slate press Vol. 6 9 No. 26 A rizona S tate U n iversity T e m p e , A r iz o n a W ednesday, October 1 ,1 9 8 6 © C o p yrig h t, S tate Press, 1986 Reagan denies trade in Zakharov’s release By KIM MATTINGLY State Press The Reagan administration, unwrapping the package deal that sprang Nicholas S. Daniloff and spared an accused Soviet spy a trial, proclaimed Tuesday that the two developments are unrelated. President Reagan, who had insisted all along that Gennadiy Zakharov, the Soviet scientist accused of spying, would not be traded for Daniloff, told reporters in a jammed White House briefing room: “There was no connection between the two releases.” But an ASU specialist in international relations said he is sure the release of Daniloff and Zakharov are directly linked. Bill Davey, also a communications professor, said: “A lot of language used between diplomats is designed to save face for the prominent parties involved. They say there’s no linking between Daniloff and Zakharov’s release, but I’m sure there was.” Only a few minutes before the news conference, Zakharov was allowed to plead no contest to the spy charges in a federal court in Brooklyn with a U.S. guarantee that he would be swiftly expelled. Davey, who was in New York on ASU business when Zakharov was arrested, said: “Zakharov would have received a much harsher sentence if we hadn’t been negotiating for Daniloff. ” He said New York newspapers published at that time a “compelling set of facts that Zakharov was involved in espionage activités.” “Zakharov probably would have been banished anyway, but he would have faced a prison sentence.” But, Davey added, “If our goal was to get Daniloff out, then we achieved that goal. ” Daniloff had been held in a Soviet prison for 13 days, and then confined to the American Embassy for 17 more days, on charges of committing espionage against the Soviet Union. He was allowed to leave Monday. Patrick McGowan, an ASU specialist in U.S. foreign policy, said: “Our purpose is not so much to send a spy to prison, but to stop espionage. (Zakharov) can no longer o perate as a spy anyw here; his effectiveness has been eliminated. “Why send him to prison for 20 years at the taxpayers’ expense?” McGowan, also a political science professor, said: “The Soviet seizure of Daniloff put the president in a very difficult position. “ On the one hand you had an apparently innocent American journalist just doing his job; on the other you have a Soviet spy caught red-handed. They are simply not equivalent. “ A lot ol people feel when you swap a Soviet spy for an American journalist, you are giving in to the Soviets. “The problem is Daniloff is a human being,. and it is the responsibility of the administration to do everything it can to protect American lives abroad. ” McGowan said a “staight trade” would open Reagan to a lot of criticism, but the release of one or more Soviet dissidents, opposers to the Soviet regime, is an equitable agreement. The Kremlin decided to permit the emigration of Soviet dissident Yuri Orlov and his wife after negotiations with the United States. The month-long negotiations between U.S. Secretary of State George Schultz and S o v ie t F o re ig n M in iste r E d u a rd Shevardnadze also eased a U.S. order expelling Soviet diplomats from the U.N. mission in New York. McGowan said: “The* Soviet mission to the U.N. is way oversized. It is assumed the vast majority of them have a sort of intelligence role, but it’s not open so it’s spying.” ASU political science professor YungHwan Jo, a specialist in relations between the United States, China and the Soviet Union, said the agreement is “not too bad of a deal.” “ It’s not real favorable, but under the circumstances at least some sort of deal was m ade. . . and Daniloff was freed.” Jo said he is not surprised at the lE lM i **A *0 Cost-free calories Michael ScuNy/Stat» P rw t Laura PHsbury, right, a Junior sociology major, glvaa har chocolate marshmallow Ice crsam cone a quick lick before It melta. Kris Akers, left, and Pat Hovendlck were giving away Ice cream conea on Cady Mall Tuesday as part of a promotion for a local merchant_________ agreement that releases Zakharov from trial because of Reagan’s past “oscillating” policies. But he added: “Even the oscillation of his stand is better than a strict, rigid president like he’s often projected. “At least he’s open to change. ” Jo said he thinks the Soviets will view this as a “limited win.” “They might have quickly recognized this as some sort of risk they took, but they came out without too big of a scratch — and they got some mileage out of it. ” He said he does not think the Soviet’s success will escalate incidents of American kidnapping for bargaining purposes. Reagan announced at the conference that he would meet with Gorbachev in Reykjavik, Iceland, in 12 days. Regarding the upcoming U.S.-Soviet summit, Jo said he does not expect much progress on arm s reduction, but added, “Never fear to negotiate. Anything is better than nothing.” Still no su spects in 1 9 8 4 slaying o f M C C student By BENNY McCONNELL State Press On October 5,1984, Kathleen Smith was concerned about a $1,100 overdraft in her company’s checkbook and was nearing an appointment with her bank to discuss the discrepancy. About 45 minutes before her appointment, the 20-year-old Mesa Community College accounting major was hit over the head with a blunt object and set afire with some sort of flammable liquid in her townhouse at 700 W. University Dr. Smith’s case is one of four unsolved killings in Tempe. The others involved former ASU students Deanna Bowdoin, Gretchen White, and Tempe resident Ambrose Seimetz. In the ensuing investigation of Smith’s slaying, police also determined that Smith’s business partner, Robert Ortloff, had taken out a $100,000 life insurance policy on Smith. They also was determined that Ortloff had written a $7,000 check to his father on the company account that caused the overdraft. Carol Smith said her daughter’s case was turned over to the county attorney’s office. However, police have never named or revealed a suspect. Smith said Ortloff had been a friend of the family since I n s id e to d a y STEVE HOOKER An exercise physiology student is working on a 10w eek training program for w heelchair dependent students. Page 9. their childhood. Ortloff was treated “as one of my children,” she said. Ortloff is currently awaiting sentencing in Waco, Texas, for conviciton of attempting to kill a Fort Hood soldier by mailing him a pipe bomb that exploded in his barracks in January 1985. He is facing a possible prison term of 50 years. Smith described her daughter as “not being perfect, but she was a nice young woman. “She was extremely competitive with her brothers . . . and intended to be the comptroller for her father’s business,” Smith said. “From the time she was 10 she competed in horse riding and traveled around Canada and the U.S. in competitions. She was extremely disappointed she wasn’t the national champion but made the top 10. ” After her death, a $50,000 reward was posted for the arrest and conviction of her killer, and Smith said the offer still stands. Tempe Police spokesman Roger Clay said a video reenactment of Smith’s killing may be produced soon to help gather more evidence in the case. On July 4 Ambrose Seimetz, a 39-year-old tool-and-die maker died a victim of circumstance. Concerned or curious at the sound of gunshots, he became a victim of one. It is not clear if Seimetz was awake before he heard shots, one that struck the arm of Gary R. Smith, as he was driving to work that early Independence Day morning. Smith drove to a nearby convience market and called police. Three minutes later, Marilynn Seimetz called police to inform them her husband had been shot and was laying down on their front porch. The difference between these two cases and that of Deana Bowdoin, killed in 1978, and Gretchen White, killed in 1981, is that police do not feel they know who killed Seimetz and Smith. “The Smith case is a very complex investigation,” Tempe police spokesman Steve Crooks said. “An enormous amount of evidence was collected at the scene, but not enough of the evidence was developed to name a suspect. According to police, there were never any witnesses to the Seimetz killing. Clay told the Tempe Daily News: “Seimetz probably stepped outside to see what was going on, and, as an unfortunate result, he was struck in the chest by a gunshot. ” Seimetz’s widow, Marilynn, could not be reached for comment. The cases of Seimetz and Smith remain open and actively pursued by Tempe police, Clay said. C o m ic s ........................................................ C la s s ifie d .....................................................26 E n te rta in m e n t............................................. 13 O p in io n ........................................................ 4 Police re p o rt.................................................12 S p o r ts ............................................................21 T o d a y ............................................................ 2 ASU W EATHER Clear skies with a high of 92 degrees. Expected low is 66. one,Tod Chrtsteneen. Amy Fellner, Jonn Qallney, Jennifer Hughes. Tom Hutchison. Mark Pstereon. Craig W icaier, Julie REPORTERS: Michael Burgees, Tina Daunt Kerry Fahr, Dave Hodges. Darrin Hostetler. Benny McConnell, Kim Mattingly, Lauren Mulatto, Michael Rowell. J.B. PRODUCTION: Michael Booth. Mark McKinney. Martoa Ogg, Kelly Pearce. ENTERTAINMENT REPORTER: Carri L Mitchell. TheStotoPrs«» i, published Monday through Friday durtag the academic year, except nonoeys and exam periods, al Matthews Center. Room I S Arizona State University. P*,w *S2S7 Newsroom: 8M-2292. Advertising ft Production: 9B5-7572. simM. PHOTOGRAPHERS- Kevin J. Larkin, Andy Mrozinakl, Michael Scully. SPORTS REPORTERS Steve Brennan, Annette Da La Cruz, Dean Obenauer COPY EDITORS Scon Luck, Carolyn Nelson, Bob Wilson. Pr***l* * • only newspaper exclusively published tor end circulated on the i h Th* n#w* v N h v e published In this newspaper are not necessarily those at the ASU administration, tocutty, stall or student body. State Prew Pages Wednesday, October 1,1986 Leisure studies folds MU travel center; plans mentorships for tourism students By MICHAEL BURGESS State Press ASU’s travel information center closed down its MU service today after its sponsor, the leisure studies department, decided to take its programs a step further, the assistant director of the départaient said. Victor Teye, said the leisure studies department wants to implement mentorship programs and have students work with local travel agencies. MU Assistant Director Floyd Land said he received notice of the termination of the agreement lease on Sept. 8. Land said the travel center paid $2,100 a year for the MU space. The space will be converted to a study area, he said. Arthur Haley, chairman of the leisure studies department, said the center was set up in 1083 as an educational experiment to acquaint students with the travel industry. Haley said the department decided to close the center in September. “We put $1,600 of department money to keep it functioning last year,” he said, adding the center earned money by Exclusively for college students, faculty and staff: save up to 75% off the cover price of Time lnc.’s award-winning titles. Mali subscription coupon (below) today! selling memberships to travel and tourism bureaus around thestate. The membership fees paid for the rental space and maintenance. In addition, the center held travel shows and charged non­ club members for booths. Haley said he wanted to end the program last year because only a few students could work at the center, while 40 to 50 students can participate in the mentorship program. “We made the decision that the center didn’t have the depth we needed,” he said. “We plan to have mentorship programs to help get students jobs in the future. “It was a good experiment. We are not going to stop our programs because one program met with intermediate success.” Dan Diaz, senior travel and tourism major and a former officer for the travel and tourism club, is disappointed by the center’s closing. “ It failed to achieve its goal of being self-supporting due to a number of factors including free enterprise legislation and lack of long-term planning,” Diaz said. GEMCO EYECARE “Presents to y o u to d a y’s cu rren t lo o ks in designer eyew ear” TIME - The world's #1 Newsmagazine and Winner of the National Magazine Award for General Excel­ lence. Just 56C an issue— that's 50%. off the regular $1.12 subscription rate. MO NEY - How to make it and how to keep more of it. A valuable tool to put you on the road to riches. Just $14.99 for 12 monthly issues—a savings of 50% off the regular $29.95 subscription rate. LOW A IR FARES TRAVEL “18” □ Sports Illustrated at just 55C an issue fo r__ Call Far Appointment 1818 E. Baseline Road • 839-6061 Faopie 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 3:30-7:00 p.m. 9 p .m .-l2 p.m. Sat. evening JZm onthfy issues for just $14.99. * issues. CH ilij j 10 monthly issues for just $12.50. 26 biweekly issues for just $22:25 -Minimum order 20 asuea. maximum 104 issues. 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Just 55C an issue—that's almost 50% off the regular $1.09 sub­ scription rate. Mail entire order coupon to: Discount Megntnae P.O. Bex 3103 Tempo, AZ 36281 FAST, FREE DELIVERY FOR ASU LOCATION CALL (happy hour) 8 2 9 - 1 7 1 7 ATTENTION ASUII 2 MEDIUM 12” PI ZZAS w ith one topping 2 LARGE 16” PIZZAS w ith one topping 1 FREE 32-oz. COKE This year w e’re doing if again! Every Sunday (b u t ONLY on Sunday). M ike Pulos of the Spaghetti Com pany will give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you order! It's our 2 lor 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. And it's good for the whole school year a t both our Tempe an d Phoenix locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner. The Spaghetti Com pany is known for a great m eal a t an affordable price. But th e SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices i better* Our dinners include a full course m eal with a ll the trim mings-fipm salad to dessert. So. dollar for dollar, when you’re hungry an d you need a break, you can’t b e a t The Spaghetti Com pany! ESPECIALLY O N SUNDAYS! W ith 2 dinners lor the price of 1! But you MUST have your student I.D. card with you to take advan­ ta g e of this offer. * 1 0 .0 0 1 *9 _______ h $7 5 ■ ■ 7 ■ 46 5 0 In d u d M tu r One coupon per pizza. Expires 10-5-86. Open 11 a .m .-l a.m. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m .-2a.m . Fri.-Sat. 12” 1 Topping e RESTAURANT TEMPE PHOENIX South on Central Just PastaMcDowell 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Bluo, Steak DIJon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Plcatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT Included In the 2-for-1 special. 4th Street and Mill 966-3848 Includes lex One coupon per pizza. Expires 10-5-86. ¿ ( p a g lie t t i (o n t p a n V ' tax Included 16” 1 Topping 12” 2 Toppings T 0 0 16” 2 Toppings Open 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. Openat 11:30a.m. to 11p.m. Sundays FREE 32-O Z . COKE > 5 .8 5 > 4 .9 5 ' One coupon per pizza. One coupon per pizza. Expires 10-5-86. Expires 10-5-86. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m .-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. N. TEMPE \ S. TEMPE \ 933 E University \ 8 2 9 -1 7 1 7 4415S. Rural \ 8 3 8 -2 2 2 7 N. MESA \ \ S. MESA \ 635M.CountryClub\ \ 8 2 7 -1 99 9 745W.Baseline \ \ 9 2 6 -1 1 0 0 \ N. CHANDLER 10181 Ann« Avt 8 9 9 -4 9 2 2 State Pre«, ASU professor brings Chicano publishing house to Valley over the world. r''i9-isgi “We’ve received great reviews from everywhere, and it definitely will bring some prestige to ASU.” here and took the press with me. . “Publications mainly concern Chicano social science research. These would be topics like linguistics, sociology C o m p a n y p rin ts jo u rn a l, b o o k s o n s o c ia l s c ie n c e a n r i p Hu p u H am ” Keller said past titles of books include “Chicano Theater,” “The Cat and Other Stories” and “Beyond Stereotypes: Chicano Literature.” He said the company prints a book each month and distributes a journal, containing smaller literary pieces, three times a year. By DAVEHODGES State Press ASU has become the home of a worldwide Chicano publishing company, an ASU faculty member said Tuesday. Gary Keller, an ASU foreign language professor, is the editor in chief of The Bilingual Review/Press, a company that publishes Chicano fiction, literary criticism, poetry and social science research. He said the 12-year-old company relocated to ASU in July after moving from the State University of New York in Binghamton. “Phoenix is a wonderful place, and I had a much better job offer here than I had there,” Keller said. “So I came down “The publications are in English 80 percent of the time, Keller said. “But we do have some bodes in Spanish.” Keller said the books and the journal are known worldwide. The prints articles from around the world, he said and accepts about one out of every 100 submissions. He said ASU graduates and faculty are among those whose works have been published. “Hundreds of colleges use our books as text books, Keller said, adding the company distributes books to about 20,000 customers. Keller said the publishing company receives $15,000 in University funds, along with grants from the Ford Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. “We’ve been reviewed in newspapers like the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times, he said. “The materials we publish are picked up and printed all The <*nmpnny is also affiliated with the ASU Hispanic Research Center. HIS: “PO LO ’ navy & grey KO HERS: "BETY” $17 white, red; yellow, carmel, navy & black T h e A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e r s ity C h a p te r o f PRICES INCLUDE SHIPPING AND HANDLING THE HONOR SOCIETY OF PHI KAPPA PHI w ish e s to notify all m e m b e rs , b o th a c tiv e a n d in ac tiv e , th a t it is p r e p a r in g for its r e c o r d s a D ire c to ry of M e m b e rs affiliated w ith A rizo n a S ta te U n iv ersity . A m e m b e r n e e d n o t h a v e b e e n in itia te d a t A S U in o r d e r to b e liste d in th e D irecto ry . P le a s e c o n ta c t E lizabeth B u m s, A d v isin g C e n te r, S S -1 0 1 , 9 6 5 - 4 4 3 2 , if y o u w ish y o u r n a m e to b e in c lu d e d . [r-4 j r - L f H f S S l Foot size, inches or centimeters to: SMART SANDALS P .O . B o x 7 0 0 1 0 P asad en a, C A 9 1 1 0 7 THE SANDAL FOR YOU MADE IN GUIFORNU OF WATER RESISTANT VINYL Visaor Mastercardquickorders dial Toll freeanytime 1-800-541-0900 WithinCalifornia1-800-334-3030 FR EE S T Y L in ' e s ti Q & cS ndak Your Authorized SCULPTURED NAJL&SHAIR STYUNO 966-5848 R e n e F o s n ig h t in t r o d u c e s T im W e ia n d $45 P e n n S p ecia l Reg. too \ÄN S DEALER (Book a friend at the same tim e for a free haircut) Full Set Acrylic. . ................................ . $23.95 FuU Set T ip s.............. ................ ..........$25.95 FUl-In ............ ..................................... $17.00 HAIRCU T SPECIAL WOMEN MEN'S HAIRCUTS Reg. sis NOW $10 Reg. S20 NOW $15 3 1 3 5 S M ill Catch your favorite prime-time soaps w hile you have your nails done. This ad first-time clients only. mmmertouaurn,tmu Mon.-FrL 9-9 • S at. 9-5 O FF IC E P R O D U C T S W AREHOUSE "O PEN TO THE P U B LIC " Sportif D o lfln MEN & W OMEN Six Pocket Shorts SH O R TS & TO P S 2 fo r 1 Reg. $26.95 2 for the Price of 1 FREE STYLIN’ 2121 W. Guadalupe, Suite 3 Mesa • 897-7544 What is transcendentalism? What’s the plot of Melville’s Omoo?Who wrote 42ndParallel? What was the “New York School”? Where you get name brands at warehouse prices! H EW LETT PACKARD S M I T H CORONK V IC TO R , Texas In s t r u m e n t s 1755 W. University Dr. 1 Vi miles west of campus 968-1198 At last! After 45 years, James D. Hart’s classic Oxford Companion to American Literature is available in a compact and affordable edition. With 2000 entries on authors, individual works, literary movements, and other aspects of American letters, the volume remains “a reference w ork I have never been able to live without.” (Alfred Kazin, ¿V.K Times Book Review on the fifth edition) $24.95 at better bookstores or direct from Oxford University Press, Box 900, 200 Madison Ave., N.Y., NY 10016 State P it s Page 7 Wednesday, October 1,1986 C o l o r a d o s t u d e n t s c l a r if y r u le o n s e x in d o r m i t o r i e s By The Associated Press BOULDER, Colo. — Sex in dormitories is OK as long as it doesn’t violate a roommate’s right of privacy, a University of Colorado student panel concluded. The Dormitory Representative Council voted 16-0 after 90 minutes of impassioned debate Monday to recommend that wording in a campus handbook be changed to reflect that sentiment. “If I stood up in front of 450 freshmen in Nichols Hall and said I voted to ban sex in the dorms, I’d be shot if they had a gun. I’m serious,” said Dan Mihelic, a sophomore who represents Nichols Halls on the council. A controversy had erupted this fall over phrasing that appeared in the 1986-87 “Guide to Residence Hall Living.” It banned “sexual activity such ais sleeping together (or) going to person.” Housing officials argued that the contested language w as m erely a clarification of existing rules against cohabitation, and they served notice that the rules would be enforced. But the dorm representatives voted to replace the offending language with: “Visitation does not, therefore, permit any activity, sexual or otherwise, which is contrary to a rommmate’s and fellow residents’ right to privacy.” The recommendation will be forwarded to Dan Daniels, CU’s housing director. Daniels could make the change effective this year or it could be placed in the 1987-88 guide to dormitory living if a committee of housing officials, students, and resident advisers adopts it at a meeting in the spring. Garage to close for refinishing By TINA DAUNT State Press Lemon Steet from Normal Steet west to College Avenue. ASU’s parking structure will be closed this weekend for refinishing, the assistant director of parking and transit services said Tuesday. “We’re giving the stucture a good cleaning,” Richard Landreth said. “We just finished landscaping around the stucture and now we’re ready to sweep it (the stucture) and wash it out.” Landreth also said $2,000 in signs and yellow painted arrows will be installed in the structure. All vehicles must be moved from the structure, located at College Avenue and Apache Boulevard, on Friday and can be parked in any non-residence lot until Monday, Oct. 6. Several streets surrounding the garage also will be closed. The streets are: Normal Street from Apache Boulevard north to Lemon Street, College Avenue from Lemon Street south to Apache Boulevard and The decision to end your pregnancy is never easy. B ut the choice is yours. F o r m o r e th a n 18 y e a rs, w e h a v e g iv en w o m e n e m o tio n a l s u p p o r t, a n d e x p e r ie n c e d p ro fe s s io n a l m e d ic a l c a re . F re e p r e g n a n c y te s tin g a n d c o u n s e lin g a re p r o v id e d w ith th e tw o -d a y p r o c e d u r e . T w o w e e k s la te r, y o u r fo llo w -u p visit in c lu d e s a la b te s t, b ir th c o n tr o l c o u n s e lin g a n d c a rin g s u p p o r t f o r y o u r r ig h ts — all w ith o u t a d d itio n a l c o s t t o you. •M e n stru al e x tra c tio n • F r e e p re g n a n c y testin g •T w ilig h t sleep-anesthesia •M in o rs tre a te d •U ltra so u n d testin g •B o a rd c e rtifie d ob-gyn M.D.S •F ü ll lab facility •S e h a b la espanol • Q uality m ed ical c a re in a hospital-like e n v iro n m en t Specializing in fir s t a n d second trim ester ab o rtio n s C a rin g , U n d e r s ta n d in g a n d C o n fid e n tia l C e n tra l a n d W e sts id e L o c a tio n A p p o in tm e n ts : M o n d ay -S atu rd ay 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 L im ited E vening A ppointm ents 2 4 -H o u r H o tlin e 2 7 9 - 2 2 1 4 Robert H. Tamis, M.D. FACOG Director “We’re in the final step toward completion,” he said. “After this weekend, the structure will be finished.” A b o r tio n S e rv ic e s o f P h o e n ix D o c to r s M e d ic a l Plaza S o u th , S u ite 2 2 0 2 7 2 0 N. 2 0 th S tre e t, P h o e n ix The cost of the cleaning was included in the $3.93 million construction contract. D O N ’T FORGET! % STATE PRESS ^CLASSIFIED AD L >■ DEADLINES ARE 3 P.M. 2 DAYS PRIOR TO INSERTION/ S T U D E N T S T h e N E W A S U S tu d e n t H e a lt h In s u ra n c e P la n BOOK NOW FOR LOW HOLIDAY FARES! is b e tte r t h a n e v e r...a n d e a s ie r t o u n d e rs ta n d ! Roundtripfrorti Phoenixto CHICAGO........... ...$ 1 7 8 NEW YO RK............ $198 BOSTON.................. $198 MILWAUKEE..........$178 DETROIT................ $198 CEDAR RAPIDS . . . . $ 2 1 8 OTHER CITIES! 966* ° It can help save you m oney for m ore im p ortan t thin gs T h e Student H ealth C enter is great to have on cam pus. But why should you pay tor all the services yourself? There’s no deductible for the X-ray and lab services you receive there. And A SU Student Health Insurance helps in other expenses. A lot! M oney for preadmission hospital tests 6300 • M oney for M ajor M edical expenses — including am bulance service MIUAVENUETRAVEL Restrictions may apply, prices sutject to change. • M oney for m ental and nervous disorders Sign up for the plan at the Student Health Center now. FAST LUNCH! FREE LUNCH! But hurry! Enrollment ends \ O r call 965-2411 for details during regular business hours, M onday through Friday. S ee your Student Insurance Brochure for full details of coverage and benefits. Faculty & Staff ■ B uy o n e B u ffet Lunch a t $3.95, g et o n e FR E E Weekdays 11:30-1:30 J u s t sh o w yo u r fa c u lty o r sta ff I.D. G ood throug h O ct. 15,1966. OCTOBER 10,1986. I The ASU Plan is underwritten by: Mutual " /O m n h iiV L / People you coo count on... Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company Home Office: Omaha, Nebraska ^VNJATEMPE''ASU 915 E Apache Blvd • 968-3451 Approved and recommended by the Arizona Board of Regents and the Student Health Advisory Committee. Report says state colleges should receive incentive funding By Collage Press Service HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. — State colleges that try to prove they do a good job teaching students should get more money than other colleges, according to a report by the National Governors Association. The report said states give schools that grade themselves with “assessment tests” a bigger percentage of the higher education budgets the states give out each year. According to the report “Time for Results,” : “Incentive funding will send a clear signal that policymakers expect and dem and proven quality in higher education.” But some educators say such “incentive funding” would give legislators, not administrators and faculty members, control of some campus courses and programs. And in education, said Bob Aaron of the Natonal Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges in Washington, D.C., “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” The governors, he said, have “taken the bottom-line approach” to funding and grading colleges’ performances. “ (The governors want to) reassure taxpayers by .having colleges demonstrate that learning is going on. ” In many states, education is the single largest expenditure of taxpayer money and “they are looking for ways to have money used in the most effective manner,” Aaron said. While many colleges and states have begun to require students to take competency tests in recent years, none has yet tied toe amount of money colleges get to their students’ test scores. Maryland has come toe closest to adopting a NGA-type plan. In April, toe state’s Board for Higher Education approved plans to test sophomores at all state campuses in 1988. Board members would then gra colleges’ efforts to teach by how well students do on toe tests. But critics said they do not really trust the tests’ ability to measure how well coUeges are doing, and that the scores would be questionable because the students taking the tests would have little motive for doing well on them. Florida, South Dakota, Georgia and Tennessee now all require students to take competency tests to prove they are qualified to become college juniors. The Texas legislature currently is debating a bill to subject Texas sophomores to similar tests. None of those states, however, make funding dependent on how well the students do. Even if they do adopt toe NGA plan to attach purse strings to test scores, the NGA’s Joe Nathan said states would adopt individual — not national — methods of grading colleges. Northeast Missouri State University in Kirksville, Mo., for example, asked sophomores to retake either toe Scholastic Aptitude Test or the American College Testing program test, and compared the results with their high school scores, said Dr. Charles McClain, NMSU’s president. Then in their senior year, students take competency tests in their chosen majors. McClain said toe scores show the students’ level of progress and are made available to toe public. For The Times When You're Too STRUNG OUT. . . C O N O C O IN C . try some fresh gourmet coffee from the P E T R O LE U M P R O D U C T S , N O R T H A M E R IC A M A N A G E M E N T D EVELO PM EN T PROGRAM OF JA V A •21 Varieties •Espresso A ll D e c e m b e r e n d M a y G r a d u a t e s o f t h e C o lle g e o f B u s in e s s a r e in v it e d t o a tte n d a p r e s e n ta tio n /r e c e p tio n on c a r e e r o p p o r t u n it ie s w ith P P .N A . •Cappuccino •Bulk Coffee •Regular a) De-Caf 414 S. M ill A v e .# 114-B Tempe • 968-1247 10% o f f all purchases for ASU D A T E : O c to b e r 2 , 1 9 8 6 T I M E : 5 - 6 p .m . PLA C E: A S B 1 0 5 students & faculty with I.D. P.S. Bring your own "lute"! -¿ (-D e g re e s S o u g h t FREE S n ea k P r e v ie w B B A — Finance« Management; M BA H ig pierre cardin PARIS Li f E( UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENT myhas a dream of turning a wreck into and roll hotel. But the town, the cops and the odds are against him. He'Sgetting some help from the oddest team he can find. His friends. N EW YORK FORMALWEAR m o n d a y -fr id a y h MUAB FILM 9-9 10-6 S u n d a y 11-5 S a tu rd a y SORORITY & FRATERNITY SPECIAL Tuxedo Rentals From $ 2 4 9 5 to $ 3 4 9 5 With This Ad .. ' ASU SPECIAL ^ »I(tnthtTTi Own Your Own Black Tuxedo F r o m * 1 4 8 50 Coat & Pant Only n w u to oucceea. largest selection o f form alw ear in the southwest Colonnade Mall 20th & Camelback Phoenix 263-4292 Loa Arcos Mall Scottsdale Rd. ,, at McDowell Scottsdale 263-4568 Fiesta Mall Southern & Alma School Mesa 833-6785 Westridge Mall 7535 W. Thomas Phoenix 849-7980 Metro Center Black Canyon Freeway at Peoria Phoenix 263-4992 ITUdfiggaWgl* O CT. 2 at NEEB HALL 8 P.M. • NO A D M IS S IO N PRIZES • RAFFLES PRIZES • RAFFLES Limited Seating. Be There Early. P la y in g F o r K eep s” open s In th e a tre s n a tio n w id e on O cto b er 3. s m Wednesday October ES22 1986 Grad student tests fitness plan for spinally-injured individuals By KERRY FEHR State Press About 10 wheelchair-dependent people will begin testing for an aerobic training program today, an exercise physiology graduate student said. Steve Hooker said the eight-week aerobic fitness program is a research project sponsored by ASU’s Exercise and Sport Research Institute. The program is specifically designed for wheelchairdependent people. He said spinally injured participants will exercise their upper body muscles on an ergometer, a stationary wheelchair. Participants will crank the ergometer wheels as they would in their wheelchairs to increase cardiovascular endurance and strength, he said. Hooker said that although the intramurals program offers adaptive exercise classes, he plans to develop “ personal exercise prescriptions” for each participant after completing the training program. He said his research goals are two-pronged: to improve cardiovascular endurance and to measure overall physiological changes. Hooker said that although the need for exercise is well-documented, “this is the first project to measure all aspects of fitness.” Wheelchair-dependent people are inclined to heart diseases because they are more sedentary and sometimes more obese, he said. Hooker said he plans to include blood testing and will monitor changes in the participants’ bodies. Sylvia Lee, a part-time ASU student, said she agreed to participate in the research project because it will “get me in shape. ” Lee also said the tests Hooker plans to perform would cost almost $500 if she went to a doctor. “ I hope to find out a lot about my body,” she said. Hooker said funding for the program has been provided through a g ra d u ate research assistantship, but the institute still needs funding for materials such as electrocardiogram paper, electrodes and blood testing. This will be the first research project using the ergometer, he said. The ergometer was developed four years ago by the institute and ASU’s physics department, he said. Hooker said ASU has the only ergometer the United States, adding the machine is extremely effective because the degree of tension on the chairs chain i&controlled by magnets. Unlike a stationary exercise bicycle, the ergometer does not have a belt which wears out and distorts the amount of strength needed to turn the wheels, he said. Increasing tension on the wheel makes the movement more difficult, he said, which increases the exercise benefit. Hçoker said spinning the wheel faster will also increase the exercise intensity and cardiovascular stress. Participants can measure their speed by looking at a speedometer directly in front of them. Lee, who said she has participated in other research projects, said she also plans to join in the program next semester. “Once your body starts feeling better, you start feeling better.” She said the project will give her more information about her body because the tests will be more extensive than others she has participated in. Hooker also said he will ask the participants to complete questionnaires about their psychological mood states and plans to measure degrees of vigor, mental fatigue, and self-worth. Steve Hooker, a graduate student ot exercise physiology, demonstrates the ergometer. The ergometer Is used as a training devise for wheelchair-dependant people. W A REH O U SE D E L I & PUB E,ub 1975 “The Family" I A M O N D" *GOOD F O O D & D R IN K ” 9 6 6 - 7 7 8 8 1 3 0 £ Univ e rsity D r. a t F o re s t ABOVE ALL... BRILLIANCE. Is t h i s a D E A L o r w h a t ! ! ! ? ? Let's Get Acquainted Breakfast Ìo r brilliance beyond compare, only T h e Lazare D iam ond w ill do. 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THE P E T R O LE U M P R O D U C T S , N O R T H A M E R IC A M A N A G EM EN T DEVELOPM ENT PROGRAM lITTElje S4 M OFF also introduces N a ils WITH THIS AD •S H A M P O O •C O N D IT IO N •PRECISION CUT •B LO W DRY REGULAR PRICES All December and May Graduates of the b y S u e Full S e t . . . . . . $85 Regular $45 COLLEGE OF EN G IN EER IN G are invited to attend a presen­ tation /reception on career opportunities with PP.NA. Acrylic Overlays.$35 ' / 1 Regular $55 F||Mns Fill-Ins.. . . . . . $18 W o m e n $15 ■ M e n $13 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe North of University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square Call 968-5946 Open Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday evenings till 9 p.m. DATE: October 2, 1 9BB TIME: A S p.m. PLACE: ASB 1 03 -$$-Degrees -^Degrees Sought B S - C H E , M E , C E Pm i B L O O M C O U N T Y b v B e r k e B r e a th e d mrrr onsme. W ifu e ê i W b y M ic h a e l R itte r LETME5EE. HOWCANI PITTTHIS? 3 TEMPE MIGUEL Sales* Rentals• Repairs BandInstalments&Accessories Drums ★ Recorders ★ Banjos * Sheet Music Etc. Astudent of AndresSegovia Guitar Lessons in Folk &Classical by Miguel ALVAREZ... GUILD... KHONO... YAMAHA... OVATION... MARTIN GUITARS ★ SPANISHCLASSICAL GUITARS★ •RAMIREZ«CONTRERAS. •BARNABE»CESARVERA •SANTOSHERNANDEZ X MOVIE EXTRAS I | W A N T E D ( | | “CAMPUS M AN” ( m a le /f e m a le s ) | | | C om e In A n d Sign Up Holiday Inn | Apache & Rural | Room 113 | Mon.-Fit 10 a.m.-5 p.m. | Thanks! | | | | | B U N D L E ’S LIQU OR S & MKT. 730 S. MILL Corner M ill & University Ave. MEISTER BRAU BEER cast ANDRE CHAMPAGNES Tso.i ! BEAMERO TEQUILA Tsom PLAYBOY Used Magazines $ 6 .5 7 1 $ 2 .9 7 $ 4 .7 2 $ .9 4 Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream. Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. 9 6 7 -9 0 7 9 B U Y «S E LL«TR A D E Your books at 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: •New & Used Books •Art Prints & Posters •Calendars & Cards •Handbound Journals M-F 10-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 Mill Avenue 966-0203 Old Town Tempe STUDENT FARES • P la n n o w fo r h o lid a y tra v e l • S p e c ia l p ric e s o n g ro u p g e t-a w a y s C all now fo r sem ester break PANDATRAVEL Free Ticket Delivery M-f94.Sat-Sm.11-3 943-3383 Restrictions may apply. Prices subject to change. C e n te r HI THE UTTLE ARCHES SHOPPING CEHTER Authorized Dealer for: Iv o ry T o w e rs u s le ★ ELECTRONICS ★ •Amps •Rhythm Boxes •Distortion Boxes •Mini Mixers •Phase Shifters •Poly Phase •Electronic Metronomes BY ROLANB-IBANEZ & ELECTROHARMONIX & OTHERS 122 E. 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We value your business and thank you for your cooperation. F A S H IO N G A L EVERYDAY SAVINGS OF UP TO 70% ON FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND & DESIGNER FASHIONS FOR JUNIORS & MISSES PHOENIX 19th Ave. & Thunderbird, 866-1690; 35th Ave. & Northern, 841-2951; 7th Ave. & Bethany Home, 265-4760; 28th St. & Indian School, 955-7804; 32nd & Shea, 867-2964; TEMPE Tempo East Shp. Ctr. 935 E. Broadway, 966-4987; MESA Fiesta Village Shp Ctr, (Alma School & Southern) 835-9089; SCOTTSDALE McDowell Plaza. 7750 E. McDowell, 949-8067. HOURS: M-Fri, 9:30am-9pm: Sat. 9:30am-7pm: Sun, 12noon-5pm. Advertised styles representative of stock—-occasionally, specific styles may not be available. Layaway/exchange. [¿ T O s I P B B M S te tc P re u ASU p o lice rep o rt University police reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period ending 12:30 a.m. Tuesday: •University police arrested and charged a Mesa man with criminal damage and domestic violence after he assaulted his wife, who is an ASU student, and smashed out the windshields of her 1980 Chevrolet car in Lot 59, police said. The student received minor cuts and bruises, the car sustained $1,325 in damages, and the man was booked into the Maricopa County Jail in Mesa, police said. •A student reported $850 in damages to her 1982 Mazda car, parked in Lot 58, police said. Police said the woman reported someone has been vandalizing her car daily, and when she went to her car Monday afternoon, the front left headlight was broken and her car was gouged with more dents. •A Tempe man, who was caught trying to steal an ASU student’s bicycle, was arrested and booked into Tempe Jail on the charges of tampering with public records and criminal damage. Police said the man was uncooperative and lied about his date of birth, Social Security number and address. Police are using the bike as evidence in the case, but will return the bike to the student after the case is heard. •A gold necklace, valued at $400, was stolen from a dresser drawer in a locked room at Palo Verde West Residence Hall, police said. , , _____ •Two women students suddenly woke to see two unidentified Caucasian men walking into their room in Manzanita Residence Hall, police said. The men fled when one of the women screamed, police said. The women were unable to supply additional descriptions ;of the men, police said. •A men’s maroon Peugëot 10-speed bicycle valued at $200, was stolen from the Forestry Services Lab greenhouses, where it was parked unlocked, police said. There are no serial numbers to identify the bike. •A men’s blue Schwinn five-speed bicycle, valued at $170, was stolen from the bike racks between the C- and D-wings of Sahuaro Residence Hall, where it was locked, police said. — LAUREN MILLETTE Tem pe p o lice rep o rt Tempe police reported the following incidents for the period ending midnight Monday: •An officer was dispatched Sept. 29 to investigate an armed robbery at the F ry’s foodstore, 6426 S. McClintock Road, police said. The thief cut a hole in the roof of the store and gained access to the manager’s office through the attic. Described only as a man in a red sweatshirt, the suspect confronted an employee in the office, pointed a gun at her, and told her to lie on the floor, police said. The woman fled, and the man escaped through the roof with a bag containing an unknown amount of cash. Police later located a Daisy BB gun in the attic that is believed to be the weapon used in the robbery. SKYDIVE! ASU SKYDIVING CLUB Police have no suspects in the case. •A Tempe man returned from work Sept. 26 and discovered his roommates had moved out, along with some of his belongings, police said. The man reported his front-loading VHS VCR, valued at $400, and $280 in cash missing. The victim said he did not owe his ex-roommates money, and he had no idea why they would take his cash and VCR, police said. / Whereabouts of the suspects are unknown. •While walking their beat, two officers arrested a man and woman for possession of a substance believed to be cocaine, police said. The officers saw one of the suspects, sitting in a red Honda "Stylists who care enough to listen" Z Shampa«v sv Conditioning Precision Cut Blow Dry / V id e o s & F o o d P r a n k s t e r 's G a r & B r i l l A n y b o d y W e lc o m e ! A cro ss from U niversity T heatres o n B roadw ay When questioned, police said the woman said the substance was cocaine, and she purchased it at the Octoberfest in Phoenix that day. The substance was sent to the Tempe police lab for analysis. « U n k n o w n persons broke into the Pasta Plus Deli, 5130 Rural Road, Sept. 26 by prying off a roof vent, police said. The intruders ransacked part of the deli and removed three cases of roast beef, valued at $382, and a case of Bud Light Beer. -D A R R IN HOSTETLER SUN DEVIL HAIRCUTTERS M e e tin g T h u rs ., O c t. 2 , 1 9 8 6 5 : 3 0 p .m . in the parking lot at 300 S. Mill Ave., hand the other an open vial containing a white, powdery substance, police said. $400 ’OFF Regular Price y Men $13 , P Women $1.5 y ) Hr*.: Mon.-Frl. 9-6 Sat. 9-5 Next to the Warehouse Dell In the Arches Plaza 130 E. University Dr. Limited Otter. Call Now! 966-5462 Personal Telephone Ads for Singles Phoenix's Easiest an d M ost Exciting W ay to M e e t Som eone N ew ! ★ No Membership Fees i t All Phone Numbers •k New Ads Daily ★ Call Anytime 1 -9 7 6 -4 0 0 0 First M inute 55C Ea Additional M inute 45* 'C a ll T o d a y a n d E n jo y Y o u r T o m o rro w s .. . ' W H O O PS! I Through an inadvertancy in I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I T H E Y O G U R T O A SIS coupon ad of 9-12-86, an expiration date was omitted. The expiration date should have read "9-17-86." We regret any inconvenience this may have caused. ic r n e n c r H4IR CUTTERS' FREE SHAMPOO WITHTHE First thing every morning: COFFEE and THE A Perfect Cut Every Time No appointment necessary ever! Bring the whole family 0 mene FdlTlILY H4 IR CUTTERS University & Rural Rd. S ta te Your Morning D ally CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 968-8008 L i H o u rs: M o n .-F ri. 9 -9 • S at. 9 -7 • S u n . 1 2 -5 Designer Perm 1 *2 6 °° Includes: •Shampoo and Designer Perm •Perfect Cut •Styling Long hair slightly higher ' 981 No Appointments Family Hair Cutters I j e n te r ta in m e n t State Press Page 13 Wednesday, October 1,1986 Dime store dame Student actress cashes in peroxide image for ‘Jimmy Dean’ By KHALI CRAWFORD State Press MIchMt Scutly/Stai* P m * Senior Jennifer Houston Is Sissy In “Jimmy Dean,” which opens tonight at 8 at the Lyceum Theatre. ASU’s blond, blue-eyed actress, Jennifer Houston, sheds her usual “dumb blond” role to play Sissy, a has-been floozy in “Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean.” “I’ve been typecast as dumb blonds,” said Houston, a senior theater and performance major. “Sissy is that way, but she has something emotional going on, too.” “Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean,” directed by Jam es Yeater, opens the ASU Theater Mainstage Series tonight at 8 in the Lyceum Theatre. Ed Graczyk’s 1976 comedy-drama tells of a group of women who come together in an out-of-touch Texas town in 1975 for the 20th Anniversary Reunion of the Disciples of Jam es Dean. Two of the disciples are Mona, who was an extra in “Giant” and claims Jam es Dean was the father of her child, and Sissy, a brassy, breasty blond. Then there’s Joanne, the mystery woman who nobody can quite place. Houston, who someday hopes to be in musicals, said the play is about “what love is and sexuality; it’s about friends and how they hurt each other. “At the reunion, all the deceptions of 20 years are coming out. I expose Mona, Joe exposes me (Sissy) and then exposes himself. They are coming to terms with themselves and each other. ” Houston explained Sissy is having to deal with the loss of a husband and the loss of her breast. “She made her life out of being sexual, now she can’t do that,” Houston said. For 2l-year-old Houston, playing a middle-aged woman has been a challenge. “It’s been kind of hard to play her,” Houston said. “I’m young; she’s in her 30s and still talks trashy like she did when she was 17.” With a little imagination and some basic emotions, Houston said she pieced the character together. th e a te r “I draw from what I have and what I can imagine,” said Houston. “I do know what it’s like to be lonely. I know what it’s like to be hurt, and I know what it’s like to be rejected. “These are all very basic emotions I draw on.” Houston said that with the help of the other actors, her character has evolved since rehearsals began the first week of school. “I’ve changed her a lot since rehearsal started,” she said. “I thought she was sexy at first, and I made her into a Marilyn Monroe type. Now I’ve come into recognizing what she really is. There’s nothing sexy about her. She’s just sexual. She’s kind of trashy, really. “ I couldn’t have created her on my own. (In the flashback scenes,) Marcy (Chaiken) and I are playing the same character who needs to have the same mannerisms. ” Houston said, although costumes and make up enhance their likeness, the student actresses’ problems are physical. “We look nothing alike, and she’s from New York and talks like this,” said Houston, immitating a Brooklyn accent. Houston, who has been in six shows at ASU and Phoenix Little Theater, said acting also has taught her about herself. “I have so much to learn,” said the fifth year theater student. “I’m just scratching the surface. “I have learned that acting is a very selfindulgent art; it has to be. You have to know who you are; you can’t go around masking yourself. I’m learning to be myself so every time I start a character, I start from neutral. “Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean” will run until Oct. 12, except Monday when the theater is dark, at the Lyceum Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 2 p.m. on Sundays. Tickets are $5, $3 for students and senior citizens. L O T salu tes C o h an w ith m u sical d o o d le d a n d y ByCARRI L. MITCHELL State Press “ I ’m a Yankee Doodle D an d y/Y an kee Doodle do or die!A real live nephew o f m y Uncle Sam /born on the Fourth of J u ly ./I’ve got a Yankee Doodle sw eetheart/she’s my Yankee Doodle joy. . ./Y a n k e e Doodle went to town, riding on a p o n y /I am that Yankee Doodle Boy. ’’ Every American knows the words to this song, but few people know where it originated. The Lyric Opera Theatre will begin its new season tonight with the light hearted, flagwaving musical that made this song such an American tradition. “Little Johnny Jones” is the George Cohan musical about an American jockey who travels to London to ride in the Johnny Jonss (Tony Vsdda) stars In LO Ts“U»tto Johnny Jones." English Derby. While Johnny is there, the evil villain tells him lies to get him worried about his girlfriend. Johnny becomes so worried he loses the race, and the villain spreads the rumor that Johnny threw the race. During the rest of the play, Johnny tries to clear his name and reconcile with his girlfriend. “It is a melodrama with an obvious villain and a hero,” said Brian Hall, stage director. “The villain is after the hero’s girlfriend, and there are other couples who add comic relief and help make the plot twists less plausible. ” Hall said the show contains a wide variety of music styles like ragtime, operettas, ballads and songs that are similar to those done by the Ziegfield Follies. Michael McMullen, the show’s musical director, said the musical has a broad mix of songs from the turn of the century. “There are a lot of good songs. ‘Yankee Doodle Dandy,’ and ‘Give my Regards to Broadway,’ are the biggest, but there were some ballads that were popular when the musical came out that are good also,” McMullen said. “Little Johnny Jones” was first performed on Broadway in 1904. Cohan wrote some of the parts to be performed by members of his own family, Hall said. In recent years, Hall said, the musical has been forgotten. “We tend to want to do the latest things, but that does not give too many choices,” Hall said. McMullen said doing a musical that has not been done a lot makes it harder because it is less known to the performers and they have less to draw on. Hall said the Lyric Opera Theatre had tried to do this musical two years ago during the ASU centennial, but couldn’t because the play’s rights were being disputed in court. “This is a good musical for the kids studying. We try to do shows from all over the decades. Last year we did “Pippin” which is from the ’70s, so we need to go back and do an older show,” he said. All the performers in the musical are ASU students, Hall said. Hall is a faculty associate who teaches musical theater. This is his Uth LOT production. Michael McMullen is a graduate student who worked on LOT’S production of “Dido and Aeneas.” Goldl* Gates’ (Teresa Hattaway) disguise succeeds In making Johnny Jones (Tony Vedda) jealous. A student showing of “Little Johnny Jones” will begin at 8 tonight, tickets are $2. The musical will open Friday and will run Oct. 4,8,10, and 11 at 8 p.m. and Oct. 5 and 12 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $9.50 for adults, $5 for students and children under 12. All shows are performed in the Music Theater. M u seu m hosts art exhibit w ith co n tem p o rary flair By KHALI CRAWFORD State Press „ . . . „ Scratching and pawing to get ahead, hard-edged businessmen are frozen in a cola tangle of confusion. “Corporate Wars,” a three-piece bronze sculpture by prominent American artist, Robert Longo, is one of the contemporary em erged in the 7 0 s and ’80s. Among the Am erican artists featured in the show, F elshin said, “There are a number of artists who deal with imagery that com es from the m ass media — TV, newspapers, film , even cartoons.” art works in Focus On The Image. Exhibit curator Nina Felshin said the piece, though not typical, contains images characteristic of other work in the show. “It’s commenting on the competitive nature of corporate America,” she said. “Certainly this im age comes from the me(|ia ’’ “Corporata War»,” a cast bronza sculpture by Robert Longo, Is one of the places In the Focus On The Image exhibit at the Phoenix Art Museum. m a n n E B S S B i s. 843-4593 and Baf road > TOPBUN|P8| 11:45.2 15. 4:30. 7:00.9:30 KARATEMOIJPS1113574 15. 9:15 FERRISOUEUiOt IPS) 2:05. 700 RUTHLESSPEOPLE(R|1130.3:30.745 RUNNINGSCARED|R| 1:30.5:30.9:45 CROCODILEDUMOEE|PS| 11:15.1:15.3:15.5:15. 7:30.9:45 STANOBYKIRI 11:30.1:30. 3:30. 5:30.730,9:30 VASECTOMY(PO-ID 11:40.1:40.3:40.5:40.7:40.9:40 MEN'SaUS (S112:00.3:30.7:30~ EXTREMITIES|R) 145. 5:15.9:35 SHADOWPLAY|R| ' 11:35,1:35,3:35,5:35,7:35,9:50 5 Q Q 0 M y!Saturday Midnight Shows Belilo«: 8 • Christo«: 5 • Suo Unii 6 B A R G A IN P R IC E A LL SHOWS BEFORE 6 P M MON THRU FRI SAT. SUN & HOLIDAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY The Cornerstone V. 829 0344 Rural & University v SHADOWPLAY|R| 1:15.3:15.5:15.7:15. 9:15 EXTREMUIESPU12:45. 5:00.9:15 HEARTBURN(D2:45.7:00 CROCODILEDUNDEE|PS| 1:30.3:30.5:30.7:30.9:30 TOPBUNT 12:30.2:« 500,7:15,9:30 VKH-IH1:00.500.9:00 ARMEDS 0AN0ER0US|PB|3:00.7:00 RUTHLESSPEOPLEIR)130.S30.S30 RUNNINSSCARED|S| 3:30. 7:» T RUNNINSSCARED|RI 12:45.3:00.5:15.7:30.9:45 VASECTOMY(PS-ID, ~ 1:15.3:15.5:15.7:15.9:15 KRSCLUSIR) 12:30.2:45.5:00.7:15.9:30 IPAIS1:30.5.-25.920 PRETTYINP1MKIP813:35.7:30 We are a FULL Service Salon featuring n o e C 7 C 7 MESA AT SO lONGMORE & SUPERSTITION a=ikM.w«5>| STANIITKID 1:45,3:45,5:45,7:45. 9:45 KARATEKWI |PB 1200.2:15,4:45.7:15,9:45 CROCODILEDUNDEE|PS| 12:30.3:00,5:15,7:45.10:00 TOPBUN|Ptt 12:00.2:30,5:00,7:30.10:00 SHA00WPLAY(M j XJtt), 3:00,5:00.715.9:30 The collection, now owned by a trust, was started by M arlies and Richard Black. Rivendell, the nam e of their home in Colorado and the nam e of the collection, com es from J.R .R . Tolkien’s “The Lord of the R ings,” where Elrond’s house is described as “perfect, w hither you liked food or sleep or work, or story-telling or singing, or just sitting and thinking bet, or a pleasant m ixture of them a ll.” “The Blacks feel their art has the same powers to rejuvenate them ,” Felshin said The Phoenix Art Museum is open 10 a m to 5 p.m ., Monday through Saturday and to a.m . to 9 p.m . Wednesday. It is closed Mondays. Adm ission is $2 for adults, $1 for senior citizens and students, and free to mem bers and children under 12. j WASH & WEAR PERM NOW Includes cut & conditioner and Introductory Special Mill & Southern H a irC u ts J with ad C f? ^ 1 % First time customers only, with coupon. Join the Winning Team! OPEN 5 a m -1am M onday-Friday 8am - 1am S atu rd ayS u n d ay fo r Inform ation call: MO CONTRACTS! YOUR FIRST VISIT IS FREE • S30 Membership Fee •S 3 0 permonth or •$ 4 per workout Nonmembers: $10 per workout $20 per week $40 per month TEMPE • 1102 W. SOUTHERN 829-6969 PHOENIX • 4843 N. 8th PL 230-0055 Beauvais FITNESS & A E r >sc\ i i i i i i i I I I i s i I i • E xpires 11-1-86. COUPONB H a i H a • 90 new weight machines •15,000lbs. of free weights • 14 Heartmate computer bikes \ 2 Wolff system suntan beds • Juice bar with nutritional counseling • Professional trainers for rent • Free instruction for new members • A ir conditioning • We have no salesmen! $25 R eg. $45 N€$JS ^ products. • 18 aerobics classes p er day! 1 0 ?evtevt& PftUn paàfófiHà TOPBUN|P6) 12:00,230.5:00.7:30,10:00 Mnn MVtU) 12:30,4:45.9:00 ARMEDA0AN0EB0US|PB|2:45,7:00 KARATEKI0U|P6) 12:00,2:30,5:00,7:30,1030 STANOITME(R) 1:00,3:00,5:00,7:00,9:00 CROCODILEDUNDEE|P9| 12:30,2:45,5:00,7:15,9:30 ^ 249-2843 S7C7NO :9Thave o il nnn/ M ES A AT 1020 V B 3 3 -W U 4 WEST SOU TH ERN J The exhibit taken from the Rivendell Collection will be shown at .pie Phoenix Art Museum in two parts: Sept. 27-Nov. 16 and Nov. 21-Feb. 8. “From the collection of about 250 things we have selected 43 works that have one thread,” Felshin said. “Each piece has im agery that is recognizable; none is abstract.” She said, however, that within the perimeters of recognizable imagery are different styles and concepts. The exhibit includes contemporary art work by 42 artists from Germany, Italy, E n glan d, S cotland , G reece, K orea, Australia and the United States who The Italian and German artists’ work tends to deal with national concerns. “The Italians tend to look back to Italian tradition, cla ssica l painting like futurism,” she said. “The G erm ans’ art is about art history or history in general with references to World War II.” Danelle Plaza I i 1 Back SW Corner I Call For Appointment I 967-5952 I 1 J Stete Frei« Page 15 W ednesday. O c to b e r 1 ,1 9 8 6 d o s e up ______________________ __ Valley com ic authors w rite for truth, justice, published w ay By DAVE MILLER State Press Superman fought for truth, justice and the American way. But those were the old days. These days comic book super­ heroes might be fighting for the sale, commission and an in­ creased expense account. After all, it can’t be cheap living in an uptown Metropolis apartm ent complex. Yes, there are new reasons to fight crime. And that’s giv­ ing Valley comic writers the chance to tell a new story. “I’ve always wanted to do comic books,” said Greg Swan, scripter of Labor Force, “and now I’ve got the opportunity. ’’ Swan, a data-processing professor at Mesa Community College, uses his opportunity to write what he calls a “dif­ ferent sort of comic book.” The book places its characters in the usual places: other worlds, time warps and in battle with hideous Jabba the Huttype nasties. But here the heroes are fighting off the economy and inflation too, with that ever-important paycheck in mind. In a nutshell, the comic book was born of a friendship between Sw'an, Jam es Pascoe and David Ammerman. After four years in New York, Swan returned to the Valley in 1985, and the three friends got together for the San Diego Comic Art Convention. Both Ammerman and Pascoe had been trying feverishly to break into the comic business, il­ lustrating for an independent publisher. With Swan on their side, the artists decided to do it on their own. “I was a CPA,” Swan said, “and Lance (Stick, the super­ group corporate-appointed leader) represents some very real people.” This idea, Swan hopes, will break his book into the surpris­ ingly competitive comic book industry. “There’s going to be a shakeout in the market (particularly for black and white comics),” Swan said. “Only the best will survive.” But if some comics fail, others may be luring writers and artists away from other entertainment media with the incen­ tives of more dollars and the chance to live thousands of miles from the office and never be late to work. John Byrne (writer and artist for Superman) is rumored to have received $80,000 in royalties for the first issue of his Man Of Steel comic. The financial reward, Swan said “is definite­ ly worth our time.” Ammerman, the artist for Labor Force, said he thinks the key to being sucessful involves believing in the product. And that’s not just on the part of the authors. “Publishing companies don’t want to jeopardize their posi­ tion. They have to believe in a book before they’ll publish it, ” Ammerman said. Ammerman said despite all the advantages of working for yourself, there is a drawback — deadline. “Things have to be done on a schedule,” he said, “and sometimes you have to force yourself to draw. You can’t say ‘I don’t feel like it today.’ Sometimes you have to give things up.” But if giving up things like Monday Night Football is re­ quired, there are compensations. “Comics tell a story, like a movie on paper, and the scripts are like the screenplay,” Ammerman said. Now it’s their screenplay. “D.C. (Comics) owns Superman,” Swan said. “We own Labor Force. ” Soper Savings from Carl's Jr. I Tw o Old Time Star® H am burgers For The P rice Of One Two Famous Star® Hamburgers for $1.99 S a v e $ 1 .1 1 Offer good through Oct. 8,1986. S a v e 1 $ 1 .4 5 Offer good through Oct. 8,1986. Offer good only at: Offer good only at: 960 East University In the Cornerstone Shopping M all Tem pe, Arizona Not valid with any other | offer or discount. One coupon per customer visit, please. $1.45 CRM 2011 Carls &Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. 1986 9 6 0 E ast U n iv e rs ity In th e C o rn e rs to n e S h o p p in g M a ll T e m p e , A rizo n a N ot valid w ith a n y o th e r offer o r d is c o u n t. O n e c o u p o n p e r c u s to m e r visit, p le a se . _ _ Lim it th r e e p e r c o u p o n . e Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. 1986 Copyright IM S, Consolidated Lebor F ono Labor Force le thè new comic hook created by locai artista David Ammerman and Greg Swan. “A d eep ly rom an tic...a n d sexy love story.* —P e te r Travers, PEOPLE MAGAZINE GRAND OPENING She is the m ost m ysterkm independent, beautiful, angry person he has ever m et He is the first m an w ho has ever gotten close enough to feel the heat of her anger...and her love Fajita Prima Just imagine a restaurant where fresh ingredients and fast service can be had at great prices...that’s right! Fajita Prima is the place. We are proud to announce our opening in the valley. Once you step through our doors we think you’ll appreciate the difference that quality makes. In using the choicest ingredients in our Fajitas^ nachos, salsa, tacos, taco salads and our fresh fruit drink, fresas. you'll experience a taste above all the rest. F ajita P rim a, where fast and fresh make the difference. W ILLIAM H I RT MARLEE MATLIN fh U d re n o fa f e s s e r fut:' — * paramount pic tu r es presents a buct » jgarman pro du ctio n A RANDAHAINESFILM CHILDRENOFALESSERCOD PIPERLAURIE PHILIP BOSCO ,ScreenplaybvHESPERANDERSONandMARKMED0FF BasedontheStagePlaybyMARKMEDOFF ^Produced bvBURTSUGARMANsndPATRICKPALMER Directed byRANDAHAINES ..lim it... COfVTUGHT© 1966 BY p a r a m o u n t p ic t u r e s APARAMOUNTPICTURE ;.| R w a a r n te ta p O u m a w MfuMft ttcoapumac I P W T HABUU tUMOIAR CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. COMING SOON TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU. Cornerstone Mall Corner of Rural and University. South end qf the mall. I I Inklings, footnotes and other tangy tidbits from the entertainment file. ICK€D You Ought to Be in Pictures. • “Campus Man," a movie about the calender men of ASU, will begin filming on campus soon, and the casting directors need your help. They’re looking for extras to be in the crowd scenes. Those interested need to go to the Holiday Inn Room 113 on Apache Boulevard and Rural Road to fill out an application. •M usical Theatre of Arizona will hold auditions for “ Fiddler on the Roof” today and Thursday, Oct. 2, at 6 p.m. at Gammage Center. For more information call 946-9200. €D N €SD R V Burt Lancaster stars In T o u g h Guys” which opens Friday, Oct. 3. At the Box Office: • “ Tough G uys," starring Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster, opens Friday at local theaters. Theater. • “Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean,” opens at the Lyceum Theater tonight at 8. Tickets for $5, $3 for students and senior citizens, can be purchased at Gammage. •LOT’S special $2 student preview of “Little Johnny .Jones” appears today at 8 p.m. in the Music Theater- For more information call 965-3434. See related stories on page 13. SHOW THAT YOU CARE 14K G O LD SUN DEVIL C h a rm o r P in 3 THURSDAY: Ladies Night: SI .00 UUell, UJine & Draft FRIDAY: A ll DAY ASH FRY ONLY S3.95 EVERYDAY: Si .00 Kamikaze« & Happy Hour Prices ALL DAY Watch the Sun Devils beat the Bruins Saturday Afternoon am NCVCR fi COV€R RDBIG WEEK 968-02« HANSON’S BULK HULLED R A S, R, OR RAW SUNFLOWER SEED S, QUALITY FOODS GRANOLA lb RC, CHERRY, DIET RITE, CANADADRYor CRUSHES LARGE GRADE A X 2 liter CHICO-SAN (THE ORIGINAL) RICE CAKES EG G S4EAC 8 oz. ‘? 6 9 e DOZEN' New Crop Jonathan LARGE C A LIF APPLES PEACHES •Children's Menu 12’ Salad Bar BIG SCREEN 1 8 4 5 E. Broadway Broadway & McClintock ZA HIDI DATES 'Appetizers •B eer & Wine 1123 S Rural Rd. R u r a lS A p a c h e HANSON’S BULK (ASST.) 897-1126 CALL SIMPLY CHARMING * TUf U N In t ALL PRICES BELOW RETAIL P IN 4 i 9 9 e Golden Dellcloua APPLE8 or Valencia ORANGES TH IS WEEK’S SPECIALS FREE Hoppy Hour Buffet 4-7 p.m. S to re H ours 8 a .m .-1 0 p.m . A R IZ O N A CHARMS G O LD $1.00 Single Drinks ALL NIGHT! G R A N DHANSON'S OPEN! w ith a C ustom GOLD CHARM kV H€PH€RD'S Music: •Pianist Bob Ravenscroft will direct a quintet of ASU jazz musicians tonight at 7:30 in the Recital Hall (5th floor in the Music Building) The combo includes saxophonist Dave Renshaw, trumpeter Steve Cook, bassist Dave Aller and drummer Steve O’Donnell. The concert is free and open to the public. •ASU Graduate and Recital Chorales perform their first concert of the season on Thursday, Oct. 2 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, 322 N. Horne in Mesa. There is no admission charge. 3 BACON CHEESEBURGER : 9 9 3 9 9 ° SMALL HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLES 6 ' 9 L ch TOMATOES BANANAS 5 : 9 9 4 ° 4 3 I w /purchase o f Teriyaki Chicken Breast Sandwich One coupon per purchase. Offer good through 10-31,-86. FREE 5 : 9 9 ° B u lk C u t P ro v o lo n e Cheese $ ^ 9 9 1 /3 lb . TOTAL TACO B u lk C u t S w is s w /purchase o f Total Taco One coupon per purchase. Offer good through 10-31-86. FREE Cheese $ 2 3 9 SALAD BAR w /purchase erf Salad Bar Hanson’s B ulk (A sst.) One coupon per purchase. Offer good through 10-31-86. CORONA f a i p a ttila I ts Sim ple! 99< MILL TOWN CENTER 2 0 1 E. B a se lin e T e m p e , AZ 897-1197 foo* s^ H o u rs : 11 a .m .-1 0 p .m . * 7 d ay s a w e e k ' » M i S > 9 9 * Bulk Cut Colby Longhorn Cheese $ 4 6 9 1 lb Hormel USDA ROAST BEEF or PASTRAMI Sliced 9 to order ” 0 ^ 9 9 C a lifo rn ia Seedleea A Ralelna 9 New 24 Oz. 1 9 9 B ulk C u t M ild C heddar $ 4 9 9 Cheese ■ ■> B o iled (Sliced HAM to o 9 6 O N IO N S 5 : 9 9 ° B u lk C u t C o -Jack CH EESE ( “ j a a * I I G o s s n e r C r e a m e ry 1 BUTTER $ 4 9 9 I a a Y^nton’t Bulk R A 8 Whole Cashewa or Pecan Halve* 4 9 9 Yogurt 4 6 0 N sw M 44oz 5 9 16 oz 8AVE 70c ■ Sham rock Low Fat [knudsen N atural Apple JlllCe 5 ° M ED . BROW N 16 oz One coupon per purchase. Offer good through 10-31-86. FREE TEKIYAH CHICKEN BREAST SANDWICH 9 P IN T O BEANS l 9 : 9 HANSON’S BULK Large Preeident PLUMS or BROCCOLI CELLO CARRCffS CUCUMBER or BELL PEPPERS Garden Freeh Green CABBAGE w /purchase o f Bacon C heeseburger : SALAD SIZE G O L D E N R IPE 4 £ 9 9 ? o . Hanson’s Bulk Freshly Shelled WALNUTS or w»t »Ch ,o s ^ H “ S h a m ro c k 2% M ilk 1 /2 Gal 7 ■ 2 3 9 | . 9 ^ c Scottie All Natural (AseL) 1 dog 9 9 9 1 BISCUITS ^ \b*. I HANSON'S QUALITY FOODS N o rth e a s t P a ra d ise V a lle y 3 2 n d S t. & G re e n w a y El M ira g e S un C ity A rea 1 2 1 0 9 N .W . G rand A ve S o u th w e s t Tem pe P riest & S o u th e rn E ast Tem pe B ro a d w a y & M c C lin to c k 482-3110 583-0301 967-4885 921-9676 P rices G o o d A t A ll F o u r L o c a tio n s . A d E ffe c tiv e W ed ., O ct. 1 T h ro u g h T u e s ., O c t. 7, 19 86. State Page 17 . October 1.1986 P rm T ail G ators sw am p P hoenix w ith m um bo ju m b o By KHALI CRAWFORD State Press For The Tail Gators, a Cajun swamp rock band out of Austin, Texas, “practice makes perfect” holds no meaning. “ W e never rehearse; never did, never had to,” bassist Keith Ferguson said in a slow drawl Hliring a phone interview from his Austin home. The Tail Gators, who will be at the Mason J a r tA"'gbt at 10:30, were formed in 1984 by Don Leady, who had just left the LeRoi Brothers. < Leady re cru ited drum m er Gary “Mudcat” Smith of the Charlie Sexton Band. After a few gigs the Tail Gators, a name given the band by its drummer after he “ r a m m e d some guy with his car,” picked up Ferguson, who had just closed the door on nine years with the Fabulous Thunderbirds. Leady and Ferguson go back 15 years and had worked together on an album for the LeRoi Brothers. “We did gigs together,” Ferguson said. “We all lived together in the same neighborhood.” Ferguson’s blues and Tex-Mex style gave the band’s sound new dimension. “I joined ’em and it happened correctly — immediately.” Ferguson said. “There were no mistakes; it gelled.” The Tail Gators are the exclusive source for their brand of music — “rock ’n’ roll with R & B out of Louisiana in the ’50s,” Ferguson said. “We’re just about the only source for this music unless you go to Louisiana,” he said. “It’s got a French influence; we don’t even The Tall Gator* are Kalth Ferguson, Don Leady and Gary MudcaT Smith. speak French.” The band now has recorded two albums on Wrestler Records, “Swamp Rock” and their August LP “Mumbo Jumbo,” and an EP, “Rock ’til the Cows Come Home,” of Cajun folk melodies and “swamp-a-billy.” “Mumbo Jumbo” combines the raw rock ’n’ roll of songs such as “I Need Love” with guitar instrumentals like “Maria Elena” and spicy Cajun tunes like “Yarddog.” Although, Ferguson said the second album is an improvement over the first, he HO M E M A DE SPAGHETTI & GARLIC BREAD! r>Satellite T I $ 2.99 said the sound doesn’t compare to live. “Everything is better live ’cause the band is there,” he said. “It’s not just a piece of vinyl.” He explained that the band doesn’t labor over any of their material — all composed by Leady. “They’re all thought up, but I don’t see him (Leady) making any chord charts,” said Ferguson, who has been playing guitar for 20 years. “Don tells me what key it’s in, plays it through on guitar, and I’ll have it figured out.” Ferguson said the Tail Gators is not a protest band, and its songs are “ for people to dance to and have fun. “It’s real savage in a happy sort of way.” Although Leady has the band’s Songwriting m arket cornered, Ferguson said he puts in his 2 cents on the title song of “Mumbo Jumbo.” “We were going to a gig in San Antonio,” he said, “and Don said, ‘You know about voodoo. I need two more verses for this song. ’ So I wrote it on the dashboard. 1986 also saw singer/guitarist Leady receiving a Grammy nomination for his participation on the Big Guitars From Texas album “ Thrash, Twang And Thunder.” After more than 10 years of touring, Ferguson said he’s happy with the Tail Gators’ kick-back approach to touring. “ When I was young, I was real shy,” he said. “I wanted to be in a band because it was a good way to meet girls and not have to work everyday. “Now I’m 40, and I don’t like to do that. We don’t tour all the time. I get to come home.” Ferguson said he now “hangs out a lot” with his cat, Bob, and the lizards at his Austin home. “If you live somewhere, it’s nice to be there instead of paying for someone else’s swimming pool,” he said. Tickets for tonight’s show at the Mason Jar, 2303 E. Indian School Road, are $6. The show starts at 9 p.m. with Chuck Hall and the Brick Wall. The Tail Gators will perform at 10:30 p.m. , ------------- CO UPO N— — I i™ 7 FREE JW B & Ö D ! CHEESE CRISP ! TV's 11am-“! 1pm $ 2 .6 0 v a lu e 12 Large Shrimp $ 2 .0 0 4-7 p m. Mon.-Fri. FREE FOOD BAR Limit on e per person. !-------------- c o u p o n --------------- --- N o rth w est C o rn e r o l D obson & U niversity °-ossHs' 8 4 4 -S H E D ! . i ^ o t '* 0 839-TACO 8 3 9 In the Mill Towne Center j PHONE ORDERS-PICK-UP WINDOW 1 ° rtt 0? vv S o u t h e a s t C o m e r o f M i l l & B a s e lin e DONORS WANTED A R IZ O N A SPERM B A N K • Age 18-45 w o rk o r a tte n d school on a fu lltim e basis. M u st pass sem en analysis, c o m p le te physical and o th e r requ ired tes tin g . • $25 ap p lic atio n fe e w hich w ill be re fu n d e d 6 months a f t e r acceptance In to th e p ro g ram , m u s t be availab le fo r final te s t 6 m o n th s a f t e r accep tan ce o f specimen 50$ caucasion 75$ Ethnic 100$ fo r special requested ethnic or genetic types 1 /2 d e fe rre d p a y m e n t to a re q u ire d 6 m o n th blood te s t Appojntment Necessary 2 66 -31 2 9 o r 279-2941 .VC IS * i Children of a Lesser G od’ proves silence is golden on film By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS State Press “ Children of a Lesser God” * * * + A film this brilliant doesn’t come around often enough. To say that Oscar winner William Hurt outdoes himself in “Children erf a Lesser God’’ is truly an understatement. The same can be said for newcomer Marlee Matlin, who brightens up the screen with her captivating portrayal of an aggressive deaf woman who refuses to fit into the “normal” speaking world. “ Children of a Lesser God” is a remarkable piece of film work. This stunning adaptation of the Tony Award­ winning stage play works well, almost to the point that you can forget about watching a movie and allow yourself the pleasure of being compelled by its beautiful story. Much of the credit goes to William Hurt. Somehow you can’t go wrong casting Hurt. His previous credits in “Kiss of the Spiderwoman,” “The Big Chill” and “Body Heat” are mere appetizers to what our eyes feast on here. Hurt plays Jam es Leeds, an unorthodox teacher of the deaf who lands a job working for The Governor Kittridge School For the Deaf. His off-handed methods of teaching only get him sneers from his protege, fir. Curtis Franklin (Philip Boscoe) . i t ’s to no avail though, because his deaf students immediately fall for the forceful antics he uses to convince his students to speak, read lips and even lip-sync to a rock song in the school’s talent show. Hurt falls in love with the school’s cleaning woman, Sarah (Matlin). As the reckless and hostile Sarah, Matlin manages to release an important message on screen — one which openly tells us that deaf people don’t have to learn to communicate by the rules of the hearing world. The film repeatedly conveys this message. We see it in the turbulent relationship Sarah has with Jam es, the refusal of her mother’s (Piper Laurie) love and when the film becomes silent and shows her swimming, a moment that doesn’t need any dialogue or music — here we can understand her silent world. Matlin, who is deaf in real life, is ¿imply breathtaking in her' screen debut. An Academy Award could be in store for this talented lady, this wonderful movie and, of course. William Hurt. n d ... GREAT ( You aENTERTAINMENT together at Gam mafie ANDRE WATTS Piano Tuesday, O ctober 7 * 8 p.m. Tickets: $18, $16 This performance is presented with the generous assistance o f Mrs. Kenneth M. Piper. ROSH HASHANA O C T O B E R 3 -5 , 1 9 8 6 D in n e r: Friday, O c t. 3, 5 p .m . a t H ille l S tu d e n ts $4 / N o n - s tu d e n ts $7 P ay b y W ed ., O c t. 1 A fte r O c t 1 ,1 6 & $ 1 0 ENTRANCE T O RO SH HASHANA A YOM K IP PU R SERVICES ARE BY AD M ISSIO N CARD ONLY! Cards are FREEJb r stu d en ts, s ta ff a n d fa c u lty o f ASU a n d th e co m m u n ity colleges. H ille l Jew ish Student C enter • • • “Musical satire of the highest quality." —New York Times “The crown princess of musical parody . . . hilarious.” — Time Magazine A nna Russell, one o f the truly great com ediennes of the 20th century, has captured the hearts of music lovers the , w orld over. H e r stories at the piano, dem onstrations on m usical instrum ents and synopses of fam ous (and obscure) \ operas have m ade her a peerless favorite on concert stages ft everywhere. v> 1012 S. Mill Ave. Services: Friday, O c t. 3, 8 p m , A riz o n a R o o m S aturday, O c t. 4 ,9 : 3 0 a m , A riz o n a R o o m Sunday, O c t. 5, 9 :3 0 a m a t H ille l Fall Sell Out FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED Apartments Greatly Reduced! Friday, O ctober 17 • 8 p.nr). Tickets: $12, $10 • • • ' T H E BLACKSTONE MAGIC SHOW Thursday, O ctober 30 • 7 p.m. Tickets: $12, $10 ••• For further information about Gammage Center events, calf 965-3434. “TICKET DISCOUNT POLICY: QAMMAQE CENTER — Students may purchase ONE or TWO tickets for HALF-PRICE with presentation of a validated student photo l.p. Students will be asked to present their photo 1.0. with their tickets at the door on night of performance. Faculty end S u it receive a $2-per-ticket discount on all scheduled season events. NOTZ: SPECIAL EVENTS ate not included In this discount poltcy. f y si 0p October 1,1986 State FHMg ANSIMI» * * * ★ Excellent; + + + Good; * ★ OK; ★ Flop “ Crocodile Dundee” *.★ Vi Paul Hogan puts some snap into a movie that could have been called “Indian Jones Does New York.” Hogan plays a ggroafime crocodile wrestler from Australia’s Outback who comes to the attention of the ever story-hungry news media in the Big Apple. Playing at Sun Devil 6. Rated PG-13. “ D e s e rtB lo o m ” * * * * Newcomer Annabeth Gish is brilliant in a story about the fears and apprehensions of those who lived in Las Vegas during the first atomic bomb testing. Jobeth Williams and Jon Voight star. One of the best movies of the year! Look for it at Oscar time. Playing at Los Arcos Mall on Scottsdale and McDowell roads. Rated PG. “ E x tr e m itie s ” * * * Ten years after F arrah Fawcett nixed the halo, she’s back socking it to the critics. In this intense account abopt a woman striking back at her attacker, Fawcett is more than ch in n in g even though she appears to be going overboard with the “beat me” kick. Adapted from the off-Broadway play, also starring Jam es Russo. Playing at Sun Devil 6. Rated R. “On the Edge” ★ * ★ Bruce Dem stars as a marathon runner who attempts a com » h a f* The film flows smoothly as it focuses on one man’s determination to shake his turbulent past. Playing at Camelview Theater, 70th Street, north of Camelback Road. Rated PG-13. “Shanghai Surprise” * Not even Madonna’s sexy image can save her or hubby Sean Penn from the depths of this flop. In their first film together, they exude about as much charisma as two wet noodles lost in a spaghetti pot. Madonna plays missionary Gloria Tatlock who seeks the help of Mr. Wasey (Penn). Together^they aimlessly search for' a lost opium treasure. What’s so surprising about “Shanghai,” is that are no surprises. Playing at Sun Devil 6. Rated PG-13. Page 19 I i — STATE - “Stand By Me” * * * * A brilliant story about four young boys who hope to find the dead body of a missing youth. The film is genumely appealing as it takes the audience back to the good ol days when friends were the only things that really mattered. Directed by Rob Reiner. Playing at Mann Superstition 5. Rated R. “3 Men and a Cradle” * * * * Three bachelors play the maternity game with an abandoned baby girl, and the results are often hilarious. This wellwritten foreign film won three French Oscars last year. Look for the American adaptation soon. Playing at Los Arcos Mall. Rated PG-13 “Vasectomy” * ★ It’s hard to believe, but they actually made a film about the trials and tribulations of someone getting a vasectomy. A cute idea, but think of what Hollywood could do if this became a trend in movies. The sequels could be “Appendectomy” or “Tonsilitis, P art II.” Playing at Mann Poca Fiesta 4,1020 W. Southern in Mesa. Rated (only?) 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W h ile you take it easy, w e cu sto m -m ake each pizza w ith yo u r ch o ice of to p -q u a lity in gredients, th en bake it fresh . A nd w e d e live r in less than 30 m inutes. S o reach fo r yo ur phone, th en relax. D om ino’s P izza D elivers® Q uality! DOMINO’S W A PIZZA DELIVERS HE P IZ Z A PEO PLE F AA..S.U M F 5 . U .. I68-5555 S. Rural Rd. am-1:30am Sun.-Thurs am-2:30am Fri. & Sat. rivers carry less than $20.00 d delivery area Domino's Pizza. Inc Short rounds ‘Indian Jones'star makes smooth transition from film to TV By MARTY WEISS State Press In 1984 a mischevious brat named Short Round saved hero Indiana Jones from the clutches of a dangerous cult. The following year, an intuitive character named Data aided the “Goonies” in their quest for lost treasure. In 1986 Ke Huy Quan, the now teen-age actor who brought Ke Huy Quan now plays Sam In “Together We Stand” to air tonight at 7 on channel 10. these roles to the silver screen, has captured a down-to-earth part in a new television series. Quan plays Sam, the adopted son of Elliot Gould and Dee Wallace Stone, in “Together We Stand,” which airs tonight at 7 on Channel 10. Quan got his new role while filming another motion picture. “ I had never m et the producer. I never even auditioned for this role. My agent got it for me,” he said. Quan describes Sam as a typical unwanted orphan. “He’s a very funny character. He’s touching and intelligent. He gets nervous when he does something wrong because he thinks his parents will send him back to the orphanage.” Quan, who was born in Saigon, is Chinese. “I was 7 years old when we moved out here (to Chinatown in Los Angeles). We moved here because of the war in Vietnam.” He now speaks like a true American. “When we do promotions outside the country, I miss it a lot,” he said. “It’s different. It’s so nice. Hong Kong is so small. You see too many people in a crowded area. America is so big.” Quan does like to visit Hong Kong, however, because “it’s a great place to shop. ” Quan received his lucky break when Steven Spielberg visited several Chinatown schools in search of a young companion for Indiana Jones. “ I never thought I could make it,” he said. “My friends were going (to the interviews). My teachers encouraged me. ” When he got the part, he said he and Spielberg became buddies. “After shooting on the lot, we’d go down to play videogames in his office: Paper Boy, Pole Position and Star Wars,” he said. Qu a n said he finally got over his nervous feelings when the “Indiana Jones” crew shot the scene in which Harrison Ford, Kate Capshaw and Quan became trapped in a runaway mineshaft car. “We shot the roller coaster scene on a closed stage,” he said. “There were 100 people, and it was really hot. The producer brought ice cream for everyone. When Steve said ‘Action,’ we got down in the car and smashed the ice cream on our faces. The cam era in front of us, we popped up with ice cream in each of our faces. He said, ‘Let’s print that.’ ” Since the completion of “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom,” Quan has worked on his second Spielberg motion picture “The Goonies” and a Chlpese film. Although Quan has worked mainly on m ajor motion pictures, in “Together We Stand” he has made the transition AT CORNERSTONE r °T h e ° fo r n e r s to n p ^ ESTABi ISHED 1964 8 2 9 -1 7 4 3 HOURS: THEg j r mmsSHOP M -F 1 0 -9 S a t. 10-8 S u n . 1 2 -6 to television with few problems. “In a movie, you do one scene and stop,” he said. “You have to memorize a whole script at one time (when filming for TV). There are four cameras around you. “It’s great working in front of a live audience. You come in with low energy and the audience brings you up. The show is touching and emotional. ” T h u rs d a y , O c to b e r 2 , 1 9 8 B C O N O C O IN C . P BOXER SHO RTS ARE FINALLY HERE!!! In 1984 K * Huy Quan starred as Short Round In “Indiana Jonas and The Templs ol Doom.” r e - R e c r u i t i n 10% OFF w ith th is ad E x p ire s 1 0 -1 0 -8 6 . i n a When: 12:15 P re s e n te d by ALPHA KAPPA PSI Professional Business Fraternity GREAT GIFT! For That Special Someone Cornerstone Center Sexy P ortraits . . . . $ 7 5 .0 0 Boudoir Portraits . $ 1 0 0 .0 0 2 ft.x3 ft. Poster . . $ 1 0 0 .0 0 You have made it to another $20 OFF with this ad only! WEDNESDAY!! O f f e r e n d s O c t. 1 8 , 1 9 8 6 . For your Wednesday reward, bring this coupon into Charts any Wed. in Oct. for AM AVA $200 O F F the list price of any non-sale album, cassette or CD, U s O n m Questions-Answers Records & Tapes C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S T ry e Refreshments Following Presentation CHARTS mm S Topics: Mgt. Development Program Opportunities/Careers Where: BA 401 T h a n k Y o u F o r W a it in g g N o n -W e d n e s P H O T O G R A P H Y , IN C . 8 2 9 -8 0 0 1 9)0 W. 23rd STREET. TEMPE r sports Page 21 State Press Healthy Devils to take on UCLA Bruins in Pasadena By B y STEVE ADAMS State Press After a less-than-impressive performance against Washington State last Saturday, the Sun Devils will have their backs to the wall in Pasadena, facing the UCLA Bruins. “I think it will help that we are backed into the corner,” head football coach John Cooper said at a media luncheon Tuesday. “My players obviously left their minds at home for the WSU game, and now they will hopefully come out fighting. ’’ The Sun Devils might just have health on their side this Saturday as the game could turn out to be survival of the fittest. “Though we don’t anticipate anybody not being ready to play in the game on Saturday, we do have some players who are not practicing as of Tuesday, ” said Cooper. The outlook is not as bright for the UCLA Bruins. »‘The prim ary place where we have the injury problem is in the running back corps,” said Terry Donahue, head coach of the Bruins. “The injuries lie much more on the offensive than the defensive unit* but we are definitely having our injury problems.” Starting tailback Gaston Green, a key player for the Bruins, is considered doubtful for the game. “Gaston Green’s status has dropped in the last 24 hours,” “Green left the field Monday in the middle of practice because he couldn’t run.” If Green remains out for Saturday’s game, forcing the Bruins to the air, the ASU pass rush will become even more important. Cooper was not very pleased with the performance of the pass rush against WSU. “Every time we blitzed (WSU quarterback Ed) Blount, we got burned,” Cooper said. “If you blitz, the results can go either way. You can either come up with a really big play or you might blow it and give up a really big play. “We were not making anything happen against WSU. We didn’t force any interceptions or fumbles.” Cooper went on to emphasize that he is definitely a passing coach. “Last year at this time we were definitely a passing team, and it wasn’t until late in the season that we lined up and started to get physical,” he said. “Nobody wants to throw the ball more than I do, contrary to what you people (the media) might think.” There had been speculation about whether quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst would start in this week’s game, considering his disappointing performance against WSU. n n n a h n e s a id . Turn to UCLA, pug« 28. Andy Mrozlnski/Stats Prsss Aim nigh niCH Noseguard Larry McGlolhen cha*e* Washington Stale quarterback Ed Blount. Coach John Cooper Identified the pass ruth ASU key to Saturday's UCLA game. rtwmm Sun Davll middle Blocker Mary Ellen Boom low er* tall e* she reaches for a eplke against Illinois State. The volleyball team alms to break the NCAA attendance record Saturday against Stanford. Story page 24. # Boredom of baseball season to stop as playoffs begin The baseball season is over for all but four teams, and as far as I’m concerened it’s a good thing. But for the other 22 teams, the season is over and they just might, in a way, be the lucky ones. I mean the season was far from exciting. I’ve had more fun watching ‘ The Making of the Super Bowl Shuffle. ” Ending the season early did us all a favor; now we can look forward and hope for an exciting series. The Angels’ lead the American League West practically all season with the exception of a slight scare by the rookies down in Texas. They also had a slight scare from the media reminding them of their tendency to act like the hare and let the turtle win. A , Boston will now take on California to see Carol Boot Asst. S p orts E d it a which team gets its shot at the World Series. The only real excitement will come when the Angels meet up with the Mets. But it’s a champ to have to wait until the World Series to see some excitement. Some teams did go out like winners. Take for instance the Giants-Dodgers game last week. The 16-inning game lasted over six hours and the Dodgers went through nine pitchers - hardly a sportswriter’s ideal . . .. **• : r it.» game — but it proved exciting for the fans as the Giants went ahead to win 6-5. Some individuals tried to make the season exciting, too. •Don Baylor became the first player to join a 30-30 club: 30 homers and 30 times hit by a pitch. •When Bo Jackson hit his second homer, his home run trot was 120 yards. Two days earlier Tampa Bay gained 83 yards m i the ground. •Reggie Jackson joined Joe DiMaggio and Johnny Mize as the only players to have three-homer games in three decades when he hit three against the Royals on Sept. 18. But Jackson may be in the unemployment line next season if the Angels back their decision earlier in the season not to negotiate a new contract for Jackson. Tcqv ttiAthe Ancrolc arpare u/rnnef .Tfloksnn i may I say Angels wrong. Jackson not be able to take the bases like he used to, but he has put in a lot of swings for the entire league from New York to California. But actually, the season is not over. There is still time for the Texas Rangers to top the wild-pitch record (91) established by the 1970 Houston Astros. Two is the magic number. Rafael Ramire can break Showon Dus ton’s error lead (32) if he gets four more errant throws. And, the race fpr most strikeouts this season is a tossup between Oakland’s Jose Canseco (167), Texas’s Peter Incaviglia (172) and Milwaukee’s Rob Deer (172). The series starts Oct. 4, a Tuesday — no Monday Night Football to watch. I guess I’ll have to watch baseball. p00£ 2 2 ______ _ —b— — — Chargers bewildered by lack of offensive punch SAN DIEGO (AP) — No one is more bewildered over the Chargers’ string of offensive failures than the San Diego players and coaches who for years have set die NFL standard for offensive success. straight games since. San Diego’s combined score in lasses to the New York Giants, Washington Redskins and Los Angeles Raiders is three fewer points than it scored in the season opener. “If we knew what was holding us back, we would have fixed it by now,” offensive tackle Jim Lachey said of a unit whose scoring punch has evaporated since the opening week of the NFL season. San Diego’s offense has slipped to a tie for fifth place in the AFC West with Seattle. The Chargers and Seahawks meet Monday night in Seattle. The top-rated offensive team last year, San Diego averaged 29 points and 408.4 ds per game in 1985. lThe i e Chargers beat yards imi 50-28 on Sept. 7 but have lost three Miami San Diego has been at its worst in the second half, failing to score a touchdown in the third or fourth period for three weeks. Against the Giants, all six second-half Charger possessions ended in turnovers. “I don’t understand. I don’t think anyone understands it,” San Diego coach Don Coryell said. In recent years, a poor defense has been the Chargers’ main problem. San Diego’s “Air Coryell” has led the NFL in passing in seven of the past eight seasons, finishing second in 1984. During that span, the Chargers have never finished worse than fifth in total offense and led the NFL in five of the last six seasons. “ If you had told me in the preseason that we would have been 1-3 at this point, I would have laughed,” Lachey said. “I think we’ve had good game plans. Everyone has been doingtheir doing their jobs. We’re just sputtering.” “ It’s real frustrating for us right now,” veteran wide receiver Charlie Joiner said. “But we’ll get over it. Football players are only human. We have our letdowns just like anyone else.” San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts, who suffered a broken nose, Sunday against the Raiders but still finished the game, has thrown 11 interceptions in the past three weeks. The NFL record holder for 300-yard passing games with 47, Fouts has yet to reach that plateau this season. It’s the first time srnce since 1979 1979 ne he nas has tauea failed to to pass pass for 300 tune yards in the the first first month month of the yards in in aa game game in season. season. iuns sign 2-year contract with top-scoring Davis PHOENIX (AP) — The Phoenix Suns have scheduled a news conference for Wednesday to announce that veteran guard Walter Davis has signed a new contract with the National Basketball Association club. Davis, 32, reportedly has agreed to a two-year pact with an option for a third year, team officials said Tuesday. Financial term s were not disclosed, in keeping with club policy. proposed contract Monday and made some minor alterations in lAgni language Tuesday before agreeing to terms. Davis, the Suns’ leading scorer in six of his nine pro seasons, reportedly had been seeking a five-year, $5 million pact with all the money guaranteed. The Suns, however, were said to be offering only a slight iiK-rfa so on Davis’ $680,000 salary last season in the final year of his six-year deal. The deal was delayed because Fentress, a Washington, D.C., — based .agent, has been involved in several other contract negotiations for his clients, which include Cleveland Cavaliers’ No. I draft pick Brad Daugherty, the Utah Jazz’ No. 1 pick Dell Curry and Philadelphia 76ers’ free-agent guard Maurice Cheeks. Phoenix general manager Jerry Colangelo said the team ’s lawyers and Davis’ agent, Lee Fentress, reviewed the Cowboys’ Walker receives passing grades for start ST. LOUIS (AP) — Herschel Walker has received passing grades for his first NFL start — from his own team and from his opponents alike. “Now people will see I can do a lot more than just run the ball,” Walker said after his starring role in the Dallas Cowboys’ 31-7 victory Monday night over the St. Louis Cardinals. “Whatever I am called upon to do, I’ll do.” The 6-foot-l, 224-pound Walker picked up 82 yards on 19 carries as the game’s leading rusher and also caught five passes for 57 yards and a touchdown. ‘He has a lot different style than Tonv Dorsett, who bursts right up the middle,” Dallas quarterback Danny White said. “He jukes (dances and fakes) a lot more than Tony and is able to break a lot of tackles. He’s going to be one of the greats.” W alker already established his outstanding ability by winning the Heisman Trophy at Georgia in 1983 and playing two seasons with the New Jersey Generals of the USFL. But Monday night, Walker received his greatest NFL exposure. After picking up half his rushing total on eight carries in the first half, Walker ruined St. Louis’ hopes with his touchdown early in the final quarter. evident, so was the lack of it for injuryriddled St. Louis. Moving to his left, he eluded defenders and caught White’s flat pass to score untouched on an 8-yard play. It was White’s third touchdown pass, giving the Cowboys a 24-7 lead. “Starting tonight was a big opportunity for m e,” said Walker, who got his chance when Dorsett was left a t home with a sprained knee. “ I want to take advantage. We have a lot of great players with a lot of talent.” If Dallas’ abundance of talent was “ It’s hard to play in this league without any wide receivers,” Coach Gene Stallings said of the Cards’ weakest link. “We were playing with one receiver who just cam e in a couple of days ago. And he (Troy Johnson) was cut by the Cowboys before.” St. Louis tried to keep up behind Neil Lomax’s passes and Ottis Anderson’s runs, but the two resources proved not enough. As the Cards remained in the NFC East basement with an 0-4 record, Dallas gained a tie for second place in the division a t 3-1. INTRAMURAL MEMO Flag Football ® Entries due today, Oct. 1 at 3:30 p.m. in the Life Science Lecture Hall #191. HydrorobiCS (water exercise) There is still room left in the Tues.-Thurs. 5:30 p.m. section and Mon.-Wed.-Fri. 11:30 a.m. section. Sign up in the Recreation/ Intramural Office, PEWB Lobby. Swimming & Diving Meet Oct. 3 & 4 at the Aquatic Center. Come out and cheer your favorite swimmer. M EN ’S DIVISION W OM EN’S DIVISION Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. 1 2 9 9 Flag Football Tourney Cross Country Powerlifting Wrestling Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 13 Nov. 20 Oct. 13 Oct. 11&12 Oct. 20 Class A:Oct 17-19 Class B:Oct 24-26 Nov. 5-9 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 24525 Flag Football* Racquetball Singles Racquetball Doubles Flag Football Tournament Cross Country Run Powerlifting Meet Oct. 1 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 Nov. 13 Oct. 13 Oct. 17-19 Oct. 24-26 Nov. 5-9 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 HOTLINE: 965-2626 BURGER KING NOW AC CEPTIN G APPLICATIONS AT 740 E. APACHE, TEMPE. • A r i z o n a » s t a t e • M E M O R I A L U N I O N 2 0 * • t i V f E AH I Z O N A 8 5 2 6 7 INTRAMURAL SPORTS OFFICE Physical Education West Bldg. Lobby 965-5638 COREC DIVISION Entrtos Dua Play Begins Entriss Dua Play Bnglna Entries Dus Hay Begins Flag Football* Pool 3-Man Basketball Racquetball ASSOQATEDBSTUOENTS o f Team Superstars* Flag Football Tourney* RacquetbaJ! 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APACHE i j M M OFFEREXPIRES analysis a m p i« « Cutbacks Proposal would limit scholarships, assistants JAY TAYLOR State Press By In a move designed to cut the cost of running intercollegiate athletic programs, the American Council on Education Tuesday presented a proposal to the Presidents’ Commission of the NCAA which would accomplish that end in several ways. If approved by the presidents’ commission, the legislation will be presented a t the NCAA meeting in January for approval, according to Jim Marcioni of the NCAA office. If it is rejected, any six NCAA institutions may still sponsor it at the January meeting. If that should occur, the proposal must be voted on by the NCAA, Marcioni said. At press time, no decision by the’ commission had been issued. The ACE proposal calls for a reduction of scholarships m football, basketball, baseball and wrestling. It also seeks the gh^ g n in g of the basketball and baseball seasons in order to reduce the prohibitive cost of running a major college athletic program. Football scholarships would be reduced from the current 95 to 80 over a three-year period under the proposal. Basketball foams would lose three scholarships, decreasing from 15 to 12, over the same three-year period. It also calls for the reduction of full-time assistant coaches in football from nine to seven, and in basketball from two to one. The proposal also contains several measures which are designed to allow student-athletes to spend more time in the classroom. Thèse include eliminating spring football and fall baseball, and pushing back the starting date of the basketball season until after the fall semester is over. The number of games basketball teams can play will also be reduced. The Washington, D.C.,-based ACE wants student-athletes to participate only during one semester of the school year. Also included in the ACE proposal is a provision which would reduce the number of games college baseball teams may play from 80 to 60. Basketball teams are currently limited to 28 games per season, but loopholes in the rule allow teams to play more than that. In a move that is seemingly unrelated, the council would also rule ineligible for college athletics anyone who participates in post-season all-star games for graduating seniors and summer basketball camps for seniors. “I don’t think any of those guys feels they are underworked. I don’t feel they are underworked. ” Sun Devil basketball coach Steve Patterson is opposed to legislation that would affect all-star games. “What are we doing legislating high schools?” Patterson asked. “What we are doing there is creeping into someone else’s backyard.” “ I am in favor of anything that will reduce expenses in college athletics,” he said. “We need to reduce the amount of money going into athletics. ” Patterson and football coach. John Cooper are both against most of the proposals that would reduce the number of scholarships and assistant coaches (see related story below). A d m in ist r a t o r s have mixed reactions about the proposals. According to Byrne the proposal would be very effective in cutting costs at his school. The reduction of football scholarships alone would save Oregon $112,500 per year. He said they would also save approximately $110,000 to $120,000 in coaches’ salaries just in football and men’s basketball. Byrne said the average football coach at Oregon earns between $35,000 and $40,000 per year. “We need to reduce expenses and give the student-athletes more time in the classroom,” he said. “We need to gain more control of athletics from an administrative standpoint. ,»1 * 4 / A vr NCAk The one area that left Harris especially piqued was that of staff cuts. “Assistant football coaches get here at 6 in the morning and don’t leave until 7 or 8 at night,” he told the Phoenix Gazette. “They come to work on Thursdays with their bags packed and after practice are on the road to scout a high school game. They come home and coach a game on Saturdays and are back in the office on Sunday morning looking a t film. University of Oregon Athletic Director Bill Byrne said he is in favor of the measures, although he said he has seen only the informal proposal and not the formal one presented to the presidents’ committee Tuesday. V *v ASU Athletic Director Charles Harris is against most of the proposed legislation. “I think there has to be a lot more research to find some balance,” he said. com sms. Sheldon Steinbach, general counsel of the ACE, last week defined what his group is attempting to do. “This is part of a long-term goal of restoring reasonable and responsible conduct in intercollegiate athletics,” he said. Steinbach was unavailable for comment Tuesday. This is not the first time the ACE has proposed controversial legislation to the NCAA. The council also devised Proposition 48, which forces incoming freshmen to have a 2.0 high school grade point average and either a combined 700 SAT score or an ACT score of 15 to be eligible. If students do not meet these criteria, they have two options: they can pay their own way to school the first year and retain four years of eligibility or take the scholarship and lose one year of eligibility. Proposed legislation brings mixed reaction By DEAN A. OBENAUER State Press ASU’s football and basketball coaches have mixed reactions to the American Council of Edycation’s proposed changes for NCAA regulations governing college sports. “I think first of all, before you make these kind of changes that they should have people in the coaching profession involved in the decision making,” football coach John Cooper said. , “These people making decisions haven t been on the other side of the table. I think both of us should sit down and put our cards on the table.” Among the regulations proposed by the ACE are the elimination of spring football practice; reducing over a three-year period the number of football and basketball scholarships; reduction of the number of full-time assistant coaches in both football and basketball; and starting basketball season a month later and reducing the number of games played. Cooper is against all of the regulations the Washington-based ACE is proposing to the NCAA, which would affect college football programs across the country. “These people making decisions have no idea of why a spring football practice is important,” Cooper said. “There are very good reasons why spring practices are important.” ' . . Cooper is no happier about the rest of tne proposed legislation. “ I’m totally against any kind of a reduction (of scholarships and coaches) whatsoever,” Cooper said. “I got in this profession to help young men. “Anytime you start reducing the amount of young men who can come play football and men who can coach them, you’re taking away from those young men,” he said. Basketball coach Steve Patterson has mivprf reactions concerning the proposed changes in basketball programs. Patterson favors the ACE proposal of starting the season a month later. “I like the idea. Right now we start games in the fall semester,” he said. “We have a tournament right before finals. “It places a lot of pressure on freshman to be starting basketball right before finals.” Patterson said moving the season to the start of the spring would eliminate the Hming problems now present. Patterson also agrees with the ACE that there should be a limit to games played by colleges during the season but stressed that the reduction is not as important as the enforcement. coaches for the sam e reason.’ Ironically, Patterson feels the reduction of assistant coaches would hurt student athletes. “There is already an overload of responsibilities on us (Patterson and assistants),” he said. “It (the reduction) would make it difficult for us to do a lot of things We do now, like monitoring academic progress.” “Every game should be counted as a game,” Patterson said. “Right now there are exceptions. For instance, games played out of the continental U.S. are not counted as games. There is the NIT pre-season tournament that doesn’t count, and even this year’s Pac-10 tournament only counts as one game with the possibility of playing four. “Duke played 39 games last year for an NCAA record with a 28 game limit,” Patterson said. “Don’t necessarily reduce the limit, just enforce it by eliminating the loopholes.” Patterson is not so favorable toward the ACE’s call for the reduction of scholarships from 15 to 12. “I’m totally opposed to that,” he said. “Over the course of a season, an injury or two, »iness or academic problems and you’re playing with 12. Under the proposal, that would leave you with no cushion a t all.” Jo h n C o o p e r “By limiting (scholarships), you’re not helping student athletes at all,” Patterson said. “ I'm opposed to the reduction of Steve Patterson Page 24 ,WWn«dajj|jOctobgJ^1W6i Spikers attem pt to break NCAA attendance record By STEVE BRENNAN State Press This weekend the ASU volleyball team will strive to enter the record books — the attendance record books — by breaking the NCAA volleyball attendance record of 10,645. The seventh-ranked Sun Devils, who have an attendance high of 1,568, will attempt to break the record held by Purdue University against the 13th-ranked Stanford Cardinal Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the University Activity Crater. ASU assistant coach Keith Staser, who was present at the last two record-breaking matches, said holding the attendance record benefits the team , school and the community. “I have been to the last two record matches, and I’ve seen what it did for the campus and community,” Staser said. “The people at Purdue are very proud of their record.” The ASU coaching staff has combined with the Sports Information Department, Phi Sigma Epsilon (business fraternity), the Residence Hall Association and the Student Athletic Board to promote the event through letters to high schools, appearances by Coach Debbie Brown, and coverage by valley media. “We have sent out 400 letters to thè high schools, and are working with every major TV and radio station in the city, along with the newspapers, to promote the match,” Staser said. But, Staser said the key element in breaking the record will be the students. “ It comes down to whether or not the students come,” he said. “If we can get less than one-fourth of the student body to come we would break the record. I believe in the students here, and I really think they will come out.” Assistant Sports Information Director Rich Wanninger shared Staser’s opinion. “The students are a vital part of it,” he said. “It’s hard to judge what they will do, but I think it’s possible. We have sold 2,500 tickets already, so we are ahead of Purdue at this point.” Wanninger said breaking the record will have positive effects beyond the volleyball team. “If we set the record and win the game, we will probably get a good crowd for the Arizona match the following weekend,” he said. “It will set the pace for volleyball and could possibly increase attendance for basketball and the other Olympic sports, such as gymnastics. It would be a good thing for the entire athletic department.” “We hope they are going to come back after this match,” Brown said. “We want them to come not because we broke the record, but because they like volleyball. ” “We can’t be disappointed in anything we do,” Wanninger said. “ It will all help down the road.” Coupons for a dinner for two at the Spaghetti Company will be given out to M ^ beer ^ Q S S S t ii Welcomes S t o r t it i the Arizona Opejj Saturday - Sunday Sponsored by October 4,5 IN DIAN SCHOOL PARK SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA Miss Lite Beer Bathing Beauty Pageant 1:00 PM Saturday Co-Sponsored by N IS S A N SA N C TIO N ED I V A i M c i a t l e n o f N ll e y k e l R i e l e M le m l» du na nun m m in i market r WOI»DYNAMICS.NIC..SAMBAMONICA.CA. everyone who attends the match, along with Reebok hats for the first 1,000 entering the gates. At the intermission, a serving contest will be held with the winner receiving a trip for two to Snowmass, Colo. Admission to the match is free for students with validated ASU IDs. The Sun Devils will play Cal-Berkeley on Friday night at7:30 in the UAC. sate ! 25 Alpha Epsilon Pi wins golf tourney B y STEVE ADAMS Stats Proas Intramural action abounded this weekend as the Men’s Class B Golf Tournament swung into action Sunday at Camelot Country Club. Alpha Epsilon P i captured top honors in the team competition scoring a 292,13 shots better than the next team, Big Dogs and the Parahiunans. The next three teams were Sigma Alpha Epsilon (3161, Phi Delta Theta (317) and Theta Delta Chi (320) to round out the top five. Justin Gerbich fired his way into the individual top spot with a score of 70. Gerbich is a member of the Big Dogs and the Parahumans. . Each member of the team winner along with the individual winner will receive an intramural golf championship T-shirt, which is a7>0-50 polyester-cotton blend. In intramural volleyball news: •The volleyball leagues are cruising right along into their third week of play with a number of teams still undefeated. In the men’s A division Theta Delta Chi heads the pack with a record of 3-0 with The Indies, Sigma Nu and Sigma Chi nipping at their heels with a 2-0 record. In the men’s B division the competition is much more heated, as five teams carry 3-0 records into this week and several teams keep close watch with records of 2-0 and 2-1. This division has some key games coming up that could have some king-of-the-hiH teams tumble. Meanwhile in the women’s leagues, the action is a little less dramatic but competitive just the same. Mouchi Pounders I, Serve’s Up and Heffers all carry undefeated records of 2-0 while numerous teams await the opportunity to take control. Meanwhile the Corec volleyball leagues are also serving up some furious games. Although a number of teams have NATIONAL NIUFFLENSHOPPE W IN A SEM ESTER OF FREE TUITION 1900 N. HAYDEN SPECIALIZING IN WILL SELL YOUR CAMERA ST A T E yTTwcf? CLASSIFIED ADS 15 M A TTH EW S CENTER 9 0 5 -7 5 7 2 8 a.m .-5p.m . d a ily All New Chippendales Show V N ew Cast, N ew D ates Ç oiden NationaC H onor1S o c ie ty SHOCKS, STRUTS, MUFFLERS, BRAKES, TIRES M inor Automotive Repair Stop by the table on Cady Mall Oct 1 & 2, 1986 G et A 10% D is c o u n t fo r A S U S tudents (With picture I.D .) Check our prices 9 9 4 -1 9 6 5 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sat. 7:30 a.m.-3 p.m. $1 per ticket. Drawing Nov. 12. $2.50 discount with student I.D. Tickets $12.50 1-HOUR F O T Or® b o -j o Submarines NEW on the m e n u 1/2 OFF GYROS 110,126,35mm, or Disc Color Print Film (C-41). Vi off ‘Rush* Prints <3-Vi'’)* 'Premium Prints’ (4"), or ‘Jumbo Prints’ (5") Price. Time restrictions apply. Limiit 1 Roll/Disc per coupon. Coupon must accompany order. Not good with any other coupon/offer/discount. Coupon good through 10-7-86. SP ! *pw ¿W T , O í , Offer good on 110, 126, 35mm, or Disc Color Print Film (C-41) ‘Later Today’ Service. Time restrictions apply. No coupon required. No limit. Not good with any other coupon/ offer/discount. Regular $2.75 N O W O N LY $ 1 .7 5 (up to 4 sandwiches) 1906. Offer expires Oct. 11,1986. $ 2.10 from (Corner o f McKellips) w it h t h is a o W /fk dropped out of the league, the competition still remains pressure-packed. The Edge and the Sparky Spikers have managed to come out of the pack and post records of records of 3-0 to lead the Corec division. In other intramural news: •There is a mandatory flag football m anagers’ meeting set for today at 3:30 p.m. in Life Science Lecture Hall Room 191. This is the only time flag football entries and the $10 entry fee will be accepted. •Entries are due by 4:00 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 2, for the men’s pool tournament. •The 1986 men’s and women’s swimming and diving tournament will be held Friday and Saturday at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center. The diving meet Friday starts at 3:30 p.m. On Saturday, the swimming meet splashes off at 9 a.m. with the finals getting underwater at 1:30 p. m . But that’s all water under the diving board. mm B0-J0829S. Rural Rd 966-5543 |fl A TTEN TIO N !! P R E -M E D and L ! Bring us your favorite Color Print N egatives) (C-41) and w e’ll do 8x^0 or 11x14 color e n la rg e m en ts) for Vi our ReguTar Price. Coupon must accompany" order. No limit. Not good with any other coupon/offer/discount. Coupon good through 10-7-86. § p 5110 S. Rural Rd............ 839-6834 1739 E. Broadway Rd.... 967-7590 930 W. Broadway Rd......968-8593 1709 E. Guadalupe Rd...897-7679 Coupons good at all 32 Valleywide locations Experience the unique atmosphere at it RURAL tn ? « ic i and ATACHE tauern P R E -D E N T O c to b e r 6 -1 0 ,1 9 8 6 and O c to b e r 1 3 -1 7 ,1 9 8 6 P lease c o n ta c t th e P re -H e a lth P rofessions O ffic e , S S -1 07 $499 .A^antageXT » PRINTERS FROM $177 1» 1B p , Includes: 640K ram, 360K drive, keyboard, 135w power supply, word processor w / speller, tutor program, & spreadsheet ASU buys from us—you should too! Computer Systems Center Tempe 3415 South M cC lintock At Southern 838-1236 state press Hours M - F 10-7 Sat. 1 0 - 5 1986 Fall Semester PRODUCTION DEPT. STUDENT HOURLY JOB PA STE-U P TE C H N IC IA N II (News Page Paste-Up) vou m ust have class o r jo b experience in paste-up techniques. You w ill assem ble and paste-up ad o f th e news page elem ents: te x t, headlines, cutlines and photos. M ust be accurate and have th e ab ility to fo llo w w ritte n directions and be ex tre m e ly reliab le students Committee sign-up for students who will be applying to medical and dental schools next year will be the weeks of 1200B MODEMS $137 DAYS & HOURS Sun. 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m. to approx. 10 p.m. DRAFT $ 1 0 0 1 s t prize! Miss Miller Bathing Beauty Contest Call Jack for more infor 838-1163. PLEASE DO N O T A P P L Y IF YO U C A N N O T W O R K THESE P U B U S H E D HO URS. Applicants m ust pick up a re fe rra l fo rm fro m s tu d e n t Em ploy­ m en t in M atth ew s cen ter, and a s ta te Press production jo b appli­ cation fro m th e reception desk a t th e s ta te Press o ffice, base­ m en t o f M atth ew s C enter. Persons selected fo r In terview w ill be called fo r in terview . Page 26 SO U N Wednesday, October 1,1986 U C LA ______ Continued from p age 21. “Jeff is the No. 1 quarterback at ASU and, in our opinion, the best quarterback we have,’’ Cooper said. “We feel Jeff will weather the storm and ride out whatever problems he might have had and get back on the right track.’1 In fact, Cooper is so confident in Van Raaphorst that he has named him co­ captain for this week’s game. Cooper’s overall assessment of the upcoming game with the Bruins is optimistic. “UCLA is the same UCLA football team that it has always been,” Cooper said. “An excellent team. “They have got great skilled athletes, but we match with them up front pretty evenly ; however, they have some good runners. “ (They) do not pose any problems in their offense and defensive alignment. ’’ Donahue was not so optimistic about his team or its chances aginst thé Sun Devils, especially after the resounding defeat it suffered at the hands of Oklahoma three weeks ago. “Absolutely I’m worried about this game, ” said Donahue. “I make worrying an art form here in L.A., and being defeated by ASU as badly as Oklahoma defeated us is one of the worries on my mind. / “I’m always anxious when you are going to play a team like ASU. They are a good team, and John (Cooper) and I know that.” Donahue expressed concern that the egos of the players were definitely hurt when they were beaten so badly by the Sooners. He is hoping that they have put that game behind them and can play effectively against ASU. “ ASU is the first real challange since the Oklahoma game, and this will prove where we are at,” said Donahue. Both coaches did agree on the fact that the Pac-10 is the toughest it has been in a long time. “The conference is the best it’s been in many, many years,” Donahue said. “ I felt before the season that there were five teams that could win the conference championship. “The team who plays the most consistent is the team that is going to win the championship.” For Cooper the bottom line for the game against the Bruins is to re-establish a passing game and some sort Of pass ru sh .v “We have to work hard this week on improving those areas that were hurting against WSU,” Cooper said. D O p r r x / FORGET! \ i STATE PRESS L "CLASSIFIED AD k / / DEADLINES ARE 3 P M. ■ V f 2 DAYS PRIOR f I TO INSERTION/ classifieds B icycles GOOD USED bikes, from $40 to $125, one great woman’s cruiser. Call Don, 829-9618. A nnouncem ents 'HANG GLIDE! On a gently sloping hill just south of Tempo. Fly all day only $50. Gifts/groups. W indsports, 8977121. Autom obiles 1974 FIAT 124 Spider. New top, original owner, 5 mag wheels, excellent condi­ tion, $2500. 861-3931 days, 942-7508 evenings. Jack. ________ 1976 FORD F150 Ranger pick-up, PS, PB, AT, cruise control, excellent condition, $2500.968-4521.___________ 1976 PEUGEOT turbocharged diesel 4-door sedan. Spare fuel tank. Best o ffer. 945-1898 ev en in g s and w eekends. , 1981 TOYOTA Truck 4x4, black with chrome wheels, $3475. Tim, 992-5944. m SCHWINN VARSITY 27-inch 10-speed men’s bike, $50. Schwinn 26-inch 3-speed m en’s bike, $55. S ear's Free Spirit racing bike, $50.835-7233._______ TEMPE BICYCLE Shop, 330 W. Un­ iversity, 966-6896 (three blocks west of Mill). Sport, touring, commuting, rac­ ing, mountain, custom-built bikes. Expert repairs. Used bikes. ASU student discounts._____________ _ B u sin ess Opp. NO INVESTMENT other than your time and effort to earn serious money. We train. CJ Enterprises. Call toll-free: 1-800-872-2000, ext. 707. (AZ-CAN) UNLIMITED $$$ just for telling folks about great opportunity. No selling, incredibly simple. 282*5928 anytime, or long SASE to Lasre, 2675 W. 89A, #452, Sedona,A Z 86336. (AZ-CAN) For Rent or Lease A CONDO for rent, 2 bedroom, furnished, walk to ASU, $400 deposit, $530 monthly. Call 945-6995 6-9 p.m. w eek d ay s; 9:00 a.m .-9:00 p.m. w eekends.___________ _________ _ FEMALE NEEDED to sublease space at University Towers. If interested, please contact Amy, 784-8589,_____________ _ STUDIO AND one bedroom immediate availability. Ask about move-in special. Bike d ista n c e to ASU. Laundry facilities, pool, BBQ. R egents Park, 1617 E. A pache Blvd., Tempe. Call 968-2616.___________ . THREE BEDROOM, tw o bath condo, washer, dryer, University at Price, $575 _________ per month. CaflS95-8803. VACANCY IN University Towers. Room for two girls. Microwave, dishwasher, and pool view. Call anytime. 829-3803. WALK TO cam pus. Room available Septem ber 30th. $180fmonth, kitchen, WD facilities. Mike, 968-6539 after 5:00 p.m, 112 E. Bonita Way.___________ For Sale A BEAUTIFUL color television, 25” $100; 19” color TV, $80; console stereo $80. C ash. Call 253-5016.________" T o u can stay on top of the , news because we do. AMIGA SOFTWARE, m ust sell for $5 to $15 each. Most new titles including Leader Board Golf. Call Nick after 2:00 p.m, 966-4291.______________________ ART/DRAFTING tables, metal frame with adjustable 23x36 slant top. $65 or both for $100.264-1552. COLLEGE GUIDE: “You, too, can be an lyy Leaguer,” how to gain entrance into th e b est U.S. colleges. Transfers, JC ’s, fresh, grads accepted into BA, MA under special programs. 46 pages. Full, part-time. “Informative, of considera­ ble value,” U.S. Department of Educa­ tion. "A public service,” writes Jerome Carter, former college professor, book editor. Send $7.50 check, money order to: Robert Reilly, PO Box 309, Phoenix, 85001. __________. STATE PRESS 15 MATTHEWS CTR. ASU PUBLISHED EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING HALF PRICE! Flashing arrow signs $329! Lighted, non-arrow $319! Un­ lighted $249! Free letters! Fully guaranteed factory warranty. Limited quantity. See locally. Call today! 1-800-423-0163, anytime. (AZ-CAN) ROLEX- PIAGET- Cartier- G ucd: Col­ lection quality replicas. 234-9810. STEREO: AM-FM receiver, cassette, 8-track. Need to sell, $70.784-8967. ’ F u rn itu re 965-7572 ALU NEW sofa, loveseats, assorted colors, fabrics, $199.95. Can deliver. B&Z, 520 E. Roosevelt, 254-4144. TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD. That's right! Now you can place your STATE PRESS classified ad over the phone if you have a VISA o r MASTERCARD. Just call 965-7572 and ask for classified advertising. Sam to 5 pm DAILY STATE PRESS 15 MATTHEW S CENTER NORTH BASEMENT ASU 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 SAVE 40% -50% Reconditioned bikes — all styles and types NEW BIKES at BIO SAVINGS All styles Beautiful new colors Repairs / Accessories TRADES WELCOME M astercharge / Visa BOB S BICYCLE BAIN 1908 E. Apache, tempe 894-6852 2 blocks oast o f McCJintock BED SALE! Twin bed and frame $25, double bed and boxspring $20, single twin m attress $15. Call Craig, 967-4074. BED'S BED'S. All sizes: Twin $49.95; Full $59.95; Queen $89.95; King $129.95. - Never used. Can deliver. Phone orders accepted. B&Z, 254-4144. COMPLETE 7-piece bedroom set $199. Price Includes com plete full size bed, 6-drawer dresser, 2-drawer night stand, mirror, and headboard. Can deliver. B&Z, 254-4144.______________________ Pride and respect. They come with the territory. [ It’s one of the first things you’ll notice asaN avyO ftlcen T h e recognition thar you’ve got what it takes to Lead th e Advennire. T hatadventurecan lead you around the world and back again. And along the way you’re picking up experience that builds confidence it takes years to get elsewhere. College graduates start with management and leadership training at Officer Candidate School. Once commissioned, you’ll have even more educational opportunities that can further professionalgrow th. You’ll uncover your potential and get the responsibility and decision- making aut hority success needs. The challenge, satisfaction and rewards add up to personal and professional growth no other job can m atch. W hen you Lead the Adventure you start out with prideand respect. It puts you a step ahead. Contact your Navy Officer Recruiter orcall 1-800-327-NAVY. NAVY " OFFICER. LEAD TH E ADVENTURE. MATTRESS SALE Twin s e ts from $49.95, Full s e ts from $59.95, Queen s e ts from $89.95, Kings $139. 7 piece bedroom set com plete $195. 7 piece living room s e t $259. 5 drawer chest $39.95, sleeper sofas from $249 plus much m ore. 3332 Furniture, 30 W. Main, Mesa, 844-1891; 3332 W. McDowell, 233-2236.________________ STUDENT SPECIAL: Student desks $49.95, bookcases $29.95, entertain­ m ent centers $99.95, com puter desks $59.95, c h e s ts $39.95. M uch,1much more. Can deliver. B&Z, 254-4144._____ TWIN BED com plete, $25; waterbed king, mirrored headboard, padded side rails, $125 OBO; lawn mower, runs wall, $20. Call 3-8 p.m. only. Jeff, 838-8063. H elp W anted ADVERTISING SALES for new national promotional program. Commissions plus bonus. Training provided. Call 837-6517, Americard.________ . AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING stu­ dent, part-time work helping design home-built aircraft. 832-5993._________ _ A GREAT part-time job with great pay could really help pay for your educa­ tion. If you or som eone you know has the brains for school but not the bucks, call the Arizona Army National Guard and see if you qualify, at 225*5574. (AZ-CAN) ____________ Slat» Pitta Page 27 Wednesday, October 1,1986 classifieds H elp W anted H elp Wanted ASU IS calling o n y o u l- to Join the ASU Telefund Drive. Qaln valuable tele­ marketing experience and earn big bucks at th e sam e time! Call 9654754 after 1rtX) p.m., Mon-Thurs. PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED: To shoot 8orority/fratemity functions. Need 35mm camera and reliable transportation. Interviews 10-2 and 10-3. Call, 894-6029. _______________ ASU STUDENT8, earn big bucks In your spare time, full o r part-time available. If you have e valid driver's license, call 968-2357 o r 8394478.________________ PLASMA DONORS. Earn up to $30 a week or $120 a month. First donation $10, second donation in the same calendar week (Monday-Sat urday) $20. University Plasma Center, Associated Bioscience of Tempe, Inc., 1015 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, Arizona, 968-6139. Effective until further notice._________ ASU STUDENTS- sell 14K Sun Devil charms. Make *13 each. Call Simply Charming, 897-1126. ____________ CONSTRUCTION, DRIVERS, m echan­ ics, welders, electricians, m achinists, carpenters, needed Immediately. Also Airline jobs. Will train som e positions. (Up to $6000fmonth). Transcontinental Job Search, 306-382-3700. Fee. (AZCAN) _______________________ DAY HOSTESS w anted, apply Wed­ nesday, O ctober 1st and Thursday, October 2nd betw een 4 and 6 p.m. Marie C allender's, 865 S. Dobson, Mesa. __________________ _________ DEVIL HOUSE is accepting ap­ plications for doormen and security positions. Must b e very outgoing, personablei. M ust be dynamic and of AAA quality. Apply In person, M-F, 11-5. No phone calls please. 430 N. Scottsdale Rd.______________________ EXCELLENT PART-TIME opportunity with consum er affairs group. $5/hour. Sunday 3-8p.m., Monday through Thursday 4-9p.m. Excellent com ­ munication skills, phone experience required. Pat Murphy, 9-5p.m. Monday throughFrlday. 2584055._____________ GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY! No product to stock, no sales, no full-time commitment. New co n cep t In marketIng. The Gold Group, 996-2297.________ GROUND FLOOR MLM opportunity, full-time, part-time. Video film classes club. W holesale equipm ent. 2754134. HAIRCUT MODELS w a n te d for workshop every Friday 5:00 p.m. $5 charge. No regular clien ts or calls. Mane Attraction, 3156 E. Camelback Rd. ______________________ HOME ASSEMBLY incom e. Assemble products a t hom e part-time. Details, call 813-327-0896 ext: J . (AZ-CAN) MARKET RESEARCH, part-time oppor­ tunity for graduate m arketing student, with potential for long-term executive position. New company. Call 9944642 o r9624514,_________ ______________ REAL ESTATE/finance/general busi­ n ess junior with em phasis in R.E. Needed to do research/assistant work for V.P. R.E. developer of Inn Suites International. Completion of or current enrollment in appraisal 401 preferred. Computer experience preferred. Posi­ tion will lead to full-time summer e m p lo y m e n t. F le x ib le h o u rs , 15-25/week. Call Doug at 944-1500. PART-TIME SALES for aggressive, self-starter willing to work with high school organizations. High com ­ missions. Send letter to: Classtracks, PO Box 9717, Mpls., MN 55440.________ PART-TIME cashier/h o stess positions available. Apply in person. Tony's New Yorker Club, 107 E. Broadway, Tempe. Ask for M.J. Limited Engagement! RAMBO* FIRST BLOOD PART H THE TERMINATOR A d m issio n O n ly $ 2 .0 0 ON SCOTTSDALE RD. Just Across The River One Block North o f McKellips Cal For Show Timas 10/3 RUPTURED DUCK, 3310 N. Hayden, Scottsdale (Osbom/Hayden): Bus-boy wanted, nights. Apply in person.______ 1974 HONDA MT125 Elsinore, 2,000 miles, $450. 861-3931 days, 942-7508 evenings. Jack._____________________ SALES LADIES needed, full or parttime. Excellent product. Good commlssions. Call Mel, 946-5375._________ 1982 HONDA CB900 Custom, 1200 miles, $2000. 881-3931 days, 942-7508 evenings. Jack._____________________ SHOE SHINE girls wanted for busy valley locations. Call Bennie at 9472742 for interviews and training._______ 1983 HONDA Express scooter. Great condition, $225 (a steal). Sheryl, 968-4170, leave message.____________ STUDENTS: EARN a free computer: Call E.C. System s, 978-0315. ________ 1983 HONDA MB5, 3,500 miles, excel­ lent condition, $310 OBO, includes helmet. Farooq, 965-3131 or 835-7233. STUDENTS EARN $6 to $10 per hour. Leads make our telemarketing easier. Part-time evening hours available immediately. South Scottsdale office is close to cam pus 947-0508.__________ 1984 AERO 125 Honda scooter, $358 Best price available, will sell fast! Tim at 968-5698.________________________ WANTED: PART-TIME office help, 10-15 hours per week, flexible hours, reliable transportation is a must. Interviews 10-2 and 10-3. Cail 894-6029. WE TRAIN, you gain! Do you have entertainm ent ex perience? Trans­ portation? Earn money on weekends as a mobile D.J. Call 996-7779.___________ WORK YOU own hours. Ten hours/week making light deliveries on cam pus by foot o r bike. 833-3171.______ Instruction 1984 MAGNA, new April 1985, low mileage, $450 accessories included in price: $1800.829-6741. Hurry! FOR SALE: Honda Rebel 250cc, 6000 miles, $1200 OBO. 220-0571.__________ HONDA ELITE 80, white, mint condi­ tion, must sell, $850. 897;1309 days, 926-6513 evenings. Shanpn.___________ HONDA ELITE 250, red, new tags, under warranty, sheepskin, $1400 OBO. Call 838-2186, Darren.________________ HONDA GYRO scooter 1984, 50cc, like new, 1400 miles, $425. Susan at 230-2296 or 943-1743 p.m.____________ Personal LEARN TO FLY AT STELLAR AND EARN *250°° CASH NOW HIRING full an d part-time, day and evening hours available for pizza prep, delivery, and crew supervisors. Apply In person a t Round Table Pizza, 1849 N. Sco ttsd ale Rd., Tempo, or 7901 E. Thomas, Scottsdale.______________ PART-TIME POSITION to provide re­ creational activities for youth. Must own vehicle for transporting. Call Janet, 934-1991._____________________ PLAYIT AGAIN CINEMA M otorcycles_____ MONEY MAKER- Show fellow students gold Sun Devil charm s. Make $13 each. Call Simply Charming, 697-1126. OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, year ‘round, Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. All fields. $900-2000 month. Sightseeing. Free Info. Write IJC, PO Box 52-AZ3, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. M iscellaneous REAL ESTATE researcher internship (without pay) in commercial real estate. Junior preferred. 279-3363.___________ MCI PART-TIME te le m ark etin g positions available. Perfect hours for students. SS/hour guaranteed plus bonuses! Opportunity to advance. Call ua for our benefits. 4:30-9.-00 p.m., M-F. Adla Personnel Services, 246-1143. EOE-Nofee.________________________ OFFICE CLEANERS needed 15-20 hours per week. Evenings. Must have car. $4 per hour after training. Bonuses, pay raises, and advancem ent opportunltles. Leave m essag e. 274-0999. The STATE PRESS disclaims all rospon. sibillty for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by Its adver­ tisers. 961-1156 10/1 Jewelry________ CASH FOR gold and diamonds. Mill Avsnua Jewelers, 414 S. Mill Ave., Suite 104. Tempe, 9684967.__________ L o st jjj* Found FOUND: ASU student ID for D. Benson. Call 965-1823._______ __ ____________ LOST AND Found ads are free everyday! Wo limit them to 20 words and run them for 2 days. Ju st call the STATE PRESS classified department, 965-7572, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p . m . __________________ LOST: BLUE Caribou backpack. If found, please leave m essage at 694-1085, or turn in to MU Lost/Found. Tommy Hemstreet. ___________ LOST: GOLD bracelet at Saturday's game. Sentimental value. Reward. Call Gina. 9664462.__________________ ___ AFTERNOON EXPANSION PART-TIME • AFTER CLASS $ 5 .$ 0 /H o u r G u a ra n te e d Our national marketing company has recently expanded Its afternoon hours to conduct surveys for a well-known radio station back Eaat. If you have a good, clear speaking voice, enthusiasm, and are available to start immediately, call DIALAMERICA •Tem po, near ASU •Perm anent positions availsbla •M orning and evenings available also •O ver 60 offices nationwide at 894-0264 ADOPTION: LET us adopt your baby. We'll provide security and future for baby, paid medical expenses for you. Call Nancy and Larry collect, (718)6930823. (AZ-CAN)_____________________ ADOPTION: GIVE your baby the gift of a loving family. Permit us to give an infant the life you want for this child. A loving home and security for a happy future. Call Mike and Leona anytime collect, 516-2264834. (AZ-CAN)_______ ANNE AND Kristi-1 m iss you! Have a fun day! Love, your long-lost pal, Kelly. ANN TANNER: To get rid of minor Irritations, use Jenaway Spray; or else a truck. A. B.________________________ ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, compulsive over eating, private and confidential coun­ seling. Gennie Monroe, ACSW, re­ covered bulimic 437-9420 or 2484204. A-PHI, TIFFANY T., you're the best pledge daughter! Corona to you. Love, Mom.______________________________ ATO DAVE Rook, Just wanted to tell you how special I think you arel Love, your new III sis._____________________ ATTENTION GRUNIONSI We still have a dinner to collect onl Love, Bessie. BELL CLUB members, say yo hey! That’s right, new members! Welcome to: Tami, Kim, and m ost Importantly, Jahmahl. Jal come back! I We miss youl Love to all! Jll Key, Bing Bong! CHAMPAGNE BALLOON bouquets for all occasions) Call Balloon Express at 968-4446 for more Infol \____________ CHI-0 SHAUNA; Mom, you’re the greatestll XO Love, Dawn.____________ DAN L: We have the beginning of som ething special. I’ll take it slow, If you will. The girl who lives in your basement._________________________ GAY MEN’S talk lines. Live uninhibited conversation, 1-9786253 and 1-978 4297. Local rec o rd e d p e rso n al m essages, 1-8783800._______________ “GRUNION QUEEN” (Carrie), get a real hickey and we'll really talk! BSBT. JEFF YEHLE- Thanks for all the hugs now that I need them the most! I_______ JENNIFER HAYES, you’re a special sis, you make AGD special. Love in AGD, Abby.______________________________ DIALING 4-MENl Recorded gay per­ sonal ads. No "coded" ads. All phone numbers! Dlsl 1-976-4MEN (1-976-4636). Call 24 hours. First minute $.55, each additional minute $.45. __________ FLEEGER- WHAT'S up? Call me! Ruth, 8944899.__________________________ R eal Estate______ Typing_________ PRICED RIGHT. 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhome, Mexican tile, patio with jacuzzi, appliances included, University/McClintock area. 1867 E. Kirk­ land Lane. 9684838. _____________ _ $1.50 PAGE. All p ro c ra stin a to r's papers word processed quickly, ac­ curately. 24-hour turnaround available. Corrected spelling. Karen or Lana, 277-6649._______________________ ___ Roommate wanted $1.50 PAGE. Perfectionist at work. Punctuation and spelling edited. Pick­ up and delivery on cam pus. Judi, 969-6856.___________________________ S125/MONTH, W orthington Place condo, pool, volleyball court, hot-tub, one year oid. Contact Joann, 921-1947. K.C., just like your clowns brighten our room, your friendship lights up my life! Thanks! ___________________________ FEMALE NONSMOKING, furnished room, $160 month, 16 utilities, $100 deposit. Roosevelt and 5th Streets. Cail evenings, 894-2297.______________ KELLY OH my! Had the best tim e at Theta Presents. Thanks big time. Dr. Scott.______________________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted, University Towers. 894-1793.____________ LITTLE JJ- Remember, all applications m ust be reviewed; Peach Schnapps shots always on me; set ups accepted; when will you get acquainted with the kitchen?! Great to have you here. JJ. LOVE LINE for $.60 a minute. Call 1-978LOVE and m eet som eone special or add to your friendship list. Give Love ,Line a try. ‘ CLASSIFIEDS WORK MARY-S AND Karen, your new ATO big bro awaits tonight at “Sheperds”. Love MATT P., hope you have a terrific week. (Yes, it’s another personal ad.) Love, S.Q. ___________________________ MODELS, GET your career rolling. Begin your professional portfolio today without professional prices. 9682977. NEED SOME ballplayers for Tempe men’s flag football league. Call Mike, 437-9614.__________________________ PREGNANT? CONSIDER adoption. We may be able to help with housing and medical expenses. For pressure free counseling at no charge, call Southw­ est Adoption Center, Inc. (602) 234-2229 or 1-800-423-2229.___________________ rF REEYOGURT] I Buy one, get one i I ! (C h ild ’S C U p) FREE | TODAY ONLY 10/ 1/86 | AHH NATURALE j In The Arches | Corner of Forest & University FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share two bedroom, two bath condo at Sierra Lakes. $250 per month + Vi utilities. Completely furnished. 831-5311.______ MALE ROOMMATE wanted, University Towers. 894-1793. ____________ M/F ROOMMATE wanted. Nonsmoker, near ASU. $180 plus half utilities. Call Jim, 784-8448.____________ __________ NONSMOKING MALE room m ate, $185/month plus Vs utilities, two bedroom,, two bath condo, pool, sand volleyball, etc. Worthington Place. Call 921-9420, Mike. ____________________ ROOMMATE FOR 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment, 2 miles from ASU. Nice, quiet, $300/month, utilities included. Call 8287377 for details._____________ ROOMMATE WANTED: Share brand new condo. Washer/dryer, microwave, Vi utilities, own private bath. Laura, 833-5417._____________________ ____ ROOMMATE WANTED. Share 2 bed­ room, 2 bath condo, fully furnished, pool, close to ASU, $25Q/month, 16 utilities. Keith, 941-8306._____________ TO SHARE three bedroom house with owner. Excellent location, Dobson Ranch area. Pool, washer, dryer, male or female. $250 per month plus utilities. Please call Jim at 839-8730 evenings. VEGETARIAN HOUSEMATE needed for beautiful house in central Phoenix. $110 month + 1A utilities. 284-9878. I Services customer | I___________________11 1J RICHARD, HAS “ Rushing” got you blue? Not to fesr, your PSE big sibling Ishsral______________________ _____ SCOOTER, THANX for the new tradltlonl XXXOOO, Paula.________________ TAHOE CREW: Crazy signs? Chefs? “Sherman?!” ' Reunion tlmel This Thursday at 5:00 p.m. Party favors for all compliments of Jungle Jane. Contact Dad for details.______________ COMPUTER TERMINALS for rent or sale with modem. Do your homework from home. $35 per month. 2486172. COPIES OF any x-ray, com puter tomography (CT) ultrasound, angiog­ raphy or nuclear medicine films are available locally. 24-hour service. Pick-up and delivery can be arranged. Call Kay Halladay RT, 994-0050. (AZ-CAN)__________________________ FOR PRODUCTS you need or if you would like a free facial, call Judy Holdsworth, beauty consultant, Mary Kay Cosmetics. 994-8271.____________ HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Tempe. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center 8287829.____________________ PHOTOGRAPHER AVAILABLE for most of your photo needs. Call Gary at 9680938 or leave m essage.___________ THETA CHI- Get out your checkbooks and get set to drink! Bottle auction this Friday. See you there. Love, Little Sisters.________ ;_______________ _ RESUMES PROFESSIONALLY d e­ signed, edited, typed. Reasonable rates.x 24-hour turnaround. 493-0132 (evenings)._______________________ THOUGHTS ABOUT suicide? You're not alone. Jerem iah 29:11, Quo Vadls Bookstore, 122-B University Drive. 968-3663._________________________ _ SPANISH TUTOR. Dependable. Four years in Latin America. $8 hour. Denice. 839-6901. ____________ TIFFANY T.: Thanks for Inviting me to Pledge Presents. We’ll have a great tlmel Love, Dolph.___________________ Transportation WENDY VINCENT: I'm your worst nightmare. Call Neal, 829-7803.________ CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. Ail States Drive-away, 992-5200.__________ 24 Hours! SINGLES ClASSIPHONE Telephone Dating Introductions Easies t and M ost Fun Way to M eet Som eone Need # We Don't 'Cods' Our Ads # No Membership Fee # All Ads with Phone Numbers To Piece Your A 4 o r Listen to O thers Dial 1 - 9 7 8 4 0 0 0 DAVID M., thank you for Friday night. I had the best time! Get psyched for Alpha Phi's presents! Love, Mary. DONNY S.: Here's the ad I promised. Have a great weekend, but remember, you ow e me a road trip. Las Vegas, the m ountains - you decide. Kelly.______ ■ 10/8 Personal R eal E state TWO OF everything: Maatar bedrooms, baths, stories, car garage. Also, micro, fireplace, calling fan, bar, and genie. $115,000. Im m ed iate o c cu p a n c y . Robert Crouch, Realtor, 945-0701. Travel BE INCLUDED in and receive the first edition of the new Spring/Summer *87 “Travel Companions Connection”, exclusive directory of pertinent in­ fo r m a tio n o n 10,000 s e e k in g travel/vacation sharers nationwide! Whether your reasons are strictly practical or purely fun-oriented, don't m iss out on this unique and valuable service available exclusively to listers! Rush $1 postage and handling for complete details,,or, to assure beating proce88ing/printing deadlines and 10, 000 listings size limit for this first edition, rush total cost of $8.75 now! Your personal data/order form and complete details, including special features, will be sent immediately! T.C.C., PO Box 39356, St. Louis, MO 83139.___________________________ _ GOT A tim eshare? We’ll take it. America’s tim eshare clearinghouse, Resort Sales International, Gatlinburg, TN. Call 815487-3108. (AZ-CAN) $1.50 PER double spaced page. Excel­ lent quality, electronic typewriter. Call Qulnet at 969-3303.__________________ A-1, GET your papers laser typeset at Kinko’s. 9682035.___________________ A-1 PROFESSIONAL, fast, accurate, all kinds, 12 years experience. 8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m. Price/Baseline area. 8386251.___________________________ AAA WORD processing service. Quick, guaranteed, professional services. Reasonable fees. Rush jobs ok. Graphic services available (charts, graphs, etc.). Discount with this ad. Ron, 833-5532. _________ . AAKURIT TYPING/ M embers of TTA/ call Brenda 897-05051 Carolyn 831-2434/ Linda 831-03491 Good rates/ prompt service._________________ ___ _______ AA TYPING - word processing, $1.50 per double spaced page. Call Cathy, 8988191.___________________________ ACCURATE. CONVENIENT. Reasona­ ble. Mrs. Oakley. 967-0802.____________ A + PROFESSIONAL typing and re­ sum e service in my home. Grammatical editing available. Reasonable rates. 966-8413. _____________ CALL ME for fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. Close to ASU. 9 6 8 2 1 8 6 ._______ . EXPERIENCED, PROFESSIONAL $1 per page. Fast, accurate service. Call Gail after 5:00 p.m. 8386258.__________ FORMER ASU staffers- experience with APA, MLA and other formats for dissertations, theses, term, and re­ search papers. Word processing, or let us take your entered disks and print them out on our IBM compatible, letter quality printer. Rates quoted. Members NASS and MAPSS. Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302. Open Saturdays.___________ JB ’S WORDPROCESSING, typing. Can type anything. Located in Tempe 8383412 after 3:00 pm weekdays._____ LET ME do your typing! Day’s T y p in g/W ordprocessing Service. Competitive rates. Call Barbara at 892-1718.__________________________ . PROFESSIONAL WORD processingreports, theses, resum es, etc. Busi­ ness, legal, engineering experience. Rush jobs okay. 945-0058.____________ PROFESSIONAL ACADEMIC word­ p ro c e ssin g , books, th e s e s , d is ­ sertations, disc storage, letter quality. Reasonable rates. Taylor, 964-6689. RESUMES AND typing professionally done. 924-0815. __________________ RUSH JOBS no problem! Term papers, theses, etc., $1.50 per page. Sharp, clear type. 8389103._________________ SHORT OF TIME? I can help. Re­ asonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 9485744._________________________ __ THESES, TERM papers, reports etc. $1.00 page, typed at home, 30 years experience. Marian 431-0818. _______ TYPING, PROFESSIONAL quality. Call evenings and weekends, 9664831. TYPING/WORD processing: reasona­ ble rates; quick service. Resumes, letters, papers. Leave m essage. 838 6297.______________________________ WORD PROCESSING, reports, legal, resum es, thesis, disk storage available. Flexible hours. 4381327._________ WORD PROCESSING, letter quality printer, reports, resum es, thesis, dis­ sertation. Close to ASU. Debbie, 8286739._________________________ _ WORD PROCESSING, m anuscripts, legal docum ents, resum es, term papers, and thesis. Close to ASU. 4388864.________________ WORD PROCESSING. Call us to have your papers professionally typed. Fast. Reasonable rates. 8924155,832-0360. Wanted HELPI! I desperately need tutoring for CSC181. $8/hour guaranteed. Cell Dan G arcia, 271-8252 days, 838-4187 evening a / w e e k e n d s . ____________ NEED SOMEONE to translate maga­ zine articles from Jap a n e se to English. 831-0472.___________________________ SOMEONE GOOD In English (B or better) who has taken 105 and can give pointers on writing papers a few hours a week. $5 an hour. Call Jeni at 829-3573 (or 3572)._________ _________ I*- SALE HOURS S A V E 20% to \ TENTS i Reg. SALE N O R T H FA CE Morning Glory Bullfrog Dragonfly June Bug $450 $310 $280 $240 *189“ *259“ *219“ *179“ $275 $250 $198 1 Pivetta 5 Muir Trail *199“ *179“ *139“ $100 *89“ *6 9 " $74 *49“ $60 $38 *19“ *39“ *29“ $90 *49“ $130 VASQ UE Flyte H I-T E C VE-23 $230 *159" J .......................... SLEEPING BAGS CAMPING ACCESSORIES Everything you need to make your trip complete and m o re ... Reg. SALE Centaur Mohave ____________________________________________ / \ BACKPACKS Minaret PCT Sierra Lite $135 $98 *79" *39“ $135 $96 *79" *53“ $159 $150 *109“ ■ W IN D Y P A S S Bee’s Knees China Clipper S IE R R A D E S IG N S Twilight Trek Reg. SALE *99M $40 NEW BA LAN CE Cascade RENTALS N O R T H FA CE •S T O V E S •FOOD « FU E L •M O U N T A IN EER IN G N E C ESSIT IES • H A M M O C K S » T H E R M A R E S T PA D S V_________ - h iiim boots P IV E T T A W IN D Y P A S S —. I Reg. SALE JA N SP O R T Lhasa Hotel Rongbuk Yellowstone N Wed.-Fri. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30-9:00 Saturday......... . v .. 9:30-6:00 ................12:00-5:00 Sunday 1986-87 EQUIPMENT available for rent! Tents, sleeping bags, internal and external frame packs... XC and SNOW CAMPING RENTALS JA N S P O R T D2 D3, D5 Cascade $185 $145 $105 CLIMBING EQNIPMEHT *149“ *109“ *69“ RO PES N O R T H FA CE FL-100 $190 *99“ $250 *139" $165 $145 *89“ *99“ G REGORY Snowcreek X C P a c k a g e s f r o m $9 9 M V 20% O FF IC E A X E S 30% O F F C R A M P O N S (1 9 8 5 ) 40% O F F HARDWARE PACKAGES SWAP MEET tO W E Uintah Appalachian by CHOUINARD $129" Sat., Oct. 4 * 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Save $50 Come early! Pick a spot in our parking lot and sell your used camping and backpacking equipment. CLIM BING SHOES by . FIRE • ASOLO • LA SPORTIVA . j HURRY! LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND! BN Layaw ay Ipine Ski Sr Spoils CORNER BROADWAY & McCLINTOCK, TEMPE • 968-9056