Arizona State University S t a t e Tempe, p r e s s © Copyright, State Press, 1966 Voi. 69 No. 43 Arizona Friday, October 24,1986 Study to review equity of universities’ funding By KIM MATTINGLY State Press State funding budgets ft»* ASU, NAU and UA for 1987-88 could be recalculated if a cost study determines that funding is not equitable among the universities, the Arizona Board of Regents president said. Ja c k P fis te r said a cost-study commission, made up of six Arizona legislators and four regents, was appointed to examine state spending for the universities' after a January proposal for a legislative study of the situation was defeated. “There’s a feeling on the part of some E ast Valley legislators that ASU is not getting its fair share,” he said. “But the Board of Regents preferred to pursue (the study) as part of a long-range plan, rather than have a legislative mandate.” 1987-88 operating budgets were approved by the regents this month a t approximately $236 million for UA, $215 million for ASU and $73 million for NAU. These figures exclude funding for the UA College of Medicine and ASU West Campus, which are about $46 million and $13 million respectively. Pfister said if the cost study finds “substantial inequities” in funding between the universities, the budgets — already sent to the Legislature’s executive budget office — still could be modified to reflect the findings. But Rep. Bev Hermon, R-Tempe, said a change would require an addendum to the Legislature before February and is “not likely.” However, “If there is information that comes out of the study that ASU is in a secondary position, that’s going to help in future decision packages,” Hermon said. University budgets begin with a “continuing base” each year, which is derived from the previous year’s total. ASU Budget Director Alan Carroll said UA’s budget base has always been larger than ASU’s. “UA used to have more students than ASU,” he said. “It was around 1970 that ASU got morje students, yet budgets are still built by the continuing base.” Carroll said the cost Study will “evaluate the bases.” ASU President J. Russell Nelson said, “What we look to see is a system which is fair and objective for the three institutions and find out once and for all if there are differences in support for sim ilar activities.” Tom Goodwin, a form er state representative and UA director of student and community resources, was chairman of the House Appropriations Committee from 1973 to 1982. He said he used to “argue every year” for UA’s higher funding. “There are more doctoral programs going on at the U of A,” he said. “There are a great deal more of the hard sciences, which are an expensive thing to educate. “ASU is trying to catch up, but we have been in these things for a number of years, and our costs are relatively higher. ” Goodwin said he is “not prejudiced and never was.” Biit Rep. Doug Todd, R-Tempe, who was on the appropriations committee from 1980 to 1984, said Goodwin was “tremendously Turn to R EGENTS STUDY, pag* 8. Ex-ASASU officer claims ASU gets less state funding By KIM MATTINGLY State Press What began in 1984-85 as Associated Students’ . annual attem pt to keep University tuition low evolved into a study by the Tempe business community that found ASU was “underfunded, understaffed’ and underbuilt,” a former ASASU president said. Ray Burnell, ASASU president in 1984-85 and now director of public affairs for the Tempe Chamber of Commerce, said the Arizona Students Association began examining Arizona’s university operating budgets in 1964 because of their relation to tuition. “ASA was able to negotiate the lowest tuition increase in history ($50) in 1984-85,” he said. "We were looking for a strategy to stabilize this type of increase to make tuition more predictable.” But Burnell said when ASASU members began analyzing operating budgets, they saw ASU continually had been allocated much less of the state’s general fund appropriation than UA, despite ASU’s higher enrollments. He said this “inequity” originally was justifiable because UA was Arizona’s only university until 1959. But as Maricopa County grew to hold 55 percent of the state’s population and ASU became the nation’s fifth largest university, Burnell said university budgeting procedures were not adjusted. Each year’s budget begins with the previous year’s base and is enlarged on an incremental percentage basis. Because UA’s budget was larger to begin with, Burnell said there is an “inherent inequity” that ASU cannot overcome “regardless of differences in enrollment and program changes.” , -, When Burnell left ASU, he said he found the local business community had an “underlying concern” that ASU was not getting its fair share of funding from the Arizona Legislature. “A University is an economic region’s most viable crop,” be said. “ASU puts $525. million into the local economy. It creates more than 17,000 full-time jobs and contributes $600,600 worth of taxes. “Without a doubt, a university is a vary vast and fertile heartland in the interests of the community, and concern arises when this heartland is not getting its proportionate share of state budget expenditures. ” Burnell said the Tempe Chamber of Commerce began a “full-scale analysis” of the situation in July 1985. The study tracked budget expenditures from fiscal year 1981-82 to 1985-86, he said, and concluded the following: •Although UA’s medical school and agricultural program funding was excluded, Burnell said the study still showed “ discrepancies” over the five-year period, during which UA received from $505 to $950 more per full-time equivalent student than ASU. The number of FTE students is calculated by adding the total number of undergraduate credit hours Avided by 15 and graduate credit hours divided by 10. On average, UA had received $725 more per FTE student than ASU during those five years from the state’s général fund. •The Chamber study also compared ASU and UA to its “peer institutions.” The National Center for Higher Education Management Systems has a procedure for identifying peer institutions based on each university’s total FTE students, percentage of part-time students, types of degrees arid research e * P e n d it U r e S - T u m lo TE M P E STUDY, p«g« 8. M ark D onhan, a graduate student In art, lounges on the W est Lawn on a balm y Thursday afternoon. The weather looks good for lounging on the w eekend, too. It should be sunny and warm on Saturday, highs in the upper 80s. 900 UA-ASU game tickets alloted only 500 actually sold to students By DAVE HODGES StatePmes £*£ -. UA officials have allotted about 900 student tickets for the ASU/UA football game, but the Associated Students president said Wednesday only about 500 of those actually will be sold to students. “Since ASU and UA is a natural rivalry, the football players each get four tickets to the game,” he said. “That leaves about 540 tickets for the students. ” ASASU is devising a special plan to distribute the tickets and a decision on how the tickets will be sold is expected today. Gary Rausch, ASU sports information director, said the UA allotted 3,500 tickets to ASU. Nine hundred tickets were allotted to students, 890 for season ticket holders, 880 for University relations, 250 for the athletic department, 200 for the intercollegiate athletic staff, 150 for the football program and the remaining 250 tickets will begiven away at the Utah game. Not many tickets are available for the game because ASU W EATH ER Clear skies with an expected high of 84 degrees. The expected low is 59. Arizona Stadium in Tucson has a seating capacity of only 51,952. Sun Devil Stadium has a seating capacity of 70,021. Rausch said as an appreciation for ASU fans for selling out Sun Devil Stadium for the first three home games, the ASU athletic department Trill draw 125 ticket stubs at random, with each lucky ticket holder receiving a pair of tickets for the UA game. “Winners will be notified by scoreboard announcements during the second half, by a messenger coming to their seats, telephone and by newspaper advertisements,” Rausch said. “Students cannot win these tickets because student season tickets do not have seat numbers,” he said. “As a result, we thought that in order to give students a fair try, we gave the method of distributing the student tickets to (Cummiskey).” ASU might have its first non-sellout crowd Saturday night, according to ticket office officials. At 3 p.m. Thursday, 4,700 tickets remained for the game against the Utas. “ It’s possible we could have a big walk-up sale on Saturday and a good sale a t Dillard’s, but we might not make it,” Rausch said. ASU police re p o rt.................... 5 C la s sifie d ................................... 19 C o m ic s ................................... 5 Entertainm ent. . .................... 9 O p i n i o n . . . . . . . . .................. ... 4 Tem pe P olice re p o rt................ 6 S p o rts .: ......................................15 T o d a y ...... ................................... 2 today Meetings •Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law will meet in the MU Navajo Room at 3 p.m. International lawyer Greg Burger will speak about international law. •AIESEC will meet in the MU Coconino Room at 4 p.m. for a general meeting. International stock broker Vince Zamus, vice president of the Arizona World Trade Association will speak and executive officer nominations will be held. •Indian Students Association will meet in the MU Yavapai Room at 7:30 p.m. “Janbaz,” a Hindi film will be shown. •ASU’s annual Octubafest, featuring transcriptions and original works for the tuba, gets underway with a concert at 7:30 p.m. at Recital Hall, and continues through Oct. 31. Performances by ASU faculty, students and guest artists are Sunday, 1 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 7:30 p.m. All performances are in Recital Halt except the Sunday evening concert, held at the Music Theater. •Marcia Klinder, piano, Graduate Recital Series at 7:30 p.m.' Music Theater. •Native American Student Association will meet at Glenna Harper’s home at 8 p.m. for a get-acquainted party. •Jeff Funderburk, tuba, Guest Artist Concert Series will perform at 7:30 p.m. at Recital Hall as an Octubafest performance. Lectures Sunday •Richard Kimball will speak on the nuclear arms race at 10:40 a.m. in the Language and Literature Building Room A-18. The speech is sponsored by the Department of Liberal Arts. •Dr. Leslie Limage, program specialist in the education sector of UNESCO, Paris, will speak on the role of the Untied Nations in promoting education and international understanding. The lecture will be held at 10:40 a.m. in the MU Pima Room and is sponsored by NISA-National International Students Association. Entertainment •Ballet Arizona will perform Cinderella at Gammage Center at 8 p.m. Tickets are $9, $12 and $15. They are available at Dillard’s ticket outlets and Gammage box office. •The MU Cinema will show “ Pretty in Pink” and “GhostbustersT” Showtimes are 4:30, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Admission is $1. •Joseph Wytko Saxophone Quartet performs in concert at 4 p.m. at the Kerr Cultural Center, located at 6110 N. Scottsdale Road. Tickets are $6 and are available at Gammage box office and Dillard's ticket outlets. •ASU harpsichordist John Metz plays at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, located at 1430 S. McAllister Ave. at 7 p.m. •Winston Morris, tuba, and ASU Tuba Ensem ble with D irector Daniel Perantoni, Guest Artist Concert Series, performs at 7 p.m. at the Music Theater. Sports •Pre-game buffet at Manzanita Dining Hall at 4:45 p.m. Price for Adults is $5.50 and $4.25 for children under 12. W hatta y a h a v e ? •ASU Football team plays Utah at 7:30 p.m. at Sun Devil Stadium. Craig Glldden, 26, look* over the Lo cal A lcoholism Recaption Center’s Information booth displaying facts about alcohol's effect on the body. GHdden, a fine arts m ajor, w as leafing through the pamphlets during Thursday’s A lcohol Awareness Fair, rniuy amwm»M/9 Mi* nw » G O O D You can stay on top of the news because we do. NEW S! your way to the gariie. . . stop by THE PIZZA PLACE On DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS THRIFT STORE featuring 9 am.-9 p.m. Monday-Saturday in th e MU 2131 E. A pache Get a Offer valid S at, Oct. 25,1986 from 2 p.m. til closing! Then watch ASU beat UTAH! Tem pe P acked W ith Top Q u a lity Used F R E E P IT C H E R OF SO DA when you buy a LARG E PE PPE R O N I PIZZA! B lv d ., CLOTHING • HOUSEWARES • FURNITURE ta u trn >| $ n c L ongnecks & W ell D rinks 1.95 G rilled H am & C heese Live Entertainm ent sat. & Sun. $ 1.50 GO ASU! B urger B asket HAPPY HOURS 2 -7 p . m . s i x d a y s a w e e k 50$ Draw • $1.00 M argaritas $2.25 Pitchers Free hors d'oeuvres APPLIANCES • KNICK-KNACKS •M en’s dress-up & leisure from 9 5 $ •D urable kids cloth in g from 6 5 $ •W om en’s fashions from 9 5 $ S o m eth in g fo r EVERYONE! 2131 E. A pache Blvd., Tem pe Senior C itizens Apache 3 0 % O FF 6 0 y rs o r older Every M onday gK- DAY No Checks • O pen To P ublic Friday, October 24,1986 State P ie u Page 3 Proposition 200 would limit campaign contributions Arizona voters will have the opportunity to vote on six propositions in the Nov. 4 general election. This is the final part in a four-part series examining the ballot propositions. Today, the State Press examines Proposition 200. By J.B. SINNOTT State Press Long ago, the foes of Proposition 200 tell us, before the days of political contributions from special interests groups, a government official represented the people who elected him, not the people who helped fund the campaign. Not so, the advocates of 200 reply. Before groups representing portions of a politician’s constituency began exercising their political strength with funds, political office was reserved for the rich and irresponsible. The struggle over Proposition 200 is headed for resolution in less than two weeks, and the stakes for politicians and political action committees, or PACs, are high. The initiative is the longest and most intricate of the six going before the voters Nov. 4. Among its provisions are limits on the amounts individuals or groups can contribute to a single candidate running for public office. Hie limits for non-statewide offices are $200 and $1,000, respectively. For statewide offices, the limits are increased to $500 from individuals and $2,500 from groups. The proposition puts a cap on total contributions a candidate may accept from campaign committees ($5,000 for non-statewide offices, $50,000 for statewide positions), and calls for candidates to report how much they spend on their campaign if it exceeds specified limits to the secretary of state. John Anderson, executive director of Common Cause of Arizona, favors the initiative. “What we’re seeing is an increased public concern that the process is being skewed by the PACs,’' he said. “Votes aren’t being bought, but influence is.” On the argument that limits on PAC contributions will hurt all but the rich candidates, Anderson said the proposition will encourage incumbents to meet with their constituents. “Most incumbents don’t have to face their challenger. They sit back and wait for PAC dollars,” he said. M argaret Walker, executive director of United for Arizona, is against the proposition. “We’re not opposed to campaign reform. We believe cam paign reform should bring more people into the process and overall increase the part of the voters, ” she said. But Walker said the candidates “ought to be discussing the issues, not beating the bushes for $25 contributions.” She also is opposed to the way the proposition would eliminate all but the biggest PACs from making contributions to candidates. Only those with more than 500 members will be left to help candidates, she said. Walker said United for Arizona and Common Cause often share similar interests, but not this time. “They thought they had a good idea, but they misinterpreted it,” she said. But Anderson feels otherwise. “Proposition 200 is the greatest thing since sliced bread,” he said. 2 A S U p ro fs to rally fo r C e n tra l A m e ric a n im m ig ran t rights w ar in Central America and U.S. immigration policy are linked. Zatz explained the connection: “ The United States has historically had a very strong presence in Central America, and that has been an economic presence as well as a political presence.” She said refugees fleeing war, political repression and poverty caused by American intervention in Central America have been arriving illegally in the United States. “As long as the United States continues to intervene in the domestic affairs of Central American countries, we can expect to have refugees from these countries entering the By ED SCHUBERT State Press Two ASU professors will be among several speakers Sunday calling for recognition of immigrant rights and an end to U.S. intervention in Central America. History professor Arturo Rosales and justice studies professor Marjorie Zatz will speak during a rally a t the Phoenix Federal Building, 230 N. First Ave. Oct. 26 has been designated National Day of Justice for Immigrants and Refugees. The raDy will begin at 10 a.m. and will be followed by a march to Harmon Park. Rosales and Zatz agree that the issues of Zatz said. Rosales said this is a difficult time for illegal immigrants because there is a sense of insecurity in the United States, and illegal aliens are easy scapegoats. He said immigrants are wrongly blamed for crime, drug traffic and economic problems such as unemployment. “What we are experiencing now is an exercise in hysteria,” he said. “When there is tension in any society, there is a need for a distraction from (social) problems.” Rosales said U.S. immigration policy “has slipped over the years from the ‘Open Door’ ” proclaimed by the Statue of Liberty. U .S .,” He said he fears a return of the attitudes toward immigrants that were prevalent during the depression. “The worst time for immigrants was during the Great Depression,” he said. “Two thousand were deported even though they had nothing to do with the depression, and their expulsion did not ameliorate the conditions of the Depression. ’’ Zatz said Sunday’s rally will focus on the Simpson-Rodino immigration bill, which would impose civil and criminal sanctions against employers who hire illegal immigrants, including jail terms for repeat offenders. the afternoon alternative DELICIOUS SANDWICHES IMPORTED TEA BEER & WINE A Tax A g fK fra g e PR H R m |% § rm fre jjp r ~ ^ V ie w j n FRESH DELI SPECIALTY FOODS UNIQUE GIFT CENTER W hether you're attending ASU, or putting som eone through it, now is the tim e to look into a practical alternative to rising dorm costs. O n e that gives you both a fax advantage a n d a m ore advantageous w ay o f lire. Look into Hayden Square. These elegant, one and tw o-bedroom condom inium s ore the perfect places to live w hile going to school. You're just a five m inute w a lk from the ASU cam pus. And y o u 're lite ra lly in th e m id d le o f the convenience and excitem ent o f O ld Town Tem pe — w ith IB m any shops, entertoirv m enf centers and m ore. Hayden Square even has covered parking — a real plus aver frying to find parking around A SJ's dorms. O f course, the fay advantages to ow ning a H a yd e n S qu are C o n d o m in iu m , as opposed to living in a dorm or apartm ent, are quite obvious. And very beneficial. W hat's m ore, b y the tim e you're ready to sell, the resale v a lu e ’s m ay have appre­ ciated significantly. . So take ad van tag e o f Hayden Square. Condom inium s that give both ASU students a n d their parents a d e a r advantage. Salts Ottica: Mill & 3rd St. A P L A C E TO D IS C O V E R SCOTTSDALE PHOENIX AR BO LED A 1651 E. CAM ELBA CK RD. 274-5429 C A M E LV IE W P L A Z A 6 9 0 0 E. C A M E L B A C K RD. 941-3696 DOWNTOWN TEMPE HERITAGE SQ UARE 622 E. A D A M S 2 5 3 -0 7 5 9 TEM PE CITY CEN TER 1420 E. SO UTHERN 8 2 0 -8 5 7 8 Page 4 State Pré« Friday, October 24,1986 M u rd e r-m y ste ry parties not evil, d e sp ite critics I had made all of the arrangements right down to the autumnal centerpiece for the dining room table. The turkey and dressing were in the oven and the guests were arriving. Little did I ' know that according to some small-time fundamentalist who was doing a sermon on a cable channel, the dinner party I was having was leading me into the occult. For weeks I had been planning a murder-mystery dinner party at my parents’ home. I invited seven of my friends and purchased the mystery game from a B, Dalton bookstore. My guests each played one of die suspects who could have killed Sir Roger Watersdown. I was also a suspect. These murder-mystery dinner parties are quite popular now because of a resurgence in the interest of Agatha Christy-type stories. Many companies are creating these games, and with the right atmosphere, these games are a Saturday’s night worth of fun. And that is all that it was to the eigitofus. But Sunday morning after my party, I turned on the boobtube and came across a preacher on cable who was talking about an insidious plot to lead people into the occult. The preacher held up a box that look suspiciously similar to the one that I used during my party. In fact, it was the same company, but a different murder. The words that followed made my jaw drop to the floor. According to this “Bible scholar,” these murder-mystery dinnerparties are secular and encourage people to delve into the morbid curiosity of death which would lead many into the occult. At any moment, I'was expecting him to say that if with having fun. Although my knowledge of the Bible is lacking somewhat, I don’t remember a verse about murdermystery dinner parties. I am sure that would have stuck out in my mind as I was cleaning the gréen beans minutes before the party. Patrick J. Kucera Opinion Editor turkey and dressing were served at these parties, it was a sure ticket to Hell. Nevertheless, I Was stumped as to why this informed Christian was attacking a game of harmless fun. There was no real murder, no one at the party became convinced that their character was real and after the party, we talked about classes a t ASU and work at the State Press. In essence, this preacher was implying that murder-mystery games are somehow Satanic. That isa surprise to me. The game I was playing challenged me and my guests to collect certain clues, discuss facts and fallacies and figure out who did old Roger in. We did not bum black candles and sacrifice virgins in the breakfast nook. Instead, we were having fun—{gain and simple. Unfortunately, there is a common misconception with many Christians that there is something inherently wrong There is nothing sinful about a murder-mystery party or many other types of fun that a lot of people have. But to many, the idea of someone having à good time and enjoying themselves is tantamount to deny that God exists. The cable preacher could not justify his claims against the company who produced the game except to recite, “Thou shalt not kill. ” Thank you for that startling revelation. If the Bible has a complete indictment against mystery, we are in a lot of trouble. Time to burn those Agatha Christy books. Censor that blasphemous television show “Murder, She Wrote” — you know, the one that is always in the top-io! Recall all of those versions of thè gam e “Clue.” And for goodness sake, make a law prohibiting anyone from discovering just who killed Sir Roger. However, I am going to be the worse off. Iheld the occultic party, served chocolate mousse and, God forbid, was the murderer. I guess I better think twice before I hold my fifth murder-mystery party. I wonder if serving pizza will send me to the underworld, or will I just have to spent half an eternity in Purgatory. letters Freedom of choteé Editor: The current University administration, not unlike the regime currently draping itself over the A m erican federal government, has achieved eminently well what the commercial and military interests that own it and the armor-plated nation, have directed. It has at every notable turn further enhanced the prerogatives and the fortunes of central, monèyed authority over (hose of us who are given the “choice” of either carrying out the orders of this authority or accepting unemployment and starvation, themselves prominent forms of domination, as “alternatives.” further augmented the hold of private commercial and military interests over what is a public, educational, not a private, commercial institution. The faculty has routinely lain down supine for all of this, participating oidy to the perfunctory extent of determining by what means it, its students and its staff, and its. work are to be strangled. For those of us who surmise that we are getting out brains kicked out by the bosses, it is very long past due time to recognize that we can and we must do something about it all. If we want to continue our work as teachers and scholars, as University people, The principal administrative initiatives of and so to resist the tumble to corporate the past approximately half-dozen years minions, and if we are to have any palpable have disguised themselves, not very thinly, basis whatever for fending off further in a public relations phalanx that talks vaguely about what is being passed off as ‘ aggressions against the civil and the academic rights of staff, untenured and “excellence.” tenured faculty, part-time and full-time But the collective effect of this faculty — in the form of such as capricious “campaign” has not had much to do with dism issals, elim ination of effective excellence in anything much resembling a elimination of cost-of-living adjustments, memorable educational sense. use of invalid and involuntary drug and Such initiatives as the budgetary polygraph exam inations, a rb itra ry reallocation “exercises,” the emphasis that increases in class size and teaching load, has been put on experimental science and and the elimination of tenure — we must its technological, commercial and military organize in some meaningful independent uses, the capital expansion of the Univërsity way. in term s of land acquisition and building If the likes of John Whitehurst and Billy construction (together with effective McKinney, and most all of the rest of us as decrements in salary adjustments), the well, are to have any feasible chance of conversations about tenure “buy out,” the defending themselves/ourselves against the sharp revisions in graduate curricula and automobile, construction, medical, sport, programs, the “m erit” * based salary legal, media and utility executives (several program, the increasingly unbalanced of whom have yet to win university degrees status of tuition increases and decreases in themselves, curiously enough) who sit on student financial assistance, and the the current Board of Regents, and against undergraduate course-review program our own central administration and its have further reduced the independent tentacles, we must collectively organize participation and judgment of faculty, even ourselves in a way that assures an over curricular matters, have peremptorily opportunity to negotiate the terms of our drawn off resources from labor-intensive work, not merely to be notified of them. functions of the U niversity like Otherwise, (here may. be no one left to undergraduate teaching and advising and resist when they come for each of us as “reinvested” this resource in capitalindividuals, and they are most assuredly intensive functions like graduate study and coming. faculty research, have systematically ti. Gerard “ Bob” Osterhoudt drained off funds from “poor” departments, Professor, Physical Education passing them on to “wealthy” ones and have EDITORIAL BOARD S T A T E PRESS'^ TOM BLODGETT Editor ANDREA HAN Managing Editor E d ito r....................................................... N e w s E d a o i"..................... .......... ...........TRACY SCOTT O piniO ltEditor........................ Asst Managing Editor............ P a trick J. K u ce ra O PIN IO N ED ITO R / STAFF ARTISTS: JpnBasalooe. Michael Ritter. _ '‘ ED,T0R,A1- ASSISTANT: Robbia Matloft Photq Edito r.................................................. RICKWILEY INTERN: Mary Mickle ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Danielle Carbone, Tod Christensen, Amy Fellner, John Gaffney, Jennifer Hughes, Tom Hutchison, Mark Paterson, Craig Wacaser.Julie W?l»s .Asst Arts Editor............................... GREGORy^ftKFtfQe PRODUCTION: Kelly Pearce. Mark McKinney, Mar.sa Ogg tr* * ***** ................................. ED SCHUBERT Sportf Analysis Editor................. ................. JAA- TAYLOR annoTcse „ Dau* Hnrinao n . ■ u ur°®f9' Mattinalv lauran iOhi !!« Mattingly, Lauren Millette, Michael A n d re a Han M A N A G IN G ED ITO R Am y F risc h k n e ch t A S S T . M A N A G IN G ED ITO R PATRIPK I tri i n r n * ! !!! AMY FRISCHKNECHT COPY EDITORS; Scott Luck, Carolyn Nelson, Bob Wilson. Assfsporis Editor........................................ 8 0 8 HauSR Conv chief - CAROL BOOS Arts Editor ............ .......... JUDIE GAILIARD U n sig n e d e d ito ria ls re fle ct th e v ie w s of th e e d ito ria l b oard . In d ivid u a l m em bers of the board w rite e d ito ria ls and the board d e cid e s on th e ir m e rit T he e d ito ria ls d o not re fle ct th e o p in io n o f the S tate P re ss staff a s a w hole. B o a rd m em bers in clu d e: Tom B lod g ett ED ITO R kari r i amh Aaat City Editor................................VICKIE CHACHERE _ T,na Daunt Kerry -Fehr, B*nnT McConnell, Kim* Rowell, J.B. Sinnott ENTERTAINMENT REPORTER: Card L Mitchell . '■ " £ 1 ¡ 1 The State Press Is published Monday through Friday during tho academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Temps AZS5287. Newsroom: 985-2292 Adverting & Production: 985-7572. PHOTOGRAPrtEfia Kav,n J. U r kin, Andy Mrotlnsk,, Michael 1 f* / T h e S ta te P r e s s is th e o n ly n e w s p a p e r e x c lu s iv e ly p u b lis h e d SPORTS REPORTERS: Steve Brennan, Annette De La r Daan Obenauer. ru2, mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm—m— .______ ,or and circu,ata^ oft the ASU campus. The new» and views published in this newspaper ere not neceaaerily those of the SdminittratiOn, faculty, Staff OT Student body. State Press Friday, October 24,1986 Page 5 comics ASU police University police reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period ending 6:30 a.m. Thursday: •Police arrested and charged two mdn not affiliated with the University with indecent exposure, police said. One man was wearing no underwear and pulled up his shorts to flash his penis to two female students standing near the Physical Education Building East, police said. The other man unbuttoned his blue jeans and exposed himself on two separate occasions in Lot 42 to two different female students, police said. Police said they were able to apprehend the men because of the women’s descriptions of the suspects to police. Both men were released on their own recognizance. •An Apple hard disk 20 computer, valued at $791, was stolen from Ritter School Room A-138, police said. The theft brings the total value of computer equipment stolen on campus in the past month to $11,300. A spokeswoman for the Ritter School said the computer was noticed missing during lab hours, and the theft must have occurred during open hours. •Phoenix police found a faded brown Datsun in an alley near West Virginia Street. The car was was reported stolen to University police several months ago. Police notified the owner of the car, valued at $750, and returned the car to him, police said. •Police observed an allegedly intoxicated man not affiliated with the University loitering on the north side of Best Residence Hall C-Wing, police said. Police directed him to Mill Avenue and warned him of trespassing laws, police said. BLOOM C O U N T Y 50N, TH6TRUTH ß THAT m sleeps in a special M6H-PKE5SURE OXMEN CHAMPEP TO MAKE HIM PEEL 'fóJU VEM ÌBP:' 1 PEAPITIN 'NEWSUYEEK: REALLY. — LAUREN MILLETTE r M T H r a S A D ^ R A S u T D “ ' Get Into SHAPE! One on one with a strength coach near ASU in a private studio! Body Sculpturing! WEIGHT LOSS & Gain! Cardiovascular Fitness! 5-pc. Oak, Brass & G la ss Dinette (Assembly Required) $1 4 9 -BCD SALE- 4-Drawer Chest $29 Twin Set $6 9 Full Set $7 9 Q u e e n Set *119 Sofa & lo v e S eat $ 1 6 9 2 0 7 7 E. U n iv e r s ity T e m p e • 9 6 6 -6 2 5 2 3 & 4 day Programs (2 hr. sessions) $ 5 . 0 0 per session students $ 7 . 0 0 per session non-students “I read the STATE PRESS Personal you wrote me. It w as utterly fa n ta stic r F i r s t S e s s io n F R E E You too can be a hero. Place your STATE PRESS Personal today 8-5 in the basem ent of Matthews Center or from 10:45 to 12:45 at the classified booth in the MU or call 965-7572 and charge it on your Visa or Mastercard. U niv e rsity F.P. Financing Available No Obligations! No Contracts! No Initiation Fees! Contact Rick Carlas STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS 9 ^ °T h e° fo m e rs to n C ESTABl ISHED I9M 8 2 9 -1 7 4 3 U f ™EM - 6 7 7 2 SERVING A S U SINCE 1972 HOURS: Papa Jay’s Pizza M -F 10-9 SHOP 8 Hrs.: 6-12 p.m. weekdays *Only 30 slots 8-8 p.m. weekends available. Call now! COUPON AT CORNERSTONE 6 S a t. 10-8 FAST FREE DELIVERY S u n . 12-6 •Limited Delivery Area We’ve got the GOLD •T-shirts •Sw eatshirts • G o lf S h irts •Stadium S eats Go Devils — Beat Utah H O U R S : Sun.-Thurs. 4:00-Midnight Friday 4:00-1:00 a.m. Saturday Noon-1:00 a.m. 8 0 4 S . A s h (2 blks. W. of Mill on Univ.) R ig h t N e x t to A S U SUN DEVIL COMBOS (includes choice of 2 FREE 2 litres of Pepsi up to 4 toppings) w ith purchase^ of LARGE'Sïïir Devil Combo Turn Gold Fever Into Rose Bowl Fever 2 E xFp ireRs 1E1 -1E5 -8 6 . cL •Ml 2 Large *7.50 Medium *6.50 Small *5.50 Expires 11-15-86. 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 o r 9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 2 URGE CHEESE PIZZAS fo r o n ly $7.75* p lu s tax (w ith th is c o u p o n ) *0/1 R e g u la r, N o t S ic ilia n R iz z a E x p ire s 1 1 -1 5 -8 6 . Stott Pm «. Friday, October 84,1986 Tempe police report Tempe police reported the following incidents for the period ending midnight Thursday: •Pólice said two employees of the . Chuckbox, 715 S. Forest Ave., arrived at work Oct. 21 and discovered the restaurant had been burglarized. The employees told police that $436 was missing from the floor safe. Police have a suspect in the case. •An officer observed two persons carrying a large sign near the corner of Apache Boulevard and McClintock Drive midnight Oct. 21, police said. The officer confronted the two subjects and discovered the sign was a “Rhodes to Congress” campaign sign. The subjects were allegedly attempting to steal the sign, that measured 7 feet by 8 feet, by putting it in a truck parked nearby. Police said the two persons were not detained because the officer was unable to contact Jay Rhodes to inquire if he wished to aid in prosecution. The subjects admitted they knew that removing the sign, valued at $100, f Student injured in crash involving state truck, car Campaigners debate results of funds study ByJ.B. SINNOTT State Press The differences in the c a n d id a te s fo r s ta te superintendent of public instruction are due more to their backgrounds than their positions chi the issues. D em ocratic candidate C. D ian e B ishop and Republican Anne Lindeman are opponents for the office, but they agree on most issues. Lindem an, a form er chairman of the Senate Education Committee, said the superintendent will need “ a broad perspective, in clu d in g th e e n tire community,” “It is essential that the c a n d id a t e have a d m in is tr a tiv e and m anagerial experience,” she said. Bishop is a Tucson teacher and member of the Arizona State Board of Education. “ Statewide experience is impôrtant, but the teaching aspect is critical. In order to make informed decisions, you have to be on both sides: policy-maker and teacher,” she said. The candidates discussed several topics during a debate Wednesday in the MU, but differences in their positions w efehard to find: Both candidates share '•?! similar plans for improving rural education, decreasing the dropout rates in high schools and increasing funding for the school districts. t But the candidates did disagree on career ladders and drew different opinions on the outcome of a le g is la tiv e c o m m itte e looking in to funding inadequacies between the three universities. On the issue of career ladders, a program in which teachers advance during their work as an educator on the basis evaluations and extracurricular activities, Bishop and Lindeman took strongly opposing positions. Bishop, who argued against the program, said, “If we want to serve on 'committees, that’s alright, but our salaries should not be dependent upon it.” But Lindeman supported the plan, saying, “Teachers wish to be paid on ability, and they want bad teachers out of the system. ” She said this plan, which is available to districts on an optional basis, would help make salaries dependent on ability. constituted theft.. •A Tempe woman reported a man exposed himself to her and her mother while they were driving down State Road 360 Oct. 21, police said. The woman was riding in the passenger seat of her mother’s car when she heard a car horn honk. The car began to pass them on the right. When the two women looked over at the car, they saw a Caucasian man with brown hair exposing himself. •An officer detained two Tempe men Oct. 21 By MICHAEL BURGESS State Press An ASU freshman was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital with possible neck injuries after a state vehicle collided with her car in Lot 59 late Thursday morning. Kimberly Ann Conner was treated and release Thursday afternoon. _____ ' after observing them inhaling a “dark substance,” police said. The men where seen walking through the Alpha Beta Shopping Center, 1700 E. Broadway Road, carrying plastic baggies. The officer watched the two subjects allegedly inhale while covering their mouths and noses with the baggies. One of the men had a can of spray paint in his possession. The subjects where arrested and charged with possession-vapor release. — DARRIN HOSTETLER ASU police officer Mike Schlittenhardt said Conner’s 1978 Datsun was traveling south when the westbound truck collided with the car. Edward Eugene Warren, 21, ah athletics facilities assistant was’driving the truck, but no one was cited for the accident pending investigation. Tempe’s Hair Salon Has Arrived! R u m o r s 3 5 0 S. M i l l A v e . (IN THE N E W H AYDEN SQUARE) 894-1888 OpenSeven Days A Week! $5°° O F F ANY HAIR CARE SERVICE W ith this ad. L im ite d tim e o n ly. At Tem pe location only. Rumors in Scottsdale: 6204 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. Scottsdale & Lincoln 50% D I S C O U N T on All Rumors HAIR CARE and COSMETIC PRODUCTS With this ad. Lim ited tim e only. 9 9 8 -1 8 8 8 At Tempe location only. I FRIDAY is C o lle g e N jg ftf o n ly at R o c k in ’ F re d d y ’s C l C l t*Co r o n a s t * T h e p la c e 8 til 11 to b e State Preis Page 7 Friday, October 24,1986 Bring down the cost of your education. Portable Z-171 Now save up to 50% on Zenith P C ’s! Our low-cost, IBM PC®-compatible P C ’s and XT computer configurations offer maximum flexibility. 256K of RAM expandable to 640K RAM without additional expansion cards. Switchable 4.77/8 mhz clock speed for 60 faster operation. Graphics video output is standard using an RG B color monitor or monochrome composite monitor (starting at $99). MS-DOS operating system is included. Zenith Z-148 Entry Level PC Available in single or dual (360K) drive configuration or with a 20MB hard disk. Dual drive configuration includes 512K RAM and your, choice of either green or amber composite monochrome monitor for $999. Zenith Z-158 PC Zenith Z-148 Entry Level PC $ 7 5 0 (sin g le d riv e unit) Z F - 1 5 8 -4 2 (du al d riv e unit) Z W Zenith Z-158 PC * $ 9 9 9 With 2 (360K) disk drives has 6 open expansion slots for maximum flexibility. The 20MB hard disk unit has 5 open expansion slots and comes with Microsoft Windows Software. 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CADY MALI (Memorial Union) from 10 a.m. 4 p.m. Page 8 State Pires» Friday, October 64,1986 Regents stucfy Continued from page 1. biased and dealt with the appropriation sources in such a way as to be blatantly favorite to the U of A.” Todd said ASU is still getting “the short end of the stick,” and he would like to see the budgets reallocated for 1987-88. “It would be difficult, but it would not be impossible,” he said. “Every time we have an opportunity to encourage equity in the funding, we’ll do it. ” Molly Broad, the regents’ executive director, said people who say ASU is being cheated out of funding claim there are incongruencies in the amount of funding per hill-time equivalent student between ASU andUA. A regents’ report for 1985-86 shows UA receiving $692 more per FTE student than ASU from the Legislature’s general fund. “We’re comparing apples with apples,” Hermon said. “That excludes the UA medical school and all agricultural extra services, and it’s still that much out of line. ’’ UA received $316 more per FTE student than ASU in 1985-86 for research alone, she said. But Broad said the FTE figures are “too simplistic.” “There are different programs among the universities and not the same amount of graduate and undergraduate work,” she said. “We need an examination of cost per student credit hour done academic program by academic program.” Ben Tuchi, UA senior vice president for finance and administration, said: “It is difficult to simply compare on a numbers basis. Some types of things are simply more expensive to do than other types of tilings. “UA has a significantly larger portion of scientifically-oriented academ ic and research programs.” But Hermon said funding for the three universities is based on “tradition and politics.” “ASU has had to fight for everything it’s gotten,” she said. “ASU has never had an alumni on the Board of Regents, whereas at least two or three people on the Board of Regents have degrees from the U of A. “Those of us who live in the Maricopa County are very interested in haying our fair share of funding, but the regents are in charge of determining the budgets.” Pfister said he does not agree that the regents are biased in favor of Tucson. “ I really don’t believe that’s the case,” he said. “ It’s really not the board that makes the ultimate decisions (on funding). The legislators are the final decision-makers on who gets the money.” Jack Kinsinger, ASU vice president for academic affairs, said ASU administrators did not prompt East Valley legislators in their quest for the cost study, but he said ASU’s goal in the study is to obtain “fairness and equity in budgeting. ” He added there is a “perception on this campus” that ASU has not been funded adequately for its rapid enrollment growth and movement toward more research. Kinsinger said in its first evaluations, the ‘A S U has had to fight for everything it’s gotten. A S U has never had an alum ni on the B oard o f Regents, whereas at least tw o o r t h r e e . . . have degrees from the U o f A' — BevHermon commission has studied instructional costs in sim ilar program s at the three universities based on “cost per student credit hour.” But he said instructional cost per student credit hour is not a favorable way to evaluate ASU funding because it “ignores the demand for services of the institution.” Whether a student registers for 16 hours or three hours, there is the same amount of administrative services to fund, he said. Task force member Nils Hasselmo, UA vice president for academic affairs, said the study also must look at faculty costs because one program may have primarily senior faculty members while another has young professors. Hermon agreed that there are more senior faculty members at UA, but said it also costs more to educate juniors and seniors, and “ASU has a very high upper- division enrollment, ” “ASU also has 41,500 people on campus to cope with,” she said. “All those people have to be serviced.” Tuchi said he does not expect substantial changes in the university budgets to result from the study. “I think the result will be to re-émphasize the mission of the three institutions,” he said. “Each is essentially designed to do different things.” Broad said the cost study commission will receive reports from the task force, provide policy level advice and identify areas of additional study. “The effort is a m ajor undertaking,” she said. “It’s a very complex issue, and we are hoping, rather than a one-time shot, to build a system to aid the regents and the L egislature in th eir future budget decisions.” Tempe study. Continued from page 1. Burnell said a 1984 comparison by the center showed ASU had the highest student/staff ratio among its peers and would need 777 more support staff members to become equal to the peer institutions—including UA•Their research also found that ASU fell 2,5 million square feet below the peer average in the availability of space for capital needs and facilities, he said. Burnell said the study showed that ASU is restricted in its ability to contribute to Arizona through its educational instruction, academic research and public service due to lack of funding. After the study, he said five chambers of commerce supported a bill to establish a joint legislative committee to look .into state spending for the universities. It was introduced last January by E ast Valley legislators. “We felt we needed that study so that each university is channeled her proportionate share,]’ Burnell said. ‘Concern arises when this heartland is not getting its proportionate share o f state budget expentitures.’ — Ray Burnell The bill was passed by both the House Education and Government Operations committees, but was opposed in the Mark Watson is going to Harvard Law School on a scholarship. The scholarship is lor a black appficant from Los Angeles. Theiets a problem...Mark is white. Brother, is he in for an education. V A « W ith any w eekday ad m ission to S O U L M A N at one o f these A M C theatres, receive y o u r F R E E S O U L MAN S O U V E N IR ! C A L L TH EATRES FO R SH O W TIM E S Senate and by the Arizona Board of Regents. Burnell said the regents and legislators combined their efforts to form a “cost study commission” after the bill was defeated. . The commission has met only twice, but its goal is to “measure related resources available to ASU, NAU and UA,” he said. . ; “These are the experts ini the field, but we are closely monitoring what they come up with,” Burnell said. “We are businessmen interested in keeping a sound economy. “The goal of the regional business community is to secure appropriations for ASU proportionate to their need. ” Regarding ASASU’s original goal for stable tuition increases, Burnell said, “Once they do bring every school into perspective, we will have a more effective funding formula and produce a more predictable tuition schedule. “Then, hopefully, we can try to stabilize the types of increases and help students plan for their education. ” Stote Press Friday, October 24,1986 M I C K E Y Inklings, footnotes and other tangy tidbits'from the entertainment file. Arizona State Fain •The State FaiF opens tonight, and to kick the celebration off, singer Eddie Money will perform on the Coliseum stage at 7 p.m. The fair runs through Nov. 9 at the State Fairgrounds located at 19th Avenue and McDowell Road in Phoenix. Tickets are $4 at the gate. Theater •Tempe Little Theater’s “ Fools,” directed by Kristina Flanders, runs tonight and Saturday night, Oct. 25, at 8. The charming Neil Simon cornedy revolves around a teacher who breaks the silly curse of a Russian village. The theater is located at Tempe Community Center, 3500 S. Rural Road. Tickets are $6 for adults, and $4 for students and senior citizens. For more information, call 968-8611. •Jean Genet’s “The Balcony” runs tonight through Nov. 2 in Drama City. Curtain time Is 8 p.m. except for 2 p.m. Sunday matinees. Tickets are $5, $4 for faculty and $3 for students. The theater is dark on Mondays. For more information call 965-5359. D oug Brendel and A m y Edm onds star In Tam ps Little Theater's "Foo ls.” Halloween Treats: •Lyric Opera Theatre is selling out its costume inventory at ASU Salvage Warehouse, Price and First Street in Tempe. The Halloween costume sale runs through Friday, Oct. 31. Hoyrs are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday. For more information call 965-2858. Page 9 G I L L E Y Cowboy crooner rides stable career By KHALI CRAWFORD State Press For Mickey Gilley, a ride on fame’s mechanical buckin’ bronc has switched gears to a comfortable canter. “ I don’t have anything exciting happening,” Gilley said in a phone interview from Austin, Texas. But the charts say different as this Louisiana boy’s lastest single “Doo-Wah Days” from his 1986 album “One and Only” climbs Billboard's country list to 13. “ (My career) is on a stable level,” he said. “I’m still doing 175 to 200 dates across the country.” Gilley has a date with the Valley at ASU’s Sundome Center Saturday at 8 p.m. He will be joined by country music’s No. 1 songstress, Janie Fricke. At last count Gilley has rounded up 18 No. 1 records, 10 from 1980 to 1983 including “Stand By Me,” “True Love Ways,” “That’s All That Matters To Me” and “Fool For Your Love;” Gilley first gained national attention in 1974 when he topped the country charts with “Roomful Of Roses’^ on Playboy records. Gilley said he was surprised as anyone to see toe tune take off — it was originally a side-two cut off a promotional record on his own Astro label for Gilley’s, the Texas horiky tonk that bears his name. Mickey, along with business partner Sherwood Cryer, founded Gilley’s in 1970 and expanded it into the 48,000 foot megahonky tonk featured in Aaron Latham’s Esquire article, “The Ballad of the Urban Cowboy.” The Texas-chic club was then immortalized in the motion picture “Urban Cowboy,” and Gilley’s name became a household word! ‘‘The name Mickey Gilley meant a lot,” Gilley said. “Once you’re established you have peaks; I peaked with ‘Urban Cowboy.” ’ And though Gilley doesn’t deny the club’s popularity had a hand in his ensuing success, he said he doesn’t have any allegiances to it. “I don’t have anything to do with Gilley’s except my last name,” he said. “The club doesn’t represent Mickey Gilley. People go into the bar now and say, ‘I can’t believe Mickey Gilley has anything to do with this.’ “I am a person hying to improve M lckoy G illey w ill appear with Janie Fricke at A S U ’e Sundom e Center Saturday at 8 p.m. performing and music; I work toward that. Gilley’s has deteriorated. The sound system is 10 years old, the lights need to be replaced and the parking lot resurfaced. ” Over die past 25 years, Gilley’s.career has had a little resurfacing of it’s own. Following in the bootsteps of his cousins Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggert, he recorded a regional hit, “Is It Wrong,” in 1959 and another tided “Lonely Wine” in 1964. After a fruitiess ride of the nightclub circuits in Houston, New Orleans, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana, he traded in his piano for a hammer and a six- month stint as a construction worker. He landed a 10-year gig in a Houston club and then opened Gilley’s in 1970. Once fame was at his heels, it pushed him into television with appearances on “The Fall Guy,” “Fantasy Island” and others. He said that although acting was a challenge, he doesn’t have plans for more. “I’m really not an actor,” he said. “I got those roles as a country music star. ’’ Tickets for Saturday’s show, at $14.50, $11.50 and $9.50, are available at the Sundome, Dillard’s and ASU ticket outlets. Mojo’s ‘wierd verbiage’ rolls into ASU By DAVID MILLER State Press In th e s p r a w lin g metropolis there are many stories. Bands come and go. Musicians get their shot at fame, do the spotlight limbo anff then w hither into h a rd w a re s to re management slots. Dance: •The new Ballet Arizona will bring Cinderella to Gammage Center tonight at 8. Tickets for the show are $9, $12, and $15. Student tickets for tonight’s show are half, price. There will be two matinees on Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. However, irreverence is not always a highly regarded quality among those in the sales community. Concerts: •Tickets go on sale today at Gammage for Wynton Marsalis. The popular jazz musician will appear at Vlnnies, 2110 E. Highland in Phoenix oh Nov. 19. For more information, call 965-3434. . Mind Over Matter. •Stargazers may want to head over to the Psychic Fair this weekend at Metro Center’s Roadway inn. The fair runs Saturday, Oct. 25 and Sunday, Oct. 26 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. There is a $2 donation at the door. The Roadway Inn Is located at Metro Center, Peoria Avenue at the Black Canyon Freeway. ^ B ut ir r e v e re n c e is precisely what Mojo Nixon is selling. At least that’s the way it seems, after hearing him talk about his “band,” his attitude, Loverboy (the “band” ), Fiddlin’ Charlie Jackson and the King of Montana. “I tend to get compared in a mutant-wedding kind of way to John Lee Hooker,” he said, “and while there are the obvious reference points like Lou Reed and Bob M ojo N ixon and Skid R oper wlH be at P alo V a n ia Baach Friday at 4 p.m . aa part ot S pin magazine'« eollaga concert Turn to MOJO, page 14. t h k Press Page 10 mmñ¡rrrm B Á ilS S S Ñ fp ro E ? ALL SHOWS BEFORE* P M M09I THRU FW SAT. SUN S HOLIDAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY p Ü M ¡ C jj j w a i i M H U g s i 004 c 7C7 MESA AT SO lONGMOfiE ^0J4*D707 * SUPERSTITION J 829*0344 Ru^i^ijni^fstfv > KARATE KI0 H [FB112:00.53». 10:00 M m U H l PEOPLE ID 2:30.730 K M L Y FMENO |R| 12:00.290. 4 00.6:00.8:00.10:00 TRICK OR TREAT |R| 1:00.300. 51». 7:00. 9:00 IACK TO SCHOOL IK-13) 1.15,520, 9:45 LEGAL EAGLES (PR) 3:15. 7:30 SOUL MAM (P6-13J 1:20.3:20,520.7:20.9:20 T0URH OUTS INR 12:45.3:00,5:15.7:30.9:45 STAND 0Y ME 10) 1:15,3:15,5:15.7:15.9:15 , CROCODILE 0UNDEE (P6-13) 1:30,3:30,5:30,7:30.9:30 TOP 8UN IPG-13) 12:00.2:00.5:00,7:30.10:00 topouripo -is ) 12:00. 2:15. 4.30. 7:00. 9:30 CROCODILE DUNDEE IP0-19I 1:15.3:1S, 5:15,720,9:45 CROCOOtLE DUNDEE (PG-13) J2 :3 0 ,2:45,5:00, 7:15.9:30 RUTHURSKOHilR11JO. 5:30.9:30 m a m u r i m m po-ty 330.7:30 STANO BY ME |R| 1:30.3:30.5:30.730.9:30 TOP SUH |P6J 12:30.2:45,5:00,7:15,9:30 T0UBH BUYS IPO 12:30.2:45.5:00.7:15.9:30 iièl ^ 249-2843 ùrie nafld COLOR OF MONEY |R| 11:45.2:15.4:45.7:15.10:00 B U * 3 " Friday &Satunlay MESA AT 1020 WEST SOUTHERN J s 7C7n o i9t h a v e j SOUL MAN (P8-13) 12:15,2:45.5:00, 7:30.9:45 T0U8H BUYS |PB| 12:30.2:45.500.7:30.10:00 COLOR Of MOREY (R) 12:00,230,500,7:30.9:50 CROCODILE OUHOHIP0-13I 1230.330.5:15 7:45.10:00 m - ia 12:45,2:45.4:45.7:15.9:15 emumEN OF A LESSER G00 (R) 1:30,4:15,7:00.9:45 soul hum naS M B IBl ID ffEVR-m 1:45535 925 (JACK TO SCHOOL HQ3 50.7:40 J Bdltower 8 • Cknstown 5 • Sun Devil 6 J CHILDREN OF A LEISER 800 (R) 1:30,4:15,7:00,9:30 L A Z A R E close up G r o o v y g h o u lie s C o m p a n y s w e e te n s u p Hallo w m m sam m J RUTHLESSPE0nimi1:45.3:45.8:00 BACK TOSCHOOL(P8-1J11:45545101» T H E DEADLY FRIEND |M1 1:15.3:15.5:15.7:15.9:15 ARMED MO 8M8ER0US |P8|315 M5 (DEADLY FRIEND |R| 1:15.5:15.9:15 J D I A M O N D ABOVE A LL. B R IL L IA N C E . By G R EG O R Y R O BER T KRZO S State Press Halloween — the eve of All Saints Day. An occasion that allows the world to indulge in some souped-up spiritual pleasure. There was a time though, when the holiday didn’t rely on excessive makeup and crazy costumes. Somewhere along the line, somebody got a cute idea to “dress it up” and throw in a few high-calorie treats. Ever since, Oct. 31 has been the day of dressing like misfits, morons and sickening slimeballs. Credit is due to the entrepreneurs of holiday mayhem who’ve made Christmas, Easter and Halloween very marketable celebrations. Surprisingly enough, Halloween isn’t just for kids anymore, according to National Theme Productions. The San Diego-based company has, over the years, supplied retail stores in America with Halloween and other costume apparrel. Their line of party clothes has enabled them to rake in a pretty bundle of green fluff, and it’s not all fringe either. - According to NTP, adults will spend more than $300 million in quality costuming for For brilliance beyond compare, only T he Lazare Diamond will do. Cut to ideal proportions, it achieves the ultimate in brilli­ ance, beauty and quality. One lode, and you'll see a difference that's perfectly brilliant The Lazare Diamond. Setting the standard for hriJUance." JEW ELRY & DIAMOND CUTTING 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. "IN T H E A R C H E S ” 967-8917 TEM PE IIB p B I I M S W here Y ou S h o u ld MMe O ne of the top hit costum es by N ational Them e Productions th is Halloween is The Rabbit In the H at Halloween this year in order to become something slinky, creepy or terrifying. “Halloween is probably one of the few holidays that has been somewhat taken over by adults,” said Joanellen Blakeley, creative director of NTP. “It’s a standard children’s holiday. Most people thought it was for children, but it became more of an adultoriented holiday. Our job now is to make it more modernized. “Right now, people are interested in a more seductive and fantasy look,” Blakeley said “ It’s such a diversion— this fantasy look —but it still has realism to it.” Blakeley said the popular items this year for women are the Sigourney Weaver-type heroine from the film “Aliens. ” “When we go into a design phase, we look at what’s hot,” Blakeley said. “We tend to look at what sequels are coming out or, for example, what Sly (Sylvester Stallone) is going to do for combat now. “We lode at all these things for general costuming ideas.” Other popular women’s outfits are “The Pirate Lady,” the intergalatic maiden called “ Astralite” and the “Girl Mouse.” The rugged hero is currently the “in” thing for men. Among those NTP costumes are “Fur Trapper,” a hunter, “The Bandit” and anything resembling Rambo. The “Ninja” and batchet-toting “Executioner” are popular as well. NTP can doll anyone up as a clown, tramp, goddess, bumble bee, French maid, deluxe devil, a sheik or even a padre. For those who enjoy wigs, fluorescent colors are still popular. The same goes for “Jason” hockey masks. The infamous mask is now a prime product. Blakeley was a teacher for the handicapped before she eventually landed a job working on the creative end for NTP’s president, Paul Sullivan. Sullivan, a former pharmacist from Santa Barbara, Calif., used his background in medicine to create a line of safe makeup and costumeaccessories. Sullivan’s ideas expanded from the small store he worked in over 20 years ago and has since spread over fee United States. It currently staffs nearly 6,000 part-time employees in 850 retail stores nation-wide, including Sears and J.C. Penney department stores. “We had 10 makeup artists outside on the sidewalk applying makeup for customers,” he ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY • • • • HOMECOMING 1 9 8 6 BOHCCOMIIW 1 0 K RACE Tempe P •A M ission m •s A N D 1MILE FUN R U N DANCING NIGHTLY 8 P M -1 A M V J. e n t e r t a in m e n t fun v & iï * * da 1ly SPECIALS SATURDAY, NOV 8, 1986 DATE: Saturday, November 8 PLACE: ASU. Race begins and ends a t ASU Sun Angel Track TIME: 8 a.m. for 1 mile fun run 8:30 a.m. for 1OK race en try form snacks P° O i ' P I E A S E P R IN T 1 1 - CONTESTS NAM E. ÉÜ 1 HOUR FREE POOL W ith this co u p o n Expires 11-1-86. $ ï 7o W ith this co u p o n $17oo W ith this co u p on -■ ô o f "o f f a n y homecoming d r i n k a n y ”f o ____________ o i T T * Expires 11-1-86. e n t r e e T Ë M lt 1 7 1 M 909 E. Minton, Tempe, AZ I block North o f Baseline; 1 block east o f Rural Near Lake Country Village. Shopping C ra te r Lim it o ne co u p o n p e r person. Management reserves right to refuse service. mMÊWm _________________ M A LE O FEM A LE O AGEDIVISION: 0 -M ----- 15-19----- 20-99___ 3 0 3 9 ----40-40__^_ 5Q-S$L—~_ 60 A up,— „. Expires 11-1-86. T issio n ASU FA CU LTY/STA FF----- T-SH IRT SIZE: t _____ X I --------- Pre*re9«stration, $10 day of race, NW XE C H E C K PA Y A B LE TO: A SU H O M ECO M IN G 10K am Sta MOLTO tòt Hike «.kt\ LEHMAN ASl tCnvnYCLVTCR, ITM PI.VSS«- À ee a J o a n e l le r Intracacli said. “E wholesal stores at Sullivi varieties abundar NTPgre “Mind merchal any ofe more cl< Thelc impress and ere has incc and m “Space extreme The v “Indian andbrai One tl product costume during s State Pres« Page 11 Fridag^ctobwJM^ITOS A Place To Call Home. ilio w een w ith d e v ilish ly trick y attire ecome ■e few iver by ’eative Idren's as for adultlake it Now there's one more good reason to move to Tempe. It’s Salado Springs —a delightfully affordable community of one and two-bedroom apartments. At Salado Springs.you'll find all these tempting extras: Smoked glass appliances Choice of designer carpets Mini and vertical blinds Private patios and balconies with extra storage Individual side/by/side washer & dryer hookups Large sparkling pool and spa Covered parking □ Individual bike parking Visit Salado Springs today i more ' said. ; —but ear for leroine look at look at imple, do for eneral M L A D O ^ âP t^ N G Ô “The called ’ thing e “Fur ’ and a” and liar as tramp, deluxe se who opular. ks. The capped ring on Paul Santa md in up and small nd has tes. It rt-time n-wide, rtment on the rs,” he 2 4 2 S o u th B eck A v e n u e. T e m p e Joan*ll«nBtak*i«y> d n tg n m a n ag * r for NaMonat Them * Productions, Instruct* pupil Lm W agttaff on tha intracadea of aafe m ake-up application. said. “Eventually we developed into a large wholésale operation supplying 150 other drug stores and many universities and colleges. ” Sullivan’s company supplies more than 100 varieties of costumes. Blakeley said the abundance of quality clothing has improved as NTPgrew. “Mind you,” she said. “ It’s a frenzy from the merchandise aspect. It’s (NTP) different from any other retail company. We have a much more close!* relationship with our customers. ” The long list of NTP costumés is indeed an impressive one: Other than the basic Dracula and creature-of-the night drab, the company has incorporated some of the most innovative and creative ideas. “The Smitten Kitten,” “Space W alk«” and “Hobo Clown” are extremely popular items. Each run under $40. The “ American Hero” a la Rambo and the “Indian Maiden,” complete with tomahawk and braided hair, a re also inexpensive, One thing gained from purchasing an NTP product is that it will remain durable. The costumes do not necessarily have to be worn during the Halloween season. With a few 8 9 4 -6 0 0 1 alterations and a couple added features, the costumes could he used for parties throughout the entire year. NTP also has a line of children’s costumes. “We’ve grown in leaps and bounds,” Blakeley said of the NTP’s costume variety. “We want to give the customers value for their money, they’re getting good material.” Blakeley said working for NTP offers a great deal of amusement. “It’s marvelous,” she said. “I wouldn’t still be here after nine years if it wasn't marvelous. You meet a lot of wonderful people, and there’s a slight string of craziness. “As we get the merchandise in, we go around wearing the costumes — there’s definitely that streak of zaniness.” Most NTP costumes come with makeup assessories and run under $40. NTP products can be purchased in the Valley at J.C. Penney department store in Tri City Mall, Main Street and Dobson Road, apd Sears at Fiesta Mall, Superstion Freeway and Alma School Road. STUNNINGDIAMONDSOLITAIRES 1/10 Ct. y if I •••••••••••••••• 1/2 Ct. ................................... 1 Ct. ............................ ret. nice quality........ 2 ct. nice quality....... C e n te r C o u rt is calling you! $99 $388 $449 $888 $ 2 ,1 0 0 $ 4 ,5 0 0 M A N Y OTHER SIZES AND QUALITIES A V A ILA B LE! Run the baseline, volley, smash and get ready fo r the HOM ECOM ING 1986 TENNIS CLASSIC Entry deadline is n o w Wednesday, Oct. 29> 1986 at 5:00 p.m. at MURoom 208-J. Pick up entry form s at the dorms, homecoming office and the athletic department. For more info, call 965-1248. L IG H T T H E FLAME ... A S U S A 1 Ü 1 Ï8 H B E R T Y ! •••••••••••*••• m OUR ULTIMATE GUARANTEE We guarantee our prices to be th e low est in the valley. Bring us any quote o f com parable quality and value and we’ll discount it by a t least flvë percent! This guarantee includes all so-called "50% o f f ” sales, wholesale centers, factories, malls, exchanges and any other place th a t springs up overnight! PHOEIMIX 936 W. C am e lb a ck west of McDonald’s, CamelbackVillage Square N .W . P H O E N IX Bell Tower village TEM PE 1814 E. S o u th e rn Southernat McClintockBehindJewelryExchange 820-3909 SCO TTSD ALE 8320 N. H a y d e n Rd. Mercadd Del lago Shopping Center 991-4814 .„,r 4925 W. Bell Rd. 277-7080 NEW LOCATION 0*43 3 State Pitt» Friday, October 84,1986 Page 12 Dern waxes philosophical about film . By DAVID M ILLER State P ress Actor Bruce Dern might want to be somewhere else. He’s a man who has made his living at being “publicly private,” but you just know after having seen him in a few roles that he might be more at ease foreclosing on someone’s mortgage or sitting chi a bench watching, staring, waiting. Fortunately real life doesn’t imitate art. At least not as far as this screen heavy is concerned. In reality, the man who plugged John Wayne comes across more like Ward Cleaver in a baggy sweater; a philosophical man with an honest message for his “children.” A cto r Bruca Dam laughs during a grass conference at the MU G lia Room Thursday prior to h is lecture, presented as part ot the A S A S U lecture series. “Acting is an endurance contest,” he said. “It’s the most competitive industry on Earth, and those in it are confronted daily by people saying ‘no’ because only one person gets to play the part.” It’s not that he wants to discourage anybody. He just wants the coming crop to know the score. “It’s sad. In the early ’60s the people running the (entertainment) business had 30 years experience behind them. Now the guys calling the shots are marketing majors from Georgia Tech working for Coca-Cola, who just purchased Columbia pictures. Everybody’s selling themselves to 25 year olds,” he said: If he’s frustated with the state of the art, it’s because he loves his art. He went in around 30 years ago and stayed in, although it was 15 years before he ever saw his name on the screen, and 17 before he made more than $10,000 a year as an actor. “There are two halves to being an artist,” he said. “The artistic half perpetuates itself. Then there’s the half that resists. It took me a long time before I realized that it’s a business. But you go into it because of art.” As an artist, Dern has seen a varied career. Not all of his film s have done Well at the box office, but that’s not been his main concern. “As an actor, I’m interested in playing characters that are multidimensional. I’ve spent my career examining people I’m interested in why they do what they do, particularly in crises situations. I want to bare the souls of the people I play,” His current film, “On The Edge,” continues the trend. Unfortunately, it didn’t do as well as he’d hoped at the theaters. Does the success of movies like “Rambo” ever tempt him touse a more “proven” route? “ I think audiehces want to see a little of everything. Every film can’t be an “On Thè Edge,” but one out of 10 can. There’s room for comedy, drama, porn. I see every mode having a viable film. “1 think a lot of the success of ‘Rambo’ came out of the fact that there was more than one made. And isn’t he also an extension of ‘Rocky,’ whom we love because he always wins? But wouldn’t it be interesting to see Rocky up against something he couldn’t survive, like AIDS? ” He pauses. “O ra conversation? ’ I T 'S f i S H E P H E R D 'S U J € € K € N D u n iv e rs ity 5 2 5 s o u th fo re st 8 2 9 -3 8 5 1 FfilDAV to w e rs 9 6 6 -5 1 9 2 ; R I I DRV FISH FRV te m p e H a p p y Hour Prices 11 a.m .-8 p.m. hors OP6N 11 R.M. llJatch All College Football on a 12-ft. Big Screen uuith Satellite $3.95 mee SRTURDRV D’o e u v R e s 4-8 N O COV€R RSU Pre-Game Party begins at 4 p.m. Beer Drink Specials FR€C Buffet After the game, continue your Sun Devil Spirit .uuith more “spirits and libations." ......... Ror-o.i\/o 2 for 1 Hrinkq' Luith ticket stub_ & . . S H € P H € R D 'S 1123 South Rural Road in Tempe • Rural St flpache • 968-0243 1 The Red Hot Chili Peppers • T.S.O.L. • Theolonious Monster Sat., Nov. 8 • 8 p.m. Chaka Khan Tickets $7.50 in advance • $9.00 day of show Jeffery Osborne Midnight Star Fri., Nov. 1 4 1 8 p.m. Sun., Nov. 30 • 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Nov. 6 • 7:30 p.m. $12.50 $13.50 $12.50 O C T O B E R 10 • N O V E M B E R 2 PHOENIX’S LARGEST HAUNTED HOUSE 30 MINUTES TO feo THROUGH THE SCARIEST 32 ROOMS YOU’VE EVER SEEN IN YOUR LIFE! Sun-Thur (ipni- 12am • F'rt-Sal 6|tni-.‘iuin IIAl.I.mVKKN 5MI-3.VM -------— COSTUME RENTALS —— ------- Rent anv of the costume» vou cee in the Haunted Mansion ASK AT THE DOOR! - WITH SUPPORTING BUSINESS MEMBERS — —— Alphagraphir* ■ Automotive Limited • David. >aha '* • ES&B Advertising Domino's.Piasa • KZZP 104.7FM * Moyse Enterprises * Meat and You * Pepsi Seifert King Financial Corp. • Sincerely Sandra • Two Roses University Screen,Print >IM l\ S Ì ) H ki >in i j. .ini a & . i u\ o ít’ <:«»in tu«-tri al H rttkfr.tjif KZZP .Ir*:A;... ............. .............. 1 THEATRÉ TICKETINFORMATION Iol cantar, slag» Ticket* on salaal all Dlilardt Bòx'Oftlca locano >urticket»by phona —244 0404. Fot lurtbei coricar! Intoirnatlon c •aliable (or spadai occasiona Box Otite» open aa.an daya a «»e M0Nmti32nv . . .. Stanford quarterback John Paye, ranked third In Pac-10 passing, leads the Cardinals against U S C Saturday. matchup. The Cougars, the only team that the Devils have failed to beat this year, have scratched out a position of respect for themselves this season. In addition to playing the Devils to a 21-21 tie, the Cougs enhanced their giant-killer image by pounding the Trojans 34-14 two weeks ago. While the idle Cougs were savoring that win last week, The Bruins were trouncing the Golden Bears of California, 36-10. The Bruins lead the series 27-8-1, but the Cougars have their offense in top shape. They rank second in the conference in total offense (390.2 yards per game) and rushing offense (194.3 yards per gam e). They gained 510 yards aginst the Trojans, with a balanced attack that brought them 201 yards in the air and 309 yards on the ground. Washington State quarterback Ed Blount, largely overlooked at the beginning of the season, ranks third in Pac-10 passing efficiency, throwing for 1,004 yards on 67 completions of 124 attempts. He has thrown for 501 yards and six touchdowns in the Cougars’ last two games. On the ground, the Cougs have the P ac’s second-leading rusher in Kerry Porter, who has gained 550 yards on 116 carries for an average of 4.7 yards per carry. The Cougs look to split end Kitrick Taylor for the big play, who has caught six TDs this season. UCLA ranks third in Pac-10 scoring offense, with an average of 27.7 points per game'. Against Cal, the UCLAns ran 50 times and passed just 15, since quarterback Matt Stevens posts an unimpressive .538 completion percentage, with 993 yards on 77 compteded passes. Tailback Gaston Green, despite being partially impaired with a toe injury for several weeks, ranks fifth in Pac10 rushing with 388 yards on 75 carries for an impressive average of 5.2 yards per carry. Green has also rushed for five TDs. The game starts at 1:30 p.m. PDT. The Oregon Ducks face Washington at 1 p.m. PDT, seeking to snap a five-game losing streak, the most recent a 41-7 pounding at the hands of the Stanford Cardinal. Washington is heavily favored in this game, and ranked No. 8 in the nation by the AP poll. Quarterback Chris Chandler leads the Pac and is ranked 10th nationally in passing efficiency, with 82 completions on 139 attempts for 1,064 yards. The Huskies are starting to get healthy after some injury problems, and figure to hand the Ducks their sixth consecutive loss. Oregon, however," can never be counted out for one reason: Chris Miller. Millerr leads the conference and is 10th nationally in total offense, at 246.6 yards per game. Every coach that has faced Oregon has stressed the fact that a quarterback like that can surprise anybody with an upset. The Wildcats play host to California Saturday at 6:30 p.m. The Cats are also heavy favorites, led by quarterback Alfred Jenkins, who has thrown for 1,044 yards on 78 receptions of 155 attempts and is always a running threat. The Golden Bears are reeling from a fourgame losing streak, while the Cats have won four straight at home. NÌÉPiA has more to worry about than drug tests SOME SCHOOLS GOT IT, SOME DON’T ASU. is (Hie of the lucky ones. Most ASU coaches are concerned about academics as much, if not more, than with making sure “Joe Star” , who may be a “D” student, is out on the field helping the team to a winning season so that the next step up for the coach is a bigger school and a bigger paycheck.' • Some, however, are more concerned with the latter. Take for instance Donald jSilveri, basketball coach at Erie Communtiy College in Buffalo, N.Y.. Silveri resigned last week after admitting to changing grades for as many as 15 athletes fit order to help them gain athletic scholarships to four-yearschools. The coach told reporters, “Maybe it was a terribly wrong decisionfor die terribly right reasons.” . Some erf the players are currently starting for Divison I schools. Not a good way to keep a job. The 38-year-old coach has guided his team to the National Junior College Athletic Association tournament for the past three seasons and he was State Coach of the Year for the past two seasons, selected by the state Basketball Coach Association, ___. I don’t mean to pick on Silveri just because he is one the one who got caught, but it just goes to show that Nebraska isn t only delay it. I’m not sure it is such a good idea when recalling the “Heidi Bowl” For three hours in 1968, New York Jets and Oakland Raiders fans sat on the edge of their seats watching the two battle it out for the division title. Carol Boos The Jets were leading 32-29 after a Jim Turner field goal Asst. Sports Editor with 65 seconds left. It look like a Jet victory. It was also 7 p.m., time for the classic Heidi. A typical commercial break the only one out there who think athletics are a fool-the-mostlead to the movie—not the end of the playoff game. people-you-can-league. Mothers tried to hush angry fathers as they badmouthed a I guess the National Junior College Athletic Association nice girl like Heidi, while others were on the lines will have one more thing beside drug testing to worry about badmouthing NBC affiliates. now. Anyway most would agree the game looked as if it was AND YOU THOUGHT IT COULDN’T BE DONE For all you Boston fans who thought the Mets were down ended with 65 seconds left, but two last-second touchdowns gave the Raiders a 43-32 victory over the Jets. A score only and out: ha ha. The Mets are just waiting to make history. After seen on the 10 o’clock news or in the morning newspaper. Hnminating the league for most of the season and clinching I don’t think NBC could forget something like that. I their division so early, they needed some kind of challenge — wonder how they broke the news to Mr. Cosby that if the to be the first team ever to lose the first two at home and game went longer than the allotted time, his kids might have come back to win the series. to miss their bed time to watch the show. The series was tied going into last night’s game, but the I’m sticking with my pick — the Mets are going to end the Mets have outscored the Sox 13-3, out-hit them 25-11 and outseason with a new ring on their finger and Boston is going to homered th 4-6 in the last two games. I guess NBC felt the series was not exciting enough to bump have to live with headlines saying ‘Boston Hasn’t Won a its top linkup (Cosby Show, Family Ties and Cheers), but World Series Since 1918.J Page 16 State Press Friday, October 24,1986 Intramural basketball breaks participation record By S T E V E A D A M S State P ress Just when it seemed that the basketball season ended, (it was only last May that the Celtics downed Houston), ASU 3-man in tram u ra l basketball sta rte d play Wednesday. “We have a record number of teams this year, the majority of them in the men’s Hass B,” said Juliette Moore, assistant director of intramurals. The competition will be extremely tough this year considering there are 104 teams in the men’s class B alone competing for the chance to win the intramural championship. “If all the teams that signed up for 3-man basketball stick with it and play all their games, the competition will be tough when the playoffs roll around, ” said Moore. The level of competition as well as the crowds that routed on their teams was unbelievable. The Greeks, no suprise to many, dominate all -leagues with the number of teams they have participating. “The chances Of an independent winning the basketball title are that much more difficult,” said one player who asked not to be identified. The player went on to add that he doubts that the results will turn out as good as the men’s volleyball championships. The in d e p e n d e n ts sw ep t the championships in men’s volleyball. In class C action: Skyliners pounded Spud T. Bouges, 21-11, The Underdogs defeated Barely Legal, 21-18, and F U I bounced by Sigma Chi, 21-10. For those who are not familiar with this event or believe that it has something to do with farm fowl, the name can be deceiving. In class B action Slam Dunka Fratboy was narrowly defeated by Bose, 21-19 while ATO NP No. 1 escaped with a two-point victory over Sleep and Eat, 22-20. In some other scores around the league, in The Turkey Trot is a 3-mile race in which the men run 1.5 miles and the women run 1.5 miles. lSach team is required to be a malefemale tandem, running the 3 miles over a cross-country style course. Tatham Jr. to go down in history for inhabiting Dino’s Doghouse You see, once again, Tatham Jr. has opened his mouth and inserted his cowboy boot. How? He didn’t let a sleeping dog lie or, in other words, he hasn’t let the dead United States Football League alone. Last summer, when the USFL was awarded $3 in its antitrust lawsuit against the NFL, its fate was near. With the NFL’s payment of the $3, the USFL then sealed its fate with the decision to suspend this year’s season. This left the Arizona Outlaws in a precarious position. They had a 30-year lease that was to run through Jan. 31, 2016, no league to play in and approximately 8,000 suckers who wanted to watch this Barnum and Baily three-ring circus. With the USFL calling off their season and the league’s end very near, ASU officials asked the Outlaws to post a $415,000 security deposit to retain their Sun Devil Stadium rights. The Outlaws responded to ASU officials by terminating their lease under a provision that allowed them to void the SKI THANKSGIVING W EEKEND The second place teams receives a chicken, third place Cornish hens, and the yolk is on the fourth place team, as it will receive eggs. Meanwhile in other intramural news: •The Corec Turkey Trot is fast approaching and entry forms are available. There are a number of games that were played Wednesday, and a number of the games came right down to the wire. One of Dino’s favorite ancient proverbs is: “Let a sleeping dog lie,” or is it “Let a dead dog alone” ? Well, however that Chinese proverb goes, Dino feels some things are better left alone. As a m atter of fact, Dino wi s he s t h a t P h oe ni x businessman and Arizona Outlaw p re sid e n t Bill Tatham Jr. had the same ideology. Now, here comes the reason why the event is called the Turkey Trot: it is nin right around Thanksgiving time, and the first place prize is a TURKEY (suprise) and a Tshirt. class B: Area Code over Average White Team, 21-15, Delta Tau Delta Purple downed Sleep and Eat, 21-16, and Barrel Busters rolled over Acbes, 21-18. •The cotton T-shirts are back and the way to get one is to sign up for the intramural cross country run. The 3.1 mile course will be run at Kiwanis Park and. the entries are due in the intramural office Thursday, Oct. 30. Every team member does receive a 100 percent cotton Beefy T-shirt.__________ CHEAPSEATS it's Nor o/ekTn* rrte FÀr LAbV S/NfrS. He’s A a*™™*! contract if they were no longer operational. Thus, their stadium lease was terminated Sept. 25, and by using the loophole in their Arizona Board of Regent agreement, their team officially became no longer operational. What Dino cannot understand is how in one breath Tatham Jr. can call the team no longer operational and in the next breath say that his team can now sit down and discuss the possibility of the Outlaws playing in the newly proposed downtown stadium. Excuse me? . Come on Bill Tatham Jr., it’s over, If Receiving $3 from your antitrust suit when you were hoping for more than $1 billion was not enough, you should have gotten the hint when the USFL owner’s decided not to {day thisseason. It is time to wake up, Bill. The USFL played its last hand and lost. The Outlaw players have all gone back to what they were doing before this ridiculous league was formed: painting houses and working as bouncers at local bars. The Outlaws soon will be little more than a trivia question answer to what USFL team was the Chicago Blitz, the Arizona Wranglers and Arizona Outlaws all in one very long year. . i And you, Bill Tatham Jr., will soon be little more than a one-time occupant of Dino’s Doghouse. Oh, and good luck on that new stadium deal, Bill. You do know that you would be better off cutting a deal with the Coliseum on McDowell. You know, where the Suns play. Dino wouldn’t go negotiating big stadium deals when the bulk of your fans could fit in Murdock Hall. — D EAN A . O B EN A U ER Entries are due Thursday, Nov. 20 and the race will take place on Friday, Nov. 21. on we / 1 mm 1 L? ASPEN 1 am te* ANMUAl a im é i®mtkiAHiewr AUNfyS 6tves no% i ^ tet- ANNUAL |L_, CLICHÉ p i i TWRMAMewr He MS A nose fonine footm cl . ■m bA, TUB m u tte r 601H6. I& A J N U A l C U U lg IRjKMM&ir Jon Basatone Q um ttty R ecycled F oreign A u to & T ru ck P a rts •Quality — ail parts pre-tested •Selection — 10 acres to & Ski 2 D ays At VAIL $279°o IT IN ERARY: Leave ASU Wednesday, Nov. 26. Ski Thursday and Friday at Vail. Ski Saturday and Sunday at Aspen. Leave for ASU Sunday at 4:00. Send Reservations A nd $50 Deposit To: Ski America 648 N. Linden Circle Mesa, AZ 85203 NAME •SA TISFA CTIO N — 90-day unconditional guarantee 10% O FF already low prices. 3024 8 . 40th 8 t. P hoenix • 437*0185 I___________________________ ________________ a ____________ I CLASSIFIED ADS . . . 15 WORDS ONLY A P P E T IT O ? HAPPY HOUR SPECIAL 16” Pizza $3.99 4 p.m.-9 p.m. Pitcher Beer $ 2.00 FOR STUDENTS 4 p.m.-Closing A dd’l. item extra R O OM M ATES For Further Inform ation C all Ski A m erica 890-2616 EAT IN ONLY Tempe Center 967-8091 W e D e liv e r □ iMUl.THe A L L M O D E L S F O R E IG N Present this ad for w M choose from Ski 2 D ays At ne tSLuce FHSfNùr 'fiue. SHTEAa S ta te P re s s 8-5 DAILY MATTHEWS CENTER 10:45-12:45 DAILY MU 965-7572 VISA • MASTERCARD • CHECK \ statt Pr«— Page 17 Friday, October 84,1986 p r la e o n ^ ^ & t e S u n D e v ils v s . U t a h U t e s p p Ä a n f ^ T im e : S a tu rd a y , O c t o b e r 2 5 , 1 9 8 6 a t 7 :3 0 p .m . S it e : Sj^n D e v il S ta d iu m A S U (7 0 -3 5 -1 o v e r a R B R - 1 A a B | H h | sm f'UjÉ F a s s e ! %U ta h (6 -7 q peT ^ ttaàijf U ta h ) ^ W e a t h e r : C le a r s k ie d , te rr^ e ra tu re 6£5 d e g r e e s . ^ ^ e n t la n c e : 7 0 0 0 0 e x p e c t e d ' , S è d ie : K T A h 8 2 0 A M wH? b r o a d c a s t liv e W ide R eceiver .. Q uick Tackl J .. Q u ic k G uard . . . . . . . . Center . Strong G uard . Strong packle ..•.y. ftg fttE n d .. Q u a d e rb a ck ..... .Y Ä lib a c k H H H a ttb a ck • ^ ¿ ♦ ^ lÄ in k e r ■ n d a l l M cD am e ^^pPevirÉ B to m a s ... ¡H jfro d d H k , . ■ f t lj m W a M f ..... 87 Jeff G aliim ore ... È .*i * ..Q u ic k T a ck le .. C H í i f |C u a r d i ^ j p M B C e n te r J m Strong G uard H t r o r p Tackfë H L fig h t E n d .. liuártéÉáack ^ ^ fc iin g B a e k [79lsaako Poti .. J H R - ................ .....* 74 Dave. Cullity . .............. 87 Curt Jo n e s ................... 9 Larry E g g e r , .e ^ r y T .,.................... 32 E d d ie J o hnaehrtrn^ r U ............ . 16 Bryan B^ro;.. ............... . J 80 CraigJtfRprrerr'r!".^:.................. .«H H H | Fu lfe a H l- . u -ö ü ck L.. Utah Defer » b ie h d o n llia w n p ittè rso rl 3 8 l^ T y M d Q io th e n P ^ F r a r u c R ié e p h .. 90 S c o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ .. 36 |ÉVicÂ| R e ce iv e r^ 23 L ò r é r ^ ^ i M a H H t .........I 70 Jarm M H m p n . . . . . . .............. 68 PaulKntertrrt ............ . . . . . . . Defensive End Defensive Tackle . . . . ¡.N o s e G uard I .. Defensive End B a c ie Inside Linebacker inside Linebacker isftVî. .».,. * Rover ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ r n e r t^ m . . . . . . Free Safety • 57 Stacy H a r v e y . . . . t|||||obby B d y d . . . . | 2 5 Erio Al l en. . . J Q ^ à r r e r ï^ Æ r a __ _ 18 RavJW^teit l M i i : 45 97 J a m es MbKennafcfe TT^ H W R . i*.. J 9 5 Jeff M cM jW « n :. . . A . 52 Bob. J mM W s 3 . . . 43 Jibe MeQrHt NK^Carland H—rnat/w’., ./ J 54 *>. J 41 C id B r ii—r^sid4| « .... . . . . . . -o.,..I M ... B E ric W h eeiw r^ M sf ■■ ■ 7 ( ; ., »vil.». . Left End ..............Left Tackle . . . 4. . f ^ ^ F T a c k l e ^ a f e ^ .Rioht End :.. Inside Linebac ker M iddle Linebacker Outside Linebacker . . . . ... .. Ò crn erback ....... C o Ä ie r b a Ä . . . . . . Strong Safety lit Free Safety U t a h S p e c i a l is t s ^ ^ Á S U S p e c ia lis t s Kicker Punter 14 Kent Bostrom 6 M ike S c h u h .. 4- K icker ........... FALL SEASON HONDA SALE! \ IPI SCOOTERS! SCOOTERS! ■1- I SCOOTERS! H H ■ il fj W Æ / j ( E W M U S I C THE COLLEGE TOUR Mo l u FR0M N . 2 5 DATE N A T IO N A L TOUR 1 " J j MOJO NIXON and SKID ROPER AZ’S #1 V 1 SCOOTER DEALER ^ ¡1 with special guest Die Balancing Act •Great on gas! •First service free! OCT. 24 • 4 P.M. P.V. BEACH •Easy parking! •High quality! LOWEST DON! MISS THE SPIN PRODUCT SHOWCASE D A T E : O C T O B E R 24 WE SELL FOR LESS! LOCATION: C AD Y MALL "FASTEST FINANCING IN THE VALIEY” TI ME : 11-4 P.M. w e s t e r n iio n d c i 6717 E. McDowell Rd. • 994*8400 McOQWEll "ONLY 5 MIN. AW AY!" FREE T-SHIRTS,PRIZES,PRODUCT SAMPLES AND M O RE!!! FRO0UCED BY USCONCEPTS BabyRuth AKAI UFESAVERs Page 18 State Press Frida^Octoto«r<24j 1986 B elp Wanted MUSIC LOVERS- $9000/month poten­ tial, part-time. Write: Music, 2816 Duncan St., Columbia, S C 29205._____ C Ó M E HELP celebrate Honors Day October 25 at Tempe Beach Park from F o r Rent or Lease $150 O F F move in. From $335, furnished, unfurnished, washer, dryer, ceiling fans, pool. Spence and Rural area. 967-0004. _________ r $2" i i i i i i i i i i i i i 2, 3, 4 bedroom condos, townhouses, houses, near ASU for sale and rent. Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 951-5800,8604)460. ________ I L unch a n d D in n er S pecial CONDO FO R rent, Papago Park Village. 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom. $600 permonth. 964-7966. I 1 I I I HO USE FO R rent. Two bedrooms in four bedroom house. $175 per room plus utilities. University and Hardy. Call Dan, 967-8337. References._______ Vs A hnouncem ents Your choice of Sandwich. Also includes 12-oz. Soft Drink, 8-oz. Bowl of Soup and Chips. Saturday Special one free Ï liter with purchase. With this ad. I Suite 11, Tempe 1 K I (N .W . C o m e r o f Hardy & Broadway in the Broadway Festival Shopping C e nter) onus cresca s 930 V. Broadway, i so t o . O M D BU VXM ED ( li mited Delivery Area, 15.00 Minimum) I 966-8950 OPEN 6 Days A Week 10-9 ICE CREAM CAFE L I I I 1 I .1 <4 G V S ta rs O f 1987??? 1987 MISS ARIZONA4J.S.A. PAGEANT (Official Preliminary to Miss U.S.A. and Miss Universe Pageants!) New Date — Previously Held in March 197Ò BUICK Electra, runs great, good tires, looks fair. Gdod transportation car. $350.962-8945. Appw foas available at Jnsica Ln Cosmetics, Pageant Headquarters. Leading Modeling Agencies Qualifications: 17-24 yrs., single - never narrili, resident 6 mos. (fall semester students accepted) For contestant information:' Name ________________________ . 1972 IMPALA, needs transmission work, <50 Ò BÒ . Call Thiru, 629-8392. # Age_ 1975 DATSUN f10, white, four door sedan, with A/C, $750. Call Neal, 966-2002. > Address _ C ity___ _ Phone. School A ttending. (Please include Christmas vacation address also, if student) MAIL TO: Pageant Headquarters 2243 N. Alvarado. Phoenix. AZ 65004 (602) 252-1172 A pp lica tio n deadline: N ovem ber 1. A p p licatio n s a ls o a v a ila b le for M i s s Arizona-Teen U S.A. 1978 DATSUN station ws^jon, auto­ matic, PS, A C , $799. Call Bob, 833-8493 or Denise, 833-1411. 1979 280ZX, clean, runs great, loaded, $5200 (best offer). Contact Brick, days, 966-6621; evenings, 966-3229.________ 1981 BMW 320-i, white/navy, new Michelins, AM-FM cassette, perfectly maintained, $8000.488-4343 (Carefree). 1984 ' CAM AR O , auto/over-drive, air, cruise, tilt, runs great, $6200 OBO. 582-1795 o r 820-1414. 1984 RED, Gray Fiero Deluxe, perfect condition, $650Q. 493-9790, 954-5919 yvork. y 1985 PULSAR: AC, sunroof, luggage rack, alloy rims, extended warranty, new tires and brakes, excellent condi­ tion, $6990. Greg at 968-5698 or 866-0496. DESPERATE, MUST sell 1981 Chevy Citation V6, 4-speed, A C , asking $1200. 963-9764. ______________ __ M G B R O LL bar for'sale with car. Looks great, runs great. $1000 OBO. 844-7632 after 6:00 p.m.__________________ _ B abysitters want«» GEM CO “Presents to y o u to d a y ’s cu rren t lo o k s in design er eyew ea r” Featuring Italian designs by BABYSITTER TO care for our 8 week old daughter in our home. Experienced, nonsmoker, part-time during week. Vicinity of Mill and Broadway in Tempe. Call 968-6190 after 3:00 p.m. CHILD CA R E. Busy mom needs enthusiastic take-charge person to help care for 6 month old twins and 3Vfe year old. Some light house keeping. Experience with young children preferred. 12 noon to 8:00 p.m., 5 days per week. 391-2458, call and leave message; 860-0295 after 4:00 p.m. Northeast Scottsdale. _________ B icycles________ í ■ V ■ i * ■ t ■ A ■* Thorough Eye Examination & Complete Contact Lens Care by Dr. Michael L Ber] Optometrist (W aUt-in Prescriptions W elcom e) TINTED SOFT CONTACTS NOV AVAILABLE ni imiM T n tu iiu i COLORS u w i r \ n a p p o in t m e n t 1818 E. B aseline Road * 8 3 9 -6 LOOKING TO move? Call 1-976-6278 for a 24-hour recorded selection of availa­ ble houses and duplexes for rent. Many In the Tempe-Mesa area. $.75/mlnute. PAPAGO ONE, two bedroom, two bath condo, all appliances* available now. Call 947-8189 after 6.0Q p.m., Earl._____ THREE BEDROOM , tw o bath townhouse, half m ile to ASU. Washer, dryer, tennis, pool. Available November 1st. Robert, 955-6265. TH R EE BEDROOMS, $550. Near campus, 903 S. Melody. 253-1210. TWO BEDROOM furnished guest house, iY z miles from campus. All utilities, $375/month. 921-0694. TW O BEDROOM, 15 minute walk to ASU, $250 plus $250 deposit. 899-5270, Mr. Linn. -. UNFURNISHED 3 bedroom, 1% bath townhouse. Includes appliances, pool, sundeck, covered parking, and water. North Tempo. 998-7823. W ALK T O ASU. Studios, one bedroom apartments, utilities included. Pool, laundry' facilities, furnished or un­ furnished, from $300-375. Marianna Apartments, 1214 E. Orange, Tempo. 966-8597. _______ _____ A utom obiles . • DECEMBER 11-13* Zip-------O ccupation. H A N G GLIDE! On a gently sloping hill just south of Tempo. Fly all day only $50. Gifts/groups. Windsports, 8977121. TE M P E JA Y C E E ’S Haunted House, 10/24-11/1, 634 South M yrtle, 7-10 p.m., Midnight on Fridays and Saturdays. Admission is $2. Costum e and pump­ kin cohtests! Call 966*9241. 1987! JODI LEE ARMSTRONG Misa Arianna U JS.A. 1986 FRIENDS (QUAKER) meeting Sundays, 9:30-10:30 a.m., Dan forth Chapel. Silent w orship, frien d sh ip , fello w sh ip, welcome! 965-7536._______________ \ PO P QUIZ answers: South Africa provides more medical care, employ­ ment, income, and education to blacks than any other African nation. Americans for South Africa, Box 62822, Phoenix, A Z 85032. _______ __ We’re Looking ß jF A L L HO N OR students are invited to attend the ASU. Honors Day Picnic. Saturday, October 25 from 1 to 5 at Tempo Beach Park. Free food, drinks, games and prizes._____ __________ . RALEIGH 10-SPEED, men's blue 27" Gram) Prlx, new Brooks seat, Suntour Arx deralleure, $175. D87-6412after5. R O LFA ST CO A S TE R bike, men’s red 1 -speed, 28", large seat, chrome lendere, 850.987-6412 after 5.________ F o r Sale 1983 Y AM A H A Riva, hardly used, priced to sell, $1100. After 6:00 p.m. call $800 A week. Simple, safe, work at home business. Evergreen, Dept. 4B, Box 44133, Phoenix, A Z 85064. 1 to 5. ___________ •' COM PUTER A C CO U N T exec. Market integrated software products and syste m s. Average co m m issio n $5O0/per week. 821-2558. _____ _ DISTROM, A division of Burger King, is presently seeking a part-time trans­ portation clerk. The applicant should have experience with the IBM PC, good recordkeeping skills, an understanding of driver logs, and DOT requirements. Hours will be 7:30-11:30 a.m., M-F. Send resume or com e in and fill out an application 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., M-F. 2401 S. Wilson, #1(33, Tempo 85282. Dlstrom Is an E O E ._____ ■ ______ EARN $480 weekly- $60 per hundred envelopes stu ffed. Guaranteed. Homeworkers needed for company project stuffing envelopes and as­ sembling materials. Send stamped self addressed envelope to J B K Mailcompany, PO Box 25-3, Castaic, California 91310. EARN $ and stop the arms raceAmerican Peace Test needs you for important phone work. Set your hours between 3:30-9:30, any day, $4/hour. Call Jim Driscoll, 968-6280, leave message.________ , ______ __ EXCELLEN T PART-TIME opportunity with consumer 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 through Friday. 2564)055. EXTREM ELY INTERESTING part-time position with great potential. Phoenix based human resources and develop­ ment consulting and training firm. Need administrative assistant to schedule classes, do bookkeeping, and assist In program development. Some of thé work can be done from home. For appointment Call Scott at The Facilitators, 241-1932.________ y ■ FINANCIAL SERVICES firm 18 looking for junlor/senior majoring In accounting/f¡nance to woric in its finance department. Approximately 20-25 hours per week, $5 per hour. Please fill out application at MSA, 1626 S. Edward Dr., Tempe, located one block north of Broadway and west of Priest off 17th St. No phones please. 264-9729. A BEAUTIFUL color television, 25” $100; 19” color TV, ;$85. Cash. Call 253-5016. ' ' " ••• BEST QUALITY, best deal aroundPC-XT compatible, complete 640K turbo, $845. IBM AT compatible, $1360. Free in sta lla tio n and delivery.; 968-4867. ____________________ GEMEINH ARDT SOLID ' silver flute, french model. New condition. Cali J. for best offer, 967-2817 evenings._____ JOURNEY- D O N T m iss this great show! Good seats still available. Call 835-7266 o r 835-6541. Reasonable! O UTR EACH FO R Needy Winter Rum­ mage Sale, Saturday, October 25, 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., Newman Center, CoF lege and 230 E. University._____ PIONEER SPEAK ER S, 100 watte. Brand new, never been used. Cost $600, will take $100 for the pair. Moving, gnust sell. 954-0627. ROLEX, PIAGET, Cartier, Gucci, Patek Philippe, Baume & Mercier: Exquisite replicas. 234-9810. H elp Wanted A IR LIN E S NOW h ir in g . Reservationiet8, flight attendants, and ground crew positions available. Call 1-619-565-1630 ext. A23AZ, for details, 24hours. ______ ATTENTION MARKETING students, local firm seeks individual to deliver information to area business owners. Auto required. Hours flexible. Salary plus bonus. 834-0922, Joann, 8:30 to 12:00 noon. G O LDEN CO R R A L Family Steakhouse now hiring line waitress and salad bar people. Day and evening hours availa­ ble. Must hfcve .telephone. Apply In person. 3231 S. Mill Ave. (comer of Southern and Mill), Tempe. G O LDEN CO R R A L Family Steakhouse hiring dishwashers, 5:00-11:00 p.m. shift. Must have telephone. Starting pay $3.75 per hour. Apply 3231 S. Mill Ave. (comer of Southern and MHO, Tempo, ______■ ■CA M ELBAC K M A LL Cinema is now hiring a part-time assistant manager. No experience necessary, will train for position., ; G reat job for college students. Perfect way to obtain man­ agement experience. Apply in person, 7033 E. Camelback Rd. PIN STRIPES AND YOUR FUTURE PART-TIME evening and week­ end positions available. Outgo­ ing personality, enthusiasm, ambition? This is the job for you! Coiftpensation will be based on performance as well as a base wage. Potential for accelerated income. Great opportunity to work at a major Wall Street firm and learn the basics of the invest­ ment business. If you meet the above require­ ments, contact Gina Cornelison, 834-3943, to arrange interview. 10/24 JEWELERS FINANCIAL SERVICES, credit division of Zale Corporation, has im­ mediate openings for part-time temporary Credit Clerks. These data entry positions require 45 WPM typing, plus ability to work in fast-paced environment. CRT experience preferred, interested candidates may apply in person Monday through Friday between the hours of 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Morning and afternoon positions available. B u sin ess Opp. $48,000 IN 3 weeks- guaranteed! Legal! Send S A S E to: Eagle Enterprises, 1020 W. 1st St., «61, Temps, A Z 88281. H elp Wanted B u sin ess Opp. 1221 HIRING S AN TAS and Santa’s helpers part-time and full-time. Earn extra money for Christmas. Inquiries call 986-6258. __________ M A KE $25 for 3 hours work. Call Tracy, 968-4605 between 5 and 7 p.m.______ _ M AKE $4-5 an hour working mornings or evenings as a professional tele­ marker, only 5 minutes from ASU. 921-1844. _________ _____ M AKE HUNDREDS weekly mailing circulars! No quotasi Limits! Rush self addressed stamped envelope: Am-Mar, 256 Robertson, Dept. G3, Beverly Hills, C A 90211.___________ , MARKETING MAJOR, pact-time phone work morning or afternoon. Hourly + com m ission. Call 968-6600 for appoint­ ment. Close to campus. Ask for Steve or Mark. M O N EY MAKER- Show fellow students gold Sun Devil charms and pine. Very loaf pressure sales. Call Simply Charming, 897-1126. M O THER’S HELPER, 3:15-9:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, $5/hour. Child care, Monday through Friday, 12:005:00 p.m. and Wednesday and Saturday evenings, up to $4.5Q/hour. Both jobs in north Scottsdale. Must drive. Domestic Consultants, 941-5150. NEEDED, 3RD or 4th year English major interested in occasional tutoring and proofreading. $6/hour. Mona, 8384)824. ___________________ NEW ADVERTISING agency seeks enthusiastic students desiring a chance to gain excellent experience in graphics, typesetting, or sales. Take this opportunity how. Make some extra money also. Call 890-9026, leave message. ______ NOW HIRING, ■I’enguin’s Place Frozen Yogurt stores are expanding into Arizona. W e are looking for en­ thusiastic, bright, energetic employees for full and part-time work at our new Hayden Square location. Interviews being held Saturday and Sunday, October 25 and 26, from 12:00-3:00 p.m., 310 S. Mill Ave. NOW HIRING part-time help, both a.m. and p.m, shifts, all positions available. Inquire at Coastal Castle Restaurant, 112 E. University, Tempe (1 block east ,Qf Mill)- ________ PA R T OR full-time, front counter and girl Friday for audio repair shop. $3.60 tostart. 969-8663. PART-TIME real estate secretacy, computer typing skills. Prefer business major. Real estate license not required. Please contact Durrell Bates, John Hall Associates, 948-0550. _______ _ PART-TIME front counter and minor electronic repair person for audio repair shop. $3.70 starting. 969-8663. PLASM A DONORS. Earn up to $30 a week or $120 a month. First donation $10, second donation in the same calendar week (Monday-Saturday) $20. University Plasma Center, Associated Bloscience of Tempe, Inc., 1015 S. Rural Rd., Temp#, Arizona, 968-6139. Effective until further notice. ______ STO CKYAR DS R ESTAURANT hiring full-time lunch waitresses and dinner waiters. Apply Monday-Friday; 1:304:00 p.m. 5001 E. Washington St. STUDEN T HEALTH: X-ray technician, part-time, on-call, $8.39/hour. ARRT required. E K G experience preferred. Apply ASU Personnel by November 7, 1986. AA/EO employer.____________ _ TE M P E . B A SED Company requires part-time individuals for telemarketing division. Qualified individuals must have good telephone communications skills. Develop your own schedule of days. Hours are 5:00-9:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, and 10:00 a.m.*7:00 p.m., Saturday and Sunday. $5.50 per hour plus bonuses. Call Anna, 894-2346. _________ _ Instruction M ASTER SELF-HYPNOSIS and change your life. Small groups or Individual sessions available. Call Jim Lane, Ph.d., 966-8810. _________________ _ LEARN TO FLY AT STELLAR AND EARN jf s \ N. College Ave. *250* C A SH In Tempe (North of Carry) 829-5800 GENERAL M A IN T EN A N C E. S Warehouse, close to campus, has a super position for a student 6:00-10:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Call 265-3220, ask for Jim D . ______ _ ,0724 961-1156 10-24 Statt Preti Page 19 Friday, October 24,1986 classifieds Instfuction ATTENTION PIANO majors: Learn musical skills that will enable you to earn big $$* performing In hotels, resorts, and restaurants. Taught by pro with .10 years experience. Call 839-1377 for more Information._______________ FLYING LESSONS, professional In­ struction. Reasonable rates. Call Gary, 894-6730. _______________ LOOKING FO R Astronomy tutor. Please co n ta ct T im . Evenings, 991-4282. Hourly wage. ____________ J e w d t Y ______ CASH FO R gold and diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill Ave., Suite 104, Tempe, 988-5967._______________ L o st S* Found FOUND DARLING orange cat. Needs loving home SQonl Call 829-3629._____ LOST AN D Found ads are free everyday! We limit them to 20 words and run them for 2 days. Just call the STATE PRESS classified department, 965-7572, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. . _____ ______ M iscellaneous JOIN TH E Honors Day celebration! Free food and drink, October 25. at Tempe Beach Park._________________ P ersonal Personal HEY CHRIS, how’s about alcohol, smelly shoes, farts, and toothpaste in your ear? Woogie.__________________ A-PHI CRISTINE G.- This is going to be your best weekend in AZ yet!! Happy b-day, Heidi. __________ HEY HOSEMUFFIN, good day EH. Let’s get psyched for tonight or die! Love, Farmer._______ ._____ ' _____ A-PHIS TA KE their hats off to Sigma Chi Derby Days! We can't wait II______ HEY S TE F F ! Why are you so incredibly sweet? Just natural, huhl Love ya, Gimpster. -______________________ SIGMA CHI’S! According to David Letterman’s hometown news, Kay Dee’s are gonna dazzle at Derby Days! HONEY, IT’S a shame we keep going around in circles, but I think it’s because you don’t appreciate what we had, or me anymore! Honey. _____ SIGMA CHI: The Alpha Phis are going to make you shake!! (And that’s a fact, ASU, IT’S time to start showing off your birthday suit! Watch for it next weekl A.- The sky's the limit. You say when! Your Sigma Pi pal. (Not Dave.)________ ATO RANDY, you’re always smiles and lord knows they’re just too irresistable. XOXOXO C.R.V.___________________ ATO SCOTT: This week has been “way cool” !! Thinking of you tonight! Love you! Lisa.________________________ A T O ’S RANDY: You want it, you got it. So psyched for the ski tripl Beth._____ JEN • Thanks for being so special!! Your A - Phi mom loves you tons!! Karen.______________________' BILLY JO E L and Journey tickets from $35. Call 829-3761.___________' JOHN ANDERSON, my best III bro! I'm here if you need anything. G a yla ._____ BOO! SPOOK-O-GRAMS are coming! Send that special ghoul/gobblin a message on Halloween. On sale October 28-30 at PV Main, Manzy, and Saguaro!_______ *________ ________ JULI, I’M excited to be your KD big sis! See you at Derby Days! Love, (?)______ BOOZHA KD PLEDGE Lisa, I’m so excited and just can’t hide it about being your big BOOZHA Boozha- Happy CARYN, HAVE a great weekend!!! I’m so excited your my little sis!! Love in K D ee llB ig sis???__________ • CHOOCH, FO R ali your grief, take relief and accept this invite to B-H Betas. CLOTHETIME SAFARI outfits bring out the animal in me. I wasn’t snoring, just growling.____________ _______ .. D.D.D. PLEDGE Eager Beaver, Beta pledge Gary needs a date for western party. ___________________ DELTA SIG Greg- How will I get those secrets from you? Call sometime! Luv, an AGD. MUST S EL L 1986 Honda Elite 150 scooter, 2 months old, low miles. $1350.966-4408. Personal #83, A L L work and no play makes Stein a dull boy. Get the key, and let’s play I AAAH, DON'T be duped. Tarot, astrol­ ogy, and psychics are occultic. Quo Vadls Books. Deuteronomy 18:10-12. ADELPHI BA SH !!! This -Friday, 8:00 p.m.. Phi Kappa Pal, 418 Adelphl Dr. Proper ID required Steve Weber! 11 AGO BUFFY: Yo baby! Can do! You are DW! I hear Jacuzzi bubbles! AG O love, Mash Queen. _________________ IF YOU have a horse over 16 hands tall, then I am crazy about you.___________ BETAS! PROUD to be a Beta pledge. Hope to be a Beta soon. Peppy._______ CAROLYN, HAPPY birthday. Have a great weekend at Pepperdine with Andrew. That's mandatory. Love, Pam. HONOA ELITE 80 scooter, good condition,' white. Contact Tom at 966-3366 or leave message.__________ HOT ROD- Good luck in Saturday’s biathalon. Don’t forget to shine your helmet. Love, Debbie.______________ _ JEANINE: ONLY two more days-1 can’t wait! Get excited! KD love, your big sis. CAPPY- I bet if we keep smiling, time will move faster. Remember that you’ve got friends. CA. _____ ______ .. 1985 HONDA ATC, 350X, excellent condition, Bassani pipe, ported air box, cover included. Not thrashed. $1300. 990-7034 anytime.______ ___________ HONOR STUDENTS, come and cele­ brate y o u r day- Tempe Beach Park, October 25, one to five. __________ BALLOON EXPRESS... Just for fun!! Call 968-4446 for information about our unique balloon bouquets!______ _ BULIMIA, TRO UBLED by uncontrol­ lable binge eating? Doctoral psychol­ ogy student will treat you for free If you will participate in research. 921-1441. 1983 YAM AHA Riva, hardly used, priced to sell, St100. After 6:00 p.m. call 264-9729. _______________ ____________________ DERBY DAYS Kappa Delta Derby Days Kappa Delta Derby Days KD’s love the Sigm aChl’s ll ,______ ___________ _ DESPERATELY S EEK IN G honor students! Come out to Tempe Beach Park Saturday from 1 to 5.______ _ DIALING 4-MEN! Recorded gay per­ sonal ads. No “coded” ads. All phone numbers! Dial 1-976-4MEN (1-976-4636). Call 24 hours. First minute $.55, each additional minute $.45._____ i________ KAREN WALKER, your big sis loves you and can’t wait to get to know you. sis! ______ ________ KD PLED G E Lori, let’s get rowdy!! W e’ll be a dynamite duo! Love, big sis. KERRIE, LET’S send some Indian smoke signals at tonight’s Pi PhiKappa Monmouth Duo. Brian. KJH, GROW L for me. Your B-Bear GMC. KV, HOW ‘bout them Hawks! The valley of the sun loves you and so do I. LYS. LISA- W E ’RE.going to have lots of fun this weekend! Love, your true big sis, Denise. _____ LOREN, H O PE your week isn’t too “ hell-aciousl” I’m thinking about you. Love, your A G P w ife!_________ ■ LOVE LINE for $.60 a minute. Call 1-976-LOVE and meet someone special or add to your friendship list. Give Love Line a try.______ '„ ■ MICHAEL AND Jennifer, happy anniversary! True love prevails._________ MICHAEL G., I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking “ gosh, she’s cute; a little plumpy, but cute..."______ MIKE, TH E S E three months have been wonderful and it keeps getting better. Love, Suz.________________________ NANCY D Y K ST R A , pre-birthday celebration, Pacific Beach Club and Coronas await us this weekend. Susan. NEW CREDIT card! No one refused Visa/Mastercard. Call 1-619-565-1522 ext. C23AZ, 24 hours. PEP AND Jeff! Watch those movies, get good grades, and please quit talking during class! Love, Shhh. Carrie. 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. . _______ _____________ __ AGD MARY Swartz, two more weeks until we paint the town red!? No, black and whltel A T O love, Stan.__________ AGD MERRY- Hope your weekend is grand with your Alpha Gam man! Thanks for always being there. Love, Caml, ________ FUN DATES of Arizona, phone dates made easy. Listen persona! ads or leave one. $.60 a minute. Free get-away weekend Catalina Islands. How? Call RICHARD, “TH E time has com e”, the walrus said, “to know my true identity I" -PSE larger sibling. AGD SECR ETAR Y take note- The two-week countdown begins today. Start counting the •'minutes"! ATO love, Brian.______________________ 1-976-6666. ROB AA AAAH H sorry, excuse me, it's a personal problem. Who is Fred Fagg?? ALISSA... DON'T go. A message from a higher authority.___________________ ALPHA CHI Tried: Happy birthday honeyl Dinner tonight- right! Love, your Snu Snu. ______________________ ALPHA CHI coaches John, John, Eric: Thanks for the wlnl Love, the football team. : ~ ALPHA GR AM S are here! See our booth on C4dy Mall and send your ghoul a "gram". _____________ ALPHA PHIS are ready to rage at Derby Daysll ' ________ A-PHI C.G., lets re-live UCLA! Love Bear and Bugs, you know I hale that name!! _________________ GAM M A PHI’S have fun at Derby Days! It will be a blast!___________________ G AY MEN’S talk lines. Live uninhibited conversation, 1-976-6253 and 1-9764297. Local recorded personal PRINCE CHARMING, your lighter is safe and flaming. Ransom is due Monday night- The three dwarves. REESE AN D Donna Rae, have fun this weekend, but no mashing! Ha-ha! Tell mom, Carli, Lefty, I said “ Hi” . Love, Pi. Q i m p y . ______ ___ ROOKY (THE best big bro), have a super weekend!! By the way, I heard you got tickets to Journey?? Hmmm. Love, your sweet III sis, Dawn.________ messages. 1-976-3800._________ ___ G LENN , HAPPY twentieth birthday, Sweetheart! We’ll make it the best ever! Love, Sandy. __________ _ H20 POLO, remember Mr. Smile E. Face? He sends his best for the weekend, the gul can’t wait either! Love ya, So'a. --------- -— HAPPY 18th Kim Swartz. I’m glad we share this special day. Friends forever. Love. Kari. --------------- - HEY BETAS and Tri Delts, last weekend was awesome! Gimme a low two! Qimpater. ------- ----- SIGMA CHI KD coaches Ken, Todd, Ed, Shannon, Dan: Thanks for ail the support to myself and all the KDs. Love, Kim. _________________ Jack.)______________________ _____ SIGMA CHIS, the ladies of Delta Delta Delta are ready for one fantastic time at Derby Pays! W e love our coaches! I SIGMA NU’S! Let’s get happy at happy hour! Love, the Kappa Deltas!________ SIGMA PI little sister Liz Bynam: Who’s your favorite big bro? Love, Delta Dash. SPACEY, HOW about a ride around the block backwards? Love, Donimo’s Pizza.____________________________ STEVEN KIRSHBAUM- We love you and owe you a night on the town. Love, your computer buddies. _____ STEVEN: TH A N K God for surprises!! Thanx again for the flower and balloons. Love, Dawn.__________. SUE W ALKER, looking forward to spending a fun filled weekend with my #1 bud!! Love,Claybee._____________ TAMMI, HAPPY 18th birthday! This doesn’t look like Oz to me! Love, your roomie La uren .__________________ _ TH E TA KGA, 6 is your lucky number, and this Is number 4. Luv, your P.H. TH R EE LOST social chairgirts, Elena, Heather, Kayla: P le a se contact Humane Society if found. Gruesome Twosome.___________________ ' TO A L L tbe Sigma Chis, Tri Delts think you're the hottest guys! Derby Days has yet to see, how wild and raging we will be! Sigma Chis are above the rest, because Tri Delts only talk derby to the ' TO KARRIN Kunasek: “Thanks mom.” You made my birthday the best. Love ya, Dot.______ ‘ __________ UNLIMITED LO N G distance phone -calls, $100 monthly, plus earn $25 monthly each person you sponsor. 968-8944. '___________ ________ W E LO VE our Sigma Chi coaches! We want breakfast! Luv, the Gamma Phi’s. MATT, W H AT were you and Judy doing in that tent all weekend? Brent, Dan. FARM ER TED: “ Put a pitchfork in your butt.” Get psyched for an awesome Pi Phi Duo- from hell. Luv ya, Camper FO O TBALL PLAYERS, Ford, Wendorf: Great job last weekend. Good luck this Saturday! See you there! Love, your front row fans, Melissa and Debbie. SIGMA CHI’S get ready to see the Gamma Phi's at Derby Days._________ best!_____________________ F R EE BIRTHCHART with your personal profile birthchart analysis. Discover the powerful advantage of knowing your talents and life/relationship pat­ terns. Send birthday, blrthtlme, bir­ thplace and $10 to: AstroLogic, PO Box 3022, Dept. A101, Scottsdale 85257. AGD LISA M c W., who would've ever thought of this? Too Cool- seriously, thinking of you. Love, Scott L.________ Room mate wanted A-PHI CHRISTINE Good: Happy 18th. May all your hopes and dreams come true. Jullann._________ ___________ anniversary. One year! So what do you want, wicker? Love you, Robert._____ _ M otorcycles_____ P ersonal SEAN - Like to party? Tell you what, one brew for you for each interview. Your big bro Todd. _________. SHERYL AN D Colleen Remember it) SHERYL- GET-ready to be “ flat on your beak” in the snow. Happy birthday. SINGLES ClASSIPHONC Telephone D aring Introduction« E a a ia a t a n d M oat Fun W ay to M oat S o m e o n e New! To Piece Your Ad or lieM i to O th sn F M Mtautt 55c Each Additional Minute E n jo y Y o u r T o m o r r o w s .. . 10-31 F E M A LE ROOM MATE wanted to share two bedroom, two bath condo. In­ cludes fireplace, microwave, dis­ hwasher, pool. $235 monthly plus half utilities. Call 921-0648.______________ Free Airport Parking* F E M A L E ROOM M ATE wanted im­ mediately: Share two bedroom, two bath condo at Questa Vida- two m iles, from ASU. Includes, w/d, microwave, two pools, many extras. Kelly, 967-5346._________________ _______ FE M A LE ROOM M ATE needed. Dish­ washer, security gates, w/d, VCR, microwave, spacious, 16 mile from ASU. Many extras! $130 rent, 14 utilities. Call now. 829-7527.________■ FE M A LE TO SHAR E two bedroom, one bath apartment. $215 includes utilities, nonsmoking, no drugs. 14 mile from campus. 829-9118._________________ M ICR OW AVE DISH W A SH ER view parking party. Need male nonsmoker Spring and Summer. University Towers. Mark, 829-3543.____________________ M/F N EEDED by November 1 in house with character two blocks north of _____ campus. 829-7525 evenings. • ROOM M ATE TO share gorgeous condo on Rural and Guadalupe. Pool, w/d, more. $320 total. 831-9611.___________ ROOM M ATÉ FOR three bedroom, two bath co nd a near University/Price, w/d, microwave, dishwasher, $225 +16 utilities. 965-3885,835-5196. _______ _ ROOM MATE WANTED: neat, clean, nonsmoking, serious full-time ASU students only. $165/month. Paul, 9468911 evenings.____________________ ROOM MATE WANTED, two bedroom, two bath apartment, Broadway/Rural area. Nonsmoker, $255, available December 1st. 921-0650.____________ SH AR E CO N CEPTS: Students and faculty, for information regarding shared housing, please call 990-8488. Fee and references required. Valleywide service. i\ j f ________ UNIVERSITY TOWERS: 6th floor, cam­ pus side! Call immediately. Available now or later. Bargain rate! Gary, I\ ff 829-3712.__________ ' WORTHINGTON PLACE: ________ Beautiful pool, jacuzzi, volleyball court. Only $225/month + 16 utilities. Seeking male, nonsmoking roommate. One mile from ASU. Call Jeff evenings, 968-1892. P e ts TW O TA M E Peach-face love birds and cage, $100 or beat offer. 345-7711. R eal Estate______ AFFORDABL.E HOUSES, foreclosures, fixups, excellent interest rates! In­ formation, Mrs. Topper, 948-2825, John Hall and Associates, 9464)550. CO N DO FO R sale by owner. Two bedroom, one bath, fireplace, ceiling fans, and more. Must see. $51,000. Near Rural and Southern. 829-1757 or 831-8588. ___________ TW O NICE guys need two roommates to share spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath house near College/Broadway, Fully furnished, freshly painted, fireplace, nice yard with fruit trees. $225 month + 1A Utilities. Call 966-2427 evenings, weekends; 965-3644 days.___________ utilities. Mike, 829-3632. C a ll T o d a y ___________________ EXTRA NICE luxury townhouse, patio, two bedroom, two bath, fireplace, pool, spa, $64,500.839-2089.______________. LUXURY TOW NHOM E near ASU. Two master suites, two full baths, loft/ family room, fireplace, pool, and all appliances. Priced to sell at $94,900. Contact Mary Lane, 2444)520, Terra Marketing, 9550505._________ •______ N O QUALIFYING. $6000 CTM as­ sumable FH A, three bedroom, two bath, many upgrades, three years new, quiet area near South Mountain Points, 437-0809. ^ _ Services ,______ RUNNING OUT of space for your belongings? You can store your valuables for less than $14 per month. Ideal for storing just about anything. Camping equipment, skis, stereos, etc. ... Sentinel Mini Storage, 967-0022 ... 720 N. Scottsdale Rd. (located between University and Curry)______________ _ "S A L T AND Pepper Crew” (male dancers). Ladies nights, parties, or any occasion. 921-0695._____________ _ WHY R EPLAC E stone damaged wind­ shields? Repair for less than 20% the cost qf> new. Stop cracks now from spreading. Guaranteed. Mobile service. 820-6029._______ _________________ T ransportation CA R S AVAILABLE ■ 21 or older. All States Prive-awey, 992-5200._________ Daysll ________ £_________ SIGMA CHI: Bodie- Watch out for usDerby Days! Spaghetti Saturday night? Alpha Phi secret'admirer.______ . Room m ate wanted FE M A LE ROOM M ATE wanted: New condo. Waeher/dryer, microwave, priv­ ate bath. Available Nov.1. V4 utilities. Laura, 833-5417._________________ __ Book now for your holiday reservations! Call Kay at 968-5900 ‘S o m e re s tric tio n s a p p ly 10/24 Typing_________ $ 1 .5 0 / P A G E , w o rd p ro ce sso r, mai Imerge, professional typist, same day service. Call Marge W illis 834-4583. $1.50 PER double spaced page. Excel­ lent quality, electronic typewriter. Call Quinet at 969-3303.__________ . A $1 per double spaced page fee for typing done to your satisfaction. Diana, 833-5393._________________________ AAA PROFESSIONAL typing - word processing. Call Mésa Secretarial Service, 844-1876. __________ ,______ AAKURIT TYPING- Short papers, over­ night/ long papers, prompt service/ transcribe tapes/ good rates. Linda, 831-0349. _________ '________ ABW SECRETARIAL Services. Typing, accurate, reasonable rates. $1.50 per page, editing available. 820-8854. Chandier/Tempe area.______________ ACCURACY G U ARANTEED. Letter quality word processing. Academic Typing Specialist, Lori, 839-4443. C A L L ME for fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2186.____________________ CER EU S WORD processing. Quality g u a ra n te e d . T e rm p a p e rs , marketing/teohnical, dissertations, th eses, form letters, resum es. 947-7796._________________________ EXPERIENCED TYPIST, $1.25 per page. Cheri, 967-3747 evenings^___________ FAST, ACCUR A TE typing. Rush jobs, professional quality... and I’m reasonablei Call Angie: 990-8415.________ FAST RETURN. Professional typist will edit spelling, punctuation and gram­ mar. Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, 839-0772.____________ ____________ FO RM ER ASU staffers- experience with APA, M LA 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 N ASS and MAPSS. Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302. Open Saturdays.__________ PROFESSIONAL ACADEMIC Word Processing; theses, dissertations, re­ search papers, resumes. Disk storage, spelling corrections, editing. 23 letter quality type styles. Optical Character Reader. WCI, 265-0678.________ PROFESSIONAL WORD processingreports, theses, resumes, etc. Busi­ ness, legal, engineering experience. Rush jobs okay. 945-0058.___________ RUSH JO B S no problem! Term papers, theses, etc., $1.50 per page. Sharp, clear type. 839-9103.________________ AUTO BUYERS! Save 18% to 25% off retail prices! Save time and aggrava­ tion. Any make, any model. Call 921-1737, Haydn Associates._________ Rrrrauch.______ ___________________ SIGMA CHIS- Are you ready for Alpha Phi? Cause A-Phis are ready for Derby SUNDANCE TRAVEL (TEMPE) Travel reservations at the lowest rates for all airline and vacation packages. UNIVERSITY TOWERS: One space open for male, nonsmoker. Free 1- 976-4000 Travel F E M A LE ROOMMATE, nonsmoker, own room, $133/month plus utilities. Near ASU1946-7232.________________ UNIVÉRSITY TOWERS. One space open for male in deluxe apartment. Available now or next semester. Will, 829-3584._________________________ • We Don't 'Code' O ur Ads • No Membership Fee • All Ads with Phone Numbers Dial FEM ALE ROOM M ATE wanted for two bedroom, two bath on Rural/Baseline. Beautiful surroundings; tennis courts, aerobics, new gym and man-made lake. Furnished. Only $235 per month -i- half utilities. Nancy, 831-5311.___________ S A M E DAY typing/word processing. Accurate, fast, reliable. Spelling and grammar. Call now, 967-0900.________ SAVE TIME, call me first. Word processing- theses, dissertations, re­ sumes. Professionaj typist. Mesa Secretarial. 844-1876._______________ TH ESES, TERM papers, reports etc. $1.00 page, typed at home, 30 years experience. Marian 431-0618.________ TH E TEXTWRITERS Word Processing Services. Theses, dissertations, and term papers. Student rates. 897-9735. TYPING- FAST, accurate, reasonable. $1 per page. Call Pamela, 835-5445. Leave message, I will call you back. TYPING TH ESES, manuscripts, re­ sumes, book reports, etc. Electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Pick-up and delivery available. 844-7850.______ TYPING/W ORD p ro ce s sin g .. Pro­ fessional, fast, accurate. Legal APA, MLA, theses, etc. Spelling and grarnmar. Cali now, 967-0900._____________ Travel WORD PROCESSING, manuscripts, legal documents, resum es, term papers, and thesis. Close to ASU. 438-8864._________________________ SKI TH E Summit- Furnished condo available November 22-April 30. (Frisco Colorado) Al, 948-5055._______ , W ORD P R O C E S SIN G . S e rv in g students in East Phoenix, 3840 N. 32nd Street, Suite 1.468-9967.____________ Page 20 Stata P ro , Friday, October 94.1986 The $1.99 Chicken Meal Plus! The $8.99 10-pc. Meal Deal Two pieces of (spicy or regular) chicken (dark or mixed order), a regular order of french fries dr mashed potatoes and gravy, and a 16-ounce drink. All for just $1,991 10 large pieces of chicken (dark or mixed), your choice of spicy or regular, three com on the cob, three orders of french fries or mashed potatoes and gravy. For just $8.99! A d d 30C fo r all-w hit« orders,. Offer a o o d o nly a t p articip ating lo c atio n s. N o t v a lid w ith a n y o the r offer. One co up o n per cu sto m e r per visit. Offer e xp ire s 12-14-86. C u sto m e r p a y s a ll app licab le taxes. Offer g o o d o n ly H p articip ating loc atio n s. N o t v a lid w ith a n y other offer. One co up o n per custo m e r per visit. Offer e xp ire s 12-14-86. C u sto m e r p a y s a ll a pp licab le taxes. Good only at 1135 E. Apache, Tempo Good only at 1135 E. Apache, Tempe (Corner of Terrace & Apache) (Corner of Terrace & Apache) Cantor tJtfX. K W A M 5 daily specials (JOLtCíí COIN Chinese Buffet 1125 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ 85281 M enu in cludes: Sweet and Sour Pork Lemon Chicken Smoked Fish Shrimp Almondine Pepper Steak Teriyaki Beef Steak Sweet and Sour Almond Turkey Chicken Chow Mein BBQ Spare Ribs Egg Rolls i CHURCH'S > CHICKEN y D Ham Fried Rice Beef with Broccoli Teriyaki Chicken Vegetarian Steak Egg Fu Young WE SERVE BEER & FRUIT C O C K T A IL I I I I ( C FWED 941 W. EHiot Chandler e 821-5428 “1984 READERS C H O ICE” • LUNCH • 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 0 Remember— Church's on Apache offers a 10% discount for alt ASU students and faculty with I.D. Offer not good on any special offers. We prepare special orders for all occasions $S«I7 • DINNER • Change in Food Selection Daily 5 p.m.-9 pjn. $4.14 D O N ’T BE JUST ANOTHER JOB APPLICANT Please Join Us VIDEO TAPE INTERVIEW for a reception honoring Employers receive hundreds of resumes for the same position. Now, you can put your best foot forward by being professionally interviewed on video tape. N o longer will you be just another applicant. Your qualifica­ tions and personality becom e alive o n video tape, unlike the unpersonable written resume. It's like being interviewed by a prospective em ployer — without leaving your home. Carolyn Warner Candidate fo r Governor at Become a pioneer in an industry that will make the written resume alone, obsolete. . Limited offer FREE video taping, preparation, individual consultation, color-cOordination. It further allows you to becom e a part of our unique networking system that makes your tape available to companies across the country interested in someone like you! Sound interesting? Monday-Friday9 a.m.-6 p.m. for a FREE appointment at our office. Cisco's 2 7 0 0 S. Mill, Tempe, A Z Friday, October 24,1 0 8 6 • 4:30-6:00 p.m. 5>25 per person at; the door TELE 1270 E. Broadway #102 Tempe, Arizona 85282 (602)966-0001 (We are not a placement company), Host Committee Aliki Coudroglou Bita M. Kelly Willard Pedrick S r u c e Mason P e te r Wéhinger William W ootten Paul Wong Rdy P e tty Suaan W yckof G R E A T FUN!! SUPER W AY TO ACT OUT YOUR FANTASIES AS THE SINGER OF YOUR DREAMS ^ . CHOOSE YOUR FAVORITE SONG AND SIN G IT IN A SO U ND­ PROOF BOOTH SO NOBODY CAN H E A R ... OR LIVE ON STAGE. COM E SEE OUR SELECTIO N S, AND RECORD FOR A GIFT TO A SPEC IA L SOM EONE NEAR OR FAR. BRING AN IN ST R U M E N T OR YOUR VOICE, GOOD OR BAD, HAPPY OR S A D ... TH ERE'S A SONG IN EVERYO NE’S HEART! V / WE D O PRIVATE PARTIES. CALL OR COME BY AND CHECK US OUT! IN THE CORNERSTONE MALL • 966-2155 lW---- ----------'##_ i/ «tu . i__:__ ^ -ÆÆ >r •a ,n5 M í s - k s ... — L ¿