sta le press
A rizo n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity
Tempe, Arizona
Monday, September 15,1986
© Copyright, S tate Press, 1906-
Voi. 69 No. 14
Scientist fears research center jeo p ard ized
By K IM M ATTINGLY
S tale Press
A University congressional lobbying
effort to build a $25 million science and
engineering building here has jeopardized
ASU’s chances of becoming the site for a $60
million U.S. Department of Defense
Research Center, an ASU scientist said.
Gunter Schwuttke, director of ASU’s
Sem iconductor M aterials
R esearch
Laboratory, said he also supports the
building project, but the proposal being
lobbied for in Congress features his work
without giving him or his sponsor— the U.S.
Defense Departm ent—any credit.
Schwuttke, who has received a threeyear, $3.8 million contract with the Defense
Advanced Research Project Agency to
produce semiconductor m aterials, said ASU
must give credit to DARPA for any work
done under its funding.
“The fact that I didn’t get credit is not
important, but we are under contract with
the Department of D efense,” Schwuttke
said. “Whenever the University is doing
something not according to contract, I get
hit in the back.
“You don’t fool around with these
people,” he said. “We are under contract to
give them recognition in everything we
publish related to the DARPA contract. ”
Schwuttke now is promoting ASU as the
top candidate for one of four $60 m illion »
Defense Department research centers that
will produce m aterials for national defense.
The use of his work in ASU’s building
proposal jeopardized his position for the $60
million center, Schwuttke said.
“They (DARPA officials) blasted me
because they figured I w as dishonest,” he »
said. “I showed up in Washington with
another project (the center) claim ing to
know nothing about the $25 million building,
and they raised hell.
“They figured I’m a double-dipper and a
double-crosser. You cannot address two
different things.”
The proposal to Congress features a color
photograph of Schwuttke’s work on the
cover and states that “ASU has performed
internationally acclaim ed research in the
production of the world’s largest single
gallium arsenide crystals. ’’
Gallium arsenide is an advanced
semiconductor m aterial used in high-power
computers.
The report fails to mention Schwuttke as
the director of this project, nor DARPA for
funding nearly $7 million.
Brent Brown, ASU vice president for
University relations, said, “I’m surprised
(Sehwuttke) wasn’t consulted, but the
University can use exam ples of the type of
work that’s being done here at any tim e.”
Schwuttke countered, “I agree the
University has a right, but there’s a right
way and there’s a clumsy way of doing
things.”
He had not heard of the building
proposal’s content before his m eeting with
DARPA last month, Schwuttke said.
But Brown said the proposal was
“absolutely not” meant to jeopardize ASU’s
chances for the defense center.
“Schwuttke is used to writing research
projects,” Brown said. “This is an effort to
get a building. I don’t see why it would be a
conflict of interests.”
Schwuttke agreed that there are no
conflicts of interest between the DARPA
center and the ASU science and engineering
building, but said the University building
Turn to LOBBY, pago 3.
Musically inclined
P articipant* In the musical chairs, right, sponsored by Theta Chi
fraternity, sit am ong the many em pty seats Sunday afternoon.
O nly 1,500 of the anticipated 6,000 took part In the charity event
fo r the Arthritis Foundation. Above, John W illiams, 11, peeks
around Junior broadcasting m ajor Lisa Schneider, 20, as she tries
to grab his seat during a lull in the music. Story, page 7.
College of Business plans to change curriculum
By TIN A DAUNT
State Press
^
The College of Business plans to cut the number of students
taking business classes in response to the deferment of its
accreditation, the college’s dean said.
John Kraft said, “There’s major changes we must undergo
if we want to be reaccredited in the spring.
“We’re fining to reduce the number of required business
courses for majors from 24 hours to 18,” Kraft said. “We’re
also going to place strict requirements on non-business
majors seeking access to business classes.”
The college’s accreditation was deferred last spring by the
American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business when it
discovered there 'were too many students per full-tim e
faculty member, and too many non-business majors in the
classes, the dean said.
Kraft said non-business students only will be allowed to
t«k<> 15 hours in certain upper division business courses and
must have a 2.0 University and business grade point average
as a prerequisite.
“Part of our problem in the past is we didn!t have enough
control over the number of students taking our classes,”
In sid e
to d a y
Kraft said. “Instead of lim iting the classes, we tried to
respond to the m arket by hiring part-time faculty to com e in
and teach the overloaded courses.
“This is what threw the student/full-tim e faculty ratio off. ”
Kraft said the college plans to cut the part-time staff next
fall by not offering as many, courses.
“It will be more beneficial for us in the long run if we cut
the number of courses required for a degree, instead of
leaving the requirem ents the sam e and adding a large
number of full-tim e faculty to balance the ratio,” he said.
However, Kraft said it w ill take several years before the
college feels the full im pact of the changes.
“We’re coming up for review by the accreditation board in
February,” he said. “Hopefully, they w ill take into account
the long-term effects instead of the im m ediate effects.
“At that tim e they w ill decide whether to reaccredit us,
defer us, or put us on probation. I seriously doubt we’ll lose
our accreditation. ’’
Charles Hickman, the AACSB director of projects and
member services, said deferm ent “is not the end of the
world.”
“I don’t see any reason why ASU can’t correct their
DARRIN W ILLIS
ASU defensive
back blocks
M ichigan State
field goal in
closing seconds to
preserve Sun Devil
victory. Page 15.
ASU W EATHER
C lear skies with a
high o f 94 degrees.
Expected low is 72.
problems in a short amount of tim e,” he said. “ASU is not the
first school to have its application deferred: Although
deferment is not a positive move, it is not a disaster either. ’’
Hickman said many people do not understand what
deferment m eans.
“When we defer a school’s accreditation, that school is still
accredited,” he said. “We’re just telling them that they have
som e problems they must correct before we will renew their
accreditation.
“If we thought ASU was really in trouble we would have
moved straight to probation instead of deferment. ”
Hickman said the agency gives school “a fair chance”
before the accreditation is suspended altogether.
Out of 35 schools up for review last spring, 10 were
deferred, 12 were put on probation, 12 were approved and one
was suspended.
Only four schools have lost their accreditation in the past
decade. Hickman declined to say which ones.
“ASU is the second largest business school in the country
with over 9,000 students,” Hickman said. “This puts a
tu rn to BUSINESS, paga 13.
Bloom County
Classified . . .
N a tio n /w o rld .
O p in io n .........
Police re p o rt.
S p o r t s ...........
14
19
2
4
12
15
arizona
n a tio n /w o rld
N eighbors rally to help
b ro thers stay to g e th e r
GAINESVILLE, Ga. (AP) — Thirty
people took just eight hours to build the
fram e of a four-bedroom house for seven
brothers trying to stay together after
their mother and grandfather died and
their father left them.
“So many generous people have helped
us, but I still couldn’t believe they could
do this in one day,” Charles O’Kelley, 16,
said of Saturday’s effort. “I’ve never
seen so many people work so hard.”
The boys’ mother, Judy, died of a brain
tumor in 1983, after telling her sons on
her deathbed that she wanted them to
stay together. They lived with their
grandfather until he died last year and
then stayed in a mobile home on his
farm.
The two eldest, 18-year-old Terry and
17-year-old Tommy, quit school to work
in a poultry plant to support the fam ily.
But the four youngest brothers were
placed in foster homes in May because of
financial troubles, including a $12,000
m ortgage on the 7.4-acre farm and
funeral expenses.
Last month, the mobile home where
Terry, Tommy and 15-year-old Charles
w ere staying was gutted by fire that was
blamed on faulty wiring.
"Oúr goal is to get the boys back
together,” said G ainesville developer
Johnny Lawson.
The boys’ father, Thomas Wayne
O’K élley, 36, is being held in the Hall
County Detention Center on child
abandonment charges.
Since the fire, the three oldest brothers
have been staying with the fam ily of
Jack Hodge, who helped set up a church
fund for the boys that had grown to
nearly $27,000 by late August.
In addition to the fund, before the fire
neighbors had collected furniture,
appliances, clothes and shoes for the
brothers. “The sad thing is, all of it went
up in the fire,” Hodge said. He has said
that an Atlanta man who asked to remain
anonymous had agreed to support the
two older boys until they can finish their
education.
6 rescuers a tte m p t to
save seals, porpoises
YAKUTAT, Alaska (AP) — Animal
rescuers camped Sunday along a lake
formed when a glacier closed a fiord’s
outlet to the sea, and hoped to attract
trapped seals and porpoises with
handouts of frozen fish.
Six rescuers and a monitor from the
National Marine Fisheries Service set up
cam p on the gravel outwash of the
Variegated Glacier, one of the few sites
that is inhabitable along the flooded
shores of Russell Lake.
The volunteers hoped to make sorties
across the lake in inflatable boats to try
to feed the marine mammals trapped
last spring when the Hubbard Glacier
dammed the fiord, which is being filled
by glacier runoff.
The group was flown to the lake from a
base cam p in Yakutat, 25 m iles away,
after a survey flight spotted 16 to 18
porpoises and seals in the lake,
discolored by silt in the runoff.
The fresh water flowing into the lake is
diluting (he original salt water, and that
debilitates both the mammals and the
seaw ater organisms they feed on.
Laurie Gage, veterinarian for the
California Marine Mammal Center, was
overseeing efforts to built hospital pens
for captured anim als that are too sick for
im m ediate release.
She also was setting up a portable
laboratory and was prepared to feed the
starving anim als and treat bacterial and
parasitic infections they m ay have
contracted as they were weakened by
exposure to fresh water.
law yers, the AFL-CIO, the Arizona
Consumer Council and others, said the
m easure was not being accurately
represented to te public.
“It would lim it a ll costs, including
exert w itnesses, depositions, secretarial
costs and copying co sts— but only for the
plaintiff,” Fischer said.
“There are no lim its on what the
wrongdoer could spend,” he added.
“This becom es significant, because
you’re lim iting what the injured party
could spend.
If approved, Proposition 103 would
change the Arizona C onstitution,
allowing the Legislature to lim it the
amount of money a jury could pay out in
a tort action for dam ages or death and to
lim it the money attorneys could make
from such cases.
M a jo rity o f voters w a n t
proposition 103 passed
PHOENIX (AP) the state Legislature to t o it t h e fe e sa
lawyer can charge m personal-injury
2 , according to poll results published
Sunday by the Arizona Republic.
The newspaper said 72 percent of those
surveyed favored limiting attorneys
fees, with 21 percent opposed and 7
percent giving no opinion. •
_ . . ,
The poll was conducted on Sept 5-6,
with a total of 655 registered voters
interviewed for their opinions on
Proposition 103, a constitutional
initiative on the Nov. 4 election ballot.
In response, Howard Fischer of
p ac-10
overwhelmed at their sudden exposure to
civilization, and quickly the Phillipine
government closed off the area and said
the Tasaday would be allowed to
continue their lives unbothered by 10,000
years of human development
Find o f p rim itive trib e
labled as detailed hoax
PULLMAN — A WSU anthropologist
and international authority on primitive
tribes says a 1971 “discovery of stone age
people” was an elaborate hoax.
John H. Bodley recently returned from
an international conference of
anthropologists invited to Manila to
evaluate evidence presented, in defense
of reports of a tiny group found living in
caves in a remote corner of the
Phillipines 15 years ago.
The clan, caffed the “gentle Tasaday,”
were said to wear alm ost no clothing,
knew nothing of farming, started fire by
grinding sticks together and were said to
be so gentle there was no word for “war”
in their language.
These prim itives were said to be
But the testim ony of natives, local
officials and others from the region
inhabite d by Tasaday, plus a critical
evaluation of original claim s suggests a
som ewhat prim itive tribe called the
Tasaday were talked into donning
traditonal costum es and moving into
caves for a few weeks while news media
and anthropologists from around the
world cam e to “study” them.
Bodley said the elaborate scam was
probably invented by a high official of
Ferdinand M arcos’ government.
- Daily Evergreen
Shannon and the gang invite you to
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16 , 1986
A L L D A Y & A L L NIGHT
TU ESD AY, SEPT.
Clow 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 will be on
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PRIZES, PRIZES and
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State Pres«
Page 3
Ktonda^egtembeMSjJWÓ
Lobby
Continued from page 1.
project should have been handled more
professionally.
“I obviously promote the sam e project,”
he said. “But it could have been handled
right j . . by better communication, keeping
everybody informed and less secrecy.
“ It w as ju st an oversigh t, a ll
unintentional; too many administrators
were involved.”
But C. Roland Haden, dean of the College
of Engineering and Applied Sciences, said,
“Since there could be as many as 200 to 300
faculty involved in using the new building, it
was virtually im possible to fully brief each
of them on the process.”
Haden added that the science and
engineering building would be a great asset
toASU.
“This building is an excellent project,
which w ill move ASU forward into the top
ranks of research universities, ” Haden said.
“The ASU administration has shown
great intuition and foresight in using this
congressional mechanism, and the Arizona
congressional delegation has shown equal
foresight in dedicating them selves to this
project.”
Brown said lobbying for the center is the
first project undertaken by a lobbying firm
under a two-year contract with the ASU
Foundation, a tax-exempt support group
that raises money for the University.
Cassidy and Associates of Washington
D.C. w ill be paid up to an estim ated $480,000
to bolster ASU’s national reputation.
“ (Lobbying) is the way you get things
done in Washington,” Brown said. “If you
expect that federal funding, you’ve got to
have paid people in Congress. ”
The building proposal is before the Senate
Appropriations Committee, and ASU is
hoping for a supportive decision before
Congress adjourns in October, Brown said.
to d a y
Today is a daily calendar o f events happening on the
ASU cam pus. Subm issions to th e calendar should not
be confused w ith Collage, w hich w as a w eekly calendar
of m eeting announcem ents. W e no longer print
Collage. All entries from clu b s about m eetin gs and
events happening on cam pus, o r in relation to student
life will be accepted. The deadline for Today en tries will
be 10 a.m., th e day before desired publication at the
State Press in th e basem ent o f M atthew s C enter.
Meetings
•ASU Aikido Club will m eet at 12:30 p.m. a t Physical
Education Building W est Room 114. T he m eeting will
focus on personal developm ent and self-developm ent.
•AWARE - Association of Women’s Active Return to
Education w ill m eet in th e M U G ila Room at noon. It will
be a brown-bag lunch. All are welcom e.
•Coalition for World Peace w ill m eet In th e MU Santa
C ru z.R oo m at noon. Dawn N oggle, returned recently
from Nicaragua, discusses “ U.S. Im m igration Policy:
D isaster!”
E n te rta in m e n t
•Trio Mexico, a piano, violin and cello ensem ble, will
perform at th e M usic Theater at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are
$10 and are available at G am m age and Dillard’s box
o ffices.
•The Monkees reunion tour will perform at the
University A ctivity C enter at 8 p.m. Touring with th e
M onkees are H erm an’s H erm its, Gary P uckett and th e
Union Gap, and th e Grass Roots featuring Bob Grill.
T ickets are $15 and are available at G am m age and
D illard’s box offices.
S T Y LE C U T
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SALE DATES:
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Store Hours:
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Monday-Friday
Entor to w in any of
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(w ith ASU I.D .)
Unlimited Tanning
m anuf. augg. re ta il $ 1 35.00
O PTIO NAL PC-324 the r
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m anuf. augg. re ta il
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LH -90 Cassette
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Tf-30-STAT
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State Pré«
Page 4
Coughing up more bucks
Yes, it was a great victory for the ASU
Sun D evils as they stopped the Michigan
State Spartans 20-17 with a blocked field
goal attem pt with just 17 seconds left in the
gam e.
However, the students were the losers.
In case you didn’t know, that parking
permit you paid dearly for is invalid during
ASU footbal gam es.
Last year, Lot 59 and other lots close to the
stadium were restricted for the Guardian
Angel, Sun Angel and Sun D evil Club
members who paid for membership. That
was acceptable.
Students could paric in other lots near the
main area of campus with a regular permit,
be it one for Lot 59 or a 12-hour reserved
space. This provided students with a way to
get to the games without having to park in
Tucson and grab a bus.
This year, however, the directors of ASU’s
parking services decided that either: a)
students should have to pay to park just like
the general public, or b) more money was
needed for this University. In either event,
students m ust shell out $3 to park in spots
that they should be entitled to.
This idea is ludicrous. Just when is ASU
going to stop raping students of their money
and give us a break?
Is it too much to ask, with permits costing
up to $150, that we students should have a
parking lot on campus for football games?
It isn’t.
If the University needs additional
revenue, let them raise the prices of
Guardian Angel ticket prices. With the
recent increase in tuition, the expenses of a
typical college student and a possible
additional increase in tuition within the next
year, a m inute bit of luxury for students is
not going to drastically affect the shape of
ASU.
v,
But don’t expect a freespqt in Lot 40,42,65
or other lots anymore. Why? The answer is
sim ple.
5
ASU wants more m oney, and what a
better way to raise it than to take it from the
students.
That’s what we are here for, right?
Sar&j
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WHAT BIAS?:'
Hit
psomganha BWADCASllNG5Ï5
Scottsdale buses lacking in passenger comfort
For those of us who live off campus but can’t afford a car, a
decent bus system becom es a necessity. In the past, Phoenix
Transit seem s to have been aware of this fact, although it has
journeyed very little through Scottsdale over the years. (But
then, everyone in Scottsdale is rich enough to afford a car,
right?) Fortunately for m e, however, the former route #22
not only ran down Scottsdale Road to ASU, but did so every 20
minutes The old #22 was the standard type of Phoenix bus
and had, as I recall, quite decent air conditioning. But, alas,
the #22 in Scottsdale is no more.
January of this year marked the birth of the Scottsdale
Connection. The idea w as for Scottsdale to have its own bus
system , and more importantly, its own revenue. Today,
Phoenix crosstown buses run only east and west into and out
of Scottsdale, making north-south “connections” with the
Scottsdale buses. Basically, this sounds okay, especially
since the Scottsdale “red route” does travel down Scottsdale
Road to ASU just as the old #22 did. Two other routes cover
areas east of Scottsdale Road. However, in these nine
experim ental months, there have been a few problems.
At first, the red route ran only once an hour, arriving at
ASU just in tim e to make you slightly late for the usual class
time at 40 minutes past the hour. Consequently, one had to
take the earlier bus, arriving alm ost an hour before class.
Besides this, the hourly buses were unbelievably crowded
with standing room only. Following constant protest by
passengers, service was increased to every half-hour. As
spring cam e to an end, however, the company threatened to
revert to the hourly service for the sum m er (since no one
could be foolish enough to attend summer school in Arizona
Bien Young
Columnist
and, of course, all non-student ASU employees could afford to
drive). Protest and common sense prevailed, though, and the
half-hour service was continued.
Over the summer and up to the present tim e, the service
has been — on the books at least — sufficiently frequent. But
the constant breakdowns have made this a less significant
improvement. It has seemed- as though, several times a
week, one either hears about a bus breaking down or waits
for a bus that never arrives. This can be particularly
annoying for those on their way to north Scottsdale, since the
added half-hour bus goes only as far as Camelback Road. The
regular bus to the Scottsdale Municipal Airport is still hourly.
If that one breaks down, you still have an hour to wait.
Once you board a Scottsdale bus, there may be other
problems. Air conditioning is often inadequate, if not broken,
m aking trips uncomfortable, especially when the bus is
crowded. Of less importance, some buses have cloth seats so
tom and tattered, they look as though they were purchased
from a junk yard. If Scottsdale government has any concern
for m aintaining Scottsdale’s ritzy and elegant image, they
are failing short in the transportation area.
A fide on the Scottsdale Connection costs the sam e as a ride
on Phoenix T ransit—75 cents. I adm it I am not an expert on
bus system s, but as a passenger, I feel that $7.50 per week
should purchase a certain standard of comfort and
convenience.
J ■
I recently spoke to a Scottsdale Connection em ployee about
these complaints. I must say, I don’t envy her job of taking
calls from irate passengers. At any rate, this is what I found
out. On the positive side, they w ill be keeping the red route
half-hour bus year-round, and they are also looking into
finding a few larger buses for the m ore crowded tim es of the
day. As for the air conditioning, I w as told that the industry
standard is only 20 degrees cooler than the outside
temperature, meaning that Arizona buses are not required to
be any cooler than 95 degrees on a 115-degree day. In fact,
there have actually been com plaints that some buses have
been too cool. I guess I m issed those trips.
But I must adm it that there have been a few occasions
when I have felt reasonably com fortable. The employee I
talked to added that one cah only expect so much comfort
with our amount of sun, heat and number of people who ride
the buses. Still, she said, the air conditioning problems are
currently being worked on.
Overall, the Scottsdale Connection serves a purpose. For
my part, I do get to school and back everyday (not counting
breakdown), although the last bus leaves ASU no later than
6:10 p.m. But it seem s tom e that when a city creates a bus
system (or in this case, a van system ), it should take a little
more pride in it.
letters
Other attitudes
American ‘clockwork orange*
Editor:
I was amused by Ben Hoglund’s
attempted defense of totalitarianism (Sept.
4). Hoglund is right that many laws are
legislation of morality, but quite wrong if he
thinks that government can force people to
be good. Even if legislating every facet erf
human existence were enforceable, it would
at best result in a society of “clockwork
oranges” — people who make “right”
choices (by the government’s definition of
right) because, in fact, they have no choice.
The purpose of our government is not to
make people good, but to facilitate “ life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” This is
best achieved by keeping government
intervention into the lives erf individuals to a
minimum. Legislation against prostitution,
drugs and pornography is beyond that
scope. Hoglund argues that by allowing
these things, society itself is victim ized by
its im plicit promotion of these activities.
This is a bogus argument.
First of all, failure to proscribe an activity
cannot be equated with condoning that
activity. There is no legislation against
vomiting in public. Does this mean that such
behavior is encouraged by society? By
Hoghind’s reasoning it should be illegal.
Allowing pornography to be distributed does
not m ean that “women should be regarded
as object of exploitation.” It means only
that if individual women desire, to be
“exploited” by being paid considerable
sum s of money to appear in such m aterial
they have the right to do so; and that people
have the right to purchase such material.
Likewise, legalization of drugs does not
mean that “society” is telling in&viduals
“that pleasure should be achieved at a ll
cost” — by this logic, one could argue that
any pleasurable activity being legal is
promotion of the achievem ent of pleasure at
any cost.
Secondly, what does it m ean for society
(the collection of interacting individuals) to
be a “victim ”? How is society at large
injured if John Q. Public sm okes a joint (or
drinks beer — alcohol is a drug, too, you
know) or subscribes to Playboy? Hoglund
says that “to say that the only victim of a
victim less crim e is the individual is to fail to
see the victim ization of a ll of us as a
society.” He’s right, I do fa ilto see how I am
hoing victim ized if som eone else wants to
live a lifestyle different from my own.
People like Hoglund — who become
em otionally distressed at the knowledge
that others are enjoying them selves in
“sinful” activities — are victim s of their
own fascist m entality.
JimLippard
Senior, Philosophy
'Editor:
This letter is in reference to Patrick J.
Kucera’s editorial of Sept. 5 titled,
“America Should Feel Proud Again,
Despite C ritics.’* Kucera is not w riting
about being pro-American; he is referring
to being pro-military. Patriotism does not
have to be synonymous with m ilitary force.
There is much to be proud of in this country,
but patriotism should not be used to justify
the violence caused by the m ilitary.
Violence in any form is morally wrong
whether it is inthe form of a city mugging or
used by one nation to make another agree
with its views. I live in this country by
choice and am aware that part of my tayag
go to support the military. The United States
has my moral support, but the military does
not. The m ilitary is the result of destructive
attitudes, and with work, the need for it
could end.
That “blow-them-out-of-the-sfcy” attitude
is exactly the kind of thinking that keeps the
arms race going. Hitting back harder
obviously does not stop terrorism . Each
individual’s attitude about how he reacts to
violence (from others or to our own selfrationalized violence) affects the world as a
whole.
At first thought, the solution to a Gadhafitype would be to m eet his violence with
more violence. Not only does that not solve
the problem, but it is against my m orals and
against a basic respect for life. We have to
decide for ourselves what to do about
problems like hostility and terrorism . Our
m ovies and politicians should reflect our
view s, not dictate them. The “Top Gun”
attitude is one w ay, but there areothers.
E rie W . Thurston
Senior, Graphic Communication
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Page 5
jtonda^SegtembeM SjJW ó
Stete Piet»
Service honors
terrorist victims
By M ICHAEL BURGESS
State Press
About 90 people and dozens of passersby paid tribute to
recent terrorism victim s in a m em orial service held on West
Lawn on Cady Mall Friday.
The 30-minute service payed tribute to the 20 people killed
during the hijacking of a Pan Am airliner in Pakistan, and
the 21 worshipers killed in an Istanbul synagogue two weeks
ago.
The Hillel Jewish Student Center conducted the service.
Rabbi Barton Lee, the center’s director, said the idea for a
service cam e last Monday, the day after terrorists attacked
the Turkish synagogue.
“After the attack happened, we had a very strong feeling
that som ething had to be said and done,” he said.
“Terrorism is an appalling situation. In no way does peace
lie in terrorism .”
Steve Gelbart, who helped organize the service, said, “It’s
a sham e this happens to people who are Americans or who
are Jew ish.”
Barbara Allen, Hillel program director, said, “I can’t
believe senseless murder goes on like this. This is really
emotional for me, and it scares m e for the Jewish people.”
During the service, ASU law professor David Kader spoke
Rabbi Barton Lao, second from the left, and others Join to sing a traditional Jewish song In m em ory of terrorist victim s In Instanbul,
Turkey, and K arachi, Pakistan.
about the irony of the synagogue m assacre.
“ (The worshipers) were about to read a passage from the
Torah that talked about the ends not justifing the m eans,” he
said. “There are no words to capture the sorrow or
bitterness.”
TU ESD A Y LUNCH
(EVERY TUESDAY)
University police were assigned to cover the service.
“Anytime people speak on campus, we are assigned to
keep things out of the ordinary from happening,” officer
Richard Purnis said.
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Tempe council approves study on airport noise
*
1 1
Burlig Stokes, spokesman for the FAA in
Phoenix, said the agency has reviewed the
agreem ent and is analyzing the questions it
poses.
“We’ll be setting up a task force group of
technical advisers from the city of Tempe
and the city of Phoenix to study its finer
technical points,” Stokes said.
Gross said four proposals were given to
the FAA:
•m ove a radio beacon at the Scottsdale
Road river bed two m iles east to Price
Road;
•require jets to begin turns at Price Road;
•balance takeoffs from the east and west
By B EN N Y M cC O N N E LL
S tate Press
The Tempe City Council approved the
hiring oi a former Federal Aviation
Administration em ployee to push for federal
approval of airport noise-reduction
agreem ents made between Tempe and
Phoenix.
The council com m issioned Gerry
Bogan & A ssociates to begin a governmentfunded study on airport noise in the Valley.
Randy Gross, assistant to Tempe Mayor
Harry M itchell, said term s of the cities’
pact, made two weeks ago, cannot be
implemented until the FAA approves it.
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Splash down
Sophomores Christine Barinka, left, and Laura Kalalua, alstars of Alpha Phi aororlty, slide down a 25-f<ups and the Catholic Church are frequent
int attacks! he said.
id assassination of Pinochet, in which five of
:re killed w hen commandos attacked his
>fsiege was proclaimed,
government can arrest anyone without a
eople have been killed^, including journalist
the international editor of Analisit, one of
the m ost prestigious opposition m agazines,” he said. “H e was
arrested Sunday night (S ep t 7) and on Monday morning he was
foundwith 13 bullets in his head.
“HC w asn’t a militant. H ew asn’t a communist. He wasn’t a
terrorist. He was just a journalist. ”
Sepulveda and G ajanlo both agree that the Pinochet regim e
might be toppled quickly if the United States w ere to put
economic pressure on Chile.
Gajardo said $1 billion in American loans to Chile are awaiting
approval in Washington.
“To receive this loan is very critical for the government,
which has the highest external debt on a per capita basis ($20
billion),” hesaid.
He said there is concern in Washington over the effect on
Chile’s people of cutting off aid.
But with a 30 percent unemployment rate, rampant
alcoholism and crim e, and 40 percent of Chile’s people living in
slum conditions, “there is no way the situation could be w orse,”
Gajardosaid.
“U.S. aid subsidizes the dictatorship so they can make thenpayment on tim e to the private international banks,” he said.
So if Jfie aid was cut off “the banks, not the people, would
suffer,” he said.
“The dictatorship was established in 1973 with the support of
the United States governm ent,” Gajando said. “This has been
very broadly documented in the U.S.
“All these 13 years the Chilean m ilitary has been receiving a
lot of economic aid from the United States.
“We are getting die information to the American people that
what you are supporting is a very repressive apparatus, which
is killing innocent people.
“The American people in general w ill not support a
dictatorship.
“What is. keeping the m ilitary in power are two things —
weapons and American econom ic support,’’ hesaid.
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found in the the staff men’s room on the first
floor.
Police said the purse was found with $20
inside.
•A student was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s
Hospital by ambulance after injuring his
back from doing back flips during a party at
414 Adelphi Drive, police said.
into a wall near the hall and the other was
found nearby.
Police estim ate the damage at $100.
•A pungent odor was reported by custodians
in Physical Science Building E-Wing, police
said.
Officers responded to the call and found
an open gas valve in Room E-107, police
said.
The valve was closed by the officers and
the room w as opened for ventilation.
•P olice said a student reported her purse
was stolen from a shelf behind the
circulation desk at the Hayden Library.
The purse, which contained $40, was later
Saturday night, police said.
The bus was parked in Lot 59 on the
northwest side of Sun D evil Stadium.
•P olice said nine minors w ere cited and
released on Alpha Drive for liquor violations
Saturday evening.
•A Tempe man was arrested, booked and
released on his own recognizance from the.
ASU Department of Public Safety for
furnishing alcohol to minors in Lot 51, police
said.
•Someone hot-wired two SAGA electric
carts that were parked at Palo Verde Main
Residence Hall, police said.
One of the vehicles w as found sm ashed
University police reported the following
incidents in the 72-hoUr period ending 6 a.m .
Sunday:
•About $1,600 in computer.equipm ent was
reported stolen from, a professor’s room in
the Engineering Center, police said.
Police said the following item s were
taken: a Zenith computer, valued at $1,000;
an Epson Printer, valued at $350; a “Super
Calc III” calculator, valued at $150; a
“Volkwriter III Deluxe” keyboard, valued
at $75, and $1 in U.S. currency.
•Two ice chests and three bottles of liquor,
valued at $175, were stolen from Arizona
Southern Bus 610 during the football game
— LAUREN MILLETTE
M O N D A Y N IG H T F O O T B A L L
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The Graduate Student Research Program encourages graduate students to
subm it proposals between *200 and * 2,000 fo r research study m ontei.
Fa« semester applications are available September 15 through October 17.
1986 in th e Graduate student Association Office, Memorial union. Room 208-ti.
Fa« sem ester applications m ust be subm itted no la te r than 12 noon on
October 1 7 ,19M . The application m ust be subm itted to .
Office, Dean o f Graduate college
WHson Hall 112
A com m ittee composed o f graduate students and faculty members win re
view proposals using th e foiow lng criteria:
11 is th e research m eritorious w ithin its ow n field?
2) is th e research methodology sound?
3) Are th e objectives o f th e protect feasible to a tta in w ithm the
grant period and th e proposed budget?
Offer g o o d 3 p .m .- l 1 p .m .
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The program provides university support, as wen as financial support, and
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For fu rth e r inform ation contact Amy Abraham, Director, Graduate
student Association. Associated students Memorial union 208.
You can stay on top of the
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•A man was asked to leave campus after he
was observed by police looking in the
windows of Palo Verde Main Residence Hall
from his car, which w as parked in Lot 53,
police said.
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Page 13
Monday, September 15,1966
Business________
Continued from page 1.
tremendous amount of pressure on the standards of the
school.
i “Up until now, ASU has not wanted to cut its enrollment,
fiow they’re listening.”
Hitm a n said schools with problems usually “clean their
acts up in a short period of tim e.”
i Kraft said the business school is not trying to refute the
charges of the accreditation agency.
■ “I’m not surprised our application was deferred, ’’ the dean
said. “Up until now the business school has been out of
control. We’re doing everything we can to solve the
broUem s.”
Kraft said som e of the problems w ill be offset by a
proposed (2 million 1986-87 budget increase.
The increase would enable the college to hire 10 additional
full-tim e faculty positions, in addition to several secretarial
and staff positions.
$tu d y finds fin an cial aid
lags begind co lleg e costs
“If our plans succeed, a better learning environment with
fewer hassles will be created,” he said. “The business
students w ill definitely benefit.”
Kraft said other proposed changes include:
•reducing the required course CIS 200, Computers in
Business, from a three-credit course to a two-credit course,
•reducing the current econom ics requirement from the two
three-credit courses — ECN 111, Macroeconomic Principles,
and ECN 112, Microeconomic Principles — to a single fourcredit course;
•allowing the current requirement for QBA 222, Quantitative
Business Analysis, to be fulfilled by MAT 119, Finite
Mathematics;
•replacing the requirement for IBS 300, Principles ^of
International Business, with a requirement for a specified
number of hours from an approved list, including courses
R eagan starts
new ‘c ru sa d e ’
against drugs
WASHINGTON (AP) —
President Reagan — joined
by his w ife, Nancy, in
appealing for a “great new,
national crusade” — pledged
a g g ressiv e
governm ent
action against drug abuse
Sunday but said the key to its
success w ill be the courage
of individual Americans.
“ I w ill announce tomorrow
a series of new proposals for
a drug-free Am érica,” the
president said in a joint
address with the first lady
from their living room in the
White Housé.
Reagan said the proposals
w ould
b rin g
fe d e r a l
spending on com batting
illegal drugs to $3 billion.
“As much financing as we
commit, however, we would
be fooling ourselves if we
thought that m assive new
amounts of money alone will
provide the solution,” he
said in the prepared text of
hisspeech.
“Your government will
continue to act agressively,
but nothing would be more
effective than for Americans
sim ply to quit using illegal
drugs,” the president said.
“I’m mindful that drugs
are a constant temptation
for m illions,” Reagan said.
“P lease rem em ber this
when your courage is tested:
you are Americans. . . . No
one— ev er— has the right to
destroy your dreams and
shatter your life.”
M rs. R ea g a n sp ok e
especially of the effect of
drugs on young people,
saying, “For the sake of our
children, I implore each of
you to be unyielding and
inflexible in your opposition
to drugs.”
“Won’t you join us in this
great
new
national
crusade?” she asked.
•and replacing all the majors within the departments of
purchasing, transportation and operations with a single
major in logistics.
Kraft said all proposals w ill not be finalized until the
Business Faculty Senate votes on Oct. 8.
AUTO INSURANCE
LET ALL ARIZONA FIDELITY C0RP.
SAVE YOU A
BUNDLE ON
AUTO INSURANCE
By College Press Service
Colleges, states and the federal government gave out
more than $21 billion in financial aid to students to get
through the 1985-86 school year, but students couldn’t buy
as much education with it as they could five years ago,
according ta a new-report by the College Board.
“Financial aid for students amounted to over $21 billion
in 1985-86, a 23 percent gain over 1980-81, although that’s
before adjusting for inflation,” said Janet Hansen, the
board’s director of policy analysis.
After adjusting for inflation, however, it seem s the
increase in the number of aid dollars did not help that
much.
“In real dollars, (the amount of aid) dropped 3 percent
over that period,” she said, adding college costs have
increased faster than the rate of inflation.
Incomes, Hansen said, just have not kept up with the
rise ip the cost of going to college, leading more students
to apply for financial aid to pay for school.
Just days before the College Board released its report,
however, the American Enterprise Institue — a
Washington, D.C., think tank — asserted in a different
study that four-year public colleges are in reality no more
expensive now than in 1973:
outside the college;
•deleting GNB 233, Business Communications, as a
requirement or replacing it with a non-business course;
•reducing the number of hours in a major from 24 to 18 or 21:
•requiring a certain number of upper-division free electives
to be taken outside the college;
•requiring a certain number of hours within the major to be
taken outside the college;
•deleting one or more of the following majors:
adm inistrative services, liberal arts or business econom ics,
insurance, quantitative business analysis, or transportation;
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Money for mental and nervous disorders
Sign up for the plan at the Student Health Center now.
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Polish activists celebrate
return at em otional M ass
c o H IÌC S
B L O O M
b y
C O U N T Y
B e r k e
B r e a th e d
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Lech Walesa joined thousands
of Solidarity supporters Sunday at a Roman Catholic Mass in
Gdansk in an emotional welcom e for more than a dozen freed
union activists.
More than 5,000 worshipers filled St. Brygida’s church in
the Baltic port, applauding loudly and waving their fingers in
V-for-victory signs as the former political prisoners were
introduced., w itnesses said.
The government says 225 political prisoners w ill be free by
Monday, when the am nesty expires. The am nesty does not
cover those accused of terrorism , espionage or betraying
state secrets.
All of the dozen or more prominent opposition activists,
including Solidarity underground leader Zbigniew Bujak, are
now free.
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A N IM P O S S IB L E M IS S IO N S P R O D U C T IO N
Page 15
Monday. September 15,1986
a it t N r t
Few things go as planned in Devils’ opener
By BOB HEILER
State Pre8s
Few things happened as everyone expected them to
Saturday night.
Lorenzo White rushed for only 61 yards in ASU’s 20-17
victory. Michigan State coach George Perles said the
Heisman candidate was “effectively stopped by ASU.”
Few of the kinds of m istakes that one expects in a
season opener took place. Jeff Van Raaphorst threw
only one interception, the Sun D evils’ only turnover.
ASU was penalized just three tim es for 20 yards.
But one thing did occur exactly as ASU coach John
Cooper expected: the game cam e down to a 23-yard
field goal attempt. It cam e down to the hand of one
man, Darrin Willis, in the right spot at the right tim e to
block that kick.
“Before the gam e, Coach Cooper said a field goal or
a blocked field goal would win the gam e,” W illis said in
the locker room, holding the gam e ball that Cooper had
given him. “We knew it was going to come down to the
special team s.”
Last year, Cooper had pointed out that ASU’s special
team s had not won them a gam e, a fact that inspired
som e work on them this season.
“We’ve been working on-field goal blocks every day
since the first day of Camp Tontozona,” said
quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst. “It paid off.”
Van Raaphorst, who completed 12 of 22 attem pts for
123 yards and two touchdowns, said he “obviously
would have liked to pass a little m ore,” but that he had
no complaints about the gam e plan.
“The bottom line is you do what you have to do- to
WÈSÊÈÈÈËÈÈm win,” Van Raaphorst said. “Coaches get paid for
winning. If they don’t win, they can’t feed their
fam ilies and they’re out living in a tent somewhere.
“College football is a business, flat out.”
But Van Raaphorst is waiting for the game when
“doing what you have to do to win” will include more
pass plays.
“There’s going to be a game soon where they let me
go,” he said. “Hopefully, then all hell will break
M ldiM l ScuHy/SM * P m *
loose.”
m
Kant Bostrom, 14, kick* tha ball from the hand of Chris G arrett, 85, during the Sun Davila 20-17 win over M ichigan State. Boatrom kicked two
field goal*, one from 46 yarda and tha game winner from 34 yarda.
Turn to SPARTANS, page 18.
Intensity level bothers Brown,
but splkers beat Oregon, OSU
they could beat USC and UCLA going into the gam es, but this
season they know they are capable of doing it,” she said.
State Press
,
Brown said that not having Valentina Vega, who sprained
Despite victories over Oregon and Oregon State this
her
ankle in practice last week, in the lineup has had an effect
weekend, ASU volleyball coach Debbie Brown is concerned
on
the
team ’s intensity.
over the Sun D evils’ lack of intensity before the team travels
“Not having Val is where we m issed som e intensity out
to Los Angeles for m atches against UCLA and USC next
there,” she said. “Val plays with a lot of intensity the whole
weekend,
The Sun D evils defeated the Oregon Ducks, 3-1 (15-7, 9-15, tim e, which gets the rest of the team 's intensity up,”
Despite her concern with the team as a whole, Brown is
15-10,7-15 and 15-8) on Friday and the Oregon State Beavers,
pleased with the play of freshmen Tracie Kisro, Noelle
3-2 (15-2,9-15,15-2,12-15 and 15-8) on Saturday .
Fridrich and Sue Nord.
“We are doing alright, but not great,” Brown said.
“The freshmen are playing consistent and steady,” she
“Oregon w as a good team , but w e shouldn’tTiave gone five
said. “I’m really excited about them now thinking how they
games with Oregon State. We can’t seem to hold our intensity
will be four years from now.”
level for more than one and a half gam es.
The Sun D evils cam e up against a strong defense in a
“This is the tim e for us to make m istakes, if any, before we
young Oregon team Friday, and though winning the miatch,
get into our big gam es, but I am concerned about our had to struggle through the entire match to do it.
inconsistent play and our lack of intensity,” she said.
Nore led the Sun D evils with her career high of 24 kills,
Sun D eyil outside hitter Christy Nore, who topped her
followed
by Tammy Webb with 22.
career high in kills Friday night against Oregon, agreed with
Oregon outside hitter M ichele Krebsbach led both team s
Brown.
with 25 kills, and Teri Kramer helped pace the Ducks with 24.
“We are playing inconsistently,” she said.
“They surprised me defensively,” Brown said. “They
ASU must battle the second-ranked UCLA Bruins and the
eighth-ranked USC Trojans this coming weekend, both of played w ell.”
which w ill be important conference matches.
On Saturday, the Sun D evils dominated a weaker Oregon
“We can’t afford to have this lack of intensity against USC State team , winning the first and third gam es, 15-2, but
and UCLA,” Brown said. “We are usually more motivated could not put the Beavers away until the fifth game.
against them, but we are going to have to work on our
Nore again led the Sun D evil scorers with 17 kills. OSU
intensity this week. .
,
.
... .
outside hitter Laurie Leier led her team with 13.
“Last year when we played them, the girls didn t think
By STEVE BRENNAN
ASU m iddle blocker Sue Nord (15) and outside h itter Christy
Nora (9 ) reach fo r the block against Oregon State outside hitter
M elinda Schwahn. The
won the best o f five series three
games to two Saturday afternoon.
Joseph, Willis provide defensive heroics for ASU
The opportunity to be a hero doesn’t com e often; when it
does, there are alw ays many heroes no one heard about who
nwdetl»topparftlAttF>
„
In Saturday’s gam e against the Michigan State Spartans,
Darrin W illis was the uncontested hero. It was his hand that
stopped the 23-yard game-tying kick from getting off the
ground. Although coach John Cooper thought it was Jen
Joseph at first, W illis wound up gettin the credit he deserved,
as well as the gam e ball.
.
But Joseph was a hero as w ell. It was he who sacked
quarterback D ave Yarema in the preceding play, setting up
the abortive field goal attemptAnd there were other heroes.
There was Stacy Harvey, the man who paved the way tor
W illis’ hand to be in the primer spot at the critical moment.
Bob Heller
Sports Editor
Willis had talked to Harvey after a previous field goal
attem pt, telling him who had prevented him from blocking
that one. He told Harvey that if he could just get that guy out
of the road, the next kick was his.
Harvey did exactly that; his effort was every bit as
important as W illis’.
And there was Jeff Van Raaphorst, who sat the sidelines
and waited during the all-important field goal attem pt. He
didn’t get to throw much, didn’t rack up any earth-shattering
numbers. What he did was control the flow of the gam e and
keep the ball away from the dangerous Lorenzo White.
In the frenzy to pay homage to the defense, many forgot
about Van Raaphorst’s effort, and about Darryl Harris’, and
about Jeff Gallimore’s.
Now none of this is meant to disparage the efforts of those
whose accomplishments w ere recognized. Indeed, they truly
had a lot to do with ASU’s win. The point is that the obvious
heroes are not the only ones.
T h is is a point that has applications in every walk of life,
but it is perhaps m ost recognizable in the world of sports.
Turn to HEILER, p *fl* 20.
Page 16
J jto n d a y ^ e p te m b e M S ^ I? ^
Devils stop Heisman candidate White
By JAY TAYLOR
State Press
• Michigan State coach George Perles knew the ASU defense
would try to take away one dimension of his offense
Saturday. The D evils concentrated on stopping the running of
junior tailback Lorenzo White.
It worked.
The stubborn ASU defenders allowed White only 61 yards
on 24 carries in the D evils’ 20-17 win, well below what might
have been expected from one of the preseason favorites to
win the Heisman Trophy. White’s total was more than 100
yards less than his average per gam e last year.
The normally sure-handed White also fumbled a t his own
17-yard line in the fourth quarter, which led to the Sun D evils
winning field goal. But all of this left him undaunted.
“If I am playing good or bad, I can’t let it take m e out of my
gam e,” he said. “I saw som e good things out there, like the
way we cam e back with the drive at the end.
“We were never out of the gam e. If we can throw the ball
like we did, I’m happy, and the way we cam e back when we
were down overshadows anything that I might have done.”
But the strategy of keying on the run alm ost backfired on
the Sun D evils. By doing so, they left them selves open to the
pass, and Spartan quarterback Dave Yarema took full
advantage of that.
Yarema completed 26 of 33 passes for 258 yards and a
touchdown, and nearly took Michigan State to a last-second
win before being sacked by cornerback Jeff Joseph with 17
seconds remaining on third and one at the ASU eight yard
line. Perles said he was just taking what ASU was giving
him.
“They did a great job of taking away the run,” Perles said.
“They just stopped it real well, so we did som e other things.
It gave us a chance to throw the ball, and Dave did a great
job. You saw how open the receivers were, and that’s why we
did what we did offensively.”
P erles praised the ASU defense for executing its game plan
so well.
“It was disappointing for us to see how well they played our
r unning gam e,” he said. “They really ganged up on us on the
run. On the sack at the end they got us on a blitz from the
back side, which shows the kind of great team, speed they
have.
“They are a fine, fine team , and I wouldn’t be surprised to
see them go to the Rose Bowl. They are a much better team
this year than they were last year.”
.
P erles offered no excuses for his team ’s performance.
“We didn’t lose because it was too hot, or because the game
was on grass or because we were on the road. We got beat
because they were a three-point better football team. ”
Heteman candidate Lorenzo W hite lea pa over an ASU defender.
LaserType
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T h e Arm y National Guard needs m ore
officers. Get in the picture. Get out front.
• t
First
thing
every
morning:
COFFEE
and
THE
State
Press
Your h/lomlng
D ally
V
The Army National Guard is looking
for officers.
It's a tough, challenging job, with
rewards to match the challenge.
You’ll learn valuable management
skills while earning an excellent part-time
salary and generous benefits.
You’ll help people in your community
and state when disasters and emergencies
strike. And, after your initial training, it
takes two days a month and two weeks
annual training to serve. So you’ll have time
for your family, friends, school or job.
To get the total picture on opportuni
ties for officers in the A m y National Guard,
see your local recruiter, or call toll-free
800-638-7600*
r-
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All rights reserved.
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Americans A t Their Best.
Page 17
15,1986
stat« P r o s
H arris’ s u c c e s s fu l d e b u t le a d s D evils
ByCAROL BOOS
State Press
M ich ail Scully/State P m
He was the one to watch, the one everybody would have his
eye on, and many thought he was the key to winning the
game. But Lorenzo White wasn’t what everyonte expected.
Neither was Darryl Harris.
In his first game as a starting tailback, Harris showed
everyone that he is ready to fill the shoes of the former No. 1
ASU tailback Darryl Clack.
H ariis rushed 25 tim es for 89 yards, averaging 3.6 yards
per carry and helping the Sun D evils to a 20-17 victory
against the Michigan State Spartans.
Heisman Trophy candidate White rushed for 61 yards,
when last year the tailback from Michigan State rushed for
103 yards in the first quarter alone against ASU.
“Everyone thought White could run. I wanted to show that
I could run,” Harris said.
And he did.
“I was awful proud of Darryl Harris tonight,” Sun Devil
coach John Cooper said. “He will pop some before the season
is over.”
But when the season is over, Harris wants more than to
“pop som e.”
Harris wants 1,000 yards — and this game makes that hope
closer.
“A lot closer,” Harris said.
However, when the season is over Harris wants to be part
of a Rose Bowl team more than he wants to be a 1,000-yard
rusher.
The 5-foot-llM>, 180-pound junior has a pretty good idea as
to how to reach the 1,000 yard mark.
“As long as I go out and run as hard as I can, I will be even
Turn to HARRIS, page 16.
Harris enjoya freedom , but only for a moment.
K ivtn X Larkln/Stata Praia
Tailback Darryl Harris, 12, runa wide left on a pltch-out from
quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorat. Harris had 25 carries fo r 89
yards to help the Devils beat M ichigan State 20-17.
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L A S T W EEK ’S W IN N E R S ARE:
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FORGING OFA^N/mON
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have a head of state w ho
is now one of the oldest on
Earth and, by any m easure, w as not a king. Personal
a n d p o lit ic a l c u r r e n ts
surely one of the b est.
sw irled around him. Thom
T h e U .S. Constitution
as Jefferson’s concern for in
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w hich em body the charac dividual rights dashed with
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ter of th is nation. A nd as
w e near the bicentennial of port for a strong central gov
ernm ent. T h e French were
this great docum ent, it is
dear: T h e more w e under demanding that our new gov
stand th e prind ples o f free ernm ent tak e th eir sid e
again st E ngland. A t th e
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surely those prind ples w ill
rebellion in the countryside
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and bitter critidsm in the
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Monday, September 15,1986
Page 18
Philadelphia beats Mets, San Diego takes Astros
Phillies 6, Mets 0
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Kevin Gross pitched a six-hit
shutout and tripled home two runs Sunday as the
Philadelphia Phillies beat New York, 6-0, and completed a
three-game sweep that prevented the Mets from clinching
the National League East championship.
Philadelphia finished off the M ets’ embarrassing weekend
by handing 15-game winner Sid Fernandez his fifth loss.
Fernandez gave up four runs on six hits in four innings.
The Mets lost for the fifth tim e in six gam es. New York still
leads the runner-up Phillies by 19 gam es and needs a
combination of two victories or Philadelphia losses to win
their third division title and first since 1973.
Gross, 10-11, struck out nine and walked four. It was his
second shutout of the season.
The Mets left carrying the six cases of champagne stored
in their dressing room for an expected-division clinching
celebration.
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Pinch-hitter Carmelo Martinez hit a
two-run homer in the ninth inning Sunday, rallying the San
Diego Padres past Mike Scott and the Houston Astros, 3-2.
GRUMPY JOHN’S
BAR-B-Q
Van Raaphorst said that he was very pleased with
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A S U FALL SPEC IA L
“I had a lot of tim e,” he said. “Our two starting
offensive tackles ( Jim Warne and Danny Villa) went
down, and we had som e young guys in there.
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Harris
better,” he said.
Another area where Harris excelled was durability. Before
the season the coaches had expressed concern about whether
he could stand up to the pounding, and had said he would
probably only carry the ball about 15 tim es a gam e.
He answered all doubts with his 25 carries against a
physical Michigan State defense.
Harris said the key to beating the Spartans was playing
tough at the beginning of the gam e.
“Last year when w e played Michigan (State) we cam e out
flat,” he said. “We took it to them this tim e.”
Harris attributes much of his success Saturday to the ASU
offensive line.
“Their defense would over-pursue and I would cut back
when the offensive line blew them o f f h e said.
Two players who w ere not able to blow them off for the
entire gam e were starting offensive tackles Jim Warne and
Danny Villa, both of whom left the gam e with injuries.
Warne suffered a strained knee in the third quarter and
Villa went out in the second quarter with a bruised ankle.
Villa should be back next week, but it is unknown when
Warne w ill be able to return to action.
In past years injuries like that would have been
devastating to the ASU attack. But the D evils have developed
som e quality backups on the offensive line, and Fedel
Underwood and Scott Kirby stepped in and did an excellent
job.
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I
Buy one regular dinner,
get 2nd one 1 /2 PRICE
W ame’s injury is cause for concern for Cooper.
“He looked pretty bad to m e,” Cooper said. “I think
he’ll be out for an extended period of tim e.”
M ichigan State quarterback Dava Yarem a looks aw ay as ASU
players celebrate.
Craig Lefferts, 9-7, pitched the final-tw o innings for his
second victory in two days.
COUPON ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ « ^ s a i ^
Continued from page 15.
Warne suffered a severely bruised left ankle in the
third quarter.
Martinez, batting for Randy Asadoor, who had struck out
three tim es in his major-league debut, hit Scott’s 1-1 pitch
high over the left-field wall for his eighth home run of the
season.
Houston began the day leading the National League West
by eight gam es over Cincinnati. The loss w as the second
straight for the Astros in the ninth inning.
Padres 3, Astros 2
Spartans________
“It Was kind of funny when they first cam e in,
because their eyes w ere all wide, and I’m sure they
were pretty nervous. But once you get that first hit in,
everything is OK.”
Scott, 16-10, leading the m ajor leagues in earned run
average and strikeouts, struck out a career-high 14 and
walked none. He took a six-hitter into die ninth and retired
the leadoff batter before pinch-hitter Terry Kennedy singled.
The Phillies beat the Mets, 6-3, Friday night and, 6-5,
Saturday, pinning losses on ace right-hander Dwight Gooden
and top reliever Roger McDowell.
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M A M A G ELA R D FS
894-M A M A *'00 .
PIZZA
PICKS
S E M E S TE R C O U P O N :
I
I
I t __________
Name
Buy a 14” cheese pizza for $4.95 and get two FREE Liters of Coke.
We Deliver. 894-MAMA. Then fill out Mama’s Pizza Pick Coupon.
Give it to your driver. Best picks drai^n Tuesday following
Sunday’s games. Winner gets a $100 gift certificate. Good luck
and go for it.
Address
Offer good Mon.-Wed. Deadlines for pietre Wed.. 12 midnight before game.
Not valid with any other coupon. O ne coupon per delivery. Ties settled by draw.
L.
JL
Phone No.
Page 19
Monday, September 15,1986
a « t» P m »
classifieds
Automobiles
F or Rent or Lease
1970 MUSTANQ. new paint, red black
top; new tires, brakes, alternator,
radiator, dead cylinder, $1000 OBO;
«27-1330. Chris._____________ .________
TW O BLOCKS ASU, 2 one bedroom
unfurnished efficiency apartments,
lease only, $350/month. 839-2961,
967-2457.
1973 MUSTANQ 351 Cleveland, at, ac,
ps, pb, am-fm cassette, $1000, runs
great. Flynn, 941-4950.________________
1973 TR IU M PH TR 6, w hite with black
con vertible. M e c h a n ic a lly sound I
Great fun! Arizona original. $2300.
829-9552.
_____________________
For Sale________
1974 TERRY travel trailer, close to ASU,
excellent condition, 25 ft., awning, ac,
self-contained, sleeps 6, $3500. 2318581.________________________________
days. 867-0210 evanlnga/weekends.
A BEAUTIFUL color television, 25”
$115.; 19” color TV, $80.; console
stereo $80. Cash. Call 253-5016._______
1977 H O N D A Civic, 82,000 miles,
1500cc, excellent condition, new up
holstery, tire«, and battery, $1200.
JAPANESE SAMURI sword for sale for
$500. Forged in the mld-1400’s. Call
948-3989, ask for Marc.________________
Tracey, 968 8876. ___________________
LIONEL rilTC HIE tickets. Four of them
for the Thursday show. Call Marc at
948-3989.
______________________
1976 V W Rabbit 4-speed, am-fm stereo,
new brakes/engine, $675. 948-7313
1979 JEEP Cherokee:, fantastic condi
tion, has all th e x-tras available, only
$3500, Call 948-3985, ask for Mate.
1979 MERCURY Capri 4-speed, clean,
new tires, AC , $2000 OBO. M ust selll
275-1806o r 840-7229._________________
1979 O M N I, runs, drives straight, body
needs beautification, factory mags,
$495. Please leave m essage, 964-7851.
1980 DATSUN B210 2-door, excellent
condition w h h only 37,000 m iles, AC,
5-speed, M lchelin tires, $2800.949-3068
o r947-6231 afte r 5:00p.m.
__________
M OBILE HOM E, one bedroom, covered
patio, storage building, across street
from ASU. $2500.968-5874.____________
CUSTOM BICYCLE clothing made of
lycra spandex. Shorts, shirts, and suits
made to order. Bright colors and fancy
prints. Terry, 838 8017.________________
SC HW INN W O R LD 10-speed, very nice.
Extras, one year old. 983-0328. $125.
BE D IF F E R E N T . I f
y o u 're
s e lf
motivated and want to make an
unusual Incom e. Call for appointm ent.
_______________
BUSINESS M AJORS, test book theory
with reality. Learn business networking
first hand. S tart your ow n business
part-time, on o r o ff campus. Call
924-2937 to r appointm ent._____________
COULD YOU use $50 031000 extra per
month w ith very little tim e Invested? If
so, call 820-5702.
_________
_______
NEED QUALITY child care? Lim ited on
funds? Let’s trade childcare hours. Call
Qayle, 837-7247.________ ____________ _
For Rent or Lease
1 M ON TH rent free w ith seven month
lease. Q uest house close to ASU.
$275fmonth. Eric Paddle, 867-8999 or
4938598.
________________ ■
2, 3, 4 bedroom condos, townhouses,
houses, near ASU for rent and sale.
Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor
Realty. 9980819941-7041._____________
2 BLOCKS A8U , one bedroom house,
$350, unfurnished, lease only. 839-2961,
967-2457.
__________ __________
APACHE V ILLA Apartm ents, now
renting 2 bedroom, 1V4 bath, $430
month. Call 829-1660. O ne block from
'
„
GREAT JOB for students. Part-time
counter sales, 10-3 Monday, W ednes
day, and Friday, or Tuesday, Thursday.
So m e w eekends.
K n o w led g e of
photography helpful. 375-1177 or 8396393._______________________________ _
GROUND FLOOR M LM opportunity,
full-tim e, part-time. Video film classes
club. W holesale equipment. 275-8134.
HOLIDAY INN Tempe, 915 E. Apache
Blvd. Relief night auditor, Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday nights, NCR 250
experience necessary. Apply in person.
945-2003.________________________ ____
PIZZA MAKER, dinner cook, and
dishwasher needed. Tony’s New Yorker
Club, 107 E. Broadway, Tempe, after
4:00 p.m.____________
P/T OFFERED: Phone, filing, typing,
PC, apply At M ilt Avenue Merchants
Association at 520 S. Mill, #201._______
REAL ESTATE development firm needs
part-time sales representative. Strict
c o m m is s io n ,
$ 4 0 ,0 0 0
p o te n tia l,
educational credit opportunity. 9904450.
BOY’S 19” 10-speed bike, little use,
been stored, good condition, $75. Call
evenings, 868.9071.___________________
ASU,
GREAT EVENING job for students,
custodian for a SE Phoenix company.
Call Jim D, 265-3220.__________________
JOBS. FLEXIBLE hours, part-time,
full-time. $8.95 per hour. M ust have
neat appearance, basic math skills.
Tempe,
Mesa: 967-5670.
Phoenix,
Glendale: 241-1083.8 to noon._________
Furniture
P a y C a re
LOST AND Found ads are tree
everyday! W e lim it them to 20 words
and run them for 2 days. Just call the
STATE PRESS classified department,
965-7572, Monday through Friday, 8:00
ROLEX-PIAGET, collection quality replicae. 371-8793.______________________
1984 M ITSUB ISHI C ordia Turbo, low
miles, tinted windows, cruise, sunroof,
5- speed, electric m inors and windows. ALL N E W sofa, loveseats, assorted
colors, fabrics, $199.95. Can -deliver.
838-5802__________________
B&Z, 520 E. Roosevelt, 254-4144.
IS IT true you can buy jeeps for $44
BED’S BED'S. All sizes: Twin $49.95;
through the U.S. government? G et the
Full $59.95; Queen $89.95; King
tacts today! 1-312-742-1142 ext.9162-A.
$129.95. Never used. Can deliver.
Phone orders accepted. B&Z, 254-4144.
Charles. 244-2331,
EXCELLENT PART-TIME opportunity
with consumer affairs group. Sunday
3- 8p.m., Monday through Thursday
4- 9p.m . E x cellen t co m m u n icatio n
skills, phone experience required. Call
Pat Murphy, 9-5p.m. Monday through
Friday. 258-0055._____________________
HOUSE CLEANING
help
wanted,
evenings and weekends, part-time,
transportation required, $6 per hour.
1980 JEEP GJ-7 Renegade, V-8 304,
4- speed trans. Hard and soft tops, S-KC $75. Call Judith. 345-9888._____________
lltes. M ust seel C all 784 0669.
Bicycles_______
L ost
PIONEER SPEAKERS, 100 watt, brand
new, never been used. Cost $600, will
take $100 for the pair. Moving, must
sell. 9544)827.________________________
TYPEW RITER, SM ITH-CO RO NA, elec
tric portable, cartridge ribbon and
correcting tape, excellent condition,
CH EST O F drawers from $30. Paradise
Bedding, 4013 N. Black Canyon
Freeway (northbound Indian School
exit). 266-0800.
___________ '
CO M PLETE TW IN bed, $79 at the
factory. All sizes available, regular,
extra long. Paradise Bedding, 4013 N.
Black Canyon Freeway (northbound
Indian School exit). 2 6 6 0 8 0 0 ._________
COM PLETE 7-piece bedroom set $199.
Price Includes com plete full size bed,
6-drawer dresser, 2-drawer night stand,
m inor, and headboard. Can deliver.
B8Z, 254-4144.
_________________
FO R SALE: O ne sofa $100; loveseat
$60; Steelcase desk $270; Steelcase
desk chair $125; Karastan woven
natural wool area rug, 10W X1516, $750.
345-1304.____________________________
MATTRESS SALE. Tw in 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, 30 W . Main,
Mesa, 844-1891; 3332 W . M cDowell,
233-2236.____________________________
QUEEN
SIZE
waterbed,
$100.
W ill
deliver If necessary. 831-2089.________
STUDENT SPECIAL: Student desks
$49.95, bookcases $29.95, entertain
m ent centers $99.95, com puter desks
$59.95, chests $39.95. Much, much
more. Can deliver. B&Z, 254-4144.______
THREE PIECE coffee table set. New
$79. Paradise Bedding, 4013 N. Black
Canyon Freeway (northbound Indian
School exit). 266-0800.________________
W AREHOUSE 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 H ITE COUCH and matching hide-a
bed, $150. Terra Cota bean pot lamps,
pictures, posters. 2368747,893-8041.
-
BEAUTIFUL N E W large tw o bedroom,
walk to ASU, pool, laundry, one block
south of University on 8th Street and
Gary. Ask about move-in specials.
9685236.____________________________
NEW, LARGE one and tw o bedroom
apt*. Great com plex, m any am enities,
3 m iles from campus. Pelllcan Bay
Apartments, 2121 W . Maln/Apache
969-3380.
_________________________
O NE M O N TH rent free w ith seven
month lease. Duplex, 2 bedroom, 2
bath, near ASU, $450fmonth. Eric
Paddle, 4 9 3 8 5 9 9 o r 867 8999.__________
Help Wanted____
AFTER SCHO OL child care leaders and
site directors needed. Must be availa
ble 2 8 p.m., Mon-Fri. Experience
helpful. Apply at Tem ps YMCA, 2201 S.
M cCIIntock. 9 6 8 -9 2 8 6 ._________ ______
COOKS, WAITRESSES, bus/dish and
counterhelp needed for immediate day
and night, full and part-time employ
ment. Swensen's Tempe- Price and
Baseline/ Swensen's Mesa- Main and
Stapley. Applicant must be personable,
enthusiastic, and willing to work.
DELIVERY
THREE BEDROOM, tw o bath house,
close to ASU, appliances, pet ok, nice
house. 8948302,994-5829.____________
(mechanical). Second or third year
mechanical engineering or technology.
Some related experience desired. Must
be avallble minimum of 20 hours per
w eek fall and spring semester. Flexible
TW O 3 bedroom hom es near ASU,
unfurnished, lease only. $650.839-2961,
967-2457.
PERSON
needed
10:00
a.m.-5:00 p.m. w ith car. Call Davidson
REAL ESTATE investor needs owneroccupied cosigner to help finance. W ill
pay $500.990-4450.
_______________
SALES OPPORTUNITY: Be your own
boss, set your own hours, earn 30-40%
commission on specialty cleaning
items. For more information call
968-7271.
_______________ __________
SET YOUR own working schedule,
part-time or full-tim e. Set your own
income. Call fo r appointm ent. Charles,
244-2331.
T E C H N IC IA N
schedule, $4.50 and up. 9568200.----------
a.m.-5:00 p.m.________________________
LOST: M AROO N wallet at Valley Art
Theater or nearby on 9 -986. W ill offer
reward. 827-1139._____________________
___________________ __
ing full-tim e lunch food servers and
hostess and part-time evening hostess
and dishwasher. Apply in person,
Mon-Fri, 10-11 a.m., 1:30-3:30 p.m. 5001
E. W ashington._______________________
STUDENTS EARN $6 to $10 per hour.
Leads make our telemarketing easier.
Part-time evening hours available
immediately. South Scottsdale office
is close to campus 947-0508._______ '
TE C H N IC A L JOB with managerial
potential. W ill train. For appointment,
please call 941-2690.__________________
W RITER FOR short paper concerning
biblical literature. No research re
quired. Price negotiable. Todd, 3450662.__________________ ^_____________
Instruction_____
MASTER SELF-HYPNOSIS and change
your life. Small groups or individual
sessions available. Call Jim Lane,
Ph.d., 966-8810._____________ _________
WATER SKI instruction and outings.
Competition M aster Craft ski boat and
equipment provided. Half days, full
days available. 966-4185.______________
•EARN EXTRA MONEY
Arizona School of
‘ BARTENDING*
Job Placement Assistance
Motorcycles____
1978 SUZUKI GS1000, excellent condi
tion, disc front and back brakes, new
brake pads, chain and sprockets, tires,
$800. Must sell due to job loss.
496-0547.
_________________________
1984 HO ND A A E R 0 125, red, low miles,
like new, runs great, $795.921-9155.
D ial
Ron, 833-5532._________________ ______
AAKURIT TYPIN G/ M embers of TTA/
cal! Brenda 897-0505/ Carolyn 831-2434/
Linda 831-0349/ Good rates/ prompt
1-976-4000
service.
______________
AA TYPING - word processing, $1.50
per double spaced page. Call Cathy,
898-8191.
________________________ __
ACCURATE. C O NV EN IE NT. Reasona
.________
A 4- PROFESSIO NAL typing and re
sume service in my home. Gramm atical
editing available. Reasonable rates.
966-8413._________________________ ___
CALL M E for fast, accurate, quality
service at com petitive prices. C lose to
GONE WITH THE MID
CASABLANCA
THE MZMM) OF OZ
ASU. 966-2186._________________
Admission O nly
$1.50-12.00
ON SCOTTSDALE RD.
One Block North of Me Kellipa
Just Aerosa The River
SUMMER BLOWOUT
SALE
15% T O 60% OFF ALL
P erso n al______
ABBY COOKSEY: Congratulations on
becoming an AGD! W elcom e to the
________
Greek life! Ann.
AEPI LITTLE sisters- the P.J. party was
a blast! Get ready for Rocky Point, it:s
only one month._______
ALPHA PHI- Christine Buranka- your
roommate loves you. See ya at home,
roomy. Eileen._____
ALPHA PHI- Christine Good- You’re the
hottest kid ever, love your pledge
monster- Eileen.
______________
ARE YOU getting the m ost out o f life?
Quo Vadis Books, 122-B University,
Tem pe, The Arches. 968-3663._________
ATTRACTIVE LAW student with a great
sense of humor looking for a dreamy
undergraduate .to wine, dine and... I
need a break from my studies. Can you
supply the needed R and R? Call Scott,
921-1680.____________
CHRISTO PHE PROSNIER, you are the
best. I love you. Looking forward to
November! Alison.________
DAW N A N D Shannon, m iss ya lots!
From Lumberjack Dianne._____________
SWIMWEAR
SHORTS, SKIRTS & SHIRTS!
219 E. Baseline • 839-9608
Between Rural & Mill
gns
Roommate wanted
FEMALE NONSMO KER to share 2
bedroom furnished duplex. 5 m inutes
to campus. $175 plus 16 utilities.
921-9143.
___________________ _
FURNISHED, 3bedroom, 2bath, 4m iles
from campus, $190 + 16 utilities. Own
room. George or Jack, 945-7253.______
HA VE O W N
room in 3 bedroom
townhouse, washer, dryer, pool, 4m iles
trom ASU, $200-1- Vi utilities. 964-7651.
M ALE
N O N S M O K IN G
ro o m m a te
needed $165/month plus 16 utilities. 2
bedroom, 2 bath condo (Worthington
Place) with pool, hot-tub, and sand
volleyball. 921-9420, Mike._____________
N O N S M O K IN G
S T U D IO U S fem ale
wanted to share nice tw o bedroom
apartm ent 8 m iles to ASU. $170 plus 16
utilities. 834-9262. __________________
DIALING 4-MEN! Recorded gay per
sonal ads. No “coded" ads. All phone
numbers! Dial 1-976-4MEN (1-976-4636).
Call 24 hours. First m inute $.55, each
SHARE CONCEPTS shared housing.
W e have numerous tenant and landlord
placem ents and are open for more.
Valley wide service. References re
quired, Mon-Sat, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 9908488,
additional m inute $.45.________________
9 4 6 8 1 9 8 . ______________________
FRIENDS/LOVERS: Receive a 7500
word personal com patibility analysis.
Amazingly accurate and fun! (Specify
friends or lovers.) Send name, btrthdate, birth tim e, birth place, of both
individuals and $15 to AstroLogic, PO
Box 3022, Dept. A93, Scottsdale, AZ
SPACIOUS 3-bedroom condo with 2
rooms to rent. Air conditioning, pool,
jacuzzi, m odem decor. Rent between
$275-6300. Includes utilities. Call Julie,
65257.__________________ ____________
furnished, pool, jacuzzi, w/d, 3-miles to
ASU, $ 2 5 0 + Vi utilities. Keith Jones,
HEY BETTY: Sorry about all the
hassles. M icky Is lonely. Your Sigma
Chi Biff.
9 6 6 - 3 8 3 4 . _________________________
TW O ROOMMATES wanted to share
new luxury condo. 2-bedroom, 2-bath,
9418306.
__________________
____________________ -
I C A N T keep this secret any longer!
I've lost 19 pounds in 3 weeks! I can’t
weight to tell you howl Lynn, 948-3504.
Chris.
9688961. M ike.
__________________ .
__________________
LOVE LINE for $.60 a minute. Call
1-976-LOVE and m eet someone special
or add to your friendship list. Give Love
Line a try. __________________________
Palm, 966-3068.___________________ __
AAA W ORD processing service. Quick,
guaranteed,
professional
services.
Reasonable fees. Rush jobs ok.
Graphic services available (charts,
graphs, etc.). Discount with this ad.
Telephone Dating Introductions
Basinet end Most Fun
Way to Most Som eone Nswl
• We Don’t ‘Code’ Our Ad*
• No Membership Fee
• All Ads with Phone Numbers
To Pisce Y our A4 o r U nes to O th e r.
Showing through Sundoyl
KRISTEN KREMMER, Julie at ISU
wants to talkl For Info, 784-0837._______
LOST: GRAY shorthaired m ale tabby, 4
white paws, white face with orange
birthmark by nose. Lost around Desert
$ 1 .5 0 /P A G E ,
w o rd
p ro c e s s o r,
mailmerge, professional typist, same
day service. Call Marge W illis 834-4583.
ble. Mr». Oakley. 967-0802.
Minutes From Campus
L ost 8* Found
24 Hours!
SIN G l€S ClflSSIPHONE
Miscellaneous
275-M IX X
4035 e. mcdowell
104, Tempe. 9 6 8 -5 9 6 7 .____________ __ ;
Typing_________
wants to ta lk !! 784-0837.______________
H O ND A AERO 80, like new, only 1,200
miles. $640 OBO. 835-7986 o r 829-8712.
KIM , I remember th e Vine. Tried to call.
W rong number? Love to go out. Call
CASH FOR gold and diamonds. Mill
Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill Ave., Suite
W EN DY STRODE, Chris from Oak Park
0549.__________________ __________ *___
KAPPA DELTA new initiates: You made
It, yea!! You’re the best! Love in A.O.T.,
Jewelry________
CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All
States Drlve-away, 992-5200.________ __
always, Greg.______ _________________
W EEKEND GESTALT therapy group for
women. No charge. Learn more about
yourself/ increase personal growth/
help your problem areas. 820-3823.
H O ND A 1985 700cc Shadow, mint
condition, must sell, best offer. 951-
S tart Any Day
Term s Available
9/15
TRISH, TH AN X for always being there you are my everything ... G eeez!! Luv
Transportation
A-1, GET your papers laser typeset at
Klnko’s. 966-2035. ___________________
STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hlrv
Travel. 241-1957. ext. 5 6 . __________
E N G IN E E R IN G
Found
________________________
Interviews Mon-Fri. 4 to 5 p.m._______
ROOM AV AILAB LE at U niversity
Towers for m ale student. Premium
suite. A m e n itie s ,
p o o l, la c u z z l,
balcony. Call Craig at 9365140.________
Personal_______
Help Wanted
MR. TAYLOR: Ms. Sipes would like very
much to see you again. H er » Is: 48505.
Services________
A T T E N T IO N
D ISA B LE D
studen tsNew! Attendant referral service. De
pendable, qualified. Screened atten
dants available now. 24-hour em
ergency back-up service. For more
Information, 921-1876._______________
COMPUTER TERM IN ALS for rent or
sals with modem. Do your homework
from home. $35 per month. 2468172.
DISSERTATIONS - THESES (Behavioral
Sciences) Statiatical
analysis,
research consultation. Dr. Lee, 629-1524.
EDITING, ACAOEM IC and technical. If
your graduate or professional writing
needs editing o r proofreading, call
Mary, 9678397 a.m .'s or after 9:30 p.m.
Reasonable rates.____________________
PALEY, JEENIE, Burritoface- Best
sisters and room m ates... totally I Fun
tim es and more in store! PI love,
M ATH TUTOR with eleven years
experience available both on and off
Dlngdong.___________________________
campus. Mark, 992-5040.
SU NSHINE, HAPPY 21st. Only the best
for the best. F .H .L forever. I love you!
TUTOR(S) N E E D E D
fo r
E C E 31 2,
PHY116, ECE314. I can pay $6.25 per
J.R.A._______________________________
hour. 966-7738._______________________
_________
FORM ER ASU staffers- experience
with APA, MLA and other formats for
dissertations, theses, term , and re
search papers. W ord processing, or let
us take your entered disks and print
them out on our IBM com patible, letter
quality printer. Rates quoted. M embers
NASS and MAPSS. Call Donna or Joan,
945-6302.____________________________
JB’S W ORDPROCESSING, typing. Can
type anything. Located In Tem pe
839-3412 after 3:00 pm weekdays.
LET ME do your typing!
Day’s
T y p ln g /W o rd p ro c e s s in g
S e rv ice.
Competitive rates. Call Barbara at
892-1715.____________________________
PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word processing. Carolyn, 838-0959.
_______
RUSH JOBS no problem! Term papers,
theses, etc., $1.50 per page. Sharp,
clear type. 839-9103._____________ _
SAVE
T IM E ,
c a ll
me
f ir s t .
Wordprocessing- theses, dissertations,
resumes. Professional typist. M esa
Secretarial. 962-6694.___________
SHORT O F TIM E? I can help. Re
asonable. Professional. Guaranteed.
Experienced in academic. Call Jessie
945-5744.___________ _________________
THESES, TERM papers, reports etc.
$1.00 page, typed at home, 30 years
experience. Marian 431-0618.__________
W H E N ACCURACY counts, call Sharon
for all your typing needs. Phone438-8066. $1 per page._________________
W ILL DO typing, word processing.
Quality work. Fifteen years experience.
897-9013.
________________________
W OR D PROCESSING and storage for
dissertations, theses and term papers.
Nancy 830-5572._____________
W OR D PROCESSING, data entry, fast
turn-around, reasonable rates. Close to
campus. 831 -9 0 5 4 .___________________
W ORD PROCESSING, manuscripts,
legal docum ents, resum es, term
papers, and thesis. Close to ASU.
438-8864.
TYPING SPECIAL!!!
Show ASU I.D. and receive a
10% Discount
on
•Typesetting
•T erm Papers
•Resum es
•W o rd Processing
laser jet printing
•Professional »Fast «Accurate
•Sam e Oay Service Available
No job too large or Too small
MU Typing canter
122 E. University
Tempe • 967-0900
Just a 5 min. walk trom Haydan Library
a Ike M m « Con* of Forest * Uuwnity
O ffer expires 9-22-66.
9-15.
Wanted
DENTIST NEEDS patient for a board
exam in Lom a Linda, California. M ust
be available on Septem ber 28-30. W ill
provide airfare, boarding/lodging, free
dental treatm ent and a bonus of $100.
C all 990-2584.________________ ________
NEED TUTOR for QBA501. Call Eve,
9564)660 (work), 483-7490 (home).
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