Arizona State University S ta te Tem pe, A rizona p re s s Thursday, October 2,1986 © Copyright, State Press, 1986 Voi: 69 No. 27 3 ASU students foil bank robbery attem pt By M ICHAEL BURGESS and LAUREN MILLETTE S tate Press Three ASU students foiled a bank robbery attem pt late Wednesday afternoon by tackling a fem ale suspect dressed as a man in the bank’s back a lle y . The attem pt w as m ade at the Arizona Bank, 619 S. Mill A ve., just after the bank closed at 3 p.m. Junior m arketing major Mike Kruse and junior business m ajors Jeff Whiteman and Scott Beattie chased the suspect after she broke through a locked door and fled on a 10-speed bicycle with about $100. Jessica Bryn Rigsby, 37, of Tucson, was being held at the Tempe City Jail Wednesday night for investigation of robbery charges. The men chased Rigsby to an alley behind the bank and pinned her to the ground until Tempe Police officers arrived “ about a minute later,” Whiteman said. Kruse tackled Rigsby, who had tossed aside a fake m ustache and straw hat that Concealed her long hair, before the students grabbed her, Whiteman said. While Kruse w as holding Rigsby, Whiteman said he kicked the blue cam era bag the suspect was holding to see if she had a gun. Kruse said Rigsby yelled, “I didn’t do it!” Whiteman said they told her, “Y es, you did do it. We saw you.” He also said Rigsby showed no emotion and said: “I had to do it. They w ere going to take my house aw ay.’’' Richard E llis, head of security at Arizona Bank, said it is corporate policy not to release information until FBI investigations are com plete. Whiteman said the three men and Rigsby were the only custom ers in the bank. “Mike and I w ere in one line, and we saw her walk up to the line next to u s,” he said. Beattie, who w as ip .th e line next to Whiteman and Kruse, said Rigsby tried to disguise her voice as a man’s. S “She said I should go before her,” he said. “She wanted to be last in line and closest to the door.” Whiteman said said Rigsby looked suspicious. “She w as wearing sunglasses, a fake mustache, and a straw hat,” he said. “She also wore a long-sleeve flannel shirt and blue jeans.” Whiteman said Rigsby also looked unusual because she ... M l Kevin J. L arkln /S tat* Prava From laft, juniors Jeff W hitem an, a management student, M ike Kruse, a m arketing m ajor, and Scott Beattie, a business student, stand outside the Arizona Bank, 619 S. M ill Ave., after apprehending a woman suspected of robbing the bank Wednesday afternoon. T he students chased the suspect, disguised as a man, knocked her o ff her bike and held her until police arrived. was stiff, stared straight ahead and kept her hand in the blue bag while at the window. “The teller was calm and said, ‘That man just robbed m e,’ ” Whiteman said. “We didn’t even think about it. We just said let’s go. “It was so weird watching her. ” Kruse said w itnessing the robbery was like something on television. The students described Rigsby as 5 feet 6 inches and about 160 pounds. A Tempe City Jail spokeman said Rigsby’s bail and trial date will be set today. ASU prof targ et of C ontra death plot, Tam bs said ■ Jy VIC K IE CHACHERE R ate Press U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica Lewis rambs is the target of a Nicaraguan Contra leath plot, a Washington, D.C.-based public nterest organization said Wednesday. But Tambs, who also is. an ASU history jrofessor, Said it is the Sandanistas, the Marxist-backed government controlling Nicaragua, who are trying to kill him. In a telephone interview from the Costa lican em bassy Tuesday, Tambs said The Christie Institute’s charge that the Contras tre trying to kill him is little more than a ■umor “that has been floating around. ’’ Tambs, who is on unpaid leave from the Jniversity, said he has received death hreats, but the threats were from guerrillas nvolved in South Am erica’s narcotics trade nd from Sandanistas backing the illegal Irug industry in Central America. The Contras are U.S.-backed rebels trying o overthrow the Sandanista regim e that :ontrols Nicaragua. The Sandanistas took iver the country 1979 when they overthrew ijicaraguan dictator AnastasioSomoza. Tambs, 59, served as ambassador to Colombia from 1983 to 1985. He said he first >ecame aware of a plot against his life here. “When I was in Colombia, the guerrillas protecting the drug trade) were after m e,” te said, adding he thinks the threats stem ; ■■■ ■ —— -- ■— ‘When 1 was in Colombia, the guerrillas were after m e . . . If you look into it, you w ill see the communist insurgence in Colombia and Peru are in aliiance with the drug dealers.’ — Lewis Tambs from communist—backed interrats in the region. “If you look into it you w ill see the communist insurgence in Columbia and Peru are in alliance with the drug dealers,” Tambs said. U.S. State Department officials have no independent confirmation that Contra rebels are involved in drug trafficking or in an assassination plot against him , he said. But Tam bs said he has officia l confirmation that die Sandanistas are involved in drug trafficking, including photographs from July 1984 showing a Sandanista official loading cocaine into a plane bound for the United States. Robert Hager, an attorney for The Christie Institute, said his organization has spent the last year investigating the Contra plot to kill Tambs and has uncovered a Contra conspiracy to assassinate Tambs and blame the killing on the Sandanistas. The Christie Institute is a center for public policy and public-interest law. The institute, which works with several religious organizations, has represented and church workers in the Sanctuary Movement. Hager said the Contras had planned to bomb the U.S. em bassy in San Jose, Costa Rica, and convince U.S. officials that Sandanistas had done it. He said the Contras DENNIS DECONCINI inside today The Arizona senator says he voted against the nation’s tax reform because of its excessive transitions ruies. Page 3. ASU W EATH ER Clear skies with an expected high of 86 degrees. The expected low is 63. :CXim * : . hope such such an an incident incident would would cause cause th< the hooe United States to launch a m ilitary strike against the Sandanistas. In August, The Christie Institute charged in a lawsuit against 24 people linked to the rebel group that the Contras had tried to kill Tambs. The suit, filed in a U.S. District Court in Florida, was rejected by a judge, Hager said, but the group will refile a sim ilar lawsuit today in the sam e court. The lawsuit asks for $23.8 million on behalf of two U.S. journalists injured in the Contra assassination attempt of Eden Pastora, a former Contra rebel who split with the organization on May 30,1984. Eight people were killed in the attack, and 28 were injured. Pastora escaped with minor injuries. The journalists, Tony Avirgan and Martha Honey, are a husband-wife reporting team working in Central America. Avirgan was working as a television cameraman for ABC News, and Honey was reporting for two London newspapers at the tim e of the attack. The lawsuit charges that one of the defendants offered a $1 million bounty for the person who assassinated Tambs. Twenty-four U.S.,.Central American and South American citizens are charged with a variety of crim es in the 63-page suit. The charges include illegal transportation of weapons to Central America, involvement in the conspiracy to kill Pastora and drug trafficking. Analysis.............................................. 5 Comics .............. 11 Classified ............................................18 O pinion.............................................. 4 Police report........................................ 11 Sports .......................................... 13 t o d a y ................................................................... 2 S te le Frew today M eetings • MECHA (M arim iento E studiantil Chicano da Aztlan) will meet in the Social Sciences Building, Room 236 at 4 p.m. Speakers will be representatives from the Arizoan Farmworkers Union and Arizona Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. •W omen’s Studies Student Association will meet in the MU Yavapai Room at noon. Students will discuss women’s studies issues and insights, including issues dealing in rape, incest and domestic violence. •ASU W ildlife Society will meet in the Life Sciences Building, Room 183 at 7 p.m. Dr. Tom Martin will speak about “ Breeding Bird Diversity on the Mogollon Rim.” •College Democrats will meet in the MU, North Pinal Room, at 6 p.m. Learn why ASU is turning democrat. We will discuss upcoming events, activities and parties. •Students Against Apartheid will meet in the MU Santa Cruz Room at 8 p.m. It will bé a general business meeting with planning for Oct. 11, National Apartheid Day. •A H EA Arizona Hom e-Econoics Association will meet in the Home Economics Building, Room 124 at 3:30 p.m. New members are welcome. •A il Saints Catholic Newman Center wilt meet at the Newman Center, located at 230 F lln iv a n iltv D riv e It is the second of five session Central American Study Course, “A Journey o Understanding.” . ... •ASU Libertarians will meet in the MU Room 221 at 1:30 p.m. How can we help abolish ASASU. Lectures •Senator Alan Stephens from District 6 will speak at 6 p.m. in the MU Gila Room. The speech is sponsored by the College Democrats of ASU. •A Strategic Method for Writing: A Seminar for Technical and Scientific Professionals, a Center for Professional development seminar will be held at 4 p.m. in the Ecology Building. For more information call 965*1740. T-Birds tail Andy MrozInakl/SUt* Pr»«« C harlie Huntington, 19, lo o k* Into the M l pipo* of a ear rendition In th e M U G allery. Huntington, a sophomore art m ajor, was looking at an exhibit by H ark Bennett called “The Effects of Fords on Barbara” W ednesday morning. li» ., a S S B . m * Welcomes the A r iz o n a MB Saturday - Sunday Sponsored by October 4,5 INDIAN SCHOOL PARK B EER SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA M iss L ite Beer B athing B eauty Pageant 1:00 PM S aturday Co-Sponsored by cQa N I S S A N O f t ! mm m mini market •Alex K. Zettl, University of CaliforniaBerkeley, discusses “Low Dimensional Collective Mode Transport,” at 4 p.m. in the Physical Sciences Building, Room F-123. •The MU Cinema presents “Easy Rider" and “Five Easy Pieces.” Showtimes are 4:30,7 and 9:30 p.m. *-•ASU Graduate and Recital Chorales sing in concert at Mark’s Episcopal Church, located at 332 N. Horne St. at 7:30 p.m. •M usical Theatre of Arizona will hold auditions for “ Fiddler on the Roof” at 6 p.m. at Gammage Center. For more information, call 946-9200. State Pus» Page 3 Thursday, O ctober g, 1986 Arizona senator disagrees with bill to tax student aid By KIM MATTINGLY S tate Press Arizona Sen. Dennis DeConcini is not happy with the nation’s tax refonp and said that in a few years Americans «dll realize “it was not such a good idea after a ll,” the senator’s press assistant said Wednesday. Tim Carlsgaard said DeConcini, a Democrat, did not vote for the bill last Saturday when it was passed hy the Senate (74-23) because of its excessive transition rules and a few key provisions. He also said DeConcini does not agree with the new provision which taxes student aid in excess of tuition and fees costs. “I’m sure he wouldn’t be happy about it,” he said. “There’s no sense in imposing taxes on students who are trying to get through school.” The nation’s tax bill cleared Congress last week and now is being filed. The bill w ill go to President Reagan who has indicated he w ill sign it into law. Carlsgaard said that before the bill went to the joint House-Senate Committee to be compromised, there were about $5 billion worth of transition rules, or special tax exem ptions, for selected organizations. IIt cam e back from the conference com m ittee with more than $10.6 billion in “tax breaks,” he said. Included in the tran sition ru les, Carlsgaard said, are exemptions that allow contributors to the University of Texas and Louisiana State University to deduct their donations for athletic seating rights. The tax bill otherwise reduces deductions for charitable contributions to universities. C arlsgaard sa id the exem ptions “probably are because som e senator from one of these states was on the conference com m ittee writing the bill. ” Jennus Burton, ASU assistant vice president for business affairs, said: “That’s the way of politicaLlife. “I’m sure (ASU) would have liked to have all kinds of exem ptions, but you have to face reality.” There were two concessions in the bill for Arizona which said tax-exempt bonds could be issued up to $391 miUion for the Central Arizona Project, and $200 m illion for the Phoenix Sports Stadium. But DeConcini said, “I’d be willing to give up these two to take out all the others.” Carlsgaard said DeConcini would rather there were no transition rules, “then everything would be fair, and everyone would be playing by the sam e rules. “People are just going to keep coming back for more and more every year, at the taxpayers’ expense,” he said. C arlsgaard said Senate F inance Committee Chairman Robert Packwood, ROre., and House Ways and M eans Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., wrote most of the compromise and the tax exemptions. As far as the bill’s positive effects, Carlsgaard said, “Oregon is No. 1, and Arizona is way down on the list. ” One negative for Arizona is a provision that elim inates deductions for state and local sales tax, he said. DeConcini was “very disappointed” in this provision “because Arizona relies heavily on sales tax,” he said. But he said the senator was happy to see the country’s 14 tax brackets reduced to two, and six million of the country’s working poor removed from tax rules. Sen. Dennis DeConcini E dito r’s note: S enator Barry G oldw ater, RAriz., w ill give his reasons fo r su p p o rtin g the new tax b ill Friday. Cultural research center attracts Hispanic students to ASU By DAVE HODGES S tate Press ASU’s Hispanic enrollment increase may be a result of the new ASU Hispanic Research Center, the center’s director said Wednesday. Raymond Padilla said the center m ay have attracted the 174 extra Hispanic students who enrolled at ASU this fall. In a report released Monday, ASU’s Hispanic population showed an increase from 4.9 percent to 5.2 percent of the total student enrollment. The HRC, established in March 1985 by the Arizona Board of Regents, is an interdisciplinary research unit reporting to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, “I think the center m ay have had som e impact'on drawing Hispanic students (to ASU),” Padilla said. "But we’re really just beginning. The main thrust of our recruiting is with graduate students. “But I think as tim e goes on, we will draw many more STYLE C U T Rag. 14 Save $4 NOW $10 P R E C IS IO N PERM Rag. $36 Save $12 --------- ----- LONG,TINTED. 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Padilla said four areas have been targeted by the HRC: Hispanic entrepreneurship, science and technology, Hispanic politics and the arts. BEER OR WINE W E D E L IV E R MEX1CAN DINNEB from $3.97 Enchiladas, Tacos, Burritos, Tamales, Chimichangaa, Tostadas, Flautas, Quesadillas, Nachos "UTEICUSSSPECML" Bud 12-oz. can 1 A íN 2-4 p.m. M-F I U t SUNDAYS “We’re producing a 60-minute program for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting called ‘Birthwrite,’ ” Padilla said. “It portrays what it is like growing up as an Hispanic American.” The center is also looking at ways to improve high school achievem ents for Hispanic students. He said besides undertaking a wide variety of research projects, the HRC also engages in several ongoing activities: •The Bilingual R eview /Press is an internationally known publications program that prints Hispanic literature and social science research. •The Electronic Publications Program represents an effort to record and dissem inate the results of significant research and creative effort related to Hispanics, using floppy disks. •The Hispanic Data Archives records research data relating to Hispanics. “A goal of the HRC is to serve as a resource to the Hispanic research community,” Padilla said. (withall food orders) wmm 7< p 6-pale Pepsi (withfood) CORONA $ 1 7 .7 5 a case e 4 limes fitice "ALLU CAN E A T $ 4 .4 7 TheAlamo • 2321V .Broadway, Mesa O S I 7 7 9 e All öfter«good »/ASULD. Exp.10-9-86. O l ) C O N O C O IN C . 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UNIVERSITY TEMPE □ Refreshments Following Presentatiòn y s rop “Some of the kids could not adjust to the fact that I’m an Arab and that I was just being normal with them ,” he said. “Some of the kids just wanted to com e up and touch m e, to see if I had real flesh and bones. “A nine-year-old cam e up to me and said, ‘Are you really an Arab?’ Darawshe said he replied, “ Why, sure, I’m an Arab. Why?” He said the boy answered, “I thought that all Arabs had ta ils.” Darawshe said he saw the same misconceptions when he accompanied a Jewish friend who w as a guest speaker at an Arab school in Israel. He said that toward the end of his friend’s talk, an Arab girl tim idly raised her hand and asked, “Are you really a Jew? You’re so nice.” “The only way you can build trust between groups is through interaction," Darawshe said. “The movement is very, very slow, but it is working. ” At the sam e tim e that Arabs and Jews learn to tolerate and uriderstand each other, there also has to be movement toward a political settlem ent of the Palestinian question, he said. “The first political solution is the (Israeli) withdrawl from the W est Bank and Gaza and the establishm ent of a Palestinian state,” Darawshe said. He said Israel needs to talk with the PLO, even though the two parties regard each other as bitter enem ies. “Yes, with your enem ies you need to speak,” he said. “It is with your enemies you need to m ake peace. You do not need to make peace with your friends. ” r S a lo o n I lu c r ili; (Across from Cornerstone) 933 E. University 9 6 6 -2 5 0 8 9 6 6 -2 5 0 8 t ---------------- TAN FAST FIRST CLASS ; i i i -- - a t the •Built-in high speed fa c e tanners •Pioneer AM/FM cassette stereo •A ir conditioned com fort STATE CLASSIFIED AD BOOTH a t the Memorial Union 10:45-12:45 DAILY to place your classified ad! F A ST • EASY CONVENIENT VISA • MASTERCARD CASH • CHECK " ’ < Survive W inter Looking lik e Summer NEVER ENDED SUN DEVIL TANNING SALON Located In The Arches M a ll • Com er o f Forest & University (N ext to the Warehouse D eli) SPECIAL CALL N O W » 9 68-4611 MONTHLY 15 Sessions OFSCOTTSDALE SPECIAL $ 3 2 .5 0 $ 3 7 .5 0 Prices good through 10-10-86. Stote Pitra; ___________________________________ a a s i Indians air concerns ab o u t excavation of tribal grave sites ByBENNY McCONNELL State Press » The line between grave robbing and excavation in the name of archaeology has been undefined toe long and needs to be changed, Arizona Indian leaders said. Representatives of 19 Indian tribes in Arizona believe the way in which Indian remains have been studied and handled is ‘‘g a r b a g e e x p lo ita tio n of n a tiv e Am ericans.” They said the practice has existed unchecked for too many years and needs to be stopped. “Our main concern is the treatm ent of our ancestors,” said Cecil Antone, a Pima Indian. “When a white man’s burial site is excavated, it’s called grave robbing. When an Indian’s burial site is excavated, it’s called archaeology. ” But Charles Merbs, an ASU anthropolgy professor, said the scientific community views archaeology as a way to uncover and understand the com plexities of the past and possibly work toward solutions to present and future problems. Merbs, who represented archeologists during the 43rd National Congress of American Indians in Phoenix last week, said: “I think there’s been a serious lack erf communication between archaeologists and the Indian community. “I have seen utter confrontation at the m eetings we have had. I think we’ve been rem iss in dissem inating the information we have uncovered and explaining it in a m atter everyone can understand. “The m edical discoveries (about recent discoveries that early Indians performed brain surgery, suffered from anem ia and took care of immobile fam ily members whose bones had fused) caught the delegation off guard. “It was something w e thought we didn’t have to document but now it’s obvious we have to,” he told the biannual m eeting of the Arizona Archaeological Conference. “As far as anthropology is concerned, this is a fairly new issue, and obviously things are going to change,” he said. Antone, who is also chairman of the Intertribal Council , Cultural Resources Committee and lives at the Gila River reservation, agreed communication is at the core of the controversy. “Y es, communication is thè problem. I’m willing to talk to archaeologists. We want to be part of the decision-making process,” he said. “If this is a country that demonstrates dem ocracy, then this is a poor way of demonstrating it, You have to remember that the native Americans were the ones who were here first.” John Lewis, director of the Intertribal Council and a Mohave Indian, said tribal governments and com m unities need to be involved with excavations and assured that their rights are involved and upheld. As a sidelight to the controversy, ASU stores about 2,000 Indian skeletons but owns few of them. The m ajority of the bones belong to other m useums, and som e are on loan from other countries, Merbs said. How long ASU keeps the bones depends upon the agreem ent made between the donors and the University. He said ASU is sensitive to Indian wishes of not publicly displaying ancient bones. “We have a definite written policy of not displaying sensitive religious things, and that would include a skeleton in a burial context,” he said. “We have a strong program here in human osteology, and we reserve the right to display skeleton m aterial in an educational context. “We don’t identify where it cam e from unless it’s important to understanding the display,” he said. All bones stored in the Anthropology Building and Matthews Center are stored with approval from Salt River Indians, Merbs said. “ E v e r y th in g is v e r y c a r e fu lly documented and stored, ” he said. The Congress of Am erican Indians has demanded action be taken on resolutions adopted at their m eeting last week, and plan to lobby lawmakers on the following: •That the past and current treatm ent of Indian rem ains is totally unacceptable and should be regulated by national and state legislation; 5 8 6 US r o r M l UT TOUT rU U I DALL R ick W U sy/S tate P reea A 8U anthropology professor Charles Merbs holds a stereo viewer which gives a 3-D effect whan viewing the X-ray of a 2000-year-old skull excavated from Northern Sudan before construction of the Aswan Dam. The skull shows offsets of m ultiple myelom a, a typo of bone cancer. •Demand the return of all rem ains in the United States and abroad to the appropriate tribes for reburial cerem onies. McCain’s opponent, Richard Kimball, was out of town and unavailable for comment. Tom Lincoln, supervisory archaeologist for the Bureau of Reclam ation in Phoenix said, “I’m really frightened that one day w e’re going to wake up and there is going to be a law over our heads that is going to be regulating what we can and cannot do. ” Tim Karlsgaard, spokesman for Arizona Sen. Dennis DeConcini, said his office hasn’t been totally informed of the issue, but DeConcini has held that each tribe should have the opportunity to negotiate and decide what action should be taken on issues concerning them. Merbs said he was certain that legislation protecting the remains would be considered. If legislation is considered for the bones to be reburied in a certain amount of tim e after excavation, Merbs said, “We would m inim ally need at least a year to do a decent study, and that’s not much time. Rep. John McCain, chairman of the House Republican Task Force on Indian Affairs and currently running for the Senate seat being vacated by Barry Goldwater, said: “Any decision that is made on this issue has to be made in close consultation with the Indian tribal leaders.” 1 “But preferably (we would like) much, much (more tim e) so other special interests can becom e aware of what we’re studying.” G O O D -Y E A R Football Intramural Gear mm At Low, Lpw.Pric.es,J INTRAM URAL SALE! Western States T IR E S A N D A U T O S E R V IC E S cra m b le '' «•9 12395 NOWSI9.95 Get Your Cars Ready For The Cool Months Ahead SAVjE $1 2 A venger ■COUPON1 Rag $39 Front End Alignment S A L E $1 9 .9 5 INCLUDES •S e t Camber & Caster •A d ju s t Toe-In •A d ju s t Steering Wheel •R oad Test ir ■COUPON11 ■i i i INCLUDES: Oil-Lube-Filter »Up to 5 Qts. Oil I •Chassis Lube 1 |4 U | »Oil Filter | *30 Weight Oil ! «Labor MOST CARS AND LIG H T TRUCKS Expires 12-31-86. MOST CARS Expires 12-31-86. 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I J a s ■*• e e u e s« * * *a * aawuBM M BW flap. $8.95 White Sm itty's New Bridge Scottsdale Gas Station ■ Superslltlen Fwy. 101 8. Hiyden 829-7400 894-0799 H ayden & 1st S outhern & M ill Seuthani Stet» P u « Watchdog Bill may prevent ASAS U members’ election bias By KERRY FEHR' S tate Press Associated Students Campus Affairs Vice President LeeAnne Sea 11 said she will support an independent electio n s department, instead of one supervised by her office, in a senate bill Oct. 7. The bill goes to the senate with the unanim ous backing of the Senate Government Operations Committee, which voted in favor of the proposal Tuesday. College of Liberal Arts Sen. Mark Isenberg, a former elections director, said the current system allows the campus affairs vice president to influence the elections director in a “real subtle, covert manner.” “There has been a definite tilt in past elections as far as attitudes toward other candidates,” he said. The elections department is under the direction of the campus affairs vice screening com m ittee to interview and recommend an elections coordinator. president who appoints a director for the annual spring elections. Isenberg said the campus affairs vice president could indirectly affect the election results and has in past years. For exam ple, the campus affairs vice president could suggest to the director that he place more polling booths at one location to favor a particular candidate, he said. The com m ittee would be composed of four elected senators and four appointed rep resen ta tiv es from each ASASU executive office. The bill calls for the nominee to be confirmed or rejected at the first senate session m eeting of the academ ic year. Isenberg said the director also decides how many voting booths to place on campus and who mans the booths. Colombo, chairm an of the government operations com m ittee, said the elections coordinator would be less influenced if chosen before the political lines have been drawn in the senate. The director also determines the order the candidates’ names are listed on the ballots, he said. Isenberg is co-sponsoring the bill with seven other senators, including John Colombo, College of Business, and Andrew G oodm an, C o lle g e of Architecture/Environmental Science. The bill would create an elections A ctivities V ice President Christine Roth supported the bill in com m ittee, saying “there are valid w ays someone could influence” the elections. LeeAnne Seall Petition seeks to rename building in honor of Challenger crew A petition calling for the Arizona Board of Regents to change the name of ASU’s Classroom Office Building to Challenger Hall will be brought before the Associated Students Senate Tuesday. The petition, which was approved Sept. 23 by the government operations com m ittee, requests the regents to change the name of the COB to Challenger Hall in memory ,of the seven astronauts killed last January in the space shuttle explosion. But the ASASU Senate must approve the petition at its m eeting Tuesday before it can be sent to ASU President J. Russell Nelson. College of Liberal Arts Sen. Mark Isenberg, author of the petition, said he does not expect opposition from the senate. Senate President Bridget Shelton said , M ark Isenburg that although she had not heard a lot of discussion about, the petition, she does not foresee any opposition. Isenberg said he thought of proposing a name change after he and a friend were talking about the COB and decided “what a stupid name for a building.” He said he wants to place a plaque with the names of the seven astronauts and their fields of study on die outside of the building. Isenberg also said he plans to have the director of NASA, Jam es Fletcher, participate in a dedication ceremony if the regents approve of the name change. Isenberg said he hopes the name change and dedication ceremony would bring “national attention” to the University. College of Public Programs Sen. Cathy Johnson said during m eeting, “I lové th is.” the committee Johnson a Isa said she has received ‘‘a great response” from people, adding, “they really like it.” Isenberg,. who attends all regents m eetings as*- the senate-liaison to the Arizona Student Association, said he will be able to explain the petition to regent members if he encounters opposition. He said he does not know if he will face opposition from the regents because he is unsure of the criteria the board uses when considering a nam e change. — KERRY FEHR « p iM k p r ? In the Forefront... a chance for you tofin iV out what ASASU ts about! I-» » ] Many of the executive officers and members of ASASU will be on Cady Mall to meet the stu ­ dent body and other people on campus, 9:30-11:40 Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Find out what ASASU is all about. You can ask questions. You can get information about many pro­ grams and facilities at ASU. MEET YOUR STUDENT GOVERNMENT FA C E TO FACE «s/\— Ask about the various speaking engagem ents by ASASU members on cam pus th is week. t 1 L in e s U p AN ACTION-PACKED TH URSDAY N IG H T 'H Late N ight W ith Lunt T h e D a v id L e tte r m a n L a te N ig h t S h o w b e g in s a t 9 :3 0 p .m .— th a n k s to o u r s a te llite d is h h o o k -u p . 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T:1S.915 CMC0QU1 HUMEE (PO) 12:30.3:00.6:15.7:45.1040 MEN'S CLUI |S| 1230.2:45,5:00.7:15.9:30 TOP SUN |PG| ___ 1230.230,530.7:30.1900 RHN HUMS 19111:30.535.920 PRETTY IN FINK ) « ) 3:35.730 y C . C . C u t t e r s & C o . Specializing in H a ir Design fa r Young A dults SHADOW PLAY |R| (^130.330.530.7:15,9:30 9 6 8 -6 6 8 $ Com er o f Lemon & Terrace • Terrace Square ^ Ask M e F o s te r T ra v e l S e rv ic e S in ce 188 8 ASK US ABOUT OUR FREE SEVEN DAY PARKNG J S till H T akin g ^ D e p o s its fo r M E E T IN G S EVER Y THURSDAY 7 P.M . UTAH OriyH89 a fe rtL% cor n ñ . VS Road Rally ff~ Honeymoons this Saturday, O ct. 4, 12 noon at Cruise Specials A lte r T h * O d d R u th .Oe ° 12 16 E A pache International Travel B lv d . A* 707 S . F o r e s t • T e m p e , AZ 85281 • 9 6 7 - 9 4 0 3 M - F 8:30 - 5:30 SAT 10 :0 0 - 4 : 0 0 PlW T h u fs c j2 ^ c to b « ^ ^ 9 8 6 Page 13 Revenge Sun Devils look for first victory ever over Bruins By CAROL BOOS State Press The D evils go on their first of three consecutive road trips this weekend to face the UCLA Bruins in the Hose Bowl. The D eyils have never beaten the Bruins . “UCLA has been piieked by everyone to win the league Phampinnship again this year, including me. They are still the team to beat,” Coach John Cooper told reporters Tuesday a t his weekly news conference. One thing the D evils w ill have to do differently this week in order to beat the Bruins is pass effectively. UCLA, currently ranked No. 15, w ill be tough to beat on the ground alone, according to Cooper. “Nobody wants to pass more than m e,’’ Cooper said. Quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst told reporters last week he wanted to throw more than he had been. The D evils cam e out throwing last week against Washington State, but Van Raaphorst w as not up to the task, throwing five interceptions in 16 attem pts. He also completed five for 126 yards. “If he (Van Raaphorst) wants to throw, he’d bettier throw it a hell of a lot better than he’s throwing right how, and he better throw it to the guy who’s open,1’ Cooper said. “But, all quarterbacks go through slum psand Jeff is in a slump. “He's working hard to correct his m istakes. He is the best quarterback w e’ve got and w e’re trying to get his confidence level back up. He’s a competitor. I’U be suprised if Jeff doesn’t bounce back.’’ The Bruins are lead by quarterback Matt Stevens. Stevens is coming into the gam e having had his best gam e yet against Long Beach State last week. Stevens completed 18 of 26 passes for 211 yards, raising his total to 442 yards, completing 36 of 66 passes. The winningest coach in UCLA history, Terry Donahue is in his Uth season as head coach. He enters Saturday’s gam e with a record of 82-32-6 (.708). He is 6-0-1 against ASU. The Bruins have two key players, out for the gam e: tailback Eric Ball and flanker Karl Dorrell. Starting tailback Gaston Green is still bothered by turf-toe, but is slated to start. The No. 3 tailback Jam es Prim us, who rushed for a careerhigh 160 yards in the Bruins’ matchup against Long Beach last week, is leading the Bruins to a 41-23 victory over the 49ers. Primus w ill probably go over the 1,000-yard mark for his career Saturday. He needs just 11 yards. Primus is the only tailback to play in all three gam es and” he has 202 total yards. ASU’s Darryl Harris has 353 yards, placing him 10th nationally. After last week’s tie with WSU, and the poor passing gam e, Cooper said he still believes he w ill need to pass to beat the Bruins. Cooper goes into Saturday’s gam e with a career record of 67-35-1. Cooper and Donahue are not strangers.Jn 1965 and 1966, Donahue was a starting defensive tackle at (JCLA. The Bruin secondary coach during that period was Cooper. The following season (1967), Cooper went to Kansas to serve as assistant coach under former UCLA assistant Pepper Rodgers. Another member of that staff was first-year assistant Donahue. Although the Sun D evils are 7-point underdogs, Cooper is looking for a com petitive game. “I think it’ll be a great ballgam e,” Cooper said. “We’re coming off a tie and two tough ballgam es and UCLA has had tim e to regroup from their loss to Oklahoma and get ready for us. “I think w e’ll play hard; whether w e’ll win or not, I don’t Jam es Prim us, UCLA tailback, rushed fo r 160 yards last week against Long Beach State. know. We’ll lay it on the line and take our chances.” UCLA journalist calls Devils ‘choke artists’ I read an interesting little piece in the UCLA Daily Bruin yesterday. I quote: “Now that he .(ASU coach John Cooper) and his players have becom e more comfortable with each other, UCLA m ay not be able to count on the Pac-10 choke artists to suffocate again in 1986.” This little gem of wisdom was brought to the orb by (he Bruin’s own A.M. Stroud, obviously a competent and objective journalist, considering that the line appeared in a regular news story rather than a column. Mr. Stroud is a little overconfident. It takes you back to Baltim ore, circa 1969 — Orioles or Colts, take your pick. BobHeilcr Sports Editor The Sun D evils, then, could be cast as the New York Mets or the New York Jets. And while I wouldn’t want to guarantee a win (a la Joe Namath), I don’t think it would comprise a m iracle, either. By the way, I w ill never Understand how anyone from B altim ore could be overconfident about anything._______ _ _ But I digress. The Brums’ are the egos in question. And a big question it is. Coming off wins against perennial powerhouses like San D iego State and Long Beach State, not to mention an im pressive 38-3 loss against the, Oklahoma Sooners, one wonders how any Bruin could m uster the courage to call the D evils “choke artists.” But not everyone over there is so confident. Bruin coach Terry Donahue is “worried” about the gam e, and not without reason. Gaston Green, the Bruins,’, starting tailback, w ill probably not b e in top form for Saturday’s gam e due to a case of turf-toe. Green has rushed for 171 yards this year on just 29 carries, an average of 5.9 yards per carry. Tailback Eric Ball is out indefinitely with a pulled hamstring. This leaves James Primus to handle much of the tailback duty. Many people in L.A. are pretty high on Prim us. He’s rushed for 202 yards, with 160 against Long Beach State and 46 against San Diego State. For the m athem aticians among you, 160 plus 46 is, in fact, 206. That leaves a grand total of negative four yards against the Sooners. It’s good to see a guy who really performs against the tougher defense. But the speculation as to how confident the Bruins ought to be is really not essential to understanding Satin-day’s matchup. A few other things are essential: •The D evils are up against the wall. No one is going to go to the Rose Bowl with two losses and a tie; so the Devils have to win five of six gam es against UCLA, Oregon, USC, Washington, California and UA. Four of those team s — UCLA, USC, Washington and UA — are going to be tough gam es, and losing the first of those four would really put Cooper’s D evils in an unenviable position. •The D evils are angry. The tie against Washington State was an unsatisfying Pac10 opener. ASU was favored by 16% points, and although the tie is not as bad as a loss, it is more than sufficient to get (he D evils up for this week’s contest. •The D evils are dangerous. The last-second blocked field goal against Michigan State, the 30-0 domination of SMU — even comeback drive that resulted in the Cougar tie — have all proven that this year’s D evils have fire in their bellies. vf/,/4 ' ,$?' 1 VV : % Jg  John Cooper «rill try to tan the fires Inside hi» Dovilo thto w eekend When Darryl Rogers coached here, the team always seem ed to lack that kind of courage. Whatever is said about Cooper’s •' gam e decisions, it is a certainty his players are not cowards. And if this crop of players remembers that som e Bruin hack called them the “Pac10 choke artists,” that fire in their bellies could consume som e Bruins. Page 14 Loner Sun Devil Aaron Cox Is all alona to catch a pass In a form er UCLA match­ up. The Devils w ill travel to Pasadena this weekend In search of their first victory over the Bruins. M. photo FOR A DEVILISH GOOD LADIES NIGHT, I'LL SEE YO U AT THE WOODSHED II $ 1 .5 0 •Golden Margaritas •Blue Hawaiis •Root Beer Floats -*Mai Tai •Scorpions •Strawberry Pina Colada $1.50 C hoose f ro m 8 Im p o rte d Bottles OO 844-SHED Corner o f Dobson S U niversity Peterson & Co. D a iry Q ueen A N A H O N A L CPA a n d c o n s is t in g f ir m is s e e k in g •UNDERGRADUATE ACCOUNTING & FINANCE MAJORS •MBAs (Accounting & Finance) WE IN VITE INTERESTED STUDENTS TO ATTEND PETERSON & c o / s c a m p u s 4>r e s e n t a iio n WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8 AT 3:30 P.M. MEMORIAL UNION ROOM 222 3 O f Banana Split *1.19 Reg. $1.75 Offer good only at 9 5 0 S . M ijl (Across from Gammage) CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FRL, OCT. 3 1 ,1 9 8 6 WITH THIS AD OR ASU I.D. «■ C O U P O N » THURS. a SAT. (with coupon) Liquor Barn COPIES: 5 * FULL SERVICE 4« SELF SERVICE white, one side, 81/2 x 11,20 b. O P E N 24 H O U R S • Binding . Passport Photos • Word Processing • Enlargements • Reductions • Cassette Duplicating MESA: 1840 W. Southern, 969-3326 TEMPE1:715 S. Forest, 894-9568 TEMPE H: 933 E. University, 894-1797 Also Available: Klnko’e L aser W ord P ro cessin g P lus 933 E University Sta. 108— 9 8 6 -2 0 3 8 5-pc. Oak, Brass St Glass Dinette u erS § P ;t E j j g i # Turin Set 9 P S FullSet y Q gggn S et Sofa & love Seat ...iTTr^nT" Back To School Special Every $10 you spend at Kinko’s get a free quiche dimjer at the Raintree Restaurant 933 E. University (With this.coupon. Good through Oct. 30,1986.) Hamm’s Pabst (Assembly Required) FU R NIIT ITU UR RE E Meisterbrau or Old M ilw o,,i *69 $ 79 *119 $169 2077 E. U niversity T em pe • 966-6252 LIQUOR BARN HAS THE LARGEST SELECTION N 1 i A SAFEWAY • LIQUOR BARN University Financing Available BROADW AY ROAD SOUTHERN TEM PE 930 E. Broadway 894-1067 sta«« Pres» Page 15 Thursday, O ctober g, 1986 Suns’ Davis signs w hat could be last pact PHOENIX (AP) — Veteran guard Walter Davis, the Phoenix Suns’ all-tim e leading scorer, signed a new contract Wednesday with the National Basketball Association team and said it may be his last. “This w ill probably be my final contract,” Davis said at a news conference after signing a two-year pact with an option for a third year. “Three more years in the league, that’ll give me 12 years and that’s been my goal — to play 12 years. If I feel good after three more years, I may continue but only if I can contribute.” Davis, 32, has led the Suns in scoring in three of the last four seasons. He passed both teammate Alvan Adams and retired guard Dick Van Arsdale last year to become the franchise’s all-tim e leading scorer with 12,582 points. The 6-foot-6, 200-pound D avis becam becamee a free agent after Davis treatm ent of cocaine and alcohol abuse. Colangelo said D avis’ new contract does not include a drug­ testing clause, but the NBA’s coUective-bargaining agreement protects the Suns from a relapse since it subjects Davis to tests if signs of substance abuse are evident. “It took great courage to step forward and do what he did, ” Colangelo said. “If there’s someone; who had a shot to beat it, it was Walter Davis. I knew he would be one of the few people to lick it.” ^ . ; “I’m just taking it one day at a tim e, Davis said. I m sober now and just ready to play basketball.” “I think I got a pretty good situation here. I got a w ife and two kids and I’ve just started a (travel agency) business. I’m really happy here, and I want to end my career here. Sometimes you have to sacrifice money ^ for happiness.” last season and reportedly was seeking a five-year, $5 million contract from the Suns. Terms of the new pact were not disclosed, in keeping with club policy. But sources said Davis received about a $40,000 increase on the $680,000 salary he earned last season in the final year of a six-year contract. “It’s a three-year contract with an option to terminate after two years if we decide to do that,” said Phoenix general manager Jerry Colangelo. “I am personally very gratified to see him sign. Waiter’s always been a very special part of the Suns’ organization and he’s made a major contribution to this franchise. To a large degree, he represents what the Suns want to represent in this community.” Last December, however, Davis left the club for a month and entered him self into a southern soutnern California ^aiuornut clinic uum . for Cavs g et Daugherty; 1st pick inks $6 million deal __ _ r, RICHFIELD, Ohio (A P ) — Brad Daugherty, the first player chosen in the 1986 NBA draft, becam e the highest-paid player in Cleveland Cavaliers’ history Wednesday, signing a guaranteed six-year, $6 million contract. The 7-footer from the University of North Carolina reportedly w ill be paid $500,000 in the first year of the deal, w ith annual raises until reaching $1.5 million in the sixth year. “The whole situation of signing and money was not that important to m e,” Daugherty said . “ I’m not a very m aterialistic person. I have other things in my life that are very important to me, and money’s not one of them. ”’’ C lev ela n d ’s h ig h e st-p a id p la y e r previously was center Mel Turpin, who is in the third year of a four-year deal worth an estim ated $2.5 million. The Cavaliers traded with Philadelphia on draft day in June to obtain the first pick overall, sending veteran forward Roy Hinson and $800,000 cash to the 76ers. They used the selection to take Daugherty, who can play both center and power forward. “I’d rather play forward, but either one’s fine,” he said. “I think I can play both positions.” state press ADVERTISING Lenny Wilkens, Cleveland’s new coach, said he has not decided how he w ill use Daugherty. “It’s a little early to say,” Wilkens said. “It’s safe to say he’s going to play both center and forward, but which way we’ll open the season with him, we don’t know. ” Daugherty averaged 14.2 points and 7.4 rebounds per game in four years with the Tar Heels, including 20.2 points and 9.0 rebounds per gam e as a senior. He is the only one of Cleveland’s top four draft-day acquisitions to sign so far. Ron Harper, a guard-forward from Miami of Ohio, chosen by the Cavaliers with their own first-round pick, the eighth overall, sai said this week he expected to be signed by the start of training camp Friday, although his agent was less optim istic. Also unsigned are Mark Price, a guard from Georgia Tech obtained in a draft-day trade with D allas, and Johnny Newman, a forward from Richmond, taken in the second round. Cavaliers’ General Manager Wayne Embry said negotiations were continuing with all three players, as w ell as with veteran guard World B. Free, who becam e a free agent after last season. C O N O C O IN C . We Give You A B igger S lice O f T he Pie At The Lowest C ost Per Bite. PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, NORTH AMERICA MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM All December and May Graduates of the COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Fajita Prima... introduces The Fajita (Fa-Hee-Ta). Beef o r chicken strip s are m arinated in a unique and fia vo rfu i com bination o f fr u it juices and spices, then grille d to perfection to give you the m ost fia v o rfu i ta ste you’ve experienced...topped w ith our freshest ingredients: grilled tom atoes, onions, sw eet bell pepper, green chiles and sour cream, rolled in a flo u r to rtilla served piping hot. 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SUN DEVIL COMBOS (includes choice of up to 4 toppings) Large *7.50 Medium *6.50 Small *5.50 E x p ire s 10 -30 -86. 966-4292 o r 966-1003 2 LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS for only *7 . 75 * plus tax ( w ith th is c o u p o n ) *On Regular, Not Sicilian Pizza E x p ire s 10 -3 0 -8 6 . i J jh u r s d a ^ O c to b e r ^ J W á ^ $and Bucks, brews, bikinis liven volleyball action By STEVE BRENNAN State Press Beach volleyball will give up the ocean for the desert as the professional beach volleyball circuit moves to Scottsdale for the Miller Lite Arizona Open, held this weekend at Indian School Park. The tournament, the secohd of its kind in Scottsdale, is the final stop on a circuit that began last May in Florida and will feature som e of the best volleyball players in the world competing for $20,000 in prize money. Sam Lagana, Promotions Coordinator for the tournament, said Phoenix is one of the better cities on the circuit. “Phoenix has traditionally been a good volleyball town,” he said. “And it has the potential to be a great town, particularly Scottsdale and Tempe. . “This is especially true with ASU going for the volleyball attendance record this weekend. We expect a good-sized crowd to com e out,” he said. Among the competitors w ill be top money- winners Sinjin Smith and Randy Stoklos, who have won close to $60,000 apiece this year, defending World Champions Mike Dodd and Tim Hovland, and Olympic gold m edalist Karch Kiraly, all of whom have been members of the U.S. national team. “These guys are som e of the best athletes in the world,” Lagana said. Two team s from Arizona w ill compete in the tournament; Evan Butler and Kelly Yanez from Phoenix, along with Scott M a n n in g of Phoenix and Don Hudson of Yuma. x.ag a n a said the Arizona team s should give the predominantly Californian team s good competition. “The Arizona people should put up a good fight,” he said. “They will have the home court advantage, which in beach volleyball is an important factor because the spectators sit only six feet away from the court.” Beach volleyball, Lagana said, is quite Turn to VOLLEYBALL, paga 17. MOVIE EXTRAS REACH 45.000 READERS DAILY IN THE STATE PRESS! FAST LUNCH! FREE LUNCH! W AN TED “CAMPUS MAN” ( m a le /f e m a le s ) Come In And Sign Up LAZYLIQUORS 1336 E. APACHE Holiday Inn Apache & Rural Room 113 Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. F a c u lty & S ta ff Thanks! 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Good through Oct. 15,1986. ■\^ofajA cO } â VWV 414 M ill Avenue 966-0203 O ld Town Tempe 915 E Apache Blvd • 968-3451 PICK NO U I W NCUI BRUSHL6SS AUTOM ATIC BIG SCREEN SPORTS • VIDEOS • DARTS BUY•SELL•TRADE Your books at C hanging Hands. For q u a lity cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% o f our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein cre d it w hich may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. o r Sun.) Browse through o ur three flo drs of: * «New & Used Books •A rt P rints & Posters •C alendars & Cards •H andbound Journals T errace & A pache (One block east of Rural) W atch for it every W ednesday in th e STA TE P R E S S PRETTY SURE YOU’RE NOT PREGNANT, RIGHT? The Arizona State University Chapter of THE HONOR SOCIETY OF PHI KAPPA PHI wishes to notify all members, both active and inactive, that it is preparing for its records a Directory of Members affiliated with Arizona State University. A member need not have been initiated at ASU in order to be listed in the Directory. Please contact Elizabeth Bums, Advising Center, SS-101, 965-4432, if you wish your name to be included. - If there is even the slightest doubt, find out for sure. Drop in for a free pregnancy test. While you’re here, learn about birth control. “Pretty sure” just isn’t good enough. —Completely C onfidential— FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE PHOENIX TEMPE 9100 N. 2nd St. 2525 S. Rural Rd 5Ü H 997-7493 I 968-7471 Page 17 Thursday, October g, 1986 s ta te p r é » Volleyball. Hockey Club checks into action against Phoenix oldtimers’ club Continued bed* P®fl* different from indoor volleyball, though they share the sam e rules. “They have the sam e court size and net height,” he said. “But beach volleyball is played with two man team s, so it is quicker and more exciting. You see a lot more one on one situations at the net, and a lot more hustle. It is exciting, power volleyball. By STEVE ADAMS State Press Arizona, the land of heat, bronzed bodies and bleached hair, would hardly seem the ideal place to start a sport associated with the dreaded word ICE. However, that tim e of year is closing in on us once again. To remind us how fun winter can be, the Ice D evils Hockey Club is checking into acton. “The fact that it is played outdoors makes it different,” he said. “All sands are different, som e are hard and have a good spring to them and som e the players have to trudge through. It could be a perfect day in the morning, but turn windy or rain in the afternoon, and they would still be playing. ” The intention of the club is to enter an ASU team in an eight-team men’s league. 1 ,pgana said the tournament will be different from those in California because of the clim ate. “In Scottsdale you a re playing in a grassy park area, and there are no ocean breezes,” he said. “So there won't be as much wind, and it w ill be hotter. I’m not sure what the sand is like, but that w ill be a factor.” The players from this team can be moved up to the club team or can just play for the competition provided within Tempe’s most com petitive league. The rules are sim ple — slapshots are allowed, but the check is not in the m ail, er, the rales. The Ice D evils will play 26 gam es this season, including playoffs, and it all starts Oct. 5. Some of the opponents the Ice Devils w ill face off against are UA, California, Stanford and USC. The majority of the gam es will be played Sunday evenings at the Oceanside The tournament w ill begin at 8 Saturday morning and run until 5 p.m. on Sunday. Along with the m atches w ill be the Miss Miller Lite Bathing Beauty Contest, which will select the loveliest bathing beauty in the Scottsdale area at 1 p.m. on Saturday. Co-sponsoring the tournam ent are AM/PM Mini Market, Nissan Hardbody Trucks and KKLT Radio. Admission to the tournament is free. RUNDLE’S LIQUORS a MKT. , 7 3 0 S . M ILL Corner Mill & University Ave. MEISTER BRAU BEER cm ANDRE CHAMPAGNES Tamil BEAMERO TEQIHLA PLAYBOY Used Magazines LEARN TO FLY AT Experience This price, though, is based on the assumption there w ill be 20-man rosters. If not, the price w ill go up. •Flag football action will kick off on Oct. 13. Schedules will be available at the intramural office, Physical Education West Gym lobby on Oct. 9. Now we all know what happens when one assum es things. This fee does of course include the jerseys and the ever-so-im portant hockey socks. •Entries are due for the pool tournament today by 4 p.m. in the intramural office. Tournament dates are set for Oct. 11 and The first big “ran for the cup” will get under way Oct. 20, when the Ice D evils face off against the Phoenix Roadranner Oldtimers Hockey Club. •Playoff schedules for volleyball w ill be out Oct. 8. Playoffs get under way Oct. Oh yeah, just a little something to those folks who don’t want to be reminded of winter happenings — don’t let it bother you. The NHL, including Stanley Cup play, ran into mid-June this year. •The entry form s for . three-m an basketball are due Oct. 9 by 4 p.m. Schedules w ill be out Oct. 16, and play starts Oct. 20. 12. 12. Now on to wide world òf intramural sports: •Men’s and women’s racquetball single entries are due in the intramural office no later than 4 p.m ., Oct. 9. Women’s double entries are due Oct. 16. •A reminder from the intramural department to the volleyball players: ONE STOP TANNING the unique atm osphere a t Be Tan For at xnt STELLAR $6.57 j $2.97 $4.72 $ .94 Check the intramural board everyday to make sure your team is scheduled to play. There are still a number of team s who are not showing up and consequently are forfeiting their gam es. Ice Arena in Tempe. Of course, lest we not forget, that this little excursion into semipro hockey will carry a price tag: $210. 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