good a chance of receiving a grant as graduates who have submitted proposals before. “ The grants are not for people who have university’s reputation often is based on the graduate research coming out, not its undergraduate programs, Abraham said. She said one reason ASU’s reputation is not as impressive as the University of California’s is because of the type of graduate research being done. Abraham said she will mail award letters by Nov. 17. “We want to give people feedback,” she said. Abraham said many students who submitted “marginal” proposals weren’t told why they were rejected: disciplines in order to give art, music and dance students a better chance to receive research money. “Last year, we wouldn’t fund exhibit or performance fees but we changed that to make it more fair,” she said. Abraham said the only stipulation to funding exhibit or performance fees is the research and production must be done on campus. “We want the graduates to do research here and share it with the ASU community,” she said. Abraham said her goal is to expand ASU’s graduate program. “The emphasis on this campus is on undergraduate education,” she said. And that creates a problem because a just started their masters or doctorate,” she said. Guidelines for the research proposals are included in the applications, Abraham said. She said proposals must be submitted to the dean of the graduate college by Oct. 17 in Wilson Hall Room 112. The proposals will be reviewed by four research councils. Each council is comprised of six graduate students and one faculty member, she said. Abraham said the grant categories are divided into four areas: natural sciences, social sciences, humanities and the arts. The hum anities and a rts grants previously were combined into one category, but Abraham said she divided the But she said the applicants can request reasons for denial from their research councils, so they will know how to submit a successful proposal in the spring semester. weekend T o d a y is a d a ily c a le n d a r o f e v e n ts h a p p e n in g o n th e A S U c a m p u s . S u b m is s io n s to th e c a le n d a r s h o u ld n o t b e c o n fu s e d w ith C o lla g e , w h ic h w a s a w e e k ly c a le n d a r o f ' m e e tin g a n n o u n c e m e n ts . W e n o lo n g e r p rin t C o lla g e . A ll e n trie s fro m c lu b s a b o u t m e e tin g s a n d e v e n ts h a p p e n in g on c a m p u s o r In re la tio n to s tu d e n t life w ill b e a c c e p te d . T h e d e a d lin e fo r T o d a y e n trie s w ill b e 10 sum. th e d a y b e fo re d e s ire d p u b lic a tio n a t th e S ta te P re ss in th e b a s e m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n te r. O n e ite m p e r e v e n t w ill be a c c e p te d . T o d a y e n trie s a re s u b je c t to e d itin g d u e to •H ille i Jewish Student Center w ill m e e t a t H ille l, lo c a te d a t 1 0 1 2 S. M ill A v e ., a t 7 :3 0 p .m .' S a b b a th s e v ic e s w ill b e fo llo w e d b y a d is c u s s io n w ith R abb i S tu ra t W e in b e rg o n “ b a tin g a n d M e .” •AIESEC - Arizona State w ill m e e t in B u s in e s s A d m in is tra tio n R o o m 2 5 3 a t 4 p .m . •Good Shepherd Lutheran Students w ill m e e t a t th e L u th e ra n C a m p u s C e n te r, lo c a te d a t 1 4 1 4 S. M c A llis te r A v e., a t 5 p .m . Im p ro p tu C re w - M e e t a t th e c e n te r an d jo in u s fo r fu n a n d fe llo w s h ip . space lim ita tio n s o r c o n te n t. Entertainment •The _ Broadway musical “Camelot” w ill run at G a m m a g e C e n te r to d a y th ro u g h S u n d a y , a t 8 n ig h tly • P i S ig m a .E p s llo n w ill m e e t a t 8 p .m . a t P a p a g o V illa g e w ith m a tin e e s a t 2 :3 0 p .m . on S a tu rd a y a n d S u n d a y . I, lo c a te d a t 9 2 5 N . C o lle g e A v e ., = B -207. It Is a g e t T ic k e ts a re $ 3 0 a n d $ 2 8 a t G a m m a g e a n d D ia m o n d ’s tic k e t o u tle ts . a q u a in te d c o c k ta il party. Meetings • T h e M U C in e m a w ill s h o w " J a g g e d E d g e ” a n d “ T h e C o lo r P u rp le ” th is w e e k . S h o w tim e s a re 4 : 3 0 ,7 a n d 9:30 p.m . • S o u l’s G o s p e l R o u n d u p p re s e n ts G o s p e l S h o w c a s e o f A rizo n a ta le n t. P ro d u c e r w ill b e lo o k in g fo r n e w g o s p e l ta le n t. Event b e g in s a t 8 p .m .. T h e re is n o a d m is s io n fe e , h o w e v e r a fre e w ill o ffe rin g w ill b e ta k e n . Sports • T h e fo o tb a ll te a m p la y s M ic h ig a n S ta te o n S a tu rd a y at S u n D evil S ta d iu m . K ic k o ff is 7:18 p .m . S tu d e n t tic k e ts m a y b e p u rc h a s e d to d a y a t th e S u n D e vil T ic k e t O ffic e fo r $ 7 . A valid ID is n e e d e d to p u rc h a s e a n d u se s tu d e n t tic k e ts . • T h e v o lle y b a ll te a m p la ys O re g o n a t 7 :3 0 p .m . F rid a y n ig h t a n d O re g o n S ta te at 3 p .m . S a tu rd a y . B oth m a tc h e s a re in th e U n iv e rs ity A c tiv ity C e n te r. Check out the he money savini saving coupons in today’s STATE PRESS!! HEY SUNDEVILS Shannon and the gang invite you to PRANKSTER’S DLL 1024 E A S T B R O A D W A Y 9 6 7 -8 8 7 5 O O D ft FEVEBÂÛE IN TEM PE! —orders to go- -orders to go- P a rty TUESDAY, SEPT. 16, 1986 A L L D A Y & C low ns & M agicians We’re excited about our four great years of business and we want you to celebrate it with us. We’ll be giving away great prizes all day and night including 2 Grand Prizes, Hats, and T-shirts!!! Little Kings and Tall Blonde Millers w ill be on special to make the mood more festive. So come on down or be left out o f all the FUNIH P R IZ E S . 1st GRAND PRIZE W e e k e n d fo r tw o in Las Vegas 3 days/2 nig h ts/a irfa re /h o te l/$ 5 0 spending money! P R I Z E S jm d M O R E P R IZ E S 2nd GRAND PRIZE W e e k e n d fo r tw o a t The Pointe* 3 days/2 nights/fre e happy hour/free breakfast/$25 spending money! *Must be present to win, dì usi be 21 yeers o r older to win. O X . / ON TH R E E , Third and one: key play! S T A R T S L IN M N O l cheered their team on even after ASU beat them. The ASU fans immediately ran to the nearest bar and did not stick around to congratulate the team on a job well done. Sun Devil football certainly has a colorful history. From the stolen victory bell to the demise of the Frank Kush era, from Whizzer White to Danny White, and from the ’75 Fiesta Bowl victory over Nebraska to last year’s Rose-wilting loss to UA, we’ve seen it all here. But for all of ASU’s historical deeds on the football field, it f!as failed to build any kind of lasting tradition. Ohio State’s band dots the “I.” The Sooner Schooner rides on to the field after every Oklahoma score. Texas holds huge bonfires before games. In contrast, ASU has Elvis running on the field to get the tee after kickoffs. Wow. They ought to write that one up in Sports Illustrated. Perhaps these traditions will never come to pass. But with 70,000 fans every Saturday night in a football-hungry town, it seems we could make our m ark in the college history books. For some colleges, they don’t have a tradition. But they are wild from the kickoff to the final gun—even if they lose. Who could forget the Southern Cal fans . who stuck around Sun Devil Stadium and Our University could use a tradition and we a t toe State Press feel we sould take toe initiative and begin a new tradition in Tempe. We call it the “key play.” At every critical situation — such as a third and one, a game winning field goal possibility, or a must-stop-’em-fromgetting-toe-first-down situation — we all get our keys (any keys will do) and shake them as loud and hard as one can. Thousands of jingling keys make a lot of noise. Many members of our staff will be in toe stadium leading on the crowds as we shake keys and cheer and yell and shout “KEY PLAY!!” A tradition is needed at ASU. While the “key play” may not be the everlasting tradition for toe Sun Devils, it is a start. And you must learn to walk before you can run. A m e ric a n s ’ p e rc e p tio n of Islam h ard ly a c c u ra te Aquickquiz: 1. Another term for Muslims is Mohammadans. True or False. 2. Muslims despise the name of Jesus. True or False. 3. All Arabs are Muslims. True or False. 4. All Muslims are Arab6. True or False. 5. Muslims worship Mohammad. True or False. When Americans talk about religions other than Christianity or Judaism, it become apparent that we are quite ignorant. fevery time an airplane is hijacked or terrorists strike in the heart of Europe, Americans presume that the people responsible few the bad deed are typical Muslims. And from there things go downhill. PagarHioss of what many Americans think and what toe media portrays, not all followers of toe Islamic faith have any desire to kill people at will and hate the United States. It is a tragedy that Americans as a whole will not try to understand or study other religions of the world. Because radical Arabs or Muslims do attack innocent people in Europe, the entire Islamic religion is chastised as something evil. What many Christians in this country fail to realize is that not all Muslims represent the religion of Islam just as many “Christians” are hardly toe spokemen for Jesus Christ. When the Supreme Court reaffirmed its position an abortion, a m inister of a “Christian” Church in Los Angeles eaiipd for all true Christians to pray for the death of the five justices who voted in favor of the pro-choice belief. PMrick J. Kuccra Opinion Editor Just a random sampling of Christians, the Pope and most church elders would show that that L.A. church is nonrepresentative of the Christian faith. So why are Muslims held up to a different light than Christians? The answer is simple. Americans are not accustomed to Eastern religions and, therefore, are timid in trying to understand what Islam (or Buddhism or Hinduism, for that m atter) represents and stands for. Like Christianity, there are some Muslims who misinterpret the Holy Scriptures and pervert the Word of God. And some persecute and kill in the name of Allah or God. That doesn’t mean they are the spokesperson or representative for that religion. If one talks about his own religion and defends it, that is one thing. But if he attacks another religion, how can he continue on if he knows nothing about that religion and continually says untruths about it? On a Phoenix . “Christian” television station, a fundamentalist preacher attacked Muslims as an immoral society. In American terms, Islam is not a society, it is a brotherhood of people with a common faith, much like the Christian brotherhood. There is nothing wrong in being egocentric with one’s chosen religion, but there is something wrong with attacking others because they have made their choice in religions by stating untruths. It has always been and will always be easier to hate than to understand. It would be an attribute if people were to learn what they can about other religions. Reading m aterials and brochures are available at toe Islamic Cultural Center and toe mosque in Phoenix and material about Buddhism is available at the Tempe in Glendale. But people won’t go an learn about Islam, Hinduism or Buddhism (and even Judaism) because it is easy to stay at home and be a couch potato. The answers to the quiz are simple. 1. False. Muslim is not synonymous with Mohammadan, just as Jew is not synonymous with Mosain (i.e. worshipper of Moses). M 2. False. Jesus is a major prophet in Islam. Read the “Koran” sometime and see for yourself. * 3. False. Some Arabs are Christians, some are Jews and some are Muslim. 4. False. Believe it or not, Islam is toe fastest growing religion in toe United States. Anyone can convert to Islam. 5. False. Mohammad was a prophet and a messenger of Allah. Muslims worship God alone. Maybe someday, it will be easier to understand that to hate, but don’t hold your breath. letters R acist Ritter w rites rubish A n o th e r b ric k in th e w all Editor: In response to Jim Rathburn’s letter regarding “frats,” I first wish to say that I am not attacking individuals within the Greek system, but rather the hypocrisy that the system itself breeds. This hypocrisy is perfectly exemplified by Mr. Ratoburn’s letter. Mr. Rathbum states that a young man joins the Greek system to attain friendship, social skills and leadership qualities. In reality, a young man pays dues to have “instant brothers,” but he also attains instant natural enemies who might otherwise have been his friends. Because, of course, the Gabba Gabba’s don’t associate with those damn Phelta Thi’s. This is not just a healthy competition, it often results in fights merely because the guy across the b ar has the wrong T-shirt on. As for grooming leadership, do people who wear shirts like “Drink and be proud” or “Drink ’til you’re Mind” have exemplary leadership qualities? Neither is leadership furthered by the internal structure of fraternities or sororities. Pledgeship involves taking orders and giving blind obedience to such mental and physical rigors as sleeping with dead animals and not showering. Now, I realize that this is far from all there is to toe Greek system. But for Greeks to present this facade of Golden Armor that appears chivalrous and noble is ridiculous. Not one Greek I know, many of whom are my friends, holds toe priorities that the Greek system professes (academics, philanthropy, etc.). Most Greeks will, on a one-to-one basis, speak frankly about why they went through rush, and it has nothing to do with building character or developing leadership qualities. But as soon as one confronts the system as a whole, toe facade goes up again. It is about time that Greeks stopped holding themselves above the ASU community and admitted that the system puts up social barriers that would not otherwise exist, i.e. a certain sorority tends to date guys from a particular fraternity. As for the Grade system benefiting ASU • as a whole, how could a system that creates artificial social strata be beneficial? Actives select pledges that seem similar to toe actives themselves; it’s only natural. But how does one acquire social skills by surrounding oneself with clones? But alas, even thhough I have avoided the cliquish tendencies prevalent in high school, I have been categorized by Greeks. I am a G.D.I.! I don’t even rqmember signing up, and I am not going to pay my dues. R.T. Barry II Junior, Political Science J .G .C ru m Junior, Political Science Editor: The blatantly racist cartoon that appeared on the opinion page of toe Sept. 8 edition of toe State Press is offensive to the Arab students attending ASU and to American expatriates, such as ihyself, who have lived and worked in Arab countries. Mike Ritter, the cartoonist responsible for toe insult, would do well to research M iddle E a s t h isto ry . Assuming Ritter can read, he would discover that the Isra eli’s are the true te r r o r is t. R itte r can commence his research by looking under the heading of “Stern Gang.” I, have worked in Saudi Arabia with several British expatriates who served in the army during the British Mandate. They personally witnessed Israeli terrorists blow up a hotel with hundreds of innocent British civilians residing inside. The purpose of destroying the hotel was an effort to drive the British from Palestine. Let’s see the state Press PLEASE, ON PEOPLE. Of THE WORLD, OPEN YOUR HEARTS to ru t PUGNT O f THE POOR, HELPLESS Palestinians... ..OR ELSE rue STEWARDESS GETS it right between ' -me eyes// I publish some information on how the Israeli’s sunk the USS Liberty during the 1967 war, murdering 36 American sailors or how Israeli spies forced Andrew Young to resign from the United Nations. What about the more recent Pollard spy case? Why don’t you try Printing the truth for a change? What I fail to understand is why did the State Press publish R itte r’s trashy Where did you find this guy • A taK uK luxK lanrally? The State Press should p r in t a n apology immediately! Tom Thorsen Class of 1977 State Press Friday, September 12,1986 Soviet official pins reporter’s fate on ‘American side’ MOSCOW (AP) — Deputy Foreign Minister Vlhdimir Petrovsky said Thursday that Soviet and U.S. officials are trying to resolve the case of jailed American reporter Nicholas Daniloff to keep it from harming superpower relations. Another official, Foreign M inistry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov, declined comment on' a letter about Daniloff from Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev to Presi­ dent Reagan. Shiite Moslems deny abduction of U.S. citizens BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Islamic Jihad, a group of S h iite M o slem fundam entalists, denied Thursday it kidnapped American educator Frank Herbert Reed and, urged “toe real kidnappers” to come forward. Reagan said Wednesday he had received the letter but declined to disclose its content. “I don’t want to rock the boat,” h esaid The White House warned earlier this week th at Daniloff’s imprisonment is an obstacle to improving Soviet-American ties.The Soviets have accused Daniloff of espionage, a charge the journalist and the U.S. govern­ ment deny. “We have established the necessary con­ tacts with competent agencies in the United States,” Petrovsky told reporters at a news conference. “All depends now on the American side.” Petrovsky claimed U.S. officials are aware that the espionage case against Daniloff is, in his terms, “quite legitimate.” But he added, “such incidents in in­ terstate relations, and especially in SovietAmerican relations, should not be an obstacle to their development. We are doing everything possible to ensure this. ” When a reporter asked about Reagan’s announcement of receipt of Gorbachev’s let­ ter, Gerasimov, who was moderating the news conference, said he did not want to comment. Daniloff, a reporter for U.S. News & World Report, has called his Moscow office three times since being arrested Aug. 30 and taken to the Lefortovo Prison. End the w eek off right, The pro-Iranian group, which previously claimed responsibility for kidnapping four Americans still missing in Lebanon, made toe denial in »typewritten statement in Arabic. The statement was delivered to the office of a Western news agency in Moslem west Beirut. T he s ta te m e n t w as a c c o m p a n ie d by a photograph of American hostage David Jacobsen, who was kidnapped last year. Islamic Jihad has said all of its communiques would b e a c c o m p a n ie d by photographs of a hostage. Four gunmen abducted Reed, 53, director of toe p riv a te L ebanese International School, on Tuesday as he drove from his west Beirut home to play golf. Reed, who has lived in Lebanon for eight years, converted to Islam before marrying his Syrian-born wife, colleagues said. Shortly a fte r Reed’s ’ abduction, an anonymous caller claiming to speak on behalf of Islamic Jihad told a Western news agency that, the organization kidnapped Reed because he was a spy for toe CIA. . The caller, said Islamic Jihad would soon distribute a picture of Reed, but no picture has been released. “We did not kidnap the American Fredrick Reed, although we support all toe forces that seek to chop off the hands of international arrogance and its spies in toe (Middle East) region,” Islamic Jihad said in its statement Thursday. “We call upon toe real kidnappers to come forth and boldly shoulder toe responsibility, instead of hiding behind our name,” the statement said. E n c lo s e d w ith th e statement was a Polaroid color photograph showing Jacobsen, 55, from the waist up. Jacobsen, director of the A m e ric a n U n iv e rsity Hospital, was kidnapped May 28,1985. BUY • SELL • TRADE Your book» f t Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •N ew & Used Books •A rt Prints & Posters •Calendars & Cards •Mandbound Journals M-F 10-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 MIN Avenue 968-0203 O ld Tow n T em ps M A IW H O U R 2pm 7pm *35tfMunchies lTBTeas *175 Monster Beers S O E HAPPY HO UR 7pm-9pm 4.00 Coronas 4 0 0 Teas 9pm-Close *1.95keepsake 1/2 litre Teas *175 keepsake M g s ♦plusour keepsake 1/2 litre specials A FTE R HOURS la m -3 am *for those 18 &over 3.75 admission g d e v il h o u s e : Page 6 ASU to try largest musical chairs game By TINA DAUNT State Press ^ ' ASU still needs nearly 3,000 people if it hopes to break the record for the world’s largest musical chairs game Sunday, the game’s coordinator said. “We still need to pull in more people to meet our goal of 6,000 participants,’1Jim Rath burn said. “We shouldn’t have any problems getting the numbers. “So far everything has been going well. We’ve had a lot of positive response.” But Marching Band Director Robert Fleming, who is in charge of the field where the game will take place, said he is less than positive. “I don’t know why they had to pick my field for this event,’’ Fleming said. “There’s going to be 24,000 holes in the field after the game is over. B it’s not cleaned up by Monday, there’s gonna be heck to pay.’’ Rathburn said he believes the damage on the field will be minimal. “ I’m don’t think there will be much damage, but “ case there is or someone gets hurt, we took out a dollars worth of insurance for the day,” he said. The ASU Theta Chi fraternity and the Arthritis Foundation has spent $3,000 on the game so far. , , “Besides purchasing the insurance and the refrœhments for the participants, we’ve had to spend $2,000 for 6,ooo plastic folding chairs,” Rathburn said. The fraternity is trying to raise oyer $12,000 for the Arthritis Foundation by asking each participant to donate 92. More than $5,000, including the money needed for the expenses, has been raised thus far, Rathburn said. “It’s not too late to register,” he said. “We’ll be accepting participants until the game starts. ” Rathburn s^id people can register on the practice field at Rural Road and Sixth Street between 9 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Registration forms are also available this week on Cady Mall, a t “Ask Mr. Foster” travel agency, 707 S. Forest Ave., and the Theta Chi fraternity house, 410 Adelphi Drive. 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In basic terms, what it Ifeally offers you is a bargain. _ Te x a s ^ In s t r u m e n t s FA S T • EASY CONVENIENT V ISA • M A STER C A R D C A SH * C H E C K ASU Books 1 7 -1 9 S ite Press Friday^SeptembeM^JMIó Page 7 S e n a te c a n d id a te ad vo ca te s n e w e n e rg y system By MICHAEL ROWELL State Press We are heading Democratic Congressional candidate Harry Braun said Thursday his proposal to change the American energy for an iceberg, system to a hydrogen energy system will make Arizona “the and if we don't Saudi Arabia of the United States.” Braun said hydrogen energy dishes — that use sunlight to change course, break water down into hydrogen and oxygen — would be we’re going placed primarily in the southwestern deserts, greatly benefiting the Arizona economy. to hit it.’ Braun, 37, is running against Jay Rhodes for the District 1 house seat vacated by John McCain. * — Harry Braun Braun told about 70 ASU students he advocates the hydrogen energy system because scientists from more than . 82 countries say it is the way to solve the problem of more hydrogen and oxygen. “I like to call them technological trees.” people competing for fewer resources. He said that' another benefit of hydrogen energy is that “We are just like the great ship, The Titanic,” Braun said. “We are heading for an iceberg, an d if we don’t change “we’ll never run out of resources.” course we’re going to hit it. ” “We can leave it and deed it to our children’s children’s Braun proposes using automobile factories to build solar children” ’ Braun called nuclear power “ominous”. dishes that would convert water into hydrogen and oxygen. “I’m coming to you with technology that the engineers at “You can rest assured that people thousands of years from Ford and General Motors have assured me is no more now are going to be looking back at this generation and difficult to build than automobile.” sayitfg, ‘How could they have been so cruel and so mindless “And if there’s anything we know how to do in this country, to create these deadly wastes and poison the planet so that it is make automobiles." they can have their neon signs and their hair dryers? ’ ’’ In other issues, Braun said he opposes cuts in federal Braun said that the government would only have to start up and regulate the program and that it would mostly be paid financial aid because he believes education is “the first and foremost priority in our country. ” for with private sector money. He told the group he felt education was even more “This dish technology, unlike a missile, provides a rate of Important than the national defense “because I don’t see how return on investment capital. ” He said that a hydrogen energy system would be very you can have a national defense if you don’t have a good beneficial to the environment because they produce only educational system.” “I would do everything possible to rebuild our educational system,” said the former high school science teacher and ASU graduate. Braun, a research analyst, commented on his opponent, a lawyer. “I have nothing negative to say about Jay, except he is a lawyer, and if we elect him to Congress, you can rest assured that nothing will happen.” When asked about health care, he said “I support a national health-care system for all Americans. ’’ “I will work, if elected to Congress, to get that kind of a system enacted.” Braun said he was opposed to the government’s support of the Contras in Nicaragua for many reasons. “The most obvious reason is that to use American taxpayers money to hire mercenary soldiers, to give them automatic weapons to go shoot and maim people, is despicable.” “We are in violation of international law. We have become an outlaw country. ’’ Braun does not support sending aid to any country that is a dictatorship or violates human rights. “I don’t think we should be spending one nickel of American taxpayers’ money going to a dictatorship that does not respect human rights or international law.” Braun also had a toungue-in-cheek method for undermining the communist regime in the Soviet Union. “ If we want to undermine the Soviet system, we ought to get as many Russians as we can fit on the boat, and we ought to get ’em over here and take them shopping with you over at Smitty’s or Basha’s.” Power company’s rate hike lowest in Arizona history PHOENIX (AP) — A state Corporation Commission hearing officer Thursday proposed the lowest-ever rate increase for Arizona Public Service Co., including no rate hike for residential customers and a cut in their monthly service charge. The increase recommended by hearing officer Thomas Mumaw would total 0.6 percent, or $1.73 million, compared with the $54.6 million the utility sought. It was not certain when the three-member commission will act on the plan, but a spokesman said a decision could come within a month. APS spokesman Kevin Mosley said the utility was “disappointed and discouraged” with the proposal, saying it ignored the cost of proyiding energy to electric customers. The utility plans to file objections to the proposal within 10 days, Mosley said. APS in May 1985 had ¿ought a $78.2 million increase, but reduced its request because of improvements in the economic markets. Under the recommendation, there would be no rate increase for residential customers and most business customers. The basic monthly service charge for most GRAND OPENING SPECIAL! First 4 two bedrooms — now $67,000 W H Y R EN T? W hen You Can Own i ! residential customers would be cut to $7.50 from $11.46. The other residential customers, whose meters must be reset each month, would have their service charge cut to $10. The 0.6 percent hike would be paid through a 4 percent rate increase to street lighting customers, irrigation customers and customers who use dusk-to-dawn lighting, Also, the hearing officer recommended a charge for bad checks. Mumaw’s recommendation said that APS did not prove it needed additional revenue, said commission spokesman Jon Poston. State Residential Utility Consumer Office Director Susan Williams said, “It’s an appropriate order. It reflects the true financial needs of the company. It is equitable to ratepayers and investors.” M um aw also re c o m m e n d e d an investigation of the APS pension program to see if it is overfunded and to determine whether any administrative changes should be made. Be ahead of your H E R M O SA PLACE CONDOMINIUMS 51 0 W . U N IV E R S IT Y DR. T E M P E , A Z 85281 1/2 M ile to ASU A ll K itchen A ppliances FH A & VA Financing P riced From $69,950 Low Dow n Paym ent $30. p.m . Assoc. Fee Luxurious, carefree living from the high s30’s 2 & 3 B edroom s 2 Baths M ini B linds U pgraded C a rp e t Energy E fficien t T ile R oof & D ouble G lazed W indow s WoOllUlKNSqI AKKII \ S i i« ( iu;i(l¡tlii|K- Kd. Dksent Foothills Villas . Condominiums from the high $30’s Guadalupe Rd.. between Arizona Ave. and Alma School, Mesa 892-3200 Condominiums from the $40’s 48th Si. N. of Elliot Rd., Phx. 893-2785 MODELS OPEN 1 0 a m -6 p m WoOlKRKKK 602-968-5798 C laire Thom as Rich Pasich T rip p B artlett Townhomes from the $70’s Longmore N. of Baseline Mesa 897-9792 FREE SPA ON SELECTED INVENTORY W ® .“ - A MEMBER OF THE SEARS FIMAHCIAL HiTWORK Tempe Office 1212 E. Baseline C O L D U J e iX B A N K e R Q 602-968-6798 Audrey C. Mascali Îv ^ ■ Æ j Open Daily '10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ■ ■ Broker Participation Invited 602-839-8200 RESIDENTIAL SEAL ESTATE SERVICES America’s largest Aril service real estate company. RICHMONDAMERICAN We’re the ones to come home to! By Intercollegiate Press : graduates’ chances of getting jobs or going to graduate school. The CGPA would put William and Mary’s grades into perspective, they say. , ■. WILLIAMSBURG, Va. - The new method of analyzing average quality points given by each depart“ *“* a"p received by different segments of the student body is the first step toward implementation of the Comparability Grade Point Average (CGPA), according to Dr. Melvyn Schiavelli, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the College of William and Mary. . . The CGPA proposal surfaced last year. According to its supporters, non-inflated grades at the College are hurting College adds new method of determ ining grade points The College’s new method of determining averages is based “on common sense,” according to Schiavelli. The average GPA here used to be determined adding all students’ GPA’s and dividing the number of students. This gave undue weight to freshman grades, according to Schiavelli, because those students had taken so few hours. Im plant pa tie nt getting better, surgeon says TUCSON (AP) — Ar­ tificial heart patient Ber­ nadette Chayrez hardly shows any of the symptoms which were visible during what may have been a minor stroke this week, her doctor said Thursday. Chayrez, the only person to twice undergo artificial heart implants, on Monday , experienced a ‘‘m inor event” which may have been a stroke, said Dr. Jack Copeland, the heart surgeon who heads the transplantimplant team at University Medical Center. Copeland said the episode, which lasted only a short period, included slight slurr­ ing of speech a s ' well as weakness in Chayrez’s facial muscles and left hand. “She has no further sym p­ toms. Her speech is nor­ mal,” Copeland said. “There is now only a slight indica­ tion of weakness in her facial muscles, and the weakness in the left hand has almost disappeared.” Chayrez has had two im­ plants of the mini-Jarvik 7 artificial heart since her own organ was destroyed by a virus. The first tim e,' the m echanical h e a rt was replaced by a donor heart, but her body rejected it, and she was returned to a mechanical heart awaiting a new transplant. Copeland said there have been no conclusive results from a CT (computerized tomography) scan given Monday as to the type or cause of the neurological episode and said another scan would be given in a few days. “Ms. Chayrez is doing well and continues in serious but stable condition,” he said. University Medical Center has searched the country in recent months for a suitable donor heart to replace the mini-Jarvik heart that has kept the Phoenix woman alive since Feb. 9, but so far the search has been unsuc­ cessful. “This event has hot had any effect on the search for a donor heart for Ms. Chayrez, which has always been at a maximum,” Copeland said. But the surgeon said specialists were being con­ sulted “on Ways to get Ms. Chayrez’s antibody level down to a point which could decrease the risk of rejection of a donor heart.” UMC officials have said a donor heart for Chayrez should be a perfect match with her tissue. Chayrez’s second implant, like the first on Feb. 3, was intended to act as a short­ term “bridge” until an ap­ propriate donor organ could be found, but a series of com­ plications, including internal bleeding and infections, have forced her to stay on the mechanical heart longer th an doctors had a n ­ ticipated. DID YOU KNOW THAT... in 5 6 % o f T e m p e b ic y c le a c c id e n ts 40% o f th e w e re rid e w ith car b ik e r id e r w a s a t fa u lt; 2 6 1 a c c i d e n t s in 1 9 8 5 cau sed in 8 7 % th e th e - th e by th e flo w b i c y c l i s t 's f a il u r e t o o f tra ffic ; o f a ll b i c y c l e r id e r is in ju re d - c a r a c c id e n ts o r k ille d ; A LL b ic y c le o r p e d e s tr ia n w ill c o s t y o u $25 OR c ita tio n s M ORE; TO AVOID BEING CITED... 1 . Ride WITH THE FLOW o f tra ffic not against it. 2 . Obey ALL tra ffic control signs & signals. 3 , Ride as CLOSE TO THE CURB as you safely can. a l s o . , . _ When using sidewalks, YIELD to tra ffic as you enter crosswalks. SLOW DOWN when approaching busy intersections. DO NOT ASSUME th a t because you have the rig h t-o f-w a y you are immune from danger... in a car - bike collision the bicyclist always loses. M a k e it a sa fe s c h o o l y e a r. S a v e y o u r s e l f w it h t h e b e in g t im e , a g g r a v a t i o n , c i t e d - f o l l o w t h e a n d m o n e y t r a f f i c in v o lv e d la w s . Failure to do so could cost you more than a ticket... v .it c o u ld c o s t y o u y o u r life . Sponsored by the City of Tempe Bicycle Committee State Pires» .E 2 2 « £ Friday, September 1g, 1986 police report University police reported the following incidents in the 24hour period ending5:40 a.m. Thursday: •A 22-karat gold chain with eight rubies and eight diamonds, valued at $1,500, was reported stolen from the main level of Gammage Center. •Silver dining ware, valued at $500, was reported stolen from 2400 S. College Ave. Police said there are no witnesses or leads. •Police said a men’s blue Tiacar five-speed bicycle, valued at $202, was stolen from the south side of Cholla Apartments between the A and B wings, where it was locked to itself with a Kryptonite lock. ______ The Tempe Police Department reported the following incidents ending midnight Wednesday: •A Tempe man reported that unauthorized cash withdrawals are being made from his bank account through an automatic teller machine, police said. The victim’s automatic teller card was used to access his account at the Arizona Bank,‘619 South Mill Ave., several times in June and July. The bikehad a Sun Devil sticker attached to the frame. •A gray five-speed Schwinn bicycle, a red Sturdee 10-speed bicycle and a black Huffy Cruiser were booted by police for parking illegally on the west side of Hayden Library. •Police said three white males ate a t the Dash Inn and then fled without paying for their meals. The theft was reported at $29. The suspects drove away in a yellow Toyota truck with a white camper shell, police said. •Two students were caught breaking a window at Best Residence Hall, police said. The window, valued at $50, was broken by an orange the The withdrawals totaled $1,120. Arizona Bank has “numerous” films from their surveillance cameras showing several illegal transactions during the period in question. Police said they have a suspect in the case. •A woman told police she spotted a m an’s face staring a t her through an arcadia door about 10 p.m. Monday. The man entered, the patio area of the students were tossing arounef. •Police said a student passed out in the lobby of the Cholla Apartments, possibly from intoxication.; Paramedics were called to aid the student, who was “very combative” toward them, police said. After calming the student, the paramedics took her to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital, where she stayed overnight for observation and treatment, police said. The Student was referred to ASU Counseling and Consultation Services. •A student hurt her knees and sprained her ankle after falling down a flight of stairs at ASU West Alhambra campus. — LAUREN MILLETTE woman’s apartment, 2505 E. Fifth Place, and stayed there for an undetermined period of time. Police said the woman screamed when she saw the man, and he fled the scene. A search of the area did not reveal any evidence. Police describe the intruder as a white male in his mid-20s, 5 feet 9 inches, medium build, with curly, dark hair and a dark shirt. •The Paradise Bar and Grill, 401 South Mill Ave., sustained damage Sept. 10 when a man broke in and allegedly attempted to rob the establishment, police said. Damage to a door, two cash registers, and a pay phone which was broken into amounted to $2,150. Police said the man also spent about three hours in the bar, consuming $10 worth of wine coolers and a beef sandwich he prepared for himself. -D A R R IN HOSTETLER Tests may allow 2nd reactor to start service in week WINTERSBURG (AP) — Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station operators on Thursday completed two major tests, possibly bringing the Unit 2 reactor to within a week of entering commercial service, a plant spokesman said. Results of the two tests would be studied over the next few days, but its preliminary indications were that the tests met regulatory requirements, said spokesman Don Andrews of the Arizona Nuclear Power Project. Andrews said successful completion of the tests would allow plant operators over the weekend or early next week to begin a 160hour run of Unit 2 at full power. The run is needed before the unit can be placed in commercial service. In the meantime, Andrews says Unit 2 would be returned to full power. Andrews said the tests were intended to simulate loss of outside demand for power produced by the unit and to determine whether the unit can operate on power produced internally instead of from an outside source. “It will take a few days to determine if the tests meet (federal) Nuclear Regulatory Commission requirements,” Andrews said. “If all NRC requirements were met, the 100- hour full-power run will begin. “ Commercial operations will follow successful completion of the 100-hour run,” he added. Assum ing the test re su lts a re satisfactory, the run could be finished by the middle or end of next week, Andrews said. The “most optimistic” projection for placing the unit in commercial operation is that it will occur Tuesday, F R ID A Y F IS H FR Y ! 1 1 C L .r n .- ll p . m . BEER BATTERED COD FRIES $ 3 9 COLE SLAW 120 E. U N IV E R S IT Y '7n TheArches" 9 966-6684 10% DISCOUNT OFF ALL MERCHANDISE W ith th is co u p o n (e x c e p t s a le ite m s). E xp ires 1 0 -3 0 -8 6 . 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A M C BELL PLAZAS 32nd St. 8 Bell Rd. 9718888 A pache DAV No Checks • Qpen To Public Haagen-Dazs] BLAIR METRO BARK North Metro Center ko Crown *1°°Off Pint i or Quart of Your Choke1 S5lh Ave. & Bethany (with this coupon) O fftr expiree 10- 12-8 6 . >|‘MttThrIU«ttrn-li»/sShoppeCtnnp4ity,lac 997-5911 GLENDALE 9 Dl 9399714 M A N N BELL TOW ER 8 5)sl Avenue & Bell Rd. 843-4593 AMCSUNVALLEYW 7420 fast Moiri, Alesa 9816200 A M C LAKES 6 Baseline a t Rural 6360606 G CC WESTRIDGE MALL 7 5 * Ave. 6 W. Thomas 8498888 CALL THEATRES FOR SHOWTIMES Starts oday! Slite Pres, A S U to p o rtra y N ic a ra g u a in m odel U N m eetin g ByEDSCHUBERT State Press ASU will probably represent Nicaragua in simulated meetings of the United Nations General Assembly in April, the president of ASU’s Model United Nations Club said Thursday. Although the General Secretariat of the F ar Western Region of the Model United Nations has not confirmed ASU’s role, Jason Zappe said Nicaragua is very likely. “I don’t foresee any problem,” he said. “We’ve never been denied our first choice in the past.” Zappe said he has no strong feelings “either way” on Nicaragua’s Sandinista government, but the ASU delegation will represent the Sandinista viewpoint. “We’ll represent the Nicaraguan government, which will be the Sandinista government,” he said. “We’ll try to represent Nicaragua from a Nicaraguan’s eyes, not from an American’s eyes.” Zappe said ASU’s Center for Latin American Studies would be a valuable resource for studying and representing Nicaragua in the Model United Nation meeting in San Diego. ASU will be one of 70 western universities representing various nations of the world, he said. “Each school represents one country, and some schools m ‘We’ll try to represent Nicaragua from a Nicaraguan’s . eyes.. ’ — Jason Zappe là represent two, depending on the size” of their model U.N. clubs, Zappe said. During the four days of the Model U.N. sessions, the nations represented submit, debate and then vote on a host of resolutions affecting each country represented, he said. ‘The year is the ‘International Year of Peace’ and a lot o disarmament questions will come up,” he said. “The meetings last for about 12 hours each day,” he said “They are very long sessions.” Zappe said that at the sessions, the display of flags an other symbols of nationalism are not permitted. The purpose is to keep the attention of the delegate focused on international problem solving with a minimum o distractions, he said. “You can’t wear a uniform or native dress of a particular country unless you’re actually from thatcountry,” he said. While waiting for the Model United Nations to convene, the ASU delegation will be studying their country, preparing resolutions and working on recruitment and fundraising, Zappe said. The club presently has 20 members and hope to sign up more during a recruiting drive over the next two weeks, he said. Zappe, a senior in political science, said the Model U.N. i an excellent way for social science majors to get “hands-o expirience” in their field. “It’s extremely educational,” he said. “ It’s priceless. Yo learn so much.” S tadium -developm ent group adds new partners PHOENIX (AP) — The development group which plans to build a domed stadium to attract major-league franchises to Arizona took on a new look Thursday with the addition of a Kansas City-based company as a major partner. The addition of Kroh Brothers cut into the role of developer Michael Blumenthal of San Francisco, who had been an equal partner with minor-league baseball owner Martin Stone in the group which last month won exclusive rights to negotiate with the city. During a news conference, Stone also denied reports that he had talked with Arizona Outlaws General Manager Bill Tatham Jr. about bringing the Tatham family into the quest for a National Football League franchise. The Outlaws play in the United States Football League, which has cancelled its 1986 season. According to die new arrangement, Stone now controls 40 percent of die stadiumdevelopment group, Kroh Brothers has 30 percent and Blumenthal owns 25 percent. Investors own the other 5 percent, Stone said. It was reported Thursday that Bell Savings and Loan Association of California had foreclosed in April on a $2 million loan to Blumenthal, and that the California Department of Real E state was considering disciplinary action against him. Last week, published reports detailed the city of San Francisco’s breach-of-contract suit against Blumenthal for failure to pay rent on a development project which stalled. And two days ago, Phoenix Mayor Terry Goddard ordered city negotiators to be sure Blumenthal could carry out any contract terms agreed to for the project. Blumenthal said .the foreclosure was part of a settlement agreement reached with Bell before it had to reorgnize, He denied any knowledge of California disciplinary action, but Joan Pisarz of the department’s licensing unit in Sacramento said the agency Had issued a cease-anddesist order against Blumenthal on May 7. She said the order related to his failure to pay $19,949 in $5- to $75-per-lot assessments for maintenance on a Blumethal-built subdivision. “A cease-and-desist order is basically a reprim and,” she said, adding that Blumenthal’s license was notin jeopardy. Stone and Blumenthal denied that Blumenthal was being phased out of the Phoenix proposal. “At the time we merged the two groups into the Stone-Blumenthal group . . . it was always my intention to bring in a major developer after we reached an agreement with the city,” Stone said. He said the city had never demanded Blumenthal’s ouster as a condition for continuing to negotiate., Blumenthal said he always viewed his role as that of “mixed-use developer,” with Stone, who owns the Phoenix Firebirds of the Pacific Coast League, overseeing the stadium part of the project. Blumental added, “I’m in a similar position to what I thought I would be in at this point It would have been easier if no one had raised any questions. That part hasn’t been any fun.” The plan accepted by the city calls for a $150 million stadium with a retractable dome, seating 73,000 for football and 45,000 for baseball. I t would be the centerpiece of a 66-acre, $303-million project including malls, office space and condominium-style residences between the downtown core and the state capitol complex to the west. Stone said he planned to run the project but was glad to share the burden with Kroh Brothers.- IT S R SH€PH€RD'S UJ€€K€ND FRIDRV FILL DRV FISH FRV SRTURDRV OPCN 11 A.M. $3.95 Happy Hour Prices 11 a.m.-8 p.m. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ $1.00 $1.25 $1.50 $1.75 M iller M ich elo b T a n q u e fo y /T o n ic M iller Lite D o m e stic B o ttle B e e r S eab reez e Jack D aniels/C oke K a m ik a z e e V o d k a /T o n ic W h ite Z in fo n d e C o ro n a R u m /C o k e H e in e k e n C h ab lis & R o s e S o r tie s & J a y m e s FRCC HORS D'OCUVRCS 4-8 NO COV€R Watch Rll College Football on o 12-ft. Big Screen uuith S a te llite RSU Pre-Game Party begins at 4 p.m. Beer & Drink Specials FRC6 Buffet After the gome, continue your Sun Devil Spirit uuith more "sp irits and libations." Receive 2 for 1 drinks uuith ticket stub. SHCPHCRD'S 1 1 2 3 S outh R ural R ood in T em pe R ura l & A p a ch e • 9 6 8 -0 2 4 3 Stale Press Miami honors program may revise curriculum b y B e rk e B re a th e d BLOOM C O U N T Y w y v * tf « nope. ipop/r oh. combon/ oertr. m ap tr By Intercollegiate Press CORAL GABLES, Fla. — University of Miami’s new specialized program for honors freshmen, which provides a rigorous core curriculum in the College of Arts and Sciences, might serve as a pilot project for revising the regular curriculum, Associate Dean Ross Murfin said. Murfin said the program will ideally expand to include about 35 students and remain at that level in order to keep the program’s central ideas intact. “This program isn’t for everybody,” he said. “It’s highly prescriptive. It pretty much provides exactly what you have to take. “I think it was in everybody’s mind that this idea could inspire the College of Arts and Sciences and the University to rethink what we teach and how we teach.” ~ Besides taking honors courses in science, history, mathematics and psychology, students are required to take a sequence of new courses developed for the program : Intensive Composition I and II will focus on utopian documents. An honors colloquium will encourage oral and written discussion of a thematically integrated series of lectures by distinguished campus visitors. Additionally, the university is embarking on a new teaching approach in History of Arts and Letters I, a year­ long, six-credits-per-semester course. Three veteran faculty m em bers from sep arate disciplines will teach simultaneously, providing different perspectives on varying topics. Page 11 1986 Friday, see.j f s a comic AUBbOKY ON7HBFtfnUTY OF UNMQUim UN6.. n r m m t M Y PUNCH uno suM5 rr up, PONT YOU? Ivory Towers by Michael Ritter ^ ..... ^ BEEB! v ^ ^ THE NUMBER VoU A HAWE REACHEP HAS BEEN PISCONNECTEC.. College Tours and Ski America present * V A I L and A S P E N Over Thanksgiving Weekend ski two days at Aspen and two days at Vail in the same weekend! $9.00 TRIP IN CLUDES •Round trip transportation from ASU •Lodging (4 to a room) •Daily lift tickets (2 days Vail, 2 Aspen) •A ll shuttles For Further Info Call 890-2616 S ham poo, H a irc u t & S tyle $279°° Reg. f 15 FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE M o n .-S a t. 9 a.m . till la te nig h t ap p t. Broadway Send your $50 d e p o s it a c c o m ., w ith V o u r n a m e , a d d re s s , p h o n e n o . to : S N A M E R IC A 1 Having a baby when you’re not ready is one mistake you can avoid. Learn about safe, effective birth control, and alternatives to an unplanned pregnancy. •FREE Pregnancy Testing •Problem Pregnancy Counseling •Oneway Termination Procedures •Birth Control Information & Exams Tempe 2525 S. Rural Rd. 968-7471 C e le b rity T h e stre Phoenix N. 2nd St. 997-7493 9100 presents 6 4 8 N . L in d e n C ir c le M esa, A Z 85 20 3 In co n ju n c tio n w ith K -storm Jim m y C liff The King o f Reggae All New Chippendales Show New Cast, N ew Oates Sun. S Mon., Sept. 28 & 29 $12JS • $2.80 «M ount with student I.D. Last featured in the movie "Club Paradise” Fri., Sept. 26.8 p.m. • $12.50 • $5 discount with 1.0 " RUNDLE’5 Xpr ^ 730 S. MILL Corner Mill A University Ave. BEAMEROTEQUILA7»mi iANDRECHAMPAGNES bo«i ,KEISTERBRAll BEERM PLAYBOYUsedMagazines | A SU STU D EN TS •STUDIOS *1 BDflAAS »2x2 storting from $310 LIQUORS • MKT. $4.72 $2.?7 $1-88 $ .94 R ent now and receive o u r C hristm as spècial Pool • Barbecue Area • Contemporary Color Schemes • Cable TV Security • Laundry • Within Walking Distance from ASU * Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines. Groceries, Ice, Winee, over 40 Imported Beers. H A V D 6N PERCE R PT S. 625 Ul. 1st S t, Tempe • 968-5444 967-9079 PUBLIC NOTICE O P E N T O T H E P U B L IC C O N D U C T E D B Y H O T E L -M O T E L F U R N IT U R E L IQ U ID A T O R S 36 HOUR FURNITURE SALE B R A N D NEW IN ORIGINAL S E A L E D F A C fO R Y C O N T A IN E R S . S U R P L U S F R O M R E C E N T S A L E AT H O LID A Y INNS, H O W A R D J O H N S O N S , RAM ADA & S H E R A T O N J N N S IN ARIZO N A , C A LIFO R N IA , T E X A S, N E W M E X IC O , E T C PLUSH DRAMATIC LUXURIOUS DECORATOR FABRICS DESIGNED TÖ 6 0 WITH ANY DECOR OR STYLE S t a ir w a y t o H e a v e n Michael Scully/Sts te Prats Pet«f O’Brien, a Junior physical education major, makes a run for the clouds Thursday a t SunAngel Stadium . O’Brien said he diligently assaults the 45 steps everyday, running up and walking down 10 times. INCLUDESALL3 PIECES • SOFA* LOVESEAT• CHAIR COMPLETE M AN Y OTHER 3-PC . LIVING ROOM SUITES, FA M ILY ROOM GROUPS, * M O D E R N AND TR A D ITIO N A L SUITES CONYEISiTIDIUU. SECTIONALPITGROUP Laaarirai U r i a — Ait m h Court rules agency’s searches illegal SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The 9th US. Circuit Court of Appeals Thursday ruled U.S. immigration agents routinely violate some constitutional rights during sweeps for illegal aliens. But the court held such searches can he made without agents having to provide specific names of suspects in warrants. In a case involving a union and five employees of Hispanic ancestry, the judges sharply narrowed a preliminary injunction issued by district court in 1982 against the immigration and Naturalization Service, and encouraged the lower court to hold trial on the merits. H ie case originated in San Jose when INS agents conducted searches and made arrests in factories and other places where it was believed illegal aliens were employed. The week of April 1982 was specifically cited, a period when sweeps were staged in the San Francisco Bay area. The workers and the International Molders and Allied Workers Union Local 164 took the INS to court, complaining of the raids and challenging the constitutionality of what was officially called “factory surveys.’.’ . The workers and their union received a preliminary injunction, 18 months after the motion was filed, by U.S. District Court Judge Robert P. Aguilar. The INS appealed Aguilar’s refusal to stay the order pending appeal. * 2 6 8 ■ l ' «Man» ' 1«Mmany «I Ml - I —LwtJSt- 'jp> wwi-ra« ClubcMnMN mlMii asUmrRTtBac. aaU. Oriundedacarator fabrics. Includes two corner units, two armless chairs & ottoman Be here early for, the best selection. ORIG VALUES TO $1000.00 REDUCED FOR TOTAL SELLOUT MANY OTHER STYLES, PATTERNS AND FABRICS TO CHOOSE FROM. FREE LAYA WAY UNTIL INCOME TAX REFUND? BRAND NEW FAM OUS POSTURE SER IES CONTRACT FIRM V V R STO WARRANTY FU LL .....1 2 9 M pc $ 4 9 •• pc $ 4 9 »« pc * 2 9 o « ,. TURNEA PC KINS... BEACH PARTY AT G RAFFITO 'S POSTURE-CLASSIC—FIRM FREE LAYAWAY Sunday, Sept. 14, 1 9 8 6 5:00-8:30 p.m . $1 Cover.Charge IMPERIAL EXTRA FIRM • ta ta "! State liquor law requires proper LD. to be storni when buying alcoholic beverages. Graffitti’s, 411 S. Mill Ave. Getyo u r FREE IN VITATIO N at HILLEL Jewish Student Center 1012 S. Mill Ave. • 967-7563 •-......... _$3fi niu......__ _____S4fi . . . . . . ....t t * MN0........._______ w • 3 9 POSTURE-FROFILE-LUXURY FIRM 10-TSAR LTD WARRANTY » .V « IT O « 4 H U N f V TWM........ IM a j.p t. retili value t241K HjL........ M sa.aeratali «ahiBlUS TWINIA-K WttB.....Ml as. pc. rafal »Pat TIMM MM......... STBsl pc. raMI «atas MHJS DANCING, MUSIC & HAPPY HOUR HORS D ’OEUVRES B Y INVITATIO N O N LY UNDERAGE STUDENTS WELCOME! 5 YEARl TJ) WARRANTY ■RAND NEW m JÊ i ü v f la iS twin EA pc lg TWM .. SMm pi. risii yateMM» n u . . «Ha.PC,malivatalMUB FUS . tnaa-ps. rabil «atasWB» Kim.. W at. ta. ratai natal HM» MEDICOPEDIC—SUPER FIRM POSTURfMIC ANNIVERSARY EDITION IS-tCAM LTO WARRANTY ■JO-TiARLTO WARRANTY ^ .......«aa. pc.nUI «ahnS n » t a M A n u ..... {7Saa.pt. raull vaha13095 v R Q T W IN E D PC TWM ...W a a .p a .N M n tn W U | H U ...W a t. pp. ratta rahn IW » «KM nee «p c. raMI rahn WBA W M ..... Waa.pt. mal «tan M7M6 twiner pc S m T ...W ra.pt.ratta«alaaWMi . ..W at pa. rtUil «ahnIM UI LY M IN U T MESA AWAY TITI LOCATION RUH in AMERICAN Wa r e h o u s e B □ ^ & STORAGE INC. BROADWAYCENTERINMESA 1S26 W. Broadway al Oobaori Whap »33 Phone844-0288 BETWE-ENK MART ANt> PRICE CLUB HOURS FRI IO 8 SAT 10 6 SUN NOON 6 MON 10-8 TERMS •Cash »Check »Mastercard • VISA »AE Sorry, no mall or phone orders SwuiHfim Wwy.txlt D i ü O» ( M i to I toodwoy —vomo to roor boddbij of Iroodwoy Cowtor botwoowK-Mort & Meo CM. % «Plüf»’ T " ■ ^ *< 1 *7 1 # ® ,,' I' *pr-t 4 » ' Î " ; * ' ■ . '' « | ' ' .' Siate: Press R eport show s la rg e cars safer, c h e a p e r to re p a ir Domestics rate highest; M itsubishi rank worst WASHINGTON (AP) —Motorists are likely to be safer and face lower collision repair costs in large, four-door cars, station wagons and vans, according to an insurance industry report released Thursday. The study by the Highway Loss Data Institute, an affiliate of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety , shows small 2door models and many small or mid-size sports or speciality cars as having the worst injury and repair record. Many of those small cars show injury claim frequencies and repair losses at least 30 percent higher than average, while many large cars, station wagons and vans typically show 40 to 50 percent better-than-average claim records, according to the analysis. Government crash tests on a variety of cars over the years have shown little direct relationship between car size and how well occupants are protected from serious injury; But auto safety experts emphasize that those test crashes were into a fixed barrier, which does not take into account the differences in size and weight among cars. A crash into a fixed barrier would be the same as a crash into another car of the'same size traveling at the same speed. Most actual auto accidents do not occur that way. The Highway Loss Data Institute report compared the frequency of insurance claims and average repair costs of 185 vehicles with adjustments made for factors such as driver characteristics. The study reflects claims filed on 1983-84 model cars. The examination of claims “shows very wide variations in the injury and collision loss experience of various vehicles on the nation’s highways,” the study concludes. Among small non-specialty cars, the Saab 900 was shown to provide the best protection against injury — 24 percent to 32 percent below average — but it also was found likely to have 31 percent to 41 percent higher repair costs, depending on whether it’s a 2-door or 4-door model. Generally, however, the large cars had the best claims record. According to the insurance industry analysis, a motorist in a 4-door Oldsmobile Delta 88, for example, is 41 percent less likely than average to be hurt in an accident. Repair costs for the Delta 88 are 40 percent better than average. Similar top ratings were reported for the Buick LaSabre, Ford Crown Victory and a dozen mid-size and large station wagon passenger vans and large luxury or specialty cars. Among the best station wagon and van performers were the midsize Volvo 240 and the large-size Pontiac Parisienne, Buick Electra and Mercury Grand Marquis. In the large luxury car or sports car category, the Mercedes 300 SD and the Cadillac Brougham 2D showed a liklihood of injury 45 to 49 percent below average. By comparison, most small 2-door models as well as many small 4-door cars showed significantly higher cances of injury and substantially higher-than-average repair costs. Of 48 smaU 2-door or 4-door cars, 19 had injury losses of 30 percent or more above average and 17 had repair costs substantially above average. Among the worst in protecting passengers as well as incurring high repair costs were three Mitsubishi models — the Tredia, Cordia and Starion — the Nissan Pulsar and 200 SX, Ford EXP, 2-door Toyota Corolla and the Mercury Capri. Of the 37 large cars examined, including all models from station wagons to luxury cars, 25 provided substantially better-than-average injury protection and 18 had substantially lower-than-average repair costs. The highest collision repair costs among all the cars included in the analysis went to Mitsubishi Starion, which had repair costs 159 percent above average. The lowest was attributed to three cars — the Pontiac Parisienne station wagon, Plymouth Voyager van and 4-door Mercury Grand Marquis—all of which had costs 45 percent below average. The models with the poorest record of injury protection were Mitsubishi Tredia, with a claim frequency 62 percent higher than average, followed by the Chevrolet Chevette at 59 percent higher than average. The car with the least claim frequency was the Pontiac Parisienne station wagon at 50 percent below average. Candidate ‘disappointed’ w ith opponent*s rem arks PHOENIX (AP) — Democratic congressional candidate Phil Davis fired som e, shots Thursday at Republican opponent Jon Kyi, who said he was “really disappointed” the g en eral election campaign is starting along those lines. Davis, at a news conference, said his opponent in the 4th Congressional District showed a “basic insensitivity” to the environment by having former U.S. Interior Secretary James Watt as a speaker at a fundraiser earlier this year. “I would never align myself with somebody President Reagan got scared to death by,” Davis said. “That’s a little McCarthyistic, isn’t it?” Kyi fired back in a telephone interview, adding he asked Watt to speak because he was an effective fundraiser. “ I’m really disappointed in Phil if he’s starting the campaign in this way.” Kyi soundly defeated fellow Republicans John, Conlan and Mark Dioguardi in Tuesday’s primary election, following a bitter campaign during which Kyi’s supporters portrayed Conlan as a man who could not be trusted. At one point, a Kyi backer held a news conference to call Conlan a “pathological liar-” Davis opened his news conference with a joking reference to the Kyi campaign’s attacks on Conlan, saying, “I’m not a pathological liar and I’ve had nothing to do with backstabbing in the Legislature. ’’ Both Davis and Kyi said they wanted to keep the campaign an issues-oriented one. “1 hope there is no mudslinging,” said Davis, a developer.- “I’m a good person; Jon’s a good person, probably.” “Why should it (the campaign) be nasty? ” said Kyi, a lawyer. Davis said Kyi has an economic philosophy of “keeping the wealthy and powerful happy and fed, and that keeps everybody else happy.” He said Kyi’s work lobbying state legislators for various groups showed he was concerned with helping big business. Davis said his own philosophy included w o rk in g to e n c o u ra g e eco n o m ic development and to increase the private sector’s role in government. Regarding the religion issue, Davis said, “ My opponent’s idea of changing professions because of a calling from God and having some kind of fundamental problem with separation of church and state, appalls m e.” Ask m e Poster Travel service Since 1888 INVITES YOU TO HELP ASU BREAK t h e W O R LD» R E C O R D for LARGEST MUSICAL CHAIRS GAME •This Sunday, ASUBAND MELD •Open Registration 9:00-11:30 a.m. •A ll participants ivill be eligible fo r travel raffle prizes. $2 donatioW m ^ pieste^ fv All proceeds to benefit the ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION 707 S. Forest • Tempe, AZ 85281 • 9 6 7 -9 4 0 3 MON.-FRI. 8:30 5:30 SAT. 10:00-4:00 State Press 1g. 1986 PespeetaRo Israel, Egypt attempt to consolidate differences in summit ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (AP) — Prim e Minister Shimon Penes and President Hosni Mubarak held the first Isradi-Egyptian summit meeting in five years Thursday in ah effort to revive the quest for Middle East Peace. The two leaders, dispensing with aides and interpreters, talked privately in English for several hours in this Mediterranean port. The two shook hands cordially as they met at the Ras el-Tin presidential palace beside the Mediterranean Sea shortly after Peres arrived from Tel Aviv. Alexandria was the site of the last Israeli-Egyptian summit meeting, in August 1981 between Egypt’s Anwar Sadat and Israel’s Menachem Begin. Moslem extremists assassinated Sadat two months later. Egypt is the only Arab nation with diplomatic relations with Israel, and any overture to the Jewish state is considered a political gamble for Mubarak. During a working lunch a t which die Israeli leader was the guest of Mubarak’s prime minister, Aly Lutfy, Peres said: “New and fresh substance has to be introduced between our two peoples. Israel does not want to impose anything on Egypt, but both countries want to overcome the desert that lies between them.” Peres’ spokesman Uri Savir said there was no formal agenda for the meeting. Another Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that was by mutual consent. Peres is scheduled to leave for home Friday. “Both sides wanted an open-ended Pakistani officials quiz quasi-Libyan about je t hijacking dialogue,” the official said. “We view this as a positive thing which indicates Egypt s willingness to listen.” Mubarak has said he envisions the summit as primarily a forum for discussion of the Palestinian question. Peres said before leaving Israel, “We shall not permit the peace process to die away or fade away, and we shall do whatever we can to bring life and spirit to the hioihebtum for peace.” Relations between the two countries hit bottom in 1982 with Israel’s invasion of Lebanon. This summit, hailed as the beginning of wanner relations, was made possible by an agreement, signed Wednesday, to submit a ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -r Authorities questioned a man with a Libyan passport Thursday about last week’s seizure of a Pan Am airliner, and sought a companion who fled into a Palestinian mission. Officials said a man Identified as Salman Taraki was seized Wednesday at Islamabad airport in connection with the seizure of the Boeing .747 in Karachi last Friday, They said his Libyan passport appeared to be a forgery, but they had no evidence against him y e t Twenty people were killed and more than 100 injured when the four hijackers of the Pan Am jet panicked and opened fired indiscriminately at the passengers and crew. Inspector Javed Mirza, who arrested Taraki, told The Associated Press that police were watching the Palestine Liberation Organization mission in Islamabad, the capital, for a man who had been traveling with Taraki. Hie man eluded authorities at the airport and w ait to toe PLO mission, where police could not follow because of its diplomatic im m unity, Mirza said. The government, meanwhile, announced that Air Marshal Shabbir Hussain Syed, the deputy commander of the air force, had been appointed to investigate the takeover and toe officials’ handling of it. It was toe first official indication that mistakes may have been made in ending the Moody stand-off when the airplane’s auxiliary power' system faltered and the gunmen began firing a t approximately 400 hostages. Obaidur Rehman, director general of the federal Investigation Agency, told The Associated Press that FITNESS & FUN FOR STUDENTS Now! Enjoy our new STUDENT MEMBERSHIP at the award­ winning Western Reserve Club Sports Country Club. Mention this ad to receive a membership of fun and fitness at 35% O F F the current initiation fee. A great student membership opportunity at great savings! nagging dispute over the 250-acre border enclave of Taba to international arbitration Speaking a t the working lunch, both Peres and Lutfy said the Palestinian issue would be discussed during the summit. Peres said a t the lunch that U.N. Security Council resolutions 242 and 338 should serve as a basis for peace talks. But neither is acceptable to Palestinian leaders because both refer to the Palestinians as refugees and not a people with a right to selfdetermination. Peres said Israel is willing to discuss the idea of an international peace conference, an Arab proposal strongly supported by Egypt and Jordan but unattractive to the United States and Israel because it would involve the Soviet Union. Taraki was arrested a t the airport Wednesday after arriving from Karachi. Rehman gave no details, but said toe m an had been returned to the southern port city for questioning about the takeover of the giant jetliner. Taraki had been in Pakistan for about six weeks and authorities were trying to determine his activity during that time, Rehman said without elaborating. “He may have nothing to do with toe hijacking,” Rehman said. Taraki is thought to be Palestinian but was carrying a Libyan passport, he said. But the passport appeared to be forged, and Pakistani authorities were checking with Libyan diplomats. The gunmen who seized toe jetliner have been identified as Palestinians. The four, disguised as airport security guards, held the plane for 17 hows. Pakistani authorities have said toe gunmen must have had help from people who supplied them with security uniforms, weapons and information on airport security. Rehman declined further comment, but toe semi­ official Associated Press of Pakistan quoted FIA officials as saying Taraki was not “the leader of toe hijacking gang.” FIA officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the AP they were hakfing 36 people for questioning about the takeover including 20 foreigners, m ost of them Palestinians, Dozens of others have been released after questioning. A freshman named Bobby McNab Came down with a case of tfie crabs. Not the kind with long claws, But those in your drawers... So tor R&C he did grab. Crab lice funny? Not when /OU have them. Besides the embarrassment, scaling and itching pose considerable problems. Not to mention passing them to your partnei R&C SHAMPOO® is the answer. It kills crab lice and their eggs on contact. R&C SHAMPOO® i&a one-step easy-to-use treatment that is safe and effective. In fact, its the most effective pediculicide you can buy from your pharmacist without a prescription. R&C SPRAY® Lice Control Insecticide helps prevent crab lice reinfestation from bedding, upholstery and carpets (Not far use on humans or animals.) • • • • • • • Tennis' Racquetbali Wallyball Basketball Olym pic Swimming Pool Sand Volleyball Indoor Volleyball • • • • • • • Social Activities Nautilus Free Weights CAM n Lifecycles Steam/Sauna Co-ed Spa • Suntan Beds • L ocker Rooms • Aerobics • Martial Arts Clubhouse • K g TV Screen • Courtside O d e Call o r visit today and you can meet your friends toning up in the weight room, exercising in aerobics, or relaxing poolside at the Courtside Cafe and Patio at the -most unique, professional and complete sports, fitness, and health facility in the W est... fo P ) W ESTERN VJ RESERVE CLUB BV D A V E RRCSHAMPOO« and RACSPRAY« are available at your local pharmacy. BROW N II B roadw ay W est o f Price •T em pe, A Z • 968-9231 piScataway, NJ 08854 ris s a s s r-« --« e n te rta in m e n t State Prêts Frida^eptembeMS^1986 Page 15 Tidbits from the entertainment file. At the Box Office: •The Kachina Theater (Scottsdale Road south of Camelback) is celebrating the anniversary of the epic film “Gone With the Wind.” This exclusive engagement lasts for one week only, so grab a friend and head to Tara. For more information call 947-5495. •“ Tough Guys,” opens in the Valley Oct. 3. Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas have reunited for the action-comedy about a pair of notorious train robbers facing a strange new world after 30 years of imprisonment. Move over Sarah Lee: •Crisco Shortening celebrates its 75th anniversary this year, and Proctor & Gamble and Family Circle Magazine are sponsoring a nationwide contest that may put Julia Child to shame. The organizations are seeking the best homebaked pie in America. The contest will take place at the Arizona State F air in late October. For more information about the bake-off, call 252-6771. Theater: •The award-winning musical “Oliver” will be performed at Phoenix Little Theatre through Sept. 27. The classic tale is based on Charles Dickens’ story of orphan Oliver Twist. Showtimes are at 8 p.m., matinees on Sunday? at 2:30 p.m. Phoenix Little Theatre is located at 25 E. Coronado in Phoenix. F or m ore information about the show call 254-2151. •Acting legend Richard Harris stars in Camelot, at Gammage tonight at 8. Tickets for the popular, long-running show are $30 and $28 and can be purchased a t Gammage Box Office. Hie show runs through Sunday, Sept. 14. Curtain for all performances is a t 8 p.m., with special matinee performances at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. For more information call 965-3434. •“ Through The Leaves” will play at Dram a City Sept. 25-28. Curtain is 8 p.m. except Sunday when the show starts at 2 p.m. ' i Ig i Music: •The Northern Trust Beethoven Festival runs Sept. 15-26 a t Phoenix Symphony Hall. Monday night’s opening features a discussion by Jean Ferris, an .ASU assistant professor in Music History. The event begins at 8 p.m. Symphony Hall is located at 3707 N. Seventh St. in Phoenix. •Catch the stylistic sounds of Trio Mexico in the ASU Music Theater at*7:30 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 15. The concert costs $10, for more information call 9653434. On the tube: ‘Growing Pains” star Alan Thicke and en-idol Kirk Camerohwill co-host NBCV’s “Friday Night Videos” tonight at :30a The video “Press” by Paul cCartney will be one of the features. Concerts:^ [he Monkees will swing in concert at ie University Activity Center (see story i page 16) at 8 p.m. Monday, Sept. 15. ickets for $15 are available at ¡■mmage and Diamond's tickpt outlets. r: Andy M rozliw kl/Slal* P i*u Electric W arrior, Sen O f Ambush Bug and th e Man O f Steel copyright D C Com ice In c., 1986. Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters and DNAgents copyright Eclipse Comics, 1986. Thunder-bunny copyright WARP Graphics, 1986. i l f s a bird, i f s a plane, it’s com ic m ania By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS State Press . In the deep dark night, in the midst of an exasperating war against spastic Russian ne’er-do-wells, the world slips closer to a disastrous fate. Power struggles “pit good against evil brother against brother, friend against friend and dentist against dentist!” Superheroes around the globe are on strike after smokey union disputes. There’s no end in sight as humans are forced to allow cats, dogs and other animals into laser-gun warfare training. Personal hygiene supplies are rationed and “for the first time in combat history, % battles are lost because of toilet paper.” In the streets, total mayhem: Osmond sing-alongs, doctors making house calls and nuns wearing mini skirts. In the midst of all this treacherous fiasco emerges one being who can dispose of the dastardly sorcerers of crime and perserve the American way . Fear not, able-bodied citizens. “The Flaming Carrot!” is hy our side!‘ So begins the complex worl$ of comics. This highly imaginative medium acts as an escape route for many people. But it’s not just “Batman” and “Captain America” anymore! In comic book land anything goes, even the bizarre “Hamster Vice,” “Rick Raygun” and “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.” “If you can accept something like Superman, then where do you go from there?” said Paul Freeman, owner and manager of The One Book Shop (710 S. Forest). Freeman has been running the comic ^b o o k store for over 11 years. During that time he’s seen many people buy and collect comics for a variety of reasons. “The large percentage (of comic book sales) is for collecting,” he said. “It’s also a stop between books and film.” It’s the bang-pow-whammy methods of illustrating a larger than life story which seems to grab the reader, strapping them on to the popularity pendulum. “You don’t have to know anything except how to read and look at pictures,” said Tom Blackwood, a freshman public relations major. “It doesn’t require a lot of concentration.” Blackwood, who at one time collected nearly .8,000 comics, sights the relation of special effects and science fiction as one reason to why comics have gained a monstrous following. “ ‘Star Wars’ became so popular because of special effects,” he said. “ (But) before that, Spiderman was walking on the ceiling and Buck Rogers was flying a spaceship. ” Fortune hunters, always smelling a profit, have created a long list of book guides that help consumers analyze other collecting possibilities. Devout comic book collectors may spend up to $5,000 for a book in mint condition. And the craze doesn’t stop there. “The Comic Book Price Guide,” by Harmony Books, lists going rates for popular and ra re comics in three conditions: mint, fair and good. “Action Comics No. 1” is currently going for $18,500 in mint condition. Although rare books are more expensive, popular comics also list in quadruple digits. Collectors could pay up to $1,700 for “Marvel Mystery Comics No. 2” in fine condition. Not the case with sophomore computer science major, David Munier, who’s also an employee .at The One Book Shop. “ It would be tough for me to spend that much on something,” he said. “Some people like to compete (in that area). I have thousands of com ics—it’s mainly a hobby.” Freeman said the good vs. evil concept wins the hearts of many readers. But this year there a re some significant changes in older comics. Marvel Comics is celebrating its 25th anniversary by introducing ‘fThe New Universe.” This new con^p brings a new level of sophistication fo^-fhe graphic business with more credible stories. This human touch can be seen in eight titles under “The New Universe,” including, “Star Brand,” “Nightmask” and “Merc.” In a similar move, DC Comics has also reshaped everyones’s all-time favorite man of steel, “Superman,” this year. In the introductory issues the caped Crusader is seen with many more human qualities while his alter ego, Clark Kent, becomes stronger . Arch villian Lex Luther is more of an executive type and Ma and P a Kent are kept alive* “He’s got more human problems, and that leaves room far m ore ¡dot,” said Freeman. iSpin-offs like Superhorse, Superdog« Superboy or Super Monkey have fallen to the likes pf “Grown-up Thermonuclear Samarai Elephants.” Page 16 G o in ’ a p e ® R eu n io n sparks m ore M o n k e e business By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS State Press Oh, I could hide beneath the wings of the bluebird as she sings the six o’clock alarm would never ring. Too much of a good thing may have just gotten better! Although their missing one of their top bananas, the Monkees, probably the only musical group to become famous after hamming it up on the tube, have swung back into the limelight two decades after winning the hearts of a million “Betty Boops” around the country. Today m arks the 20th anniversary of the trend-setting comedy series which premiered on NBC. Hie “hip” singing combination, which currently consists of Davy Jones, Peter Tork and Micky Dolenz will bring their reunion concert tour to the University Activity Center, Monday, Sept. 15 at 8 p.m. Mike Nesmith, one of the original m asterm inds from the foursome, unfortunately is swinging on different branches these days. Nesmith chose not to rejoin his fellow crooners, and it’s a shame. Somehow, without the ski hat fanatic, it’s hard to believe that the current troika could rekindle the craze which gave birth to a righteous, scream ing teeny-bopper revolution. it rings and I rise wipe the sleep out o f my eyes. My shaving razor’s cold and it stings. Surprisingly, this hot revival has paid off. America is eating them up! Before the group embarked on the concert tour this summer they released an energetic “Best Hits” album, “That Was Then, This is Now.” That, along with the publicity of a new “Monkees” television series, sprouted a hit single and a nationwide talent search for four new clean-cut cuties that would fill the soiled shoes of the predecessors. Twenty yesrs dgo this ssifl6 energy was permeating wildly. Two top television executives, Robert Rafelson and Berten Schneider got this groovy idea for a show about a squeakyclean teen-age singing group. Cheer up sleepy Jean oh what can it mean to a daydream believer and a homecoming queen. The quartet was first called the Turtles (mutant titles were big in 1966), then the Inevitables. Until one day a public relations exécutive of NBC probably caught a glimpse of someone slipping on a banana peel, and “voila,” the birth of a goldmine. Rafelson and Schneider put their ideas down on paper, saw dollar signs and went with it. Little did they know how profitable the Monkees would be. Fortunately, everyone hit pay dirt. One week before the show debuted, the group performed live for a swarm of prepubescent barbie dolls. The rest was history. The show skyrocketed to the top of the r a t in o s a P ïn w f p H ratings, ass expected, shelling in millions. a n H th o L You once thought o f me as a white knight on his steed now you know how happy l ean be. Oh, and our good times starts and then with our dollar want to spend but how much paper do we really need. Their first album, “The Monkees,” sold more than three million copies, better then the Beatles debut LP. That sizzling appetizer set a chart record that lasted 17 years. During the first two years they produced nine top 20 singles and four No. 1 albums. In 1967, they became the top-selling musical group, paving the way for more mega-hits like “Last Train to Clarksville,” “Pleasant Valley Sunday” and “Daydream Believer.” Even the show, which swayed more toward the silly slapstick side, impressed critics. It won two Em m y Awards for best comedy series and best episode by a director. Surprisingly, there seemed to be nothing wrong with this cute little group of far-out singers. They were considered to be fresher and much more innocent than the Beatles, and they created a message for teen-agers everywhere, one which stressed the fact that teens could actually survive in the turbulent ’60s. Cheer up sleepy Jean oh what can it mean to a daydream believer and a homecoming queen. Peter Tork told the “New York Times” in a 1966 interview that “there’s a social revolution going on and the young ones are in it — the young more automatically agree to ch a n g e .. . ” Change is basically what many of their groupies were aiming for. Nothing is quite so special as an innocent teen-ager capturing a message of hope that the Monkees hid between the lyrics of their pastel poppy LP. Cheer up sleepy Jean oh what can it mean to a daydream believer and a homecoming queen. Appearing with the group on Monday are Herman’s Hermits, The Grass Roots and Gary Puckett and the Union Gap. This tour signifies the last reunion of the Monkees. Unfortunately, this could mean that the last train to Clarksville will be leaving for a pleasant Valley Sunday, for a very long time. BROADUJAV TERRACE CONDOMINIUMS Yo u r s e l f 50cc Engine A u to m a tic Drive M ore pow er than Honda Spree M odern L u xu ry S tylin g NOW *499°° FOR SALE ExF/PTT&L Lim ited to stock on hand. prices in the 50's $ 60's 151 Cast BroaduuaY • 2 covered parking spots • pool • im m ediate a v a ila b ility FHfì/Vfì Financing Mill Ave. ASU Call: 968-7656 967-6420 College CYCLE CENTER * 6 8 2 8 E. T h o m a s • 941-5321 5 7 2 0 N.W. Grand • 931-3753 Page 17 Friday, September 12,1986 State Press DEVILISH DEALSI MONEY SAVItie COUPOHSI SHRIMP DINNER Olocovor lor yourself Why Golden Corral is the best family steakhouseinAMERICA. •USDA Choice steak cut fresh daily •FREE beverage refills •New Roast Chicken •Famous salad bar with fresh fruit, hot vegetables & desserts •12 item potato bar •FREE banquet facilities 3231 S. M ill Ava. Tampa, AZ. 804-1509 Haora Sun.-Thur*. I I A M -10 P M Fri. a S a t 1 ! A M -11 P M 2 For $7.99 Served with your choice of French Fries, Rice Pilaf or Famous Potato Bar and Texas Toast. T a x Payable By Bearer 1 JUMBO HOT DOG SMALL FRY, MEDIUM SOFTDRINK /(JoreaJ-Wied I $2.49 H Ï Ï ' eSaCbCttaoo A fam ily tradition for ever GO years TAKE OUT WELCOME TRY T H E VCR RENTAL + 2 MOVIES For Only $9.95 1843 X Scottsdale With Coupon 941-2835 15/8C Expires 10/15/86 T h is a d d re s s o n ly Expires 9/18/86 SPECIAL sTED'S MONEY SAVINO COUPONS! R e g . $ 3 .1 9 C o m er of M cC IIntock & B roadw ay Tam pa Qood through 9/30/86 YOU DON'T HAVE TO CROSS THE BORDER FOR THE AUTHENTIC TASTE OF MEXICO! •Authentic Mexican Food •Giant Margaritas •Imported & Domestic Beers $1.00 zeTara off any dinner 216 E. University • 829-8624 w ith th is coupon (Between College & Forest) L A U N D R Y S E R V IC E fo r 1 w e e k at 120 E. University In the Arches 966-6684 1/2 THE REGULAR COST! O ffe r E xpires 9-17-86 O ffe r goo d fo r new accou nts only. If you don’t know how to do laundry, don’t hava time, o r ¡uat don’t care t o . . . I ■^ Open nights till 9:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. rat n n ■v i r § . A 1 IR J I f I I Y n r n iT l/U ? 9 2 1 -0 1 4 8 S h lU I U 10% DISCOUNT OFF ALL MERCHANDISE W I T H T H I S C O U P O N ( E X C E P T S A L E I T E M S ) . E x p ir e s 1 Q -3 0 -8 6 We are Canada’s largest retailer of genuine fashion surplus clothing from around tho world! Browsers welcome. S H IR T S ’N S T U F F 8 2 9 -0 2 7 7 1 0 3 9 E. L em on S. W. Corner Lemon /T errace Mon.-Fri. 10-8, Sat. & Sun. 10-5 BUY TWO GET ONE FREE ANY REGULAR PRICED T-SHIRT OR SWEATSHIRT HUNDREDS OF DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM Not valid for group orders. Offer expires Sept. 30,1986. Roadway $2°° O F F 1 0 S p e e d B ic y c l e U n iv e rsity & H ardy, T em p e Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10p.m. . Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-l 2 midnight Sun. 4 p.m.-10 p.m. HAVE DINNER FOR UNDER $3.00! from T IM E S Q U A R E B U R G ER S •1/4 lb. Hamburger •Large Fries »Large Drink $2.75 CALL 967-6083 For delivery! F ree d elivery fo r purch ases o f $ 7 .0 0 o r m ore. N O L im it fo r co u po n orders. NURSERY BUY ONE HOUSEPLANT and receive 1/2 O FF second plant of equal or less price. Limit one coupon per person. A « n 1 y68-0201 O ffe r g oo d th ro u g h 9 -2 2 -8 6 . SALE $109.00 FREE HANDLEBAR CAGE with purchase of NEW BIKE DOMENIC’S Cycling 1032 S. Terrace ( W it h th is c o u p o n o n ly - E x p ir e s S e p t. 3 0 , 1 9 8 6 ) WWW W W W W W W W W W i f tV v'deo w 1250 E. Apache Blvd. t (East of Rural Rd.) § 968-5265 ASU STUDENTS ♦TAX A riz o n a G re e n G a rd e n s / Q ^ T e m p e « R u ra l & U n iv e rsity • 968-9 5 1 2 We D eliver Beer!! Any Large 2-item P IZ Z A 968-8575 Q FREE FRESH FRUIT | Bananas, strawberries, melon-mix, apples, grapes, pineapple~| Broadway * )Rural Next to Safeway Free Membership w ith one free M ovie Rental (no new release) ALL MOVIES $1.75 VALID WITH COUPON THE CORNERSTONE THEM IBra'C0 mi l / lidr HOURS: M-F 10-9 SAT 10-8 SUN 12-6 A NECESSITY FOR THE GAME: A GOLD POM POM FREE POM POM Plus 10% OFF Any $10 Or M ore Purchase w /C oupon. k . J iS lG ^ L S A k U f f iH $ . — . T R Y S O N Y F L O P P Y fftS K S AND S O N Y W ILL G IV E YO U R M p N E Y BACK! * jP l •TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OF IQgSONY HG-EX OR ESX HI-FÍ VIDEOCASSETTES! SONY I MO-10 5 2 V 0 3 0 mm) BUY A 10 PACK OF SONY 51/i ” SINGLE-SIDED DOUBLE DENSITY DISKS $000 BUY A 10 PACK OF SONY SW ’ DOUBLE-SIDED DOUBLE DENSITY DISKS FOR AND RECEIVE A STORE CHECK DIRECT FROM SONY FOR GOOD TOW ARD TH E PUR CHA SE O F 10 S O N Y H G -E X O R E S X H P F I V ID E O C A S S E T T E S ! AND RECEIVE A STORE CHECK DIRECT FROM SONY FOR GOOD TOW ARD T H E PURCHASE O F 10 S O N Y H G -E X O R E S X H l-F t V ID E O C A S S E T T E S ! S O N Y ava” DISK 5-PACK SINGLE SIDED DOUBLE DENSITY S O N Y 3Va” DISK 5-PACK SO N Y DOUBLE SIDED DOUBLE DENSITY 3 PER PACK 11« ■ ■ PER PACK THATS ONLY THAT’S ONLY M .49 PER DISK! *2.29 PERJDISK! Salé limited to stock on hand. Ad Mams subject to prior sale. Sais anda Tuesday, September 30th. W H E R E IIO IJ S K .............................. FI—*« m i «PHOENIX........----------- .~-------- -— IMrocwitar PHOENIX™________ Wirtrida« Ih« «m oni» MESA. «MESA «PARADISEVALLEY-,-------------4306 E Cactus Rd. «PHOENIX — ----- -------------- «308 Cactus Rd. *pH0ENIX „__ __________ .939W. CamoîtackpS îraW E Z Ü fiZ Z . . . .35th i Ttmnderbird „2501 No. Scottsdde M. ............939 E. Broadway State Pres» P a g e 19 FridaysepteiW beM £J98^ theater am m age g raced by ‘C am elo t’ m agic By MATTHEW CARY b t*t« P i*M Richard Harris, as King Arthur, played his part to perfection, giving Arthur the spark and idealism necessary The tights went down. Scattered applause greeted the -rchestra as the music grew in intensity. The curtain rose, e smoke encased the darkly lit stage. And then the magic an. Wednesday night a little taste of Broadway came to ammage Center with “Camelot. ” Richard Harris’ revival of Lemer and Loewe’s musical based on the legend of King Arthur’s court is faulty, but has jmany magical moments that made the show worth the $30 jacket. -Sv Harris, a show-biz veteran of movies, records and theater, lays the role of King Arthur. He also staged and directed the show, which just began a 15-week national tour. ‘Camelot’’ retells the classic myth of King Arthur’s fatal omance with Guenevere and the rise and fall of his kingdom, here “might is for right” and “ it never rains before uadown-” . ¡¡¡¡¡¡8 With m usic and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Lowe, the script itself moves quickly and the musical umbers are used well to brighten the slow moments in the ction. The show, if. directed badly, could have been long and edious, but Harris kept it at a good pace, And quick scene Vinngas made the action flow smoothly. The costumes and the sets were as good as Anything you’d ee on Broadway: . The smoke used in the opening scenes was very effective, ut it drifted into the audience, and the smoke’s sickly sweet mell choked the audience for many scenes after. to carry the show. As the young king in the first act, Harris was not quite convincing, but he became more believable as the play moved into Arthur’s adulthood. Harris’ singing voice did not equal his acting prowess. He belted out the title song with pizzaz as well as the bouncy “I Wonder What The King ls Doing Tonight,” but when it came to the ballad, “How To Handle a Woman,” Harris was pitifully off-key. Martha Traverse, who portrayed the beautiful Queen Guenevere, has an exciting, well-trained voice, and her acting is more than adequate. In the early scenes, she was excellent as the innocent maiden, but when Camelot starts to crumble, her acting became very one-dimensional and consisted of pouting and staring. The weak link in the royal triangle is Lancelot, portrayed by Batrick Godfrey. Lancelot, the French knight who becomes Arthur’s friend and Guenevere’s secret love, should have been handsome, dashing and charming. Godfrey was handsome, with a powerful bass voice, but played Lancelot as a pompous bore. His overacting made it impossible to believe that anyone, much less Guenevere, would fall in love with him. Jam es Valentine, who portrayed both Merlyn and King Pellinore, stole many scenes with his hamming theatrics. Opening night ’s performance received an enthusiastic standing ovation, which it rightly deserved. “ 1 A m e r ic a n S o c ie ty f o r P e rs o n n e l A d m in is tra tio n CA SPA ) We give you e chancy to develop yourself into a com petent Human Resources Professional. P e rs o n a l T e le p h o n e AdA for S in g le s Phoenix's Easiest and M ast Exciting W ay to M eet Som eone Newt * W e o ffe r y o u : internships scholarships company visits inform ative speakers „a professional edge ie w ill be in the patio area outside the s buildings from Sept. 8 -1 2 ,1 9 8 6 . N o M e m b e rs h ip F e e s B E IN G , A S T U D E N T ' GAN B E S T R E S S F U L T rea t y o u r s e lf to so o th in g a n d re la x ­ in g N ew A g e records a n d ta p e s a t th e TRANQUILITY ZONE H * A ll P h o n e N u m b e rs * Richard Harris reigns as King A rthur In Lam ar and Loawa’s legendary musical “C am elot." The show plays at Gammaga today through Sunday. N e w A d s D a ily Sr C a ll A n y tim e 1*976*4000 Flrst Minute 55 « E * Additional M inute 4 8« 'Call Today and EnjoyYoor Tomorrows. 4 1 4 S . M ill A ve. # 114C T em pe • 8 2 9 -0 4 4 1 ROLL ROCK D esign Y our Own P ersonal Charm 14K Solid G old License H ate C harm s ^ ^ D e s p o u t i a g e o u s T im e s ! USA N E W YORK A R IZ O N A 1 0 0 % ME *87 G R A D 1 V$$ < ^ o \ Let Your Imagination Run Wild!! Student Priced a tf$ 4 9 -9 $ Instant Attention Getters ***** Sfanply Charming 8 9 7 -1126 Wealso carry F R i »1 Every Friday $2.99 "All You Can Eat" Fish-n-Chips 3-11 IOC Wings« Hot or BBQ 3-6 « Live: Coyote through Saturday! S A T •; Every Saturday 99CLongneclcstill3 $1.99 Burgers till 6 $1.65 Coronas 7-1 S U N D E V IL C H A R M S S U N . : Every Sunday! Ladles Night 7 p.m .-l a.m. 99C Bloody Marys &Screwdrivers IOC Wings at RURAL and APACHE taurrn a n 50 CORONAS HAPPY HOURS 1-7 p.m. six days a week 50f Draw • si.OG Margaritas 12.25 Pitcher: v ; lV FREE POPCORN ™ “ M O N •: Every Monday! $1.99 Pitchers of Long Island Teas 6 p.m .-l a.m. 50C Hot Dogs During Football Games Happy Hour Prices on Pitchers During Football Games FRIDAY & SATURDAY Live: M ike Ziffer •1 )6 ^ ~d k p e é ü 5<5s COUPON ExplrM «-16-86. P rem iu m W ine, W ell« . D raft or $1.99 PITCHER Limit QMpar customer. T U E S «; Every Tuesday! j $1.99 Tacos (3) — you add the toppings! Live: THE DOCTORS 3-11 W E D •¿Every Wednesday! $1.99 Pizza (medium} 3-11 n Live-COYOTE ^ Page 2 0 State Pres» Friday, September 12,1986 O sm ond loses her coun try tw a n g som ew here in M o n ta n a By C A R R IL MITCHELL State Press Marie Osmond. “ I Only Wanted You” Marie Osmond has long since left her brother Donny’s side and ventured out oh her own singing career. These days she has turned her efforts to making it big in on the country charts. She has done fairly well. Her duet with Dan Seals, “Meet Me in Montana,” did well on the charts. However, her latest album, “I Only Wanted You,” will probably not produce a crop of hits. Osmond claims to be country, but most of the songs on this album are somewhere in the vast nowhere-land between soft country and mellow pop. This is not a good place to be, there is very little a country music listener hates more than a weak cross-over song and most pop music listeners hate the country “twang.” The only things country about this album are the steel guitar softly vibrating in the background by Terry “The Swede” Choate (how many Swedish cowboys do you know?) and Osmond’s slide-around, nasal vocal style. One song,“New Love,” almost makes her sound like a country Sheena Easton. The song has a real rock beat, but Osmond has the country type of voice. The two just do not blend well. records Sultry Marie Osmond tries to lure listeners to The two or three country songs on the album do not really have any guts or great musical qualities — they are just there. There has been a great influx of new mediocre country sound. country artists lately. This “New Country” style has produced talents, like Dwight Yoakum and Randy Travis, who have returned to their roots and played the old earthy beats that true country lovers adore. Osmond’s bland cross-over style seems old compared to these other country sounds. Osmond performs a good sounding duet with Paul Davis, which will probably do well on the charts. It has a strong steel guitar accent and a basic country rhythm. Davis’ true country voice adds a rough aspect to the harmony. However, the lyrics are not that great: "But honey, I love you so much/the first time that we touched/! love you more now than then and you’re still new to me. ” The song, “We’re Gonna Need a Love Song,” almost sounds calypso or tropical. This album is almost a potpourri of music formats. If variety is the desired outcome, Osmond has succeeded. The sad part of this album is that Osmond does not really sound good. if you are a diehard Marie Osmond fan, the album would probably not be a bad purchase (men should like die sultry look she is giving cm the album coyer.) But for .someone looking for a quality country album with a hot new sound, go buy a Dwight Yoakum album and forget about Marie. First thing every morning: COFFEE and THE S ta te P re s s Y our M o rn in g Dally 965-7572 TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD. That's right) Now you can place your S TA TE PRESS classified ad over the phone if you have a VISA or M ASTERC ARD . Just call 965-7572 and ask fo r classified advertising. 8am to 5 pm DAILY ST A T E PR ESS 15 M A T T H E W S CEN TER N O R T H BA SEM EN T ASU 965-7572 % O U \V A State Pi— » Friday. September 12,1986 Page 21 PRESENTS THIS FRIDAY A H A M A S • T o n i g h t w i n a T r ip f o r T w o fo r 7 d a y s a t The s h e r a t o n G R A N D o n P A R A D IS E IS L A N D • A B E A C H C R U IS E R f r o m D O M IN IC S C Y C LIN G IM P O R T S • A S p e c ia l v i p P a c k a g e • CRAB RACES • S W IM W E A R C O N T E S T • C R A Z IE S H A W A IIN P R IN T S H IR T SPECIAL HAPPY HOUR • 2 fo r 1's on e v e ry th in g • w o rld s g re a te s t Tropical P atio P a rty S tatcP hm 1g, 1986 t F rid ay th e 13 th ’ star stabs at horror fli flicks By MARTY WEISS State Press Jason Voorhees is alive and so is his archenemy, hero Tommy Jarvis. ' In “Friday the 13th, P art VI: Jason Lives,” Thom Matthews, recreates the role of the man who foiled Jason’s attem pt to turn the entire cast into shish kebab in “Friday the 13th, P a rt IV: the Final Chapter.” Matthews had roles in “Dangerously Close,” “The Woman in Red” and “Return of the giving Dead.” (He immortalized the line “ I know you’re up there because I can smell your brains.” ) He regularly played characters on television’s “The Yellow Rose’’ and *‘Capitol. ” M a tth e w s p a r tic u la r ly en jo y ed w ork in g on “Friday. . .P art VI.” “For me, it’s a joy because I’ve seen all of them, and I’d jump a t the opportunity to play opposite Jason. It’s a dream come true.” However, Matthews said he doesn’t want to become typecast as a horror film character. “ If it’s done well and exciting, I enjoy (horror films),” he said. “ I don’t want to be stereotyped, although I’d love to do an ‘Aliens.’ ” Matthews said he is confident of the latest Jason movie’s success. “This will restore the fans,” he said. “ ‘P art V’ lost them; it was a mistake. The production value wasn’t there. It turned off a lot of people. ” He credits the last sequel’s success to writer/director Tom McLoughlin. “ ‘Vi’s’ quality comes from good direction, writing and acting/’ Matthews said. “Tom was always there for everyone. “He wrote it on Christmas. People around him were singing ‘Jingle Bells,’ and he’s writing F riday the 13th, P art VI.’ ” In one scene, he and actor Ron Palillo (“Welcome Back Hotter” ) dig up Jason’s supposedly dead body: “They brought in five pounds of maggots from a maggot farm in Colorado. They shipped them out to Georgia (where “Friday” was filming). ” Matthews does not know how the latest chapter in the “Friday” series will affect his career. “You can never tell, I thought ‘Return of the Living Dead’ would help a lot,” he said. “You have to keep working. If a film is good, work begets work.” If Paramount Pictures produces another “Friday” feature film, Matthews said he would consider recreating his role. “I don’t know,” he said. “If they asked me back, probably. ‘P a rt VI’ was a fun film to work on. I especially liked fighting Jason underwater.” Matthews said he liked reading Jason Voorhees fan mail. He recalled one letter said, “ ‘I’m leaving my window open tonight. Please come and kill me.’ ” Currently, Matthews is working on a dark comedy titled “Downtwisted,” starring Carey Lowell (“Dangerously Close” ) and Charlie Rocket of “Saturday Night Live” fame. In this film, Matthews plays a “bad guy” who kills at least eight people. The story is about crooks who steal and then lose a priceless artifact in South America. Thom Matthews stars as Jason’s archsnsm y In ‘Friday the 13th, Part V I.’ MIKE KUANS Call for daily specials GOLDEN COIN Chinese Buffet 1125 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ 85281 941 W. Elliot Chandler *821*5428 M enu includes: S w eet and S o u r Pork le m o n C h icken S m oked Fish S h rim p A im o n d in e P ep p er S teak H am Fried R ice B ee f w ith B ro cco li T e riy a k i C h icken V e g e ta rian S teak E gg Fu Y oung T e riy a k i B ee f S teak S w eet an d S o u r A lm ond T u rk e y C h ic k e n C h o w M ein B B Q S p are Ribs Egg R olls O p e n WE SERVE BEER & F R U IT C O C K TA IL “1984 READERS CHOICE” • LUNCH • • DINNER • 11 a.m.-3 p jn . C h a n s e In F o o d $ 3 *5 7 S e le c tio n D aily 5 Pjn - 2 4 H o u rs $ 4 *0 4 d a ily f o r p h o n e T e rra c e R o a d A p a r tm e n ts b ill p a y m e n ts . N o w a s a lw a y s , m a i l i n g y o u r p h o n e b ill is t h e WALK TO SCHOOL! e a s i e s t w a y t o p a y f o r p h o n e s e r v ic e : T h a t ’s b e c a u s e t h e r e ’s u s u a l l y a m a i l b o x n e a r y o u . Y o u w o n ’t h a v e t o w a it in lin e o n c e y o u g e t th e re . A n d b e s t o f a ll, m a ilb o x e s n e v e r c lo s e . S o y o u c a n m a k e y o u r p a y m e n t a t a r i h o u r 1 /2 b lo c k f r o m C a m p u s , H u g e , w e ll-fu rn is h e d 1 -b e d ro o m , 1 -b a th , a n d 2 -b e d ro o m , 2 -b a th s , a ll u tilitie s in c lu d e ^ , c a b le T V , p lu s m a n y a m e n itie s . t h a t ’s c o n v e n i e n t t o y o u . 9 5 0 S . T e rra c e R d . B e ll. P l a c e i t a l o n g w i t h y o u r m o n t h l y s t a t e m e n t i n t h e 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 W h e n m a ilin g y o u r b ill in c lu d e a c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r , w i t h y o u r p h o n e n u m b e r o n it, p a y a b l e t o M o u n t a i n e n v e lo p e p r o v id e d a n d d r o p it i n th e n e a r e s t m a ilb o x . N o m a t t e r w h a t t i m e o f t h e d a y o r n i g h t , i t ’s o p e n ju s t fo r y o u . m r w ir r a B E LL TO W ER L 843-4593 andKLLROAD > IS ? .? » !? « ). 7:30.10«) MBBmm L 829-0344 ¡ » T O f t y AVEMIM6 FORCE |R) 1245.3:00.515.730.9:45 PATRIOT |R| 1200.200.400. OOO. 0:00.1000 STAROBY ME (RI 1130.130.330.5:30.730.0:30 > a t A C7 K7 MESA AT$0 L0NGM0RE 044-3/07 ¿SUPERSTITION > TOP8UNIP0-13) 1200,2 *0.*)». 730,1020 EXTSERHTK1M 1:15.215.5.1577:15.9:15 MCI TONMOL m -ia 3:00.7:15 M M M flM M |R)1 00. 5:15.830 RUTHLESS PEOPLE |R| 100.200.500.700.900 TOPOUN|P0| 1230,2:45.500.7:15.9:30 MMTE KM 0 IPS 1200,230.500.7:30.1030 MM00-1X124$,245,44S OEM EM MME ■ « 7 0 0 .900 M B MBMS WIN 12:45.5:15.9:4$ PSETTTHI PMNffS-IH 200.730 STANDIT MEINI 1:00.3:00.5:00.7:1 7:00.900 MUHTE SION (PH 11:45.2 tt. 430.7:15.9:45 RUTHLESSW IE |S) 12«), 2«). 5«). 7«), 0:45 FIRS» RUBIER? |PR)11* 3*. MO PRETTYM PINK(PR) 1:30.5:45.10:00 B A R G A IN P R IC E ALLSHOWSBEFORE6PM. MON.THRUFRI SAT.SUN.6 HOLIDAYSFIRSTSHOWONLY MBlMEMMH-tS 12:30.500.9:15 (M(JR rNMM 8CARE0 |R| 230.700 ' 249-2843 57C7no 11:45.1:45.3:45,5:45,7:45.9:45 RUNNIM OCAREO«111« 3 « 731 . REMEM DRIVEIII IRI130.5:30.030, a n *3°° Mltenrl a Friday &Sitmday Midnietit Skews (Mown 5• Sun Owl 6 1 k 835-0404 westSOuthern A M o u n tain B ell A US WEST COMPANY isth «ve j s 1:45.345.5:45. 7 45. 0:45 1:15,3:15.5:15,7:15, »15 MU1M I Kltcm I» 13302:15. Rem em ber— Church’s on Apache offers a 10% discount for all ASU students and faculty w ith I.D. Offer not good on any special offers. We prepare special orders for all occasions. i *7.75* Expires 9-30-88. CHURCH’S A 1 i ibS Sw i Where You Should B e ... DANCING NIGHTLY 8 PM-1 AM VJ. ENTERTAINMENT DAILY SPECIALS f u n SNACKS INYOURSCHEDULE Attend University Fellowship John lynch (left), a graduate of A.S.U. and albot Seminaiyj is a dynamic speaker with a special concern for the needs of college students and young adults. His desire is to see people develop in tneir relationship with Christ by proclaiming the Truths of the Word in a dramatic, sometimes humorous, but always powerful way. thousands through 1_____ of teaching. A recording artist in full-time music ministry for the past five years, Randy is anxious to see you have a deeper knowledge K n o w led g e of and commitment to his best friend-thtie LordJesus Christ. hoilT of teaching, singing and fellow ship with John lynch and Randy Thompson. IjNNERSnY FELLOWSHIP Every Sunday Evening 7:30 PM-8:30 PM Pima Room (218) in the M.U. CONTESTS PO q 1 1 HOUR FREE POOL With this coupon________________________________ Exp. 1 0 /1 /8 6 “$i7o0 OFF ANY DRINK With this coupon ' __>_______________ Exp. 1 0 /1 /8 6 $ 0 ) 0 o f f "a n y ”f o o d e n t r e e With this coupon_______ __i____ __ ______________ 1 0 /1 /8 6 909 E. Minton, Temp«:, AZ 1 block North of Baseline; 1 block east o f Rural Near Lake Country Village Shopping Center Lim it one coupon p er person. M anagement rts e r v c s r ig jM J ^ Page 30 S ta te ñ rm _ F H d flj^ ^ 2 e m b e r 1 S J ^ 9 8 6 ^ Announcem ents For Rent or Lease ALPHA PHIS! If ASU plays as intense as our pre-game party, we’re Rose Bowl bound! (Good luck Sun Devils- from the bros of Delta Sip)________________ ' 2, 3, 4 bedroom condos, townhbuses, houses, near ASU for rent and sale. Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 996-0919 941-7041. FREE LECTURE: Learn about sexually transm itted diseases and how to prevent them . Monday, September 15, 7:30p.m. Sponsored by the Phoenix Gay Youth Group. Call 897-8989 or 938-3932._________________________ 2 BLOCKS ASU, one bedroom house, $350, unfurnished, lease only. 839-2961, 967-2457.______________ __________ _ FRIENDS (QUAKER) meeting Sundays, 9:30-10:30 a.m ., Danforth Chapel. Silent w orship, frien d sh ip , fello w sh ip , welcome! 965-7536._____________ ____ ON GOING m editation and healing for reaffirm ing your inner center, Mondays at 7:30p.m. Claire LeNormand, inter­ nationally experienced psychic, 9459572. Autom obiles 1973 MUSTANG 351 Cleveland, at, ac, pa, pb, am-fm cassette, $1000, nine m eat. Flynn, 941-4950._______________ 1973 TRIUMPH TR8, white w ith black convertible. M echanically sound! Great fun! Arizona original. $2300. 829-9552.___________ _______________ 1974 SUPERBEETLE. Good condition. Tape deck. Air. $1300.947-4066._______ 1976 VW Rabbit 4-speed, am-fm stereo, new brakesfenglne, $675. 948-7313 days, 8(17-0210 evenlnga/Weekends. 1977 HONDA Civic, 62,000 m iles, 1500cc, excellent condition, new up­ holstery, tires, and battery, $1200. Tracey, 96641876._______________ , P 1977 TOYOTA Corolla SW, only 4500 mites on rebuilt engine. Automatic, pb, ac, amffm stereo. Excellent condition. $1850.962-4316. wœ l i 1979 JEEP Cherokee: fantastic condi­ tion, has all the x-tras available, only $3500. Call 948-3965, ask for Marc. g S y ittiiy p witòy y « .resSaBEeié 1979-LTD LANDOU white, PS,PB, power seats, automatic, air, cruise, AM-FM, 8 track, $1795.8992052. Devil d an cers Katrin J. Larkln/State P íe n Lorelei Alexander, a Junior Journalism m ajor, leads one flank of tbs ASU Devil Dancers through practice fo r th eir Saturday night debut a t half-tim e o f the ASU-M Ichlgan State football game. The dancers have been practicing together since the week before school began. D oghouse Continued from page 26. “searching for the best college and professional football fans on earth,” they are also selling a product that they feel will “enable fans to become more of an active part in the game? ” Ditto's answer: They are touring the country to sell their product, Penalty Pals, and they are going to give the Y ear of the Fan trophy to the fans who buy the most Penalty Pals. What are Penalty Pals? Good question. Answer: “The Penalty Pal enables fans to become more of an active part of the game — to help their team win,” say the Boo’s Brothers.” Answer: “Hie Penalty Pal is a yellow handkerchief which better suffice as a snot rag,” Dinosays. This yellow hunk of polyester, which sells fw about $2, is a replica of a football official’s penalty flag and is supposed to be the fans’ way of calling penalties that die referees miss. The Boo’s Brothers, one of whom has no neck, claim that “the Penalty Pa] enables fans to become more of an active part of the gam e—to help their team win.” Who knows? There might be enough stupid people out there to buy this stupid gimmick to make some stupid people very rich. DEAN A. OBENAUER M EM O R IA L GOOD NBW Sl FOR THE VICTIMS OF THE TERRORIST ATTACKS IN TURKEYAND PAKISTAN EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING Cady Mall (across from the library) Today at Noon STATE PRESS Organized by students at H ille l sco n so lile hvundm Scottsdale T IR E B A L A N C E & R O T A T IO N Rig*tarllf $24.95 ONLY $9.90* ‘Includes spin balancing It weights LUBE O IL F IL T E R ONLY $10.75* A tax RigMbHy $22.95 Includes; o il filter It lubrication 68th St. G McDowell FRO NT END A L IG N M E N T $9.90 2-whe*l drive o nly Coll 990-1110 1979 MERCURY Capri 4-speed, clean, new tires, AC, $2000 OBO. Must sell! 275-1608 o r840-7229,________________ 1980 DATSUN B210 2-door, excellent condition with only. 37,000 m iles, AC, 5-spted, M ichelin tires, $2800.949-3068 o r947-8231 after 5:00p.m.______ ______ CLASSIC '66 Mustang- drive in style! New engine, transmission, clutch, upholstery, rust-free, $2000. Call 2679767. Babysitters Wanted RESPONSIBLE LOVING adult tp care for children in. our homa. Nonsmoker, flexible hours. C a ll829-0033. BOY'S 19” 10-speed bike, little use, been stored, good condition, $75. Call evenings, 866-9071,_________________ CUSTOM BICYCLE clothing made of lycra spandex. Shorts, shirts, and suits made to order. Bright colors and fancy prints. Terry, 838-6017.______ B u sin ess Opp. WAREHOUSE SALE- desks from $44, chairs from $5, end tables and coffee tables from $10, typing tables, compu­ ter tables, bookshelves and more. 437-2224._______________________ W HITE COUCH and matching hide-a­ bed, $150. Terra Cota bean pot lamps, pictures, posters. 2368747,8938041. NEW, LARGE one and two bedroom apts. Great complex, many amenities, 3 m iles from campus. Pelllcan Bay Apartments, 2121 W. Main/Apache 969-3380. _______ ' H elp Wanted ONE MONTH rent free with seven ‘ month lease. Duplex, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, near ASU, $450fmonth. Eric Paddle, 4938599 o r8678999. THREE BEDROOM, two bath house, close to ASU, appliances, pet ok, nice house. 8948302,994-5829.___________ TWO 3 bedroom homes near ASU, unfurnished, lease only. $650.839-2961, 967-2457. " ''' . '" '" ■ TWO BLOCKS ASU, 2 one bedroom unfurnished efficiency apartments, lease only, $350/month. 839-2961, 967-2457. U NIVER SITY/M cC lintock furnished townhouse, $600.966-7653-________ For Sale 1974 TERRY travel trailer, close to ASU, excellent condition, 25 ft., awning, ac, self-contained, sleeps 6, $3500. 2318581.______________ A BEAUTIFUL color tplevlsion, 25” $115.; 19” color TV, $80.; console stereo $80. Cash. Call 253-5016. MOBILE HOME, one bedroom, covered patio, storage building, across street from ASU. $2500.9688874.___________ MUST SELL! Great dealt Blue 1972 Superbeetle “Bug”. Runs great, looks g re at. C all 986-3365 between 7:00-10:30(pm). $1380OBO.__________ PIONEER SPEAKERS, 100 w att, brand new, never been used. Cost $600, will take $100 for the pair. Moving, must sail. 954-0627.____________ __ ROLEX-PIAGET, collection quality re-. plicae. 3718793._______ WOOD PLANT stand for sale. Holds seven plants. Call 921-1392. Furniture ALL NEW sofa, toveseats, assorted colors, fabrics, $199.95. Can deliver. B5Z, 520 E. Roosevelt. 254-4144.______ BED'S BED'S. A ll sizes: Twin $49.96; Full $59.96; Queen $89.95; King $129.95. Never used. .Can deliver. Phone orders accepted. B 8Z, 254-4144. CHEST OF drawers from $30. Paradise Bedding, 4013 - N . Black Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian School exit). 2660800._____________________ COMPLETE TW IN bed, $79 at the factory. A ll sizes available, regular, extra long. Paradise Bedding, 4013 N. Black Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian School exit). 2668800._________ BUSINESS MAJORS, test book theory with reality. Learn business networking first hand. Start your own business part-tim e, on or o ff campus. Call 924-2937 for appointment.____________ COMPLETE 7-piece bedroom set $199. Price Includes oomptete full size bed, ¿drawer dresser, 2-drawer night stand, mirror, and headboard. Can deliver. BAZ, 254-4144,__________ COULD YOU use $50081000 extra per month with very little tim e invested? If so, call 8205702,__________ _________ FOR SALE: One sofa $100; loveseat $80; 8teelcase desk $270; Steelcaae desk chair $125; Karastan woven natural wool urea rug, 1015x151*, $750. 345-1304,________" ' __________ 1 MONTH rent free with seven month lease. Guest house close to ASU. $27S/month. Eric Paddle, 867-8889 or 4938599. TWIN SIZE bed for sale. Includes head board, frame, box spring, and mattress, $40. Call 921-1392._______________ _ BEAUTIFUL NEW large two bedroom, walk to ASU, pool, laundry, one block south o f University on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about move-in specials. 9668238.___________________ BE DIFFEREN T. If you’re s elf motivated and want to make an unusual income. Call for appointment. Charles, 244-2331,________ For Rent or Lease THREE PIECE coffee table set. New $79. Paradise Bedding, 4013 N. Black Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian School exit), 2668800._______________ APACHE VILLA Apartments, now renting 2 bedroom, 1Vi bath, $430 month. Call 829-1660. One block from ASU.___________ • ' B icycles 23" CENTUHIAN Super Lemans, new frame, quality components, includes rack, generator, $220. Bob, 890-2027 evenings.__________________________ m a t t r e s s s a l e . Twin sets from $49.95, Full sets from $59.95, Queen sets from $89.95, Kings $139. 7 piece bedroom set com plete $195. 7 piece living room set $259. 5 drawer chest $39.95, sleeper sofas from $249 plus much more. 3332 Furniture, SOW. Main, Mesa, 844-1891; 3332 W . McDowell, 233-2236.___________________ ______ A CONDO for rent. Two bedroom, furnished, washer, dryer, overlooks pool, walk to ASU. $500 deposit, $595 monthly, electric is on. Call 945-6995 6-9 p.m. weekdays, 9 am .-9 p.m. weekends._____________ . ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, excellent condition, Brother with correction cartridge. Good deal - only $80. 1960 JEEP CJ-7 Renegade, V-8 304, 4speed trans. Hard and soft tops,966-7350. S-KC . »tes. Must seel Call 7840669.________ JAPANESE SAMURI sword for sale for $500. Forged In the mld-1400'a. Call 1980 MAZDA RX7 5-speed, sunroof, air, 948-3989, ask for Marc.______________ ' louvers, good condition, $4500. 9989732,______________________ ' KRAMER GUITAR, the Focus 3000 with Floyd rose and case, two weeks old, 1981 CAMARO V6 2-door; AC, AT, PS, must sell, against apartment rules. Call PB, must sell. 991-2646 evenings._____ now and save, after 6:00 p.m. 8298427. 1961 HONDA Civic, nice and dependa­ LIONEL RITCHIE tickets. Four of them ble, saves gas and money, $2300. for the Thursday show. C all Marc at 967-9308. -______________ 9488989.________ ________ _ 1981 TOYOTA Corolla 4-door, 5-speed, MARY.KAY C osm etics!!!! Need room amffm cassette stereo, 45,000 m iles, must sell. New colors, formulas. Call $3000. Call 966-5175 or 8298390. Ask or 986-7350. ________ _ leave message for Dave.___________ _ 1984 MITSUBISHI Confia Turbo, low m iles, tinted windows, cruise, sunroof, 5-speed, electric mirrors and windows. 839-5602. _______________________ Furniture STUDENT SPECIAL: Student desks $49.96, bookcases $29.95, entertain­ ment centers $99.95, computer desks $59.95, chests $39.95. Much, much more. Can d»lh-— R »7 7*11111 . $7.50 PER hour. Junior, senior, and grad students. We need ou tgnL-- people for in-person advertisin', spies, no appointment e ctf^ t^ 'd a tu n tey s and Sundays enjoy meeting and commu, Q r g w ith people, please call 839-9 .4 7 , AFTER SCHOOL child care leaders and site directors needed. Must be availa­ ble 2 8 p.m., Mon-Fri. Experience helpful. Apply at Tempo YMCA, 2201 S. M cClintock. 968-9286. . _______ ALL MAJORS: part-tim e work with exciting, rapidly expanding publishing company. Choose own hours. Un­ lim ited earning potential. For Informa­ tion contact Sally, days and evenings, 821-1953. BARTENDER 966-2508. WANTED. Please call DELIVERY PERSON needed 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. with car. CaU Davidson Travel, 241-1957, ext. 56._______ ______ E N G IN E E R IN G T E C H N IC IA N (mechanical)- Second or third year mechanical engineering or technology. Some related experience desired. Must be availble minimum o f 20 hours per week fall and spring sem ester. Flexible schedule, $4.50 and up. 9568200. EXCELLENT PART-TIME opportunity with consumer affairs group. Sunday 38p.m ., Monday through Thursday 4-9p.m . Excellent com m unication skills, phone experience required. Call Pat Murphy, 98p.m . Monday through Friday. 2588055._______ EXTREMELY INTERESTING part-tim e . position with groat potential! Phoenixbased human resources and develop­ ment, consulting, and training firm . Need adm inistrative assistant to schedule classes, do bookkeeping, and assist in program development. Some of the work can be done bom home. For appointm ent, c a ll’ Scott at the Facilitators, 241-1932. ___________ GREAT JOB for students. Part-time counter sales, 1 08 Monday, Wednes­ day, and Friday, or Tuesday, Thursday. Some weekends. Know ledge o f photography helpful. 375-1177 or 8396393.____________ HOLIDAY IN N Tempo, 915 E. Apache Blyd. R elief night auditor, Fridayw Saturday, and Sunday nights, NCR 250 experience necessary. Apply In person. HOUSE CLEANING help wanted, evenings and weekends, part-tim e, transportation required, $6 per hour. 945-2003. ____________________ JOBS. FLEXIBLE hours, part-tim e, full-tim e. $8.95 per hour. Must have neat appearance, basic math skills. Temps, Mesa: 9678670. Phoenix, Glendale: 241-1083.8to noon. MALE MODELS: Versatile m ale models needed by photographer who w ilt be In Phoenix in October. Those selected w ill earn top dollars. Send recent photos, etc., to J.G ., 5509 Crosscreek Lane, Suite 1075, Fort W orth, Texas 76109. __________________ OFFICE CLEANERS needed 1520 hours per week. Evenings. Must have car. $4 per hour after training. Bonuses, pay raises, and advancement opportunltles. Leeve message. 2748999. PARKING LOT painter. Light labor. M ust have phone In car. $4 per hour. CalHor appointm ent. 2557970*_______ PART-TIME SECRETARY $ 48 8 per hour + expenses + bonus. Must have tran­ sportation. Call Greg Johnson, 9942200. ___________________ ’ Pa r t -Tim e c a s h ie r s . Groat job for students. Various shifts avalleble, •specially weekdays, noonG:00 p.m. Apply after 1 80 p.m. University Theaters. 1025E. Broadway.__________ PART-TIME WEEKDAY work. After­ noons and evenings. Good pay. Start Immediately. C ali 242-4192, ask for Ray, ‘fs PHONE INTERVIEWERS needed, no sales - w ill train. $4/hour, part-tim e , work in eveninga/weekende. 2778907 between 9 8 . crttP lM I- Frlday, September ' classifieds Helo Wanted L ost 8* Found PIZZA MAKER, dlnnar cook, and dishwasher needed. Tony’s New Yorker •Club, 107 E. Broadway, Tampa, after •'•••-----------’ 4:00p m .______ ,. Y