s la t e p r e s s Voi. 69 No. 46 A rizo n a State U niversity T e m p e , A riz o n a Wednesday, October 29,1986 © C o p y rig h t, S ta te P r e s s , 1986 Football team not Included in gambling probe By M ICH AELBtiRQ ESS State Press The ASU football team , Coach John Cooper and the Sun Angel Foundation are not under investigation for com plaints of alleged illegal gambling, Phoenix police said Tuesday. Five men, including Sun Angel advisory board m em ber O rest J. “Babe” Alex, were issued com plaints Sunday of allegedly participating in an illegal gam bling ring. Lt. Mike F razier, special investigations bureau, said, “Nothing we have found so far has anything to do with ASU.” : Bût he said “if something comes up we will do an investigation.” F razier said Alex, 65, 8549 E. Laredo Lane, and four others were not arrested, but civil racketeering liens w ere placed mi their homes so they could not destroy property needed in the investigation. C ivil racketeering liens and complaints, under Arizona's crim inal forfeiture laws, allow the state to seize, the proceeds and assets of a crim inal enterprise. “We started the investigation two months ago after we got inform ation from a source about a gambling ring,” Frazier said. “We seized records and documents related to gambling (from the hom es). It was pretty evident.” Alex was unavailable for comment, but his wife, Jackie, said Tuesday: “The whole thing has been blown out of proportion. It has nothing to do w ith ASU.” Charles H arris, ASU athletic director, said Alex has disassociated him self with the athletic program and Sun Angel Foundation until the m atter is resolved. “We talked about if and that was the conclusion we both reached,” he said. Cooper said he was unhappy to read about Alex’s alleged gambling involvement and expressed concern for his friend’s welfare. “I certainly don’t like to read something like this because Babe is a friend of mine, and I ju st hope everything is all right for him ,” Cooper raid. “I’ve been close to Babe, but I’ve been close to a lot of boosters since I’ve been here.” F razier said the investigation, which had been focusing on Alex and the four others, will be handled by the Maricopa County attorney’s office. F razier raid the aUeged gambling ring was “fairly large” — with 25 regular players. He said it is “technically” illegal to (dace a bet, but few people are ever prosecuted. But F razier raid people who accept a bet for a charge will be prosecuted. “It’s conducting an iMegal enterprise,” he said. Alex has no prior record of gambling, Frazier said. He said the aUeged ring was Valley-wide, extended into p art of Colorado and dealt with coUege and professional football. But he raid, “With the World Series, there were probably bets on that and basketbaU last year.” Frazier said the alleged ring was handling close to $50,000 a week, with people placing $500 to $1,000 bets per event. “The people playing were not just some Joe Blow off the street,” he raid. F razier said the aUeged ring probably would handle close to $1 million during the football season. Dave TuneU, Sun Angels community relations officer, raid it would be “real difficult” for any gambling money to be used for Sun Angel purposes. Women postponing children to pursue careers, education By SHERRIE FED O CK, MICHAEL ROW ELL and LAURA VINCI State Press NNchMi Scully/Stat* P m Aiming for victory Mika Morgan, Democratic candidate for state treasurer, speaks to ASU students In front of Danforth Chapel. Morgan, a business analyst, M id during a speech Tuesday, “Business Is the key to economic development" Story, page 3. ■i hum survey shows drug use major problem facing schools STETLER By DARRIN!H O OSTETLER State Prase . Drug use is the m ajor problem facing Arizona schools, according to a statew ide pubMc opinion poll released Tuesday by CoUege of Education Dean Gladys Johnston. The poU, co-sponsored by the CoUege of Education and the ASU chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, surveyed the opinions of 855 Arizonans about problems and issues facing state educators. Twenty-eight percent of those surveyed mentioned drugs as the m ajor difficulty faced by Arizona schools. Concerns about school curriculum s and poor standards were cited by 19 percent of those surveyed as the top problem, while 15 percent feèi lack of discipline as a problem. Johnston raid Arizona differed in its concerns from the rest ait the country, and that there is a “back to basics movement in this state.” While the concern about drug use m atches the results of a recent nationwide GaUup poll, standards and curriculum quaUty is a higher priprity in Arizona than in other states. The GaUup poll cited lack of discipline ih schools as the second m ajor problem, foUowed by lack of financial support for education. Johnston said she is suprised a t some of the poU results: “The strong sentim ents expressed over the basics was a Utile unexpected, as was the progressive stance on sex education,’’'she raid. Thé poll rjsvealed that 82 percent of Arizonans approve of schools offertog courses in sex education. Other findings include : , *78 percent of the Arizonans surveyed beUeve that not enough «mphflgis placed on writing skiUs. Another 76 percent raid too Utile attention is paid to reading skills, while 60 percent ------- — 1 i r------------------------------ 7 h o p e this survey will help to start d ia lo g u e in the s ta te . . . W e w ant to help m a k e future A rizo na d e cisio n -m a k e rs aw are o f p u b lic attitudes a n d trends.’ M ary Benin waited until she was 34 to have a baby. B rad and Cheryl, an unm arried couple in their 20s, will wait 10 years before they change diapers. Cynthia, a 22-year-old student, plans to travel and start her career before she has children. These people iUustrate a growing trend of women delaying motherhood in pursuit of career development, higher education and travel. However, the delays could cause a drop in the country’s population, an ASU sociology associate professor said. “Many couples are waiting until the woman is 30 to have their first child,” Deborah SuUivan said. “Women are having their first births from ages 30 to 34.” She raid in 1982,15 percent of m arried women ages 30 to 34 had their first child. That is an 8 percent increase from 1970. Benin, 35, an ASU associate sociology professor, is part of that growing percentage. Benin waited until she was 34 to have her daughter, Cynthia. Benin raid she delayed having children because she wanted to get her doctorate first. “It’s hard to find tim e when you get involved in a new career,” she raid. Benin, who teaches a graduate sem inar dealing with career choices and motherhood, said, “Many women are deciding that instead of jobs they want careers. ” Previously, she said women would work until they were ready to have their first child, then quit their jobs. Now, if a woman wants to establish a career, she m ust take five to 10 years to establish job security before she can have a child, Benin said. “It’s reaUy hard to balance the demands of having a family and (establishing a career),” she said. “One of them ’s got to give.” Benin said changing roles of parents and company poUcies providing m aternity leave and flexible hours are helping career women adjust. Turn to DELAY, page 12. — Gladys Johnston said m ath was neglected and 55 percent raid more emphasis was needed in foreign language training. •Athletic competition ranked first, at 38 percent, in a list of areas people felt received too much em phasis in public schools. •91 percent of Arizonans favor a “pass to play” requirem ent for student-athletes. •Almost 60 percent raid children with AIDS should be aUowed into classroom s with other students, while 24 percent raid children suffering from the disease should be educated a t home. •96 percent of those surveyed beUeve that teachers should have to pass a basic skills test before certification. The poU found that 69 percent of Arizonans favor the passage of Proposition 101, which would aUow state school districts to raise spending lim its by 10 percent. “The vast m ajority of people in this state are supportive of education and oUr goal of exeeUence,” Johnston raid. “I hope this survey wiU help to start dialogue in the state about what our problems are and what we can do about them ,” she said. “We want to help m ake future Arizona decision-makers aw are of pubUc attitudes and trends.” in sid e today ASU WEATHER Fair skies with an expected high of 90 degrees. The expected low is 60. Classified....................................... 26. Comics.............................. 10 Entertainment.........................................13 O pinio n ............. 4 Police report . . . ..... ................. A_____ 9 Sports Analysis. . . , . ; . . . . . . . . . . 23 Sports... 21 Today.......... ......... 2 M eetings •Women’s Studies and LGAU w ill meet in the MU at 7 p.m. Two docum entaries w ill be shown; “ Susannah” and "Com ing to Know,” on the Lesbian experience. •Hispanic Business Students Association w ill meet in the B u sin e ss Adm inistration Building at 3:30 p.m. for a general meeting. •United Campus to Prevent Nuclear War-ASU Chapter will meet in the MU Navajo Room at 2:30 p.m. The A B C news production “ The Fire Unleashed. Part 1” w ill be shown. •College Republicans w ill meet at the Lunt Avenue Marble Club at 6 p.m. for a general election update. This is the last meeting before the election. •Minority Pre-Law Club will meet in the MU Pinal North Room at 2 p.m. It will be a general business and informational meeting. •Native American Student Association will meet in the MU Pinal South Room at 3 p.m. •American Humanlcs will meet in the MU Santa Cruz Room at 5:30 p.m. Joanne Johnson will give a lecture on “ S elf Motivation.” . •Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers will meet in the Engineering Building, Room G-228 at 2:30 p.m. There w ill be gur&t speakers from Digital Equipment Cnrnnratinn anri information on the Halloween mixer. •MU Gallery will meet in the MU Yum a Room at 4:30 p.m. It is a general meeting and all are invited. •National International Student Association will meet ine MU Navajo Room at 5:30 p.m. to d iscu ss the next forum, future speakers and advertising. Correction The State Press incorrectly reported in the Oct. 24 edition, KASR Is located at 660 on the AM dial. The station is located at 680 on the A M dial. The State Press regrets the error. Pumpkin heads Manufacturing engine«ring technology senior Penny Heiniger, left, and computer systems engineering senior Scott Bedrosian And themselves In the middle of a future jack-o’-lantern patch Tuesday at the Arnold A ir Society pumpkin sale at Orange Circle. The sale Is a benefit for National Teenage Suicide Prevention. wwm Ron KucMkJr./8tatoPrtM FR ESH M A N DAY pierre cardin PARIS NEW YORK FORMALWEAR monday-f riday 9-9 Saturday 10-6 Sunday 11-5 SORORITY & FRATERNITY SPECIAL Tuxedo Rentals 2495 t o $ 3495 F R E E .Frozen Yogurt Sundaes From * With This Ad ASU SPECIAL For All Freshm en 3:30-8:30 TODAY ONLY j Own Your Own I Black Tuxedo { Fm m * (10-29-86) MUST SHOW STUDENT l.D. 14850 Coat & Pant Only largest selection of formalwear In the southwest Cotonnade Mall 20th & Camelback Phoenix 263-4292 (value $1.15) Los Arcos Mall Scottsdale Rd. at McDowell Scottsdale 263-4588 Fiesta Mall Southern & Alma School Mesa 833-6785 Westridge Mall 7536 W. Thomas Phoenix 849-7980 Metro Center Black Canyon Freeway at Peoria Phoenix 263-4992 Corner of Rural & University AN ARIZONA TRADITION n \ i r T A r - r v v o State Press Page 3 Wednesday, October 29,1986 I to n e y ta lfc Treasurer candidate backs investment in Arizona By M ICHAEL ROW ELL State Press Democratic candidate for state treasurer Mike Morgan, said Tuesday m ore of Arizona’s treasury funds should be invested in the state, adding, “It’s m ore im portant to invest in south Phoenix than South A frica.” Speaking in front of Danforth Chapel, Morgan said, “We have an opportunity with a $2 billion portfolio to invest in Arizona,” He said only about 10 percent of the treasury departm ent’s funds currently are invested in Arizona. Morgan, a 31-year-old business analyst, proposed channeling a portion of the state’s investm ent portfolio into reduced-rate loans to sm all businesses, farm s, and ru ral and border communities in Arizona. “Business is the key to economic development,” Morgan said, adding the state needs to develop a partnership with business. ;s .._ * He cited Valley National Bank as an example and said 90 percent of the bank’s portfolio is invested in Arizona, and the bank is getting good returns from its investment. Morgan is running against Republican incumbent Ray! R ottas, who has been state treasurer for four years. The two W e Ve never put a d im e of deposit in Tempo, M e sa or the east Valley.’ — . Mike Morgan ran against each other in 1982 for the sam e post. Morgan said the treasu rer’s office was receiving a higher rate of return on investm ents four years ag o —before Rottas took office—a t a tim e when the office operated with half the budget and half the employees it has now. Morgan called R ottas “semi-functional, semi-competent and sem i-retired. ’’ He also criticized R ottas’ hiring policies, calling die state treasurer’s office an “all-white, all-m ale country club that has invested in South Africa instead of Arizona. ” Concerning education, Morgan said the state needs to invest m ore money in universities and education in order to halt the current “brain drain.” In an interview after the speech, Morgan said the 10 percent of treasury funds invested in Arizona have gone into downtown Phoenix. The other 90 percent goes toward out-ofstate federal securities. “We’ve never put a dime of deposit in Tempe, Mesa or the east Valley.” Rottas said Monday all three gubernatorial candidates have criticized M organ’s investm ent plan. Democratic candidate Carolyn W arner quickly denied R ottas’ allegation and declared support of Morgan’s program . Republican Evan Mecham and independent Bill Schulz have not commented. Morgan said R ottas’ statem ent was “a gross inaccuracy by intent.” M o r g a n said the entire debate of the treasurer’s race is about his proposal because R ottas has no specific program of his own. journalists’ petition demands release of hostages in Lebanon By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — More than 1,200 journalists across the United States and abroad have signed a petition demanding freedom for their colleague Terry Anderson and the other hostages in Lebanon. The petition asks President Reagan, Secretary of State George Shultz, their counterparts in the Middle E ast and others with influence in that strife-torn region “to work diligently for the speedy release” of Andersori and the other prisoners. Anderson, who turned 39 mi Monday, is the chief Middle E ast correspondent for The Associated P ress who was kidnapped in west B eirut on M arch 16,-1983. He is one of sèven Americans believed held by the Islam ic Jihad or other terrorist groups. No G reater Love, a support organization for fam ilies of Americans killed in w ar or held hostage, m arked Anderson’s birthday by presenting 500 birthday cards from parochial school children to Anderson’s sister, Peggy Say, in Philadelphia. The group is urging children nationwide to w rite m essages of support for those missing in Lebanon. The jounalists’ petition drive was launched by' two reporters in^the AP’s Washington bureau, Diane D ustonand Joan M ow«, three weeks ago, and will rim through Nov. 27—Thanksgiving Day. They originally intended just to gather signatures in Washington, Duston said. But friends of Anderson’s and AP staff members began circulating copies of the petition in New York, on the West Coast and, more recently, in foreign capitals, including Tokyo, where Anderson was once an officer of the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan. Signatures also were gathered among re p o rte rs who covered the recen t superpower summit in Reykjavik, Iceland, and some 135 newspaper editors signed it last week at the Associated P ress Managing Editors convention in Cincinnati. Among the signers are: John Scali of “ABC News,” a fo rm « U.S. am bassador to the United Nations; Bernard Gwertzman of The New York Times; Bill McLaughlin of “CBS News” ; Susan Stam berg of National Public Radio; John Fogarty of The San Francisco Chronicle; Colman McCarthy and David Ignatius of The Washington Post ; and White House correspondents Michael Putzel of the AP, Helen Thomas of United P ress International, Gene Gibbons of R euters, W alter Robinson of The Boston Globe and Owen Ullmann of Knight-Ridder. It has also been signed by Louis D. Boccardi, president of the AP, and W alter R. M ears, vice president and executive editor of the news service. Duston, who supervises AP’s news cov«age of Washington, D.C., and the surrounding m etropolitan a re a s in M aryland and Virginia, said she got the idea after watching television replays of a videotape appeal by Anderson that his captors released to W estern news agencies on Oct. 3. P A R K IN G M lC A L S to UPGRADE YOUR PARKING DECAL Decals for the following lots will go on sale Thursday, Oct. 30, 1986. NUMBER AVAILABLE LOT LOT 40 LOT 41 ' ; LOT 42 LOT 44 STRUCTURE 1 200 14 20 48 158 D ecals w ill be so ld on ly a t the PARKING SERVICES OFFICE a t Campus Inn betw een 8 a.m. a n d 4 p.m. A ll sales w ill be on a fir s t com e fir s t served basis. Phone orders w ill n o t be accepted. I f yo u already have a decal a n d wish to upgrade it, y o u m u st bring y o u r o ld decal w ith you. , m Chance to do good If a member of your family was involved in an accident and needed five units of blood right away, you would hope the local blood bank had plenty on hand to fill the need. Unfortunately, there are many tim es when the num ber of units of blood available to the public is low and not everyone who needs the blood m ay be able to get it. Every sem ester, United Blood Services arrives on campus in an attem pt to have students donate blood so there is a large supply, should it be necessary. However, not enough students are donating when the opportunity arises. Those who donate deserve applause for their efforts and unselfishness. Still, many refuse to donate simply because they do not want to spend the tim e or they think they will suffer side effects from donating. Ask a friend why they did not give blood. Chances are you will hear such excuses from qualified donors as, “I’ve never given before. Why should I now?,” “I’m afraid of needles” and “My doctor says I need all of my blood.” But you can be sure that when these for once people need to have an operation or a m em ber of their family needs a blood transfusion, they are the first in line to ask Blood Services for help. Giving blood is a simple, easy process that only takes 20 to 30 minutes. The needle is very sm all and it is not that painful. Those who are drawing blood from you are trained specialist who can calm your fears and are willing to help you in any way — even if it m eans holding your hand. Approximately one pint of blood is taken and you can continue with a normal routine the next day. Some refuse to give blood because they are certain there is a chance of catching Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. A fresh, sterile needle is used with each donor and there is no m edical claim that donating blood increases one’s chances of coming in contact with the AIDS virus — or any virus, for that m atter. Donating blood is something that all who qualify should do. You could save someone’s life. It may even be your own. Besides, they give you free cookies and juice ju st for sticking a needle in your arm . // 1 í Jiíhúñé MJ i . 's ty L u v i n V . '^ a - S '— " t: " . I U - —~ . . To r t o i s e í t u e w e h aw s ' ■ ________________________________ ' letters Nurses not ‘raffling’ puppy Editor: Perhaps you read the pessim istic opinion in the Oct. 20 issue of the State Press concerning the Senior 1 College of Nursing puppy. Unfortunately, this opinion was w ritten with little fact. Actually, the only fact correctly states was that the Senior l College of Nursing had a puppy. The anonymous author indicated that the student nurses were trying to “get rid of the puppy.” This statem ent is not true. The fact is that • several offers were m ade to buy this puppy before, during and after the drawing. The next error was the claim that there was not any screening process and the College of Nursing did not seem to care who won the puppy. Again, this is untrue. The fact is that all nursing students are trained during their first nursing courseof the im portance of planning prior to implementing any program or project. The puppy adoption was no exception. Before the first tickets were sold, two people offered to buy M argaret (the puppy) from the winner, should the winner be unable to properly care for or love M argaret. Also, the original owner of M argaret has offered to buy her back if at any future time, the winner no longer wants her. The next error was the statem ent that M argaret was being raffled. This project was not a raffle or ever claimed to be. It was an adoption with the winner carefully screened and the option of an immediate or future cash settlem ent. I have never heard of a raffle that would take these kind of precautions. We a t the College of Nursing grew to love M argaret and were concerned for her from beginning to end. So what about the happy ending? The Senior 1 class of the College of Nursing has found a happy home for M argaret. The lucky person who won the chance to adopt M argaret was an exuberant Rebecca Munoz. Rebecca is a member of the Senior l class of the College of Nursing. When interviewed by the owner of M argaret, she promised to love and give Insinuations unnecessary Editor: This letter is in regard to the anonymous article in the opinion section of Oct. 20 concerning the puppy raffle. F irst, as an anim al lover, I, too, am concerned about anim als tha t are purchased or adopted then abandoned for any one of many reasons. However, it is difficult to guarantee a decent home to an anim al if it is purchased, so what is the difference in raffling a dog off? The owner is uncertain of the anim al’s future in either situation. The author of the aforementioned article assumed that the winner would be an ASU student. It may be inconceivable to some, but there are people outside of ASU who associate with ASU students. As a graduating nurse, I am appalled at the insinuation that the College of Nursing convocation is some sort of party held to begin celebrating the night before graduation. The convocation is a special public cerem ony to recognize the accomplishments of the nursing college graduates as they enter their profession. By the way, nursing is only one of two colleges on campus that prepares professionals. Upon graduation and in addition to a degree, nurses and lawyers become part of professions, not m erely careers. The convocation will not evoke graduates to im m ature and inappropriate behavior or to attend in various chemically altered states. The graduates of the nursing college take the convocation very seriously and view it as the “graduation cerem ony.” The expenses of this ceremony m ust be paid entirely by each graduating class. The class m ust pay for program s, speakers, reserving Grady Gammage, special aw ards and other costs. Each graduate m ust purchase a nursing pin, invitations, the cap and gown, am ong o th er expenses re la ted to graduation. The College of Nursing does not provide anything. The graduates no longer receive nursing caps. The convocation is the last night together as a class and an opportunity for family and friends to witness the em ergence of new professional nurses. The au th o r also questioned the hum anitarianism of nursing. Nursing is a hum anistic profession. As students, We were required to perform complete physical exam s, injections and sta rt intravenous therapy on one another. Is it hum anitarian of the nursing college to require that of nursing students or would it be more hum anitarian to allow a nursing student to give the first injection on you or your family member? Nursing is involved in many ehtical issues. It is infuriating to have the en tire nursing collegè and nursing profession hum iliated and degraded for one nursing class raffling off a puppy. Sally Grieve College of Nursing STATE PRESS TOM BLODGETT Editor ANDREA HAN Managing Editor M argaret a good home. Hundreds of people fell in love with M argaret these last few weeks and will be gald to hear that M argaret has a new loving family, a large back yard and a canine campanion with whom she can enjoy her new life. The article in the Oct. 20 issue of the State Press was obviously w ritten by a concerned person who cares greatly about anim als. It is unfortunate th at this sam e person chose the easy technique of criticizing instead of extending a little effort ask questions concerning the specifics of the adoption It is also unfortunate the author was not willing to sign his or her own name. Come on. Let’s communicate and work together rather than shboting at each other in the dark. T .L . Drake President, Senior 1Class College of Nursing Twisting of the Bible Editor: In his letter “Cultural Common Sense,” Jim Lippard uses Bible passages out of . context. I am wondering why Jim distains Christians so much that he distorts the truth to make his point. Jim quotes Matthew 5:40 and Luke 6:30 as saying, “You should give away your property to anyone who merely asks for it.” These sections of the Bible are referring to giving to the needy. . . Jesus desires that we have such a low regard for m aterial things that we are free enough to give away what we don’t need without thinking about it. If Jim would have written to us the next verse, Luke 6:31, his agrument may not have fared as well, for it states, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” Yes, the Golden Rule comes from the Bible. (This is in the sam e passage that Jim condemns.) Next, Jim states th at the Bible says, “It is acceptable to lie as long as it wins converts.” At this I alm ost died laughing because if you take it in context, this section states “ . . . people who say, ‘Let us do evil that good m ay result,’ will be condemned.” (Romans 3:7-8. Jim only quotes the first half.) I am not a theology m ajor, nor do I go around jam m ing my beliefs down other people’s throats. In other words, I am not writing this to engage in a religious debate I am just sim ply stating th at I did not care for a twisting of Biblical writings to support Jim ’s ideas where ethics are, or are not, derived from. Tim Hedrick Junior, International Business EDITORIAL BOARD Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the board write editorials and the board decides on their merit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: Tom Blodgett Andrea Han fcDITOR Patrick J. Kucera __ OPINION EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR Amy Frischknecht ASST. MANAGING EDITOR City Editor KARI BLAND Sports Editor BOB HEILER Asst City Editor VICKIE CHACHERE Asst Sports Editor CAROL BOOS Nows Editor TRACY SCOTT Copy Chisf JUDiE GAILLARD Asst Managing Editor AMY FR1SCHKNECHT Arts Editor KHAU CRAWFORD Photo Editor RICK WILEY Asst Arts Editor GREGORY R. KRZOS Analysis Editor ED SCHUBERT Sports Analysis Editor JAY TAYLOR Opinion Editor PATRICK J. KUCERA REPORTERS: Michael Burgess. Tina Daunt Kerry Fehr. Dave Hodges. Darrin Hostetler. Benny McConnell. Kim Mattingly. Lauren Millette. Michael Rowell. J.B. Sinnott ENTERTAINMENT REPORTER: Card L Mitchell. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Kovln J. Larkin, Andy Mrozlmkl, Michael Scully. SPORTS REPORTERS: Steve Brennan, Annette Oe La Cruz. Dean Obenauer. COPY EDITORS: Scott Luck. Carolyn Neleon. Bob Wllaon. STAFF ARTISTS: Jon Baaalone. Michael Ritter EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Robbie Mattoff. INTERN: Mary Mickle ADVERTI8IN0 REPRESENTATIVES: DanleNe Carbone, Tod Chrltteneen, Amy Fellner, •ronn Gaffney, Jennifer Hughes, Tom Hutchison. Mark Peteraon. Craig Wecaeer, Julie u ? 85-2282. Advertising S Production: 965-7572. Th; State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published lor and circulated on the hum. i n ? u*’ n#w* ,n d view* published in this newspaper are not necessarily m°** * *’• ASU administration, faculty, stall or Mudant body. State Press Wednesday; October 29,1986 Page 5 OPENING SATU R D AY, NOV. 1 10:00 A.M. T h e New Esprit Store! You’ll find a great selection of Esprit Sport, Esprit Shoes, plus Accessories all ’round. The Esprit Store Hayden Square 350 S. Mill Ave., Tempe, AZ M o n d a y th ro u g h F rid a y . . . 10:00-9:00 S a t u r d a y .............................. 10:00-7:00 S u n d a y ..................................12:00-6:00 I' '¿6?' S i i mm PÉSI H » **; . % 7 Î7 • , S tatcP ress Pascó Senior citizens ‘expand horizons’ in ASU classes! By TINA DAUNT State Press Ponce de Leon m ay have searched for the “Fountain of Youth” in Florida, but a group of elderly “students” has found it right here a t ASU. Thirty-eight senior citizens from all over the country cam e to Tempe Sunday to participate in ASU’s Elderhostel program , a week-long sem inar featuring classes unique to Arizona and current events. The Elderhestel program , which is held a t m ore than 850 colleges worldwide, gives people over 60 a chance to visit different schools and cities. “They’ve traveled from all over to crane to campus and feel college life,” said Zkohreh Sotoodeh, who has worked with ASU’s program since it started in 1972. “They enjoy being with the young students. One lady even told m e she left her heart a t ASU.” ASU offers the program four tim es a year, and there is usually a waiting list, Sotoodeh said. The next program is Nov. 2-8. H arry Baxter, 78, from Lima, Ohio said he enjoyed his first sem inar a t ASU so much he “had to come back for a second one.” “This is a fabulous university,” he said. “The students are friendly and polite.” B axter’s wife, Rose, 78, said, “The best p art of the program is m eeting new people. We’re trying to do as much as we can while we still can.” Sotoodeh said when the national program was started in 1975, only 220 people participated in program s a t five schools. But in 1984, m ore than 50,000 attended program s a t 850 schools. The cost of the program is $250, which includes housing, m eals, classes and e x tra c u rric u la r activ ities. By ED SCHUBERT State Press San Salvador. Midnight. Oct. 11,1986. At least 500,000 people a re sleeping in the streets in the wake of a devastating earthquake. Hundreds m ore are trapped inside the ruins of collapsed buildings. Arriving a t the city, five m em bers of the Office for Foreign D isaster Assistance, a segm ent of the Agency for International Development, survey the devastation. One m em ber, R ichard Olson, who also is Die d irector of ASU’s International Program s, was on University business in Costa Rica when he was contacted by OFD A shortly after die quake and flown to El Salvador in a m ilitary aircraft. Olson recalls die scene vividly. “The first thing we did was fan out and do dam age assessm ent,” he said. “The U.S. em bassy was so badly dam aged it could not be reoccupied. H ie AID mission was a sham bles.” He said a t least two dozen m ultistoried buildings w ere dam aged and eight others had been demolished, including the Bloom Children’s Hospital and the m assive Ruben Dario Commercial Center. “Our best guess is th at (the Commercial Participants m ust sign up for the program through the ' national office, in Boston. Sotoodeh said the Elderhostels usually stay in dorms, but ASU participants stay in a nearby hotel due to limited campus housing. John Edwards, the director of die program, said ASU’s program “is more and more in demand” every year. “We should have had this program decades ago,” he said. “They really enjoy it. “Man’s mind is naturally curious. The classes give them an opportunity to expand their horizons. ” The classes offered a t ASU this season include: Fun With the Dictionary, Campaign Management and Political Action In An Election Year, Indian Tribes and Arizona Territory/M ining History. William ami Priscilla Foster from Seattle, Wash., said they were “quite taken” with ASU students. “We’ve loved meeting the students,” Mr. Foster said. “The way they dress is something else. ” Mrs. Foster said, “When we were young, no one ever went to school dressed like this.” Mr. Foster added; “They’re so casual. They have the right idea on how to five.” Edwards said he belives the program keeps the mind of the participant “sharp and alert. ” “They’re good people with brilliant minds,” he said. “They look forward to tomorrow. ” Other activities of the week include: a tour of the city, a night a t the Phoenix Symphony and tours of the University Art and Heard museums. “ I’m having so much fun, I want to stay for next week,” H arry B axter said. ’‘Maybe they’ll let me sneak into the next sem inar.” ' Center) had 700 people in it when it went down,” Olson said. U.S. em bassy activities and relief efforts were coordinated from the home of Ambassador Edwin Corr. “He managed to keep the entire embassy and AID m issio n — about 150 people working together” with no sleep and little food, Olson said. On the morning following the quake after everyone had been up all night — a m eeting was held to coordinate bringing in rescue team s, food andm edical aid, hesaid. “For the first 72 hours all we had was the am bassador’s private telephone,” Olson said. “That single line was our relationship with Washington. “At tim es (here w ere 10 or 12 people lined up to talk to Washington. We read out cables to Washington and a secretary on the other end would transcribe them. That’s what we were reduced to. ” ; " » He said the first rescuers to arrive were the Miami-Dade County F ire Departm ent and Rescue Team , which is rally two hours away from E l Salvador by air. “There w as.a tremendous urgency to get people out of the downed buildings quickly,” Olson said. “ If you can get someone out in 24 MlotuMt Scully/Stat* P r m William and Priscilla Poster o f Seattle, Wash., look at pottery while browsing at an arts A crafts fair along . Cady Mall Tuesday. The two are visiting A 8U as part of the continuing education program Slder hostel. Richard Olson homo, they have a . 90 percent chance of survival.” But ch an ces of su rv iv al decline dram atically with each passing hour, he said. “One hundred people were rescued in 48 hours, ” be said. “It was spectacular. ” He said digging people out of collapsed buildings is m uch like m ining: first, tunnels are dug into the buildings, then dog teams trained to scent living bodies are sent in to find survivors. “The dog team s scent live people in the tunnels, and they m ake m aps of where the dogs get live scents,” he said. Olson said cm the th ird or fourth day of the effort, when hope for survivors was dying, a 12-year-old g irl and a mother of four w ere rescued. “I happened to be on the radio when they pulled the people out,” he said. Olson said he expects the number of fatalities to rise to 1,500. After search and rescue, .Olson said OFDA’s priorities w ere getting medical aid to compensate for destroyed hospitals and getting food and w ater to the people. He said the g reatest problem left in the wake of thedisaster is housing. “it’s dm tail end of the rainy season, which m eans it rains every night,” Olson said. “If you get wet. and have to sleep outside, within a few weeks you begin to lose children and old people to pneumonia and other upper respiratory infections.” . Family markets home, property of U.S. defector By The Associated Press HOUSTON — The house o w n ed b y a c a n c e r researcher who defected with his family to the Soviet Union is up for sale, and two cars left in the driveway and much of the furnishings inside are gone. . Arnold Lockshin’s home in Houston is on the m arket for $82,500 and has been shown twice, the Houston Chronicle reported Monday. A source not id en tified by the Chronicle said about $62,000 rem ains owed on the $69,500 mortgage. Lockshin, 47, turned up in Moscow on Oct. 8 with his wife L auren and th eir >ch ild ren Jen n ife r, 15, Jeffrey, 11, and Michael, 5. He had been fired two months earlier from the S tehlin F oundation for C a n c e r R e s e a rc h in Houston. Hair Salon Has Arrived R u m o r s 350 S. M ill Ave. 894-1888 (IN THE NEW HAYDEN SQUARE) Open Seven Days A Week! Rumors in ANY HAIR CARE SERVICE W ith th is ad. Lim ited tim e only. At Tem pe location only. 6204 N; SCOTTSDALE RD. Scottsdale & Lincoln 998-1888 50%DISCOUNT on All Rumors HAIR CARE and COSMETIC PRODUCTS With this ad. Limited time only. At Tempe location only. Stt* Pret» ^ ^ SR P president urges residents to limit water use By DAVE HODGES State Pres* The Valley of the Sun is not facing a w ater shortage, but conservation is the'key for keeping w ater available, the president of Salt R iver Project said Tuesday. John Lassen told about 100 people a t the monthly Tempe Mayor/Council Breakfast that as long as Tempe residents lim it their w ater consumption, there should not be any shortages in the near future. “W ater conservation is extrem ely im portant,’’ he said. “Using desert landscaping and low water-usage plants and having sound plumbing in your house will save millions of gallons of w ater every year. ” Along with stressing w ater conservation, Lassen said Tempe and SRP have shared a “great history together.” “SRP has contributed power, w ater and jobs to Tempe,” he said. Tempe Mayor H arry Mitchell said the power company has played a role in developing Tempe. “We’re very proud that Salt River Project is headquartered in Tempe,” M itchell said. “Right outside of the University, SRP is the largest employer in the city.” Lassen, a Tempe native, has operated his fam ily’s farm s in ‘W ater conservation is extrem ely im portant U sin g desert la n d sca p in g a n d low w a ter-u sa ge plants a n d having s o u n d p lu m b in g in your h o u s e will sa ve m illions o f ga llo n s o f water every year.’ —- John Lassen the southeast Phoenix/Tempe area, raising cotton, alfalfa and grains. “One of our farm s was about where the Lakes subdivision is now,” he said. “I’m am azed at the tremendous growth in the area and how quickly it has come. “We ju st built (a branch office building) in south Tempe and we already know that it’s too sm all.” Lassen presented a slide show tracing SRP’s history in Tempe from the ancient canals built by the Hohokam Indians to the present dam proposals on the Salt and Verde rivers. “We learned a lot from the Hohokam Indians,” he said. “We learned cooperation and conservation from the Hohokams’ m anagem ent. Some of our present canals are exactly where they had theirs. “SRP is based on agriculture,” he said. “Last year, SRP supplied m ore w ater to cities than farm s. That was the first tim e ever.” He also suggested Tempe use canal banks to its full potential. “I’m encouraging Tempe to (connect) its canal banks,” Lassen said. “Many cities, especially Scottsdale, are realizing th at canal banks are an excellent place for parks, bridle and bicycling paths or jogging paths. “Canal banks do not have to be an eyesore. In fact, they can be a focal point to the city. ” Lassen said his company is involved in two m ajor projects: the building of Cliff Dam on the Verde River between Horeshoe Reservoir and B artlett Lake and increasing the height of Roosevelt Dam by 60 feet. “These are both extrem ely im portant for (SRP) in order to continue quality service for Tempe, ” he said. “The Cliff Dam project is turning out to be a little controversial, but hopefully that can be worked out.” Environm ental groups have been challenging the proposal of SRP saying the dam would flood a known nesting area of bald eagles. Prof says students plan European study despite terrorism By KER R YFEH R State Press The threat of terrorism apparently is not preventing students from registering for a European studies program offered by International Business Seminars, the owner of the company said Tuesday. Daniel Brenenstuhl, who also is an ASU managem ent professor, said about 25 students have deposited $400 each for the $2,208 European winter excursion. That’s about 10 more students than last year. Brenenstuhl, who has offered trips for the past 12 years, said students registered for the sum m er sem inars m ust have been “scared by the m edia hype” because no students signed up after terrorist attacks in M arch. He said some students canceled their reservations. He said scaring Americans from traveling abroad kept tourism within the U.S. borders and brought European travel to the United States, which helped the U.S. tourist industry. But Brenenstuhl said the sem inar group lessens its risk of being attacked by terrorists by traveling on non-American airlines and local European bus lines. He also said students are warned not to GRAND OPENING Phoenix’s Easiest and Most Exciting Way to Meet Someone New! ★ ★ ★ ★ NO PU R CH ASE N EC ESSA R Y 2021 E. A P A C H E TEM PE, AZ 85281 829-7101 SKI THANKSGIVING WEEKEND (Betw een M c C lin to c k a n d P rice ) B renenstuhl said som e executives participate in the sem inar because they attended an American university and feel like they have a debt to the United States. Others participate because “they are becoming im portant players” in the American business m arket and seek company name recognition, he said. “Sometimes they just want to learn about us,” Brenenstuhl said. The BIRTHDAY SUIT is a new, lightweight disposable jumpsuit. It comes with assorted color markers that you and others can use to decorate, color and graffitti it. The suit is great for Halloween, birthday gifts, parties and exchanges. No M em bershipFees A ll Phone Numbers N ew Ads Dally Call Anytime 1-9 7 6 -4 0 0 0 d r a w o n i t O d a n c e in i t O o r j u s t w e a r i t First M inute 55c Ea Additional M inute 450 Available now through Friday on CADY MALL . . . soon to appear in Tempe stores # Coil Today and Enjoy Your Tomorrows. He said while 5 percent of the scheduled speakers are public relations people, 95 percent are *‘first-line executives.’’ The Birthday Suit is finally BEING EXPOSED Personal Telephone Ads for Singles • p r in ts • p o s te r s • g r e a t p ric e s • f a s t tu rn a ro u n d S p e c ia liz in g in c o m m e rc ia l fra m in g fo r p h o to g ra p h e rs , a rtis ts & a rc h ite c ts . 4 ° visit the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam because it is considered a typical American tourist spot. Brenestuhl said he does not expect any problems in filling the 45 sem inar seats by the Nov. 1 deadline or up until Dec. 10, if airline reservations are available. He said students from about 20 schools, including Texas A & M and San Diego State universities, and three professors will visit Belgium, F rance, Sw itzerland, W est Germany and the Netherlands in 21 days. “They will m eet with extrem ely high ranking (business) officials,” Brenenstuhl said. v _____________ ___ / P R E -S E A S O N SW EATSH IRT SALE! 5 D A Y S O N L Y !! Ski 2 Days At ASPEN VAIL & Ski 2 Days At *5 OFF $ 2 7 9 0 0 ANY ASU OR GREEK LETTERING SWEATSHIRT! IT IN ER A R Y: Leave ASU Wednesday, Nov. 26. Ski Thursday and Friday at Vail. Ski Saturday and Sunday at Aspen. Leave for ASU Sunday at 4:00. S en d R eservations A n d $50 D ep osit To: S ki America 648 N. Linden Circle Mesa, A Z 85203 Just mention this ad in the ST AT E PR E SS. NAME AODRESS . CITY STATE _j . ■ ZIP ROOMMATES Offer does not apply to sales items. For Further Information Call Ski America Limit three per customer. 890* 2 6 1 6 Expires 11-2-86. U n iv e r s it y s p o r t in g g o o d s 968-7725 1038 S. Mill (A cro ss from Gam m age) S t t» Pre«« M cC ain uses false name in relocation By The Associated Press PHOENIX — Republican S enate can d id ate John McCain, who spent his first years in Arizona fighting off charges that he was a carpetbagger, is secretly moving out of the Mesacentered district that sent him to Congress for two term s. For months, using the name “Smith,” McCain has been remodeling a halfm illio n -d o lla r c e n tra lPhoenix house owned by his f a t h e r - i n - l a w . Im provem ents listed on construction perm its are estim ated a t m ore than $125,000. The building plans show M cC ain is in s ta llin g jacuzzis, a cab an a, a ram ada, a swimming pool, fountains and a barbecue as well as adding m ore than 4,000 square feet to a main residence th a t alread y covers m ore than 6,700 square feet. In addition the plans show McCain is erecting six-foothigh w alls and iron fences as w e ll as in s ta llin g m echanized w rought-iron gates. The property now belongs to Jam es and M arguërite Hensley, the parents of McCain’s wife, Cindy, and o w n e rs of a beer distributorship. A ccording to M cCain spokeswoman Torie Clarke, the plans w ere filed under the names Hensley and Smith because Smith was M rs. H ensley’s m aiden name. But copies of the perm its list the work as being done either for Jim Hensley or “ Mr. Sm ith,’* and one subcontractor who worked on the project, plum ber John McGann, said he was told the Work was being done for an “Eldon Sm ith.” Building sketches filed with the city refer to the project only as “proposed alterations Smith residence” and “ Sm ith R esidence Remodel.” Work on the project has been going on since a t least June, and Clarke said the McCains planned to move in after the first of the year. The house will have a burglar alarm system but no o th er sp ecial sec u rity equipment, she said. But the plans on file with city officials show McCain is surrounding him self with walls, fences and motordriven gates. McCain moved to Arizona 18 months before running for Congress for the first tim e and relied heavily on out-ofsta te co ntributions. He countered charges that he was a carpetbagger by saying that he cam e from a Navy family and had never lived in any one place for long. Asked if McCain feared b e in g la b e le d a carpetbagger again, Clarke said he expected to win the Senate seat being vacated by B a rry G o ld w a te r’s re tire m en t and would therefore “represent the entire state.” McCpin plans to keep an office in the congressional district after he is elected, sh e added, saying th e current McCain residence in Tempe “was fine for two people” ELECT DOUG TODD AS YOUR STATE SENATOR KABL E. WOCHNEB O ctober 29, 1986 YOU CAN HAKE THE D I F F E R E N C E . . .................... As l o y a l ASU s u p p o r t e r s we a r e w r i t i n g t o recommend § t a t e R e p r e s e n t a t i v e Doug To dd, who i s r u n n i n g f o r t h e S t a t e S enat e i n D i s t r i c t 27. Doug has been an h o n e s t , e f f e c t i v e , s t r a i g h t t a l k i n g l e a d e r a t t h e S t a t e C a p i t o l f o r D i s t r i c t 27 f o r 4 t e r ms i n t h e House. As Chairman* o f t h e House T r a n s p o r t a t i o n C o m m i t t e e Doug was a l e a d e r i n g e t t i n g t h e 233 m i l e s o f new f r e e w a y s t h r o u g h t h e l e g i s l a t u r e and appr ov e d by t h e v o t e r s . He p r o mo t e d t h e 56t h S t r e e t b r i d g e t o t h e c o u n t y bond c o m mi t t e e and e n c o u r a g e d AD0T t o speed up c o n s t r u c t i o n o f t h e Warner and t h e Ray Road i n t e r c h a n g e s on I - 1 0 . Those o f us who s h a r e D o u g ' s c o n c e r n f o r h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n and h i s a p p r e c i a t i o n f o r i t s i m p o r t a n c e t o o u r s t a t e ' s e c o n o mi c f u t u r e know him as har d w o r k i n g and d e d i c a t e d t o t h e goal o f maki ng ASU an even g r e a t e r University. As C h a i r ma n o f t h e A p p r o p r i a t i o n s S ub c o mmi t t e e on U n i v e r s i t i e s , Doug's d e d i c a t e d e f f o r t b r o u g h t a s p e c i a l a p p r o p r i a t i o n t o t h e ASU E n g i n e e r i n g Center of E x c e lle n c e . O t h e r f u n d i n g a c t i o n s f a v o r a b l e t o ASU i n c l u d e p r i m e s p o n s o r s h i p o f a b i l l wh i c h e s t a b l i s h e d a f r e e e n t e r p r i s e o r i e n t e d R e s e a r c h Par k i n s o u t h Tempe on t h e o l d c o l l e g e f a r m . Th a t R e s e a r c h Pa r k i s now o p e r a t i o n a l . Doug Todd has worked h a r d f o r Tempe and our s t a t e . He does i s s u e s and more i m p o r t a n t l y , he keeps h i s campai gn p l e d g e s ! n ot d u c k t o u g h When someone has wor ked as d i l i g e n t l y as Doug has f o r ASU, f o r a l l h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n and t h e o v e r a l l d e v e l o p m e n t o f our s t a t e , we b e l i e v e he d e s e r v e s a l l of our s u p p o r t . ? _ j|- JSrfc P l e a s e be s u r e t o v o t e T u e s d a y , November 4 t h . be a v o t e t o h e l p ASU and t h e many b e n e f i t s i t o f A r i z o n a . Y E S . . . Y O U CAN MAKE THE DIFFERENCE Your v o t e f o r Doug Todd w i l l p r o v i d e s to t h e whole S t a t e Si n c e r e l y , K a r l E. Wochner Past P r e s id e n t ASU A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n Noel B a r^ i% Past p r e s i d e n t ASU A l u mn i A s s o c i a t i o n Jotoof J . B r o o k i n g P « t President ASU A l u mn i A s s o c i a t i o n L i n c o l n J Ragsdale ist Preside n t ISU A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n W i l l i a m G . P a y n e , M .D . P a st P re s id e n t ASU A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n 2530 «SOUTH BUBAL BOAD • TEMPE, ABBONA 85282 • (602) 968-7233 KEEP AS YOUR DISTRICT 27 REPUBLICAN TODD Spi Paid for by Todd For Senate Committee JohnA. Faccone, CPA, Treasurer State P re is Page 9 Wednesday, October 89,1986 A S U p o lic e report , University police reported the following incidents in the 24- harassing fem ale students in Lot 8, police said. unlocked room>at 606 Alpha Drive, police said. hour period ending 5:45 a.m . Tuesday : Police warned the m an of trespassing and disorderly •A m en’s blue Raliegh 15-speed bike, valued a t $200, was •University police issued nine citations to students violating conduct laws and advised him to leave campus, after they stolen from the bicycle racks north of the MU, where it was bicycle laws on College Street, police said. checked his crim inal record, police said. locked, police said. The bike has serial No. NOG1580. •Someone walked into the ASU police dispatch center and •Police reported a woman not affiliated with the University •A m en’s blue Schwinn 10-speed bike, valued a t $100, was stole a seven point sta r badge from an officer’s uniform, becam e “extrem ely irra te” when she returned to hear car. stolen from 606 Alpha Drive, where it was locked, police said. police said. Estim ated value of the loss is $27. parked a t Tempe Center and found a rhino boot attatched to •A maroon daypack with ASU w ritten on it was stolen from Police said no one was wearing the uniform a t the tim e the the front axle. the Physical Education E ast Building Room 139, where it badge was stolon, and they do not know if the door was locked The woman verbally abused the security spotter and hit was left unattended, police said. Estim ated value of the loss when the thief entered the room. him with her shopping bag, police said. is $81. •Police observed an allegedly intoxicated transient verbally •A Minolta 35mm cam era, valued a t $250, was stolen from an _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ — LAUREN M ILLETTE Tem pe p o lice report Tempe police reported the following incidents for the period ending m idnight Tuesday: •Police said a Scottsdale teen-ager was injured while riding his bicycle a t the 900 block of North Scottsdale Road Oct. 27. The boy collided with a 1975 Ford truck when the vehicle turned into a private driveway. •' The injured boy was identified as Brandy Jay Watson, 16, of 7725 E. Latham. Watson was transported to Scottsdale M emeorial Hospital-where he is listed in critical condition. •An officer was dispatched to investigate the assault of a Tempe m an a t 1215 E. Vista Del Cerro Oct. 26, police said. The m an was walking from a friends apartm ent back to his home when he was confronted by an attacker, who said something unintelligible to him and then punched him in the face. The victim feel backw ard and hit his head on the window of a parked car, shattering the window. Police describe the suspect as Caucasian, 6-foot-2,150 pounds, 23 years old, wearing a flannel shirt and blue jeans. There are no suspects in the case. •Police said a Tempe m an assaulted a woman Oct. 25 by striking her in the head with a projectile from an air powered gun. Police identified the projectile as a piece of potato, one inch in diam eter and three inches long. The woman suffered a headache from the im pact of the potato, but declined to prosecute the attacker. •An officer was dispatched to investigate reports of harassing phone calls a t a Tempe woman’s residence Oct. 26, police said. The woman has been receiving calls from a m an who identifies himself as “Fred the Sheriff.’’ Police said he has been calling the woman several tim es a day, sometimes saying nothing. On one occasion, he threatened the woman and told her that “if you call the police, you are going to need them .” -D A R R IN HOSTETLER Prof touts ‘mastery’ classes for best student performances By Collage Press Service TALLAHASSEE, F la. — Students do much better and get higher grades in classes when they know w hat is expected of diem in advance, a Florida State University professor said. FSU’s March Driscoll said, “Students are m ore likely to work harder when they know not only w hat’s expected of them, but how the grading works. ” • As a result, Driscoll said die nation’s teachers should adopt “m astery classes” in which teachers give students the sam e test a t least twice, outline grading policies carefully and m ake their expectations of students explicit. She said her research shows students in the “m astery” classes tended to perform a t higher levels than students in other kinds of courses. Driscoll said: “Students typically work for the grade they think they can get. By knowing what can give them an ‘A’, it m akes them ju st that much more confident.” However the Natonal Education Association, although Supporting m astery classes as a theory, says studies like Driscoll’s do not always lead to practical teaching techniques. NEA’s Jerry Bledsoe said, “ Most people who study teaching methodology support ‘m astery,’ despite arguing” over how difficult it is to give teachers guidelines to handle all the situations that m ight arise spontaneously in a classroom. “The problem we have identified is that students may learn ju st enough to get by,” Bledsoe said. “Teachers fall into the trap of ‘teaching to test,’ thereby CO M PUTERS FO R Pizza In n 's on the M O V E REN T IBM Compatibles Lowest Prices CALL 371-8857 SAVE 20% -30% at BOB’S BICYCLE BARN Nothing fancy, just hdhest deals. Good selection, newand used bikes, all styles at prices you can afford. Fairdeals on TRADE-INS REPAIRS- SERVICE PARTS-ACCESSORIES Mastercharge/Visa CHRISTM AS LAY-A-W A Y 1908 E. 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' _ “G O O D F O O D tt> D R 1N JC “The F a m il y ” x30 E avoiding student experim entation and spontaneity,” he said. “When I lowered the minimum score for an ‘A’ in my class, I found students worked harder and exceeded their expectations,” she said. “Minimum” grades used to be whatever got the student to pass, but Driscoll said the traditional letter grades may eventually give way to pass/fail systems. “It’s m ore a case of the student saying, ‘What can I learn out of this course, instead only getting a grade,” she said. The pass/fail system “gets away from comparing one student to another” all the time. Bledsoe said grades are the least of the problems in the m astery-based plan, and schools have much more difficult classroom problems. P U B 966 7888 u n iv e r s it y D r. a t F o r e s t Is this a DEAL or what!!!?? 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Baseline ♦ 831-8670 (Lakes Country Village Center) \ _________________________ State Prest Page 10 Songstress reweds in private ceremony PVR/NO m MILLENNIA THAT MAN ARP FOWL HAVE S0U6HT AND SNARED W N6S... , By Th* Associated Press — 5PEAKINÚ O f IMFE~ mRwrr 'filHKLBY ff/USHN* OUR SOURCESR6R0RTTHAT um h u span d r z a __ _ AMP SNARED ’m R o C T f t u m e 'MR M g ™ * 1 Of 'STAR TREKEAM E. m ir < m if WEST JORDAN, Utah — Singer M arie Osmond rem arried Tuesday in an unheralded, private Mormon Church ceremony in the Jordan R iver Temple, a spokewoman said. Kathy Gangwisch, Osmond’s K ansas City-based personal publicist, said the 27-year-old entertainer was wed to Brian Blosil, a Provo, Utah record producer, a t U :30 a.m. P aul H. Dunn, a m em ber of the F irst Quorum of the Seventy of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, officiated. Dunn also officiated at Osmond’s 1962 Salt Lake Temple m arriage to form er Brigham Young University basketball star Stephen L. Craig. The couple separated in 1984 and w*re later divorced. Gangwisch said Osmond and Blosil, 33, m et in January a t a party in Provo given by m utual friends and had been dating since. It is Blosil’s first m arriage. Osmond wore a full-length white gown, decorated by delicate sequins and pearls with a high neck and long sleeves. b y B e rk e B reathed BLOOM COUNTY M NOWRETURN W THE STORY IN PROGRESS... EXOTIC SINÙ6R M ARtE 05M0NP M L , REFEAT. M U 06 MARRYING ADAIN. ROD ftOP kW J 12U SL b y M ichael Ritter Ivory Towers JO M E TOUGH SWR FÜPERUJCK IÑ OUR FOOTBALL GAME NEXT WEEK.., WHi,GeDFF M4RCÖWI/ idWfSTBRINGSStÜ TO THE NEWSROOM. .? Im m ediately following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was hosted by the bride and groom a t an unspecified Salt Lake City restaurant. The couple then left for an undisclosed honeymoon location. HHBWER/NOHNRP IN THEPET5WNNTEP) BETTERLUCKNÙCT COLUMN? X UFE, UVER-UPS! Gangwisch said Osmond would be perform ing, as scheduled, Friday night a t Gilly’s in Pasadena, Texas. On O ct 13, Osmond won the Country Music Award in Nashville for vocal duo of the year with Dan Seals for the hit single, “Meet M ein M ontana.” Osmond has a 3-year-old son, Stephen, by her previous m arriage. TWAHK^ANPI'P LIKE TD WBM THE 5AMETOVbOR RADIOSTATION... ^WtLL.SEETOO OÜTHEFIBJX. I KNOWHOW MUCH OXJ/iEN) THAT H R* .PREPARE W 7 ~RNt>WHENI DO ERTMPCLERTS, > FEEL FREE TD5LÆK M O im iN S M JU rfi M Y 5W ERT5BCKS! .5 0 W U C M .JUTIW NT WANT TDUPCHUCK ONVDURWfmON K-MRRTREEB0K5! MAV THE BEST MAN WIN... BLOWITUPYOUR TERMTNRLWBE, CHI5LE-CM N! STIC Edit h. TUCK tues c ID » By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Conducting a mode trial outside the Supreme Cotftt, a group of fundamentalist Christian m inisters Tuesday convicted numerous government officials of violating God’s law. Representing the American Coalition of Unregistered Churches, the m inisters found the government guilty of allowing abortion, sodomy and “a communist-style income and SocialBecurity tax.” ' The m inisters ted about SO people in prayer and Bible reading as they conducted a trial before what was called the universal court of divine justice. “We are here today in an attem pt to have all elected official^ return this nation to righteousness,” said the C h ristian g r o u p c o n v ic t s U .S. o ffic ia ls in m o c k trial Rev. Everett Sileven of F aith B aptist Church in Louisville, Neb. “We are holding a trial before God because the government has become the enemy of the people,” said Sileven, the coalition’s co-chairm an. The religious organization said hundreds of “political prisoners” — including form er Rep. George Hansen of Idaho, and ex-federal judge B arry E . Claiborne — are being held for," as Sileven put it, “bring brave and standing up t o the Internal Revenue Service.” Hansen, a conservative Republican who served seven term s in Congress, was convicted in 1984 and sentenced to five to 15 months in prison for falsifying financial reports filed with toe House of R epresentatives. HILLEL J e w is h S tu d e n t C e n te r in vites y o u to : N O T IC E HAVE YO U BEEN INJURED IN A TRAFFIC ACCIDENT? TO FIND OUT W HETHER YO U HAVE A CASE, CALL ATTORNEY JOHN R . BAKER 4625 S. WENDLER DR., SUITE 111 TEMPE, ARIZONA Sunday, November 2, 1986 4:30 p.m.-7:00 p.m. 4 3 8 -1 2 1 2 NO No Cover Charge C H A S m E O R INITIAL 1 KAPLAN SMMfYHKAFlANHXJCAnONALCENTBtinX The World’s Leading Teat Prep Organization 2 HRS. FREE ON TAPE TUTORlNfi 967-2967 Gome to Hillel for an Admission 1012 S. Mill Ave. Ik Can you afifoid togambfe with the LSAC GMAT, GRE,orMCAT? Probably not. Great grades alone may not be enough to impress the grad schopi pf your choice. " s Scores play a part. And that'! how Stanley H. Kaplan can help. - , The Kaplan course teaches.test-taking techniques, reviews course sh e e ts , and increases the odds that you Qdo the best you can d a So if you've been out of school for a while and need a refresher, or even if you're ftesh out of college, do what over 1 million students have done. Take Kaplan. Why take a chance with your career? At Sub Stop 222 E. University •HAppy ^MMiveRSARV K A S R !! C o ^ R A T ü l A t io a Is P to v ib itA d i A S O y cA R S A o $ Fi^5 oor Ä e I U&T€A /6 fcrl ic a ü ö f Ro a ^ SoooseuF t u HioMrnE’ €v/eg.y M ÿ 1 r° A&U'«> S&ÙL rtsw rto«c. 6oy*ce_ g KA£> R 6 8 0 IN S.T M T - (te « u € S T 1 & S -4 I4 Z A rt o í tm M te e g . ‘b u s s / A b O O T /// t OM Flyer. *2.91 State Pin» Page 11 Wednesday, October 99,1986 Private firm manages physical plants at Tennessee colleges By College Press Service NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Ju st as private companies have taken over public hospitals and even prisons, a new one in Nashville is hoping to “take over” some colleges. “We think that there’s a place for a private company to m anage education program s just like Hospital Corporation of America has done for hospitals and Corrections Corporation has done for jails,” said Roy Nicks, head of the Education Corporation of America. Nicks, who headed Tennessee’s State Board of Regents for 10 years, said his company often can do a better job managing certain parts of a campus — janitorial services and m aintenance operations are his favorite examples — than educators themselves can. For anywhere from $995 to $12,990 a year. ECA will m anage a college’s janitorial serv ices, p rev en tativ e m aintenance program s, work order system s, painting and other tasks, said ECA salesm an Jeff Jones. “School and industry tend to do a lousy job of m anaging their physical plants,” Nicks said, “TTiat’s because most of the people who do the work are a t the low end of the salary scale.” Keeping cam puses up physically has indeed become a m ajor crisis for some campuses. Colleges, trying to cope with inflation in the ‘70s and then federal funding cutbacks in the ‘80s, often have deferred m aintenance on their structures and equipment. Now buildings and equipment have become so bad that colleges cannot afford new ones. In i984, architect Harvey Kaiser, in his book “Crumbling A cadem e,” estim ated colleges needed $50 billion to rebuild themselves after years of physical neglect. The White House Science Council concluded in 1985 that colleges needed about $10 billion to renovate themselves. Two weeks ago, Virginia’s Higher Education Council estim ated its state colleges need $90 million to replace worn-out buildings and equipment. N ick s - fig u re s ECA ca n m ak e m aintenance cheap enough for colleges to avoid falling into disrepair again. Colleges, Nicks said, can save 10 percent to 30 percent off their current budgets by letting ECA m anage the m aintenance instead of doing it themselves. The savings have gotten some cam puses’ attention. ECA recently won contracts to m anage program s a t Carson-Newman College, Tennessee Tech, Middle Tennessee State and W alters State Community College, all in Tennessee. , “A lot of colleges use (these program s) for a combination of things — maintenance, the to tal m anagem ent p ro cess, to strengthen and upgrade th e ir own managem ent program s — and they have proved very beneficial,” said Wayne Leroy of the Association of Physical Plant A dm in istrato rs of U n iv ersities and Colleges. But Leroy adds ECA would appeal mostly to sm aller colleges. Larger campuses are m ore likely to have a “fairly stabilized, tenured work force that’s been in place for many years.” ■ CO UPO N i 120 E. University In The Arches 966-6684 WELCOMES B R A IN Open nightly till 9 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. ASU F O O T B A L L FEVER! KEEPTHE SPIRIT WARM WITH 100% WOOL BLANKETS DIRECT FROM THE CANADIAN ARMED FORCES L „Js 10% D I S C O U N T OFF ALL MERCHANDISE % with ASU I.D. Sale items exempt. VOTED BEST HOMEMADE COOKIES IN PHOENIX SINCE 1982 COOKIES FROM HOME Visit our Victorian parlor at 418 South Mill Ave.. Tempe diversifiedtrowelInc. 967-7855 Hours: Sun 12-6 Mon 106, Tues-Sat 10-11 pm BUY Va lb. GET'Alb. FREE LIMITED TO ONE PER PERSON. GOOD AT STORE LOCATION ONLY. “Your Home Town Travel Agency* £**«*****************#***************' * MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW! * sta te p re s s Thanksgiving, Christmas and Ski Season are just around the corner! * ADVERTISING * We Give You A Bigger Slice Of The Pie At The Lowest Cost Per Bite. * a************************************* Apache Broadway Serving Sun Devil Country for the past 16 years at the corner of Mill & Broadway in Tempe! HEY ASU! I T 'S T O U G H T O B E A T U N I-P R IN T •B u s in e ss C ards •R e s u m e s • H ig h Speed D u p lic a tin g 1 r N' I \ y / » B ro ch u res •F ly e rs •L e tte rh e a d s WE'RE FASTER — FREE Pickup & Delivery Less Expensive — 3 V& a co p y ! No Minimum W e offer a fu ll ran g e of p r in tin g se rv ic e s And Better! a ll w ith th e h ig h e s t p ro fe ssio n a lism . Y ou c a n e v e n b o o t y o u r o w n flo p p y d is k to o u r system ! ♦ «A WUNIVERSITYOR f u 1 1 2 I a g Ì U N I-P R IN T 829-1834 1605 W. U n iv e rsity Dr., T em p e Page 12 Pieta 1986 Delay__________ Continued from page 1. “The husband is taking on m ore of the traditional f a m e i * . responsibilities,” she said. “And when institutions have flexible work hours, it reaDy helps couples a lot.’’ She said improved birth control methods also give women the option of delaying motherhood. “This is a relatively new phenomenon,” she said. “Before people didn’t really have that much choice. ’’ Benin said she always fe d s pressed for tim e when balancing her career and motherhood. “But I wouldn’t give up my job, and I wouldn’t give up parenting either,” she said. Both Benin and Sullivan said there is always the danger that a woman’s “biological clock” will runout. “A later birth m eans fewer births,” Sullivan said, aHHiwg fertility diminishes every year after a woman reaches 25. A fertility survey conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics in February 1985 found th a t 8.7 percent of m arried women ages 25 to 29 were infertile; 13.6 percent of those ages 30 to 34 were infertile; and 24.4 percent of those ages 35 to 39 could not have children. Benin said medical researchers are spending more Hm«> working on a treatm ent for infertility. “There’s a t least two doctors in the Phoenix area that treat infertility only,” she said. B O D A C IO U S BU R G ER S! Sullivan said in 1982,53 percent of m arried women ages 30 to 34 said they did net expect to have children, compared to 68 p ercen t» 1974. . The average family size in the United States is 1.8 children, aiid th at most young women plan on having two kids, Sullivan said. She said 2.1 children per couple is the number needed to replace the population. A m ore difficult economic situation for couples is a m ajor factor in the delay of childbirth. “Now both have to work to m eet the cost of living,” Sullivan said. She said m ore competition in the job m arket between a large num ber of people the sam e age ?—namely the “baby boomers” — has given them an economic insecurity, forcing them to put off having children. Sullivan said another reason for the delay is changing priorities. “Couples who need to cut down on expenditures don’t cut down on m aterial things,” she said. “They cut out or delay having children until they feel they are comfortable financially.” Brad, 25, and Cheryl, 21, a Tempe couple who are engaged to be m arried in 10 months, said they have chosen to wait. “Financially, we’re not ready,” Brad said. “I don’t see LOW AIR FARES TRAVEL “ 18” starting a family in the near fu tu re— m aybe 10 years. “I want to make sure I can provide for my child’s life.” Cheryl said she wants to devote tim e to her husband and her interests for a few years before startin g a family. “I have to be satisfied with m yself career-w ise before I have a child,” she said. “I w ant to feel I ’m the best I can be when I becom ea m other.” Cynthia, a 22-year-old single ASU student, also said she doesn’t plan on having children for another ten years. “I’m going to get m arried, but not for a while,” the broadcasting senior said. “I want to have a career. I w ant to trav el,” she said. “I’m not even positive I want children. ” She said she only would consider having children with the right person. “I feel parenting is a two-person responsibility, and you have to know you’re going to have a partner who’s going to change diapers.” Bruce Miller, a Scottsdale obstetrician, said he has noticed a trend toward later pregnancies in his patients. Miller said he generally sees no com plications with women between 30 and 35 becoming pregnant. “But after (age) 35 we recom m end am niocentesis and other types of tests to avoid Downs Syndrome and other problems associated with later pregnancies,” he said. You a n d ... E N T E R T A IN M E N T 7155 E. Thomas, Suite 5 Scottsdale, A Z 85251 Sink your teeth into our giant 1/4 or 1/3 lb. burgers with all the fixins. G R E A T together at S a m m a a e » 949-8888 SKI SEA SO N SPECIALS! For Breakfast — Try our New York Style Bagels and save your dough only 6 5 $ includes cream ch eese or butter 6 2 0 S. C o lle g e A ve. S u n lie s : D e c. 6, $49 o n e day Vail: $704, s e v e n 8 n o w b o w t: e v ery W e d n e s d a y , $42, o n e d a y T a o s : $275, th re e n ig h ts p e r p e rs o n d o u b le o c c u p a n c y P u rg a to ry ; D ec. 12-14, $159 p e r p e rs o n , tw o d a y s , d o u b le occupancy In n sb ru c k : $909 six n ig h ts, p e r p e rs o n d o u b le o c c u p a n c y (e x c lu d in g lift ticket) n ig h ts p e r p e rs o n d o u b le o c c u p a n c y Banff t Lake Louise, Canada: $449, five n ig h ts, p e r p e rs o n d o u b le o c c u p a n c y A ll packages include transportation, lift tickets and lodging where applicable. 9 6 8 -1 9 4 0 For Food A C ut A b o ve The Norm O pen M on.-S at 7 a.m .-9 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m .-6 p.m. HALLOW EEN Exclusively for college students, faculty and staff: save up to 75% off the cover price of Time lnc.'s award-winning titles. Mail subscription coupon (below) today! Thursday, Tickets: $12, $10 see- p.m. ' A n ex tra o rd in a ry c o lla b o ra tio n SPORTS ILLUSTRATED TIM E —The world's #1 Newsmagazine and Winner G o t the feeling w tih the best sports coverage in Am erica of the National Magazine and 100% futi-cotor pho­ Award for General Eapeltence Just 56C an issue-? , tography. Ju st 5 5 c an : issu e -th a t's alm ost 50% that's 50% o ff the regular o ff the regular $1.09 sub* 41.12 subscription rets. scription rate. THE6IMHIEM STRUG QUARTET PEOPLE —Find out Wharfs reafty going on in the lives o f th e rich, the fa m o u speople you want to know. Ju st 55C an issue —that's alm ost 50% o ff the regular #1.09 subscription fate. 'van«the KAUCHSTEIH-UREDO-ROBflISOHTRIO .. m u s ic -m a k in g o f th e m o s t m a g ic a l s o r Sevën internationally acclaimed Artists com« together for an evening o f mi you will long remember, t h e program is scheduled to include the Haydn Pi ck w ma*or’ Beeth0^®n’8 Quartet in F minor. Op. 95 "The Serio c oenberg s Verklärte Nacht and the Brahms Piano Q uartet In G minor. Wednesday, November 5 * 8 p.m. Tickets: $14, $12 • • • M O N EY—How to make it and how to keep m ore o f it. A valuable tool to put you on the road to riches. Just $14.99 for 12 m onthly issues—a savings o f 50% o ff the regular $29.,95 subscription rate. THE [FO R TU N E-A n in sid er's D ISCO V ER -Today's most guide to the fascinating . im portant science issues ir w orld o f S ig B usiness. G et jergon-free language and 26 issues for ju*t $ 2 2 .2 5 — fu> color photography. Jusi a savings o f 50% o ff the «eg- $14.95 for 12 monthly ular $ 4 4 .5 0 subscription ¿ate. «sues— a savings oT37% | o ff the regular $24 sub­ scription rate. fW HOE LAINE MUSICAL' DIRECTOR Ti m m y ñ a m a r a Send me: □TIME a t just 56C an issue for D SH Sports Mustrated WITH THE a tju s t 55C □tapie 12 m onthly issu e s for just $14.95. am a t ju st 5 5 0 an issue for FABULOUS FORTIES 10 mopithly issues for just $12.50. 2 6 biw eekly is su e s for ju s t $ 2 2 .2 5 O 965-2610 501 S. Mill Ave. Old Town Tempe Name Address C ity .. State O P E N 7 D A Y S A W EEK Zip Name Of School Year Studies End □ Student Û Educator 5 M attinare oràmtcouponfo: ■> weakumMagami»* Make checks payable to TIME, INC. ^ H E S T R A Monday, November 10 • 8 p.m. Tickets: $14, $12 For further information about _ Gammage Canter events, call 965-3434. TICKET DISCOUNT I9QUCY: *<, .•». ' C VAtID THRU 11/15/86 Signature □ Rayment enclosed Q QUI me later 'J R TRICKS-TREATS H4f ? o S o = Ce,, i rER — Studantt may purchase ONE or TWO ticket* for Ha . . J I T . 6 * ,h pr“ 0"W*Y> of a validated atudant.photo 1.0. Student* will o a rin rm .I. p[®fen* their photo I.D. with their ticket* at the door on night of arh^ , ce /* c o/ty and Staff receive a $2-per-ticket discount an all •cneduled aeaaon event*. » P E O tA l EV EN TS are not Included In tide d iscou n t policy. entertainment ******— Wednesday, October 99,1986_______ - __________________________________________ Page 13 Inklings, footnotes and other tangy tidbits from the entertainment file. Halloween Horror Highlights: •F o r the first tim e ever, the original horror film, "Friday the 13th" and all five sequels wilt be presented together in one program. The blood­ slashing event takes place at 9:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday in the Paradise Valley M ail Cinemas, 4550 E. Cactus Road in Paradise Valley, and at the Metro Center Cinemas, Black Canyon Freeway and Peoria ^Avenue in Phoenix. Tickets for the two-night terror marathon are $6. For more: information, call 996-7905 or 997-6364. •Lyric Ópera Theatre is selling out its costum e, inventory at A SU Salvage & Warehouse, Price and First Street in •Tempe. Hours for the Halloweeh costum e sale are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. For moté information call 965-2858. •The Tempe Jaycees present their ninth annual Haunted House at 634 S. Myrtle Road in Tempe. The frights run non-stop from 7 to 10 tonight and Thursday night. Hours are 7 p.m. to m id nig ht Friday and Saturday. Tickets are $2. For more information call 966-9241. A t The Box Office: •One o f the m ost highly acclaim ed film s o f the year, “ Blue Velvet,” opens at selected theaters in the Valley Friday. The film stars Kyle Mac Lachlan. New Order drummer and vocalist, Stephen Morris, appears wtth the popular English music group at 7:30, tonight at the Mesa Amphitheater. N e w O rd e r Brotherhood: more than LP for British band By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS and KHALI CRAW FORD State Press K yle M acLach len sta rt In the highly acclaimed “Blue Velvet.” The film opena Friday at selected theaters. Theater •Jean Genet’s “ The Balcony” plays at 8 tonight in Drama City. The show is one of the most interesting productions o f the year. It runs through Sunday. Curtain tim es are 8 p.m. except for a 2 p.m. matinee on Sunday. Tickets are $5, $4 for faculty and $3 for students. For more information call 965-5359. Music: •One of Britain’s hottest groups, N ew Order, w ill appear at 7:30 tonight in the M esa Amphitheatre. Tickets for $14.50 in advance and $15.50 the day o f the show, can be purchased at Gammage. The am phitheater is located at Main and Center in Mesa. For more information, call 965-3434. •An ASU Jazz Combo wrIH perform at 7:30 tonight in the Recital Hall. The com bo w ill be a sextet directed by drummer Jay Busch. The concert Is free and open to the public. The Recital Hatl is located on the fifth floor o f the M usic Building. Albrecht took over the-vocals with the help of bassist P eter Hook. Starting over cold turkey, the band chose New Order, B ritain’s quasi-rock/new to m ake it’s way back into the lim elight wave m usical group, arrived in the Valley without riding the wake of Joy Division’s from Macclesfield, England, just in tim e for success or using its m aterial. New O rder’s drum m er Stephen M orris’ big birthday first single, “Ceremony,” reached No. 34 on bash. M orris celebrated his 29th birthday at the B ritish singles chart. G raffitti’s in Tempe Tuesday night. Since then the group’s dance-single sound New Order will play a t 7:30 tonight a t the has become sought-after in England and has Mesa Amphitheatre. begun to expand its cultish following in the Even though he’s making his way up the United States with its 1962 U.S. tour. Their hill, M orris, who started out playing the breakthrough cam e in 1985 with “Low Life” clarinet, doesn’t seem to show his age. on Qwest records, and it continued with “The only place in the world where they three cuts from the “P retty in Pink” thought I was under 21 was a cafe near soundtrack, including “Shell Shock.” Their Disneyland. It’s quite flattering actually, current LP is “Brotherhood. ” but California . . . ” M orris said in a In 1986, put to rest a t last, Joy Division, telephone interview from Macclesfield. H e. which existed for a m ere two years, will be paused and said, “Well, I’ve never quite rem em bered with reverence. understood California. Maybe it’s over, my But New Order doesn’t fall prey to head; it’s always been a m ystery to me. ” success’false security. And in the minds of die group’s fans, the “Success is something that you get m ysterious genesis of New Order seem s to influenced by that should be downplayed,” be changing its tune. After five years and M orris said. “You never know what the next two of their albums, “Low Life” and now, day is going to bring.” “Brotherhood,” the group has finally Morris’ voice lends itself to apprehension exorcised the ghost of their form er group, when talking about the group’s success. Joy Division. “I’m not really frightened by it,” he said, Joy Division, which originally formed in the wake of the Sex Pistols in 1977 as Warsaw, cam e to an abrupt end with the deathof their lead singer, Ian Curtis. Curtis, torn by a broken m arriage committed suicide on May 18,1980, the eve of the band’s first U.S. tour. . The band re-emerged in September 1980 at Liverpool’s Brady’s Club, minus Curtis’ Jim Morrison vocals, a s New Order. The group recruited Morris’ girlfriend Gillian Gilbert to (day keyboards, and Bernard “but it’s that so-called star system that can get to you. I'm just like, 'Thank God your alive’ “OCeassionally you get bothered by people when they see you, but it’s not really a problem. You just accept it really.” He laughs and a-Manchester lilt returns to his voice. “A big problem when you grow (in popularity) is that at one print you might start thinking that you’re doing a job,” he said. “It becom es repititious and you think, ‘Oh God, this is a job, and I’ve got to work.’ “That’s something that you have to overcome. You’re in a position where you’re doing something that others don’t do — not many people do this type of thing for a living. I t’s som ething th at’s totally enjoyable. “I ju st thank God th at I’m really lucky to be doing something that I like.” And what the four-member band likes is creating music. But technology doesn’t m ake enjoying and doing synonymous even for a group as prolific as New Order. “The m ore you try, the harder it gets,” M orris said. “Easy «m gs are when every (me is playing a t the sam e tim e. You ju st come up with the sam e thing and you say ‘you play this and you ¡day th a t’ But once you get involved in m achines and com puters, it sounds m ore processed. “ If you’ve got an idem in your head, you m ight have to work on that a ll day, pushing buttons — it’s not really music, it’s like com puter program ming. “ It doesn’t necessarily m ean B u t what you com e up with is g rea t you go in, m ess around with som e styles and you may com e up with something good. But if it fe d s right when you play i t when you get a good feeling while playing it together, then you know for sure.” After five years Morris said the group is feeling fairly good about playing together. “I think w e a ll g et along w d l and enjoy each others company. We’re a ll friends; w e do it (perform together as a band) bem use we want t o /’ he said. “I think love is behind it a ll really, and I think if it ever got tedious, w e’d think about doing something else.” Tickets for tonight’s concert are $15.50. State Pt»m Wednesday, October 29,1986 B la c k s t o n e m a g ic C /N fm Aer ir p py k a H i i / ' û r h r i n n Ibini Form ro d u ce r to bring P rofessional C en ters COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SURVEY RANKS BAR/BRI BEST PROGRAM over Kaplan LSAT LS A T Classes in Phoenix begin Nov. 6, 1986. C ali 969-8953 for price and location. L if t o f I t a ly fo r th e ultim ate Cut and Style P e rm Special *16 *30 Beg. *25 to suit your face shape N e w L o c a tio n 7319 E. Stetson Dr. Scottsdale ( directly across fr o m D.J. '&) Keg. *65 C ut and style to suit your face shape, p erm and condition (lo n g h air e x tra ) First-time clients only M en’s *30 9 4 1 -1 4 6 9 9 4 5 -6 3 8 5 Perm , c u t and style by Appointment Only O ffe r e x p ire s Nov. 2 5 ,1 9 8 6 . Reg. *55 Harry Blackstone will be at Gammaga Canter at 7 p.m. Thursday. Sf $250 C A S H P R I Z E BEST MALE COSTUME $250 C A S H P R I Z E BEST FEMALE COSTUME S P E C IA L BUFFET In The Cornerstone Mall 829-8495 OQOOOOI] IT’S C O M IN G ! |y DAVID ¡late Pres It’s real! Other gi or a cou] tarry Bla he tools o iird cage :omes the Or rathe Blacksti 1p.m. Thu The sh( Magician, might ha' Blackston of the ear wasn’t alv suit that “I had Blackston University in broadc eventually Smother’s that ende< The Sm the cuttin TV due fa serious cu “I had feeding th magic?’ ’ What al along wit! Smothers the now-r one. “My magic eai Blackst the age ol father’s a him on sti “I had| build on 1 right plac But Bla Stete P N « cage, buzz saw to Gammage y DAVID Page 15 Wednesday, October 29,1986 MILLER tate Press It’s really an enviable position. Other guys have been home from the office or a couple of hours now, and it’s tim e for Harry Blackstone J r., to go to work. Out come he tools of the trade: ligty bulb, handkerchief, ¡rd cage and a buzz-saw. On goes the tux, out omes the attitude, and it’s off to work. Or rather, off to the show. Blackstone will perform his m agic show at p.m. Thursday a t Gamm age Center. The show’s th e tiling for Blackstone the !agician. But as obvious a career choice as it light, have seemed — his father, The G reat lackstohe, ranked as the forem ost illusionist if the early p art of this century — Blackstone asn’t always sure m agic was his show. It was suit that took some tim e to fill out. I had no intention of going into m agic,” ¡Blackstone said. “I graduated from the [University of Texas and was ready fo ra career jin broadcasting. I worked in the field, and (eventually becam e the producer of the Smother’s Brothers show. And you know how that ended up.” The Smother’s B rothers show ended up on the cutting room floor, axed from the realm of TV due to m assive irreverence. And it was a serious cut for fam ily-m an Blackstone. “I had tittle things to w o rry about, like feeding the kids. And my wife said, ‘What about magic?’ ’’ What about m agic, indeed. That suggestion, along with a tittle financial backing from Tom Smothers, turned into a full-time jo ti th at for the now-magician clicked w ith him. from day one. “My only reg ret is not having gone into magic earlier,” he said. Blackstone got his earliest taste of m agic at the age of 6 months doing baby-cameos for his father’s act by appearing and disappearing for him on stage. “I had good parents,” he said. “I was able to build on his tradition, I guess I w as just in the right placeat the right tim e.” But Blackstone put aside the m agic hat and ‘M y only regret is not having g o n e into m a gic earlier.’ — Harry Blackstone cape for college, and didn’t seriously consider the trade until the Smother’s incident. Now he resolves to carry on the name of his father, whom he says occupied the number one seat among sim ilar entertainers of his time. It seems that Blackstone is carrying on his father’s tradition in more than one respect. He’s among an elite group of magical entertainers (including Doug Henning and David Copperfield) performing today. An intense demand for sleight of hand áre what keeps him and his cohorts working, he said. “There’s no competition. There’s so much work that I keep busy 11 months a year. It’s a terrific business,” he said. His fascination for the entertainm ent aspects of broadcasting carried over into the field, which he describes as both a science and an art. “The science aspect of magic involves the creation of the m aterials and apparatus allowing the entertainm ent to become a rt,” he said. “But entertainm ent is what ray show is about.” P art illusion and part levitation, Blackstone will cut a hapless victim in two with a buzzsaw. I f s a tip a rt of a night’s work, he says. “Through hypnosis I will stop the blood flow. It’s very terrifying.” One would guess so (particularly with a buzzsaw heading for the beer handles). But Blackstone stresses it’s all in fun, and any references to the horrific, or demonic, are all done tongue-in-cheek. “ It’s not black magic, it’s Blackstone m agic.” Tickets for Thursday’s show, at $10 and $12, are available a t Gammage and D illard’s ticket offices. JA M B ES ® p p s a B A R G A IN P R IC E ALL SHOWS BEFORE S P M MON. THRU FBI SAT.. SUN.A HOLIDAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY ÜL3M em . Unersione iversity °&An I 843 4593 ondMOBO AD A>®jkL. 829-0344 T R IC K O S T R E A T H R o rn i 100.3:00,5:00.7:00.9l:00 12:00.2:15.4: 1,7:00,9:30 IACKTOSCHOOL|PG-I3)115i530.945 wuu mourn L EGALEARLESIPO)3:15,730 12:00.2:00. *00.6:00. 0H0.10:00 T OUGHOUTSINI SOULHAS(FO-13) 12.45.3H0,5:15,7:30,9:45 1:20.320.5:20.7:20.920 CROCODILEOURDEE(PS-13) CROCODILE0UN0EE(PS-131 1:30.3:30.500.7:30.9:30 1:15.3:15.5:15.7:30.9:45 R UTHLESSPEOPLE|R)130.5:30.930 RTRUIYMEIRI FEBOsuorsRRer U-OI3:30.730 1:30. 3:30. 5:30. 7:30.930 TOPOUR(PO) TOUOHOUYOirtQ 1230.2:45.5:00.7:15.9:30 12:30.2:45,5:00.7:15.9:30 RUTHLESSPEOPLE(R)11:45.3.45.8:00 BRCKTOSCHOOLIPO-13)1:45.545.KUO o o c rM iT , M ESA AT 1020 COLOROFMONETISI OJD -URU‘1 W EST SO U TH ER N J 11:45,215.4:45.7:15.10:00 CRILDREHOFALESSER000(R| 1:30.4:15.7:00,230 COLOROFM0REY(RI m 12:00.2:30.5:00.7:30.9:50 SOULMARIP0-I3I Friday $ Saturday 1 3 » HdiiiM 9ws 12:45.2:45.4:45.7:15.9:15 RRRtRRUBTMIern-IR1:45.535925 BcHtomrI • Chrtata«ni5• SmOrni6 RACKTOSCHOOLPR350. 7:40 k ______________ - V 7 m m Mm mm ESAAlSOLONGM ORE L.834I-5767 SSUPERSTITION J KARATEKIRH|PH12:00.5:00.10:00 RUTHLEISPEOPLE|R|2:30,7:30 OEAOLTFRtEHOlR) 1:15.3:15,5:15.7:15.0.15 STAUITRE(RI 1:15.3:15.5:15.7:15,9:15 TOP8UH(PO-13) 12:00.2:00,5:00,7:30,10:00 CR0C00H.E DURSEE (PO-13) 1230.2:45.5:00,7:15.930 ^ 249-2843 s 7C7NO i9t h a v e j SOULMAR(PO-13) 1215.245.5:00,7:30.9:45 TOUGHSUYS(POI 1230.2:45.5:00.7:30.10:00 CROCOOILEDUROEE(PS-13) 12:30,3:00, 5:15.7:45,10:00 CHIL0REROfALESSER000|R) 130.4:15.700,9:45 ARMERAUOAUEWUSIPOI335.715 VjXAOLYFRIEU(R)1:15,5:15,9:15 M ARDELLE DYSO N Department Manager M ard e lle is an e n th u sia stic cy clist, w ith the rid in g experience to h elp fit the b ike and a cce sso rie s to the rider. TEM P E B IC Y C LE SH O P 3 3 0 W , U n iv e r s i t y • 9 6 6 - 6 8 9 6 C» FAST, FREE DELIVERY FOR ASU LOCATION CALL - 1 7 1 7 2 L A R G E t6 ” PIZZAS with one topping 1 FR EE 32-OX. CO K E *10.00 ta i Incudsd 2 MEDIUM 12” PIZZAS with one topping *9.00 ta x ln clu d td 16” 1 Topping *7.75 *6.50 One co u p on p er pizza. In d u d M ta x One co u p on p e r pizza. Expires 11-5-86. Expires 11-5-86. O p e n 11 a.m .-1 a .m . S u n .-T h u rs. 11 a .m .-2 a .m . F ri.-S at. O p e n 11 a .m .-l e .m . S u n .-T h u rs. 1 1 a .m .-2 a .m . F ri.-S at. 12” 2 Toppings 12" 1 Topping *5.85 *4.95 One co u p o n p e r p izza. Empires 11-5-86. O ne co u p on p e r pizza. O p e n l i e . m : - 1 e .m . S u n .-T h u rs. 11 a .m .-Z a .m . F ri.-S at. O p e n 11 a.m .-1 a .m . S u n .-T h u rs. 11 a .m .-2 a .m . F ri.-S at. N. TEMPE B33LIMvKity 829-1717 Discover the career you want. In the country you love. 1 FREE 32-oz. CO KE 16” 2 Toppings In e h J d M lw i % Expires 11-5-86. N. CHANDLER 10181. Arina Aw. 899-4922 Motorola’s Semiconductor Products Sector will be on campus N O V E M B E R 12,1986 Qualified college students are invited to meet with us and explore the international career opportunities...the-innovative technology...the industry leadership that is Motorola^! Semiconductor Products Sector. We are seeking individuals who are citizens of and who desire to work in Hong Kong ■ Malaysia 1 Taiwan ■ Korea I Japan. Areas of opportunity include: , .l Design ■ Manufacturing ■ Wafer Process ■ Facilities MIS ■ Finance ■ Support Operations. for more information, stop by your College Placement Office or write to Manager, College Recruiting at: Motorola Semiconductor Products Sector, International College Relations, 72S South Madison, Tempe, Arizona 85281. (602) 994-6812. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. (M ) m q ix m o l a W S e m ic o n d u c t o r P r o d u c t s S e c t o r international C o lle g e Relations | Page 16 Stile n w Wednesday, October 89.1986 craze C u be inventor untwists new By KELLY UPTO N State Prass Remember die Rubik’s CUbe,*the famous little box people conquered with their feet on “T hat's Incredible?” Well folks, the challenge is back. Professor Rubik has out done him self with his newest invention — “Rubik’s Magic Puzzle.” Erno Rubik, father of the Rubik’s Cube the inventor of the soon to be released puzzle, is hard a t work. Why? — To sta rt another craze that will frustrate our nation a t Christm as time? No, not exactly. According to Professor Rubik, it is only through exploration and discovery that people can find happiness. Four million Rubik’s Magic Puzzles will make their appearance nationwide. The puzzle is an eight-paneled rectangle. Each panel is attached by a four-sided hinge. When folded up it will fit in one’s pocket. On both sides of die puzzle there are three colored rings, edch printed across several panels.' The object of the puzzle is to link the rings. However, to link these rings the solver has to m anipulate the right panels to shift die position of the rings. The catch is that as any one panel moves the rings move too. Out in the nick of time, for early Christmas shoppers, Rubik’s Magic Puzzle will be available in November for $10. When and if someone solves this bit of “m agic” they’ll feel a rush of accomplishment. However, if the puzzle proves to be a bit more than consumers can handle, $2.95 will buy “The Solution." The book that will help millions solve this latest baffler will be available in November at B. Dalton book stores! Rubik’S Magic Puzzle will be available In thé Valley in November. »------ — COUPON M edia Law yer FREE DAVID BODNEY speaks on I 1 “TH E REHNQUIST COURT & TH E 1st AMENDMENT” CHEESE CRISP $2.60 value Limit one per person. •----------COUPON--------- T Thurs., Oct. 30, 1986 • Noon at the Spaghetti Company 4th St. & Mill Ave, . In the Mill Towne Center ! „ M MORDERS * — PICK-UP WINDOW PHONE L u n c h e o n I n c lu d e d Southeast Corner of M ill & Baseline i Members: $ 5 .2 5 Non-members: $ 6 .2 5 Sponsored b y Sigm a D elta CM & ASASU éSÊh, Louise Lincoln ! Ä f f Kerr Cultural center FIFTH ANNIVERSARY SEASON G EO FFR EY P LA TTS Join the Winning Team, # p resents Selections from Edgar Allen Poe Friday, October 31 • 8 p.m. Tickets: $5 ••• ANDREA ANDERSON, Piano Miss Anderson’s "American Heritage" program includes works by Edward MacDowell, Samual Barber, Aaron Copland. Leonard Bernstein, Charlies Griffes and Louis Moreau Gottschalk. Friday, November 7 • 8 p.m. Tickets: $8 • •• Bach West... I I I I I I ! Is Back NO CONTRACTS/ YOUR FIRST VISIT IS FR EE S30 fMemberefMjpPee • S 3 0 p e r m onth d r S 4 p e r w orkout $10 pe'w orkout $20 per week $40per month » fZ w w M rrc h m t p e rdmy! • 90 new weight machines • 15,000lbs. of free weights •14 Heartmate com puterbikes • 2 W oltl sy ste m su n ta n b e d s • Ju ice bar with nutritional counseling y • Professional trainers tor rent • Free instruction tor new members •Airconditioning • We have no salesmen! ■ . ' 5 a m -la m M onday-F riday B am -lam Saturday A Sunday T h is popular grou p roturne to K arr Contar w ith a program that Inctudaa tha T aoor A ria from Cantata N o. 97 by J . 6 . Bach. Three Songa to r M arlboro by D avid Am ram , th a Q am ini Variation», O p. 73 {Tw elve Variation» and Fugue on an Epigram o f Zoltán K odaly) and tha C an tiela III (StMl F alla tha Rain), Op. «5 by Beniam in B rltla n , T rio Sonata in G m ajor. O p. 9. N o. t by P iatro Locate«! . an d the Tenor A rta iro m Cantata N o. ii3 o lJ . S. Bach. Sunday, November 16 • 4 p.m. Tickets: $7 TICKET DISCOUNT POLICY: A S U atudonU, faculty and ataff may purchaeoONE or TW O ticket* for Half-Price with presentation of A SU 1.0. Studonfa wilt bo required to show e validated photo I.D. when purchasing their tickets aa well ee at the door on the higM of the concert FITNESS & AEROBIC CENTER Phoenix: 4 8 4 3 N o rth 8 th P lace 230-0055 Bodym asters Tempe: 1 1 0 2 IK S o u l 829-6969 • ^N autilus S P O R T S M E D I C A L I N D U S T R I E S . IN C • COM PUTERIZED BICYCLES 17 a k e u p ! lamour comedians spritz laughter onto RKO’s movie set Fielder, a 29-year-old Valley resident, works as a hairstylist at Rumors in Scottsdale. He is excited about being Behind the scenes of Hollywood filmmaking, behind every affiliated with the film. “ It’s all very flattering,” he said. “They cam e in one m irror and dirty bandanna, there’s always somebody Tuesday a few weeks ago and needed somebody (as a waiting with some lipstick and mousse. For hairdresser, D arrell Fielder and m akeup specialist, hairdresser for the film ), I couldn’t believe it.” Fielder decided to become a hairdresser 10 years ago. Tam i Smith, working behind the scenes for RKO Pictures’ “I thought I could be m yself (as a hair sty list),” he said. “Campus Man” is certainly filled with hairraising experiences. When you put these two cosm etic geniuses “The m ore wild and crazy I was, it didn’t m atter— I could be together, they tend to prim p each other’s wild personality. just whatever I wanted to be.” “We’re like Mutt and Jeff, Heckel and Jeckel,” Fielder At 24, Smith is indeed worldly; her career has taken her said Monday while on location at ASU’s Mona Plum m er around the globe. Originally from San Diego, she decided to ra te r the high-gloss world of cosmetics because she “got sick Aquatic Center. “No, we’re like Vaseline and Wheat Thins,” Smith said of sewing plastic tips on shoe laces and selling green suede jokingly. luggage.” She lived in Europe for four years as a makeup specialist “Wait,” Fielder.said in defense. “Who’s Vaseline? ” for various French and Italian vogue magazines. She adm its Smith smiled and said, “OK, we’re Cool Whip and beets.” Between the laughs, Fielder and Smith peform their duties that the job had many benefits. “The greatest p art was that I got to go on fabulous trip s,” in a professional manner. Before filming begins each day, they rise at 5 a.m . and assem ble themselves into the stars’ she said. “I went to Africa, they flew me to India and Sweden dressing room trailers and create a fashion showcase — on — the traveling was fantastic, it was one of the best things their heads. ____ about the job.” Fielder and Smith m et a few weeks ago and have since Needless to say, it takes a certain flair to whip out the Max Factor and hairspray. Fielder and Smith feel that a sense of been cracking up the cast and crew of “Campus Man. ” “We hit it off im m ediately,” Fielder said. humor and open mind can get them through a tedious 12-hour “We’ve had a past life experience,” Smith joked. day of filming. “We’re both creative and fun, I think,” Fielder said and “I think we were hired for our enthusiasm ,” Fielder said. “We’re both creative I guess. When an actor comes in a t 5:30 laughed. “Now we’re joined a t thehip.” Smith laughed and added; “Because we have the creative in the morning, we have to get to them first.” Smith added, “Their-whOle mood is set by us. If they leave juices flowing in the saine riv er.” But how do these glam our comedians rem ain so spunky? feeling bad, then they m ight perform that way.” “Caffeine,” Fielder said loudly. “Campus Man” is the first film project they have worked “Yeah.” Smith said: “Caffeine and Twinkies — that’s it. ’’ on. By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS State Press ■ M É S A Andy Mrozlnaki/Stata P r a n ~ampu» “ «-•*h ttnrfyMf«. w n n u r , t o p , p r i m p « « « t r a Anna Rovse’i hair on the « 1 s t B w AauaHc Center Monday. L e t t , Gaffer Art Pappidas points ate lighting problem, while stare Kim Delaney Knd Kathleen Wltholte (tar right) discuss their lines. Right, Taml Smith applies makeup on Royae’s face._____ / . S O F T C O N T A C T LENSliS F O R A S T IG M A T IS M Daily Wear (tinted & dear) Extended Wear Newest Gas Perm&ifitfe Lenses Call for FREE Consultation — and Special Low Fees Com plete Contact Lens C are* Fashion Eyewear D r. W . G . A m e s 505 V^Rary^RiL/Sfcfite 3 Chandler, AZ 85224 821-2020 F o r A p p o in tm e n t HOME MADE SPAGHETTI & GARLIC BREAD! S atellite $ *2 Q Q J - y ,,/ TV's 11 a m - 11 p.m . 12 L arge S h rim p $ 2 .0 0 4-7 p.m . M on.-Fri. FR E E F O O D BAR i« vv o o N o rth w est C orner o f D obson & U niversity o tN E s C A M E D E P O T S for the games people play (formerly Flying Buffalo Games) The Minority Recruitment Office needs current ASU students to volunteer with on-campus visitation programs for the following high schools. If you are an alumnus of one of the following schools and would like to participate, please contact our office in Matthews Center 142, 965-3040. Westwood Mesa Corona Del Sol Chandler Central North Phoenix Indian Glendale Dysart Tolleson Alhambra Mountain View Dobson Marcos de Niza St. Mary’s Carl Hayden South Mountain Maryvale Peoria Agua Fría Trevor Browne Apollo •Fam ily Games • stra te g y Games •Magazines •Playing cards «Role Playing Games «Miniatures «Dice »Plus much more rJust north o f ASU 708 S. Forest Ave. 966-4727 DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS T H R IFT STO R E 9 am .-9 p.m. Monday-Saturday 2131 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe Packed W ith Top Q uality Used CLOTHING • HOUSEWARES • FURNITURE APPLIANCES • KNICK-KNACKS •M en!s dress-up & leisure from 9 5 4 •D u rab le kids clothing from 6 5 4 •W o m e n ’s fashions from 9 5 4 S o m e t h in g f o r E V E R Y O N E ! Get In On The 2131 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe B O O (Z E ) for Halloween at NORM'S DRAFTS 2 5 « PITCHERS $ 1 .2 5 Friday 10-31-86 only. N8RMS Senior C itizens 30% OFF 60 yrs o r older Every M onday g; & ff ft Apache D AY 6 2 0 S. C o lle g e A ve. . Hrs. Mon.-Sat. 7-9, Sun. 9-6 9 6 8 -1 9 4 0 No Checks • Open To Public Page 18 Wednesday, October 29,1986 New boys of Boston m ake good in ’80s after 6-year hiatus Boston “Third Stage” If anything, Boston’s new albinn shows the boys have a good memory. It’s been six years since Boston last made a sound, and now they’ve tuned up the answering machine once again, for a third round of the orchestral buzz that endeared them to millions. With the release of “Third Stage” it could be said that they’ve got a lot of gall to have kept us waiting so long, or we could sim ply be grateful to have them back from the dead. E ither answ er probably fits, but it doesn’t bother toe boys in the band. A fter all, they know what we like. Tom Scholz certainly does. As the whiz-kid (who’s not such Mayor Eastwood helps cam paign to oust Justices from our guy Tom. It's like a high-tech Hallm ark card. Scholz only brings back B rad Delp from the 70s Boston and it’s a good thing he does. Delp’s incredibly high range wraps a distinctiveness around toe m aterial, particularly in Boston’s experim ental sound from the 70s bumped this “Amanda” and “My Destination.” Delp’s voice fits the techno-guy tip seven tax brackets back then, and he’s not heart-strung stuff like a wet surgical glove. about to change a thing (except to switch the starting line-up As fa r as follow-up album s go, “Third Stage” proves to be a a little). leap in the right direction for the band. It rem ains to be seen Scholz is the principle player: he grinds the am ps and if a tour will follow, as it’s been rum ored th at one reason for spreads the orchestral frosting. Nearly every song carries their six-year absence was Scholz’ insistence on staying a t his tradem ark sentim entality, and he’s proud to adm it th a t,. home following the album s’ release. But even if they spend in keeping with the Boston tradition, no synthesizers were the next year hunting basselope (as long as it’s not the next used in the baking. Every strange jet-sound, every Mr. T six years), it’s OK—the boys done all right. — DAVID MILLER noise, every melancholy baby-blue note is a personal effect a kid anym ore) behind the sledgehammer-love sound, he continues to hit the right num bers in betting what’s going to sound good. : D ID Y O U K N O W ? LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actor Clint Eastwood has w ritten a $30,000 check for a group campaigning to defeat California Chief Ju stic e R o se B ird a n d tw o colleagues, the g ro u p ’s campaign m anager said. YOUR ASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! Eastwood’s contribution was received last week by Crime Victims for Court R e fo rm , s a id L ee Stitzenberger. • W h ip la s h • N e c k P ain •H ead ach es • B a c k P ain • S h o u ld e r P ain • A c c id e n ta l In ju ries Stitzenberger was quoted,, in Monday’s editions of the Los A n g ele s H erald Exam iner as saying th at Eastwood, who earlier this year was elected m ayor of Carmel, m ade the donation after attending a m eeting earlier this month sponsored by tiie group. Among the speakers was M arianne F ra z ie r, the m other of a child whose killer’s death sentence was overturned by the California Supreme Court. The group is seeking to oust Bird and Justices Cruz Reynoso and Joseph Grodin in the Nov. 4 election. will accept your insUrance, provide a student discount, with little or n o out-of-pocket expense to you. We TEMPE SCOTTSDALE 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 9 4 1 -2 9 0 9 D r. D o n a ld N e ls o n 3 9 K ) S. R u ra l R d . # E D r. S te p h e n 7 3 3 3 N ie ls o n E. T h o m as R d. S tiff N e c k & Back! W h ip la sh ! One of Eastwood’s bestknown ro les is “ D irty H a r r y ” C a lla h a n , a hardened San Francisco d e te c tiv e w ith little sym pathy toward crim inals. GIBRALTAR (A P) — Rock stars Cyndi Lauper, Bob Geldof, Paul Young and toe Pretenders were among the m usicians who turned a B ritish Royal Navy aircraft carrier into a floating stage with the Rock of G ibraltar as toe background. FdlYllLY HAIR CUTTERS FREE SHAMPOO W ITH T N I The occasion Sunday was the taping aboard the HMS Ark Royal of “Rock Around the Rock,” a C hristm as s p e c ia l fo r B r ita in ’s Grenada TV. " Geldof, best known as the organizer of last year’s Live Aid concerts for fam ine relief, said later a t a news conference it was “great to be back in front of the m ic ro p h o n e s p la y in g music.” PO R T O F S P A IN , Trinidad (AP) — Nobel P e a c e P r iz e w in n e r Desmond Tutu will arriv e in Trinidad Dec. 4 for a fiveday visit, the Anglican Church in P ort of Spain said Monday. The visit to the two-island southern Caribbean nation of Trinidad and Tobago is being sponsored by the church and the University of the West Indies. Tutu is Anglican archbishop of Cape Town, South Africa, and a leading opponent of his c o u n try ’s sy s te m of apartheid. A Perfect Cut Every Time No appointment necessary ever! Bring the whole family Merit « » W T T fK |p m L University & Rural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 968-8008 i Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun, 12-5 Designer Perm | s2 6 °° I Includes: 'Shampoo and Designer Perm •Perfect,Cut •Styling ■• ■ L o n g h a ir «lightly h ig h e r 1981 No Appowim fit« family h m C mMw » I m J state ft— » Wednesday, October 99,1986 Page 19 fHcks Mystery filmmaking plagues ‘Belizaire’ By CAROLYN NELSON Stale Press “ Belizaire The Cajun” *★ As far as filmmaking goes, Glen P itre’s “Belizaire the Cajun” would m ake a terrific m urder-m ystery game. Set in Lousiana’s bayou country in the mid 19th century, the movie focuses on Belizaire Breaux, a crafty CajUn folk healer played by Armand Assanté, who tries to unravel the truth of the m urder of local land owner Matthew P erry (Will Patton). Complications abound: P erry ’s father (Ernie Vincent) is swayed by the argum ents (rf his power-hungry son-in-law, Jam es Willoughby (Stephen M cHattie), to organize a band of anti-Cajun vigilantes. The younger P erry, however, was somewhat sym pathetic to thé Cajun people; he had taken one for his common-law wife and was reticent to persecute the Cajuns. Belizaire’s younger brother, Hypolite Leger (played by Michael Schoeffling), is the prim e suspect, but Belizaire confesses to the m urder in a-bid to quell the vigilante attacks. Belizaire manages to resolve the situation literally at the last m inute — on the gallows where he is about to be hanged —with a little help from his m ystic gifts. Set the table for Cajun cuisine, have the guests take off their shoes, and voila! M urder-mystery with a New Orleans flavor. FILMSTRIP ss 0 ° Ö-C ★ * * * Excellent; * * * Good; * ★ OK; ★ Flop “Children of a Lesser God” * * * ★ Oscar-winner William Hurt gives a stunning perform ance as a teacher for the deaf who falls for a hearing-im paried woman. M arlee Matlin, who is deaf in real life, m akes an im pressive screen debut as H urt’s love interest. The film glows with warm th and a script th at works so well that the audience will forget they’re watching a movie. Playing at Harkins Camelview Theater, 70th Street and Camelback Road in Scottsdale. R ated R. “The Color of Money” * ★ ★ * Paul Newman and Tom Cruise rack up the nine balls in thissem i-sequel to 1961’s “The H ustler.” M artin Scorsese directs with sheer excellence here. Cruise plays Newman’s up-and-coming protege in the hustling pool circuit. The film is rated R. Playing at Harkins Camelview Cinema. “ Jum pin’Jack Flash” * ★ * Form er O scar contender Whoopi Goldberg, counts her corn rolls and team s up with director Penny M arshall fo r'a gam e of comedy volleyball. Goldberg plays a baids employee who gets a m essage in her computer term inal from “Jum pin' Jack F lash,” a British agent stranded in Europe. Playing a t local theaters. R ated R. “ Name Of The Rose” * * % Sean Connery ¡days a super sleuth in a monk’s cassock to solve the bizarre m ystery m urders plaguing a Benedictine m onastery. Although a tad irreverent, the film doesn’t want for action— violence or sexual. The only problem is this film can’t decide whether to be a m ystery or a love story. Playing at Cine Capri, 24th Street and Camelback Road. Rated R. “Peggy Sue Got M arried” * ★ V2 Kathleen T urner follows in the footsteps of Michael J. Fox as she lands back in 1960 and is faced with the choice of rem arrying her drippy husband (Nicolas Cage) or another high school sweetheart. D irector Francis Coppola barely gets away with this one. Playing a t AMC Lakes, Rural and Baseline roads. Rated PG-13. “ Soul M u ” * * * % C. Thomas Howell wants to go to H arvard and there s only one scholarship left — for a black student. “Soul Man” is an enjoyable comedy which shows th e true colors of bigotry and predjudice. Howell stars as a kid who poses as a black student in order to get into the prestigious law school. Playing a t Sun Devil, 6, Rated PG-13. “Th&t’s IJMfc” ★ ★ ★ Blake Edwards uses his wife, Julie Andrews, and his own house to bring us another autobiographical account of his life, ja c k Lemmon stars as a man caught in the change (rf life process. He does « lot of babbling, but the film does paint a pretty picture of what it's h^e facing the truth, flay in g a t The Kachina, Scottsdale Road, south (rf Camelback in Scottsdale. Rated PG-13. “ Trick or T reat” * M arc P rice (Skippy from TV’s “Fam ily Ties” ) stars as a hard rods music fan who’s idol dies and leaves him with a few sadistic surprises. The movie lacks a decent storyline and seem s doomed from the minute it shows actor Tony Fields (“Chorus Line — The Movie) sporting a thin line o f leather around his genitals. H . y ^ . . A MC F l ^ V l ^ g oy w M R T K |g o 8 Bringing with him credits from “P rivate Benjam in,” “Unfaithfully Yours” and “I, The Ju ry ,” Assante plays the healer Belizaire with an appealing sense of humor. It is no m ystery that he received a Special Ju ry Prize from the USA Film Festival in March 1986 for the role. The rest of the cast is equally as effective in their roles. Patton portrays both sides of the torn Matthew Perry, and McHattie is perfectly sinister. Robert DUvall puts in a cameo as the preacher as well as serving as the film ’s creative consultant, and Robert Redford’s Sundance Institute supplied some development assistance. W riter/director/co-producer P itre spent his $900,000 budget wisely; the film includes some captivating locations. Many of the extras wäre locals, adding to the authenticity of the scenery. “ Belizaire” offers only one truly annoying aspect: the bobbing boom microphone that ruins the feeling of m ore than one scene. Even though this film is P itre’s first feature endeavor, the star-studded help he employed would be expected not to perm it such a silly and prevalent error. But maybe it’s an im portant clue to the vital scenes, something like the cassette-tape hints in any good boxed m urder-m ystery. 1986 INTRAMURAL SPORTS CROSS COUNTRY RUN KIWANIS PARK November 12 { M a p s a v a ila b le in In tr a m u ra l O ffice, P .E . W e st B u ild in g ) E N TR IES D U E T h u rsd a y, O ct. 30 by 4 p.m . Intramural Office, P.E. West Bldg. D IV ISIO N S Men’s A & B Women’s EN TRYFEE $5 entry fee per entrant. At check-in each entrant will receive a T-shirt (100% cotton) and a race number. Runners must show their ASU photo I.D. or any other photo I.D. to be entered in the race. ASSOÖATEDBSTUDENTS O f » » A t l O N A « ST A T f -♦ t j t e j V g H > 1 T V, NA AAjf* The meet is open to individuals and team entrants. A maximum of five members may run on a team but only the first three men and two women finishers count towards the team total. They must finish the race. Page 20 Wednesday October 2 9.1986 Actor opens book of intellectual chills By CARRI L. M ITCHELL Stata Press Halloween is traditionally a night when Valley residents are plagued with little spooks haunting their front doors or partying die night away in silly costumes. But this year the ASU K err Cultural Center is offering Halloween chills of à m ore intellectual nature. Local actor, Geoffrey P latts will do a dram atic reading of five of Edgar Allen Poe’s thrilling tales a t 8 p.m . Friday at the K err Cultural Center. “ My purpose is not cheap thrills but to give prose to the audience w ritten by a great m aster, ” P latts said. P latts will be reading the stories, “ ‘Oval P o rtrait,” “Masque of the Red D eath,” the “Tell-Tale H eart” and the poem “TheR aven.” “ . . . And he would not see that the tints which he spread upon the canvas were drawn from the cheeks of her who sat beside him. . . And then the tint was placed; and, for a moment the painter stood entranced before the work which he had wrought; but in the next while he yet gazed, he grew tremulous and very pallid and aghast and crying with a loud voice,'This is indeed Life itself!" and turned to regard his beloved : She was dead.’’ — E dgar Allen Poe, “O vallPortrait” A fter a brief interm ission, P latts wiù conclude the evening with the “The P it and the Pendulum ,”' a story about a m an sentenced to a bizarre style of death by the Spanish Inquisition. G eoffrey Platts A COMEDY F R E E S O U L M A N S O U V E N IR M S III 0606 ■ LAKES 6 SASiUHESO. ».OM UOM W . AND SOUL. j Two Fumons Star® I Hamburgers for ) $ 1 .9 9 IT0WNÄC0ÜNTRY6S Ì C R M 21 S a v e $ 1.1 1 Offer good through Nov. 5,1986. V s 7-3 5 P O I ■mm ■ H 9SM 2Ö Ö I Savings from C a rib jc WITH HEART with any weekday admission to SQ U L M AN at one of these A M C THEATRES: ‘«MNEW MOUincruNES C----- 1 LOW ROUND-TRIP FARES FROM PHOENIX $178 MILWAUKEE . $188 PORTLAND .. $178 SEATTLE . . . . $118 DENVER..... $198 LOS ANGELES $38 SACRAMENTO AND MORE! $178 $138 $158 $118 $38 $118 $ i. 4 5 C RM 2011 S a v e $ 1 .4 5 Offer good only at: 960 East University In the Cornerstone. Shopping Mall Tempo, Arizona 960 East University III the Cornerstone Shopping Mall Tempo, Arizona Not vatid with any other offer or discount. One coupon per _ customer visit, please. Two Old Time Star« Hamburgers For The Price O f One Offer good through Nov. 5,1986. O ffe r g o o d o n ly at: Éfc NEW WORLDPICTURES l p ii-1 3 l« « B . I SUNVALUYPUIZA10 CHICAGO NEW YORK..... MINNEAPOLIS.. SAN FRANCISCO DES MOINES... SAN DIEGO .... “. . il saw that the crescent was designed to cross the region of my heart It would fray the serge of my robe — It sould return and repeat its operations — again ■— and again. .Twice again it swung, and”a sharp sense of pain shot through every nerve. . . ” P latts §aid he feels Poe’s writing is so effective because of the author’s ability to build suspense and to take a them e and pursue it to its clim ax in the short'story form. “People can lose them selves in the short story b etter than in poetry. They can dose their eyes and m ake their own movie,” he said. P latts, a native of England, moved to Arizona 25 years ago. He said he first got the idea to begin doing dram atic readings five years ago. “I read an article about how (Charles) Dickens had come over to America and had traveled around and read his stories,” he said! “This was so widely declaimed he was aide to go back to England and retire on his earnings from it. This gave me the inspiration to read some of my own desert journals.” , - ’ . -* * P latts said he then progressed to reading other works by Charlotte and Em illy Bronte, Anton Chekov and his favorites W..Somerset Maugham and Guy de M aupassant. Tickets for the reading a t $5 are available a t the K err Cultural Center, 6110 N. Scottsdale Road, as well as Gammage and D illard’s ticket offices. • Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. 1986 N o t valid w ith a n y o th e r o ffe r o r d is c o u n t. O n e c o u p o n p e r c u s to m e r visit, p le a se . Limit t h r e e p e r c o u p o n . e Carl Karcher Enterprises. Inc. 1986 The Red Hot Chili Peppers • T.S.O.L. • Theolonious Monster Call Now ! Fares increase Soon! M I L L A V E N U E T R A V E L 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 Restrictions apply. Fares subject to change. S U N D E V IL R O O M S S P E C IA L $ 3 8 . 8 8 with this coupon N o w t h r o u g h D e c . 2 7 ,1 9 8 6 A S U Students. Faculty, Staff and their guests. Present this coupon and your A S U 1.0« upon registration. The rate is discounted, but the service isn’t! You will receive •A room with two double beds or one king size. •Use of our pool & hot tub. •Complimentary coffee each morning. •Complimentary cocktail each evening. •Free Showtime/ESPN/CNN. ■ \^ o ß u & cu ) â w rv: T E M P E / A S U • 915 E. A p a c h e B lvd. • 968-3451 Tickets $7.50 in advance • $9.00 day of show Jeffery Osborne Special Guests Oran“juice” Jones Thurs., Nov. 6 • 7:30 p.m. • $12.50 sports state Press Page 21 Wednesday, October 29,1986 Tubeless By BOB HEILER State Press “not very happy” with the decisions of CBS not to cover the game, which pits the seventh-ranked Devils against the If you live anywhere other than greater Phoenix or Seattle, sixth-ranked Huskies. ASU and Washington are going to square off in tire best game “CBS decided to go with Miami-Florida State instead,” you’ll never see this Saturday. Muldoon said. “They cannot do it as a doubleheader because The national networks that have contracts with the Pac-10 they have already contracted to do an NBA game on conference have turned down the game in favor of previous Saturday. or preferred commitments. “Lots of people are interested in the NBA right now,” Jim Mtddoon, director of m edia relations for the Pac-10, is Muldoon added sarcastically. Darrin Tupper and the rest of the Sun Dovlls will not bo soon around tho nation In tholr Pac-10 matchup against the Washington Husldoa. Local affiliates in Phoenix and Seattle have picked up the game, but no regional or national coverage is slated. KTSP (Channel 10 in Phoenix) will broadcast the gam e live a t 7:30 p.m. The Pac-lO’s contract with CBS expires this year, and the conference has already signed a 3-year contract with ABC to take over after its expiration, according to Muldoon. “We’re happy to be changing networks in light of this decision,” Muldoon said. “But unfortunately that left us with absolutely no leverage in trying to get CBS to televise this gam e.” Len Deluca, director of program planning for CBS sports, is not much happier about the game going without national coverage than Muldoon. “If this was a situation where we did not have a prior commitment, we would have gone with a split-regional with M iami-Florida State and ASU-Washington,” Deluca said. “But that option was not open to us.” CBS had committed, as part of its contractual agreem ent with the NBA, to televise an opening-weekend game, which had been planned for Oct. 25. But the NBA pushed back its opening weekend to Nov. 1, so as to avoid conflict with the World Series. This left CBS with a commitment to televise the Los Angeles Lakers-Houston Rockets gam e Nov. 1. Since the basketball game coverage must start a t 1:30 MST, an d CBS had decided to go with the Miami game im m ediately before that, the only spots left open for the ASU game were 10 a.m . to 1:30 p.m. or 5 p.m. to 7:30 MST. “We could not in good conscience ask ASU and Washington to kick off at 10:10 a.m .,” Deluca said. “And to show the gam e after the NBA gam e would m ean that we could only show it on the West Coast, becuase of our commitments to our local affiliates. “ In our minds, to use one of our Pac-10 games to show to 14 percent of the nation was not a good decision. I would much rather be in a position to show another Pac-10 game to the whole nation on Nov. 8, Nov. 15 or Nov. 22.” Deluca was unhappy that his network would be unable to televise the ASU-Washington game. “ It’s going to be a great gam e,” he said. “It’s an em barrassm ent of riches this week. “We do not have the luxury of; say, a cable sports network, because they do not have the sam e kinds of commitments to local affiliates.” WTBS, the cable network with a contractual agreem ent with the Pac-10, is televising the Navy-Notre Dame game Saturday, a game which the network com m itted to televising last sum m er. John Van De Grift, sports programming director for WTBS, said that his network would definitely televise the Devils-Huskies m atchup were it not for its previous commitments. “We had m ade this commitment during the summertime, ” Van De G rift said. “Quite honestly, we assumed that ASUWashington would be a nationally televised game on one of the networks. We didn’t think we’d be able to get to it. It’s going to be a great game. It’s too bad people aren’t going to see it.” Van De Grift said that WTBS likes to televise at least one Army or Navy game every season, and that this weekend would be the network’s only opportunity to get a Notre Dame game this year. “CBS also dropped out on USC-ASU,” Van De G rift said. “It’s interesting that there seem to be a lot of good Pac-10 games not being covered. ” B aseb all p la y e rs sh o u ld leave boxing to p rofession als R O AD R A L L I E S C A N B E F U N I always wondered what it would be like to only work six or seven months out of the year like baseball players. I thought finding things to do m ight turn out to be more difficult than actually working, so I decided towork. I mean, some people, like Bill Buckner, have a hard tim e finding things like baseballs th at piddle through his legs during the season. B ut,for the m ost p att, players only have trouble finding things during the off season. I guess if I had a six-month vacation, I would get a little bored, and I would propably participate in a road rally or two like Lloyd Moseby and Gary Pettis to pass som etim e. I just hope I am a better driver than they are because I know I am not as good of a lighter. Anyway, during this road rally, Moseby and P ettis were slightly injured after making a wrong turn somewhere outside Palm Springs, Calif. But they didn’t get huff Carol Boos Asst. Sports Editor then. H ie injuries were incurred after a fight broke out between the two athletes and several Indians claim ing the players were trespassing on their land. Moseby of the Toronto Blue Jays, and Pettis, of the California Angels, were told by the Indians that they w ere on private property and asked them to leave. But no, the baseball players wanted to try their hand at boxing. I don’t know what kind of boxers they turned out to be or if they were even that good, but they managed to get their names in the paper anyway. Moseby was punched several tim es and Pettis was nicked on the hand, possibly with a knife. No arrests were made. Maybe baseball players have a better rapport with policemen than they do with umpires. PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM The instant-replay rule is on its last leg, and the tape is just about ready to run out. Supporters who once thought the new rule would m ake calls seem perfect are squirming in their seats, while people like me are saying “toldya so, toldya so.” But in the meantime, we get to watch games like Denver vs. Pittsburgh, where a pass behind the line of scrim m age by John Elway to Gerald Willhite, who then passes to Steve Watson in thé end zone for an easy six points, right? Wrong. The guy on the field was waiting on the guy upstairs who was watching the World Series or something. And the TD was not a TD because according to the guy on the field, the original pass went forward. At first the officials w ere not opposed to the new rule, which put the fate of most calls in the hands of someone 50 feet above the game. I could not understand why they would not care if someone upstairs said, “No, no, you’re wrong” —until now. Now after being downplayed by fans for so long, the officials on the Held are ready to throw some of the snowballs, em pty beer cans and paper airplanes a t someone else. But they are throwing them at the people upstairs, the people supporters say are oldtim ers. I think they are pushing the wrong people out to pasture. Even if the guys up in the booth are a little gray, they have been around the league a long tim e and have earned the right to sit up in the air-conditioned booth. Being over-the-hill doesn’t mean they can’t see. We are not asking them to run a 90-yard touchdown. If the supporter of the instant-replay rule are going to call the guys upstairs old fogies, fine; set them out to pasture with the instim t-replay rule. Lets ju st say we tried it, and we didn’t like it. -4 .Page 22 State Press Wednesday, October 29,1986 Intramurals crow n new racquetball cham pions By STEVE ADAM S State Press The intram ural racquetball tournam ent sm ashed off Sunday with divisional champions being crowned in the women’s A and B doubles and the men’s B singles. In sem ifinal action in m en’s division I, Ed Bushm an defeated Tim M iller to advance to the finals against Oscar ViUansenor, who disposed of Rob DeMaraville. Villansenor cam e out psyched and defeated DeM araville to take the Division I championship and give him a definite berth in the competition for overall champion in the men’s singles. In the m en’s division II sem ifinals, Leon Murphy cam e out swinging as he defeated Craig Lem er to set up a finals m atch against Luis Rivero, who outlasted Gordie Monroe. In the championship m atch, Murphy put up a strong offensive gam e against Rivero, but he fell short. This set up a powerhouse m atch between the two divisional champs. When it was all over, Rivero had come out on top and becam e the new 1986 m en’s racquetball champion. In the women’s doubles A action, the team of Kendra B axter and Lee Watson coasted easily into the final after they received a bye. They went up against Kathy North and Carlee Scheidt, who defeated Heather Grim e and Jodi Gallant. In the end it was the team of B axter and Watson that pulled GOOD NEW S! away with the victory and captured the championship. Meanwhile, over in the women’s B doubles action, there was not much action, since all but two team s dropped out of the tournam ent. Both of the team s that reached the finals, Katherine Swartz-Gloria Morales and Jodi Lammers-Steph Palm er; got th e re ' because the other doubles team s in the division forfeited their m atches. , “We wished that m ore of the team s that had signed up for the tournam ent would have shown up or a t least brought racquets to play,” Morales said. According to the students, it was never stated that racquets would not be provided. According to the intram ural departm ent, the only thing that was specifically stated as being provided for the tournam ent was racquetballs. People who signed up for the tournam ent were expected to have their own racquets. “The end result was that only two team s were left to play the tournam ent, ” Swartz said. Consequently, it set up a m atch between two team s that had no preparation going into the final and both team s were playing each other cold. H ie lack of preparation didn’t seem to bother Swartz and Morales as they crushed Lam m ers and Palm er in the best two-of-three, 21-13,21-4. “We were really excited about winning but were disappointed about the lack of turnout, especially by the sororities,” Swartz said. This was: another intram ural tournam ent in which independents won the championships and shut out the Greek organizations. The only previous tim e it happened was in the m en’s volleyball championships this year. In other intram ural news: •The Cross Country deadline is fast approaching. Students who wish to participate should have their entries in no later than 4 p.m. on Thursday Oct. 30. Members of the winning team s will receive 100 percent cotton T-shirts, according to the intram ural departm ent. •For the first tim e in intram ural history, g corec two-person volleyball tournam ent will be held Nov. 14-16. “This is the first tim e we have ever done something like this,” said Juliette Moore, assistant director of intram urals. “This is a special edition and is something that has never been tried by the intram ural departm ent before. “There will be both A and B divisional competition. ” The entries should be turned in no later than 4 p.m. on Nov. |. r ^" L Meanwhile in club-sport news: •The ASU Fencing club participated in the October Arizona Divisional Foil Open held a t ASU Sunday Oct. 26. Jam es B arbour placed second, Michael Poppre took fourth and Daniel Rothman finished eighth. Y o u ca n sta y o n top o f the new s becau se w e do. O F F IC E P R O D U C T S W AREH O U SE "OPEN TO THE PUBLIC” brother Where you get name brands at warehouse prices! 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(with th is coupon) *On Regular, Not Sicilian Pizza 1 E x p ire s 11-15-86. •SHAM POO •CONDITION •PRECISION CUT •BLOW DRY REGULAR PRICES Women $15 Men $13 Full S e t .............. $25 Regular $45 A cry lic O v e rla y s.$35 X / s \ Regular $55 $55 Regular ^ F i n-i l l - Ins. n s.. ... .. ..___ Fi . . $18 $11 709 S. Forest A v e ., Tem pe N orth o f U n iversity • B eh in d the C h u ck Box • In O x fo rd S qu are C a ll 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 Open Tuesday, W ednesday & Thursday evenings till 9 p.m. ja g i^ _____ analyste^ State Pf*» : Page 23 Wednesday, October 89,1986 Crunch Defense name of game for Devils, Washington By JAYTAYLO R State Press The one thing that nearly all great football team s have in common is that they play good defense. Under that criterion, both ABU and Washington qualify as great teams. Washington has one of the highest-ranked defensive units in the nation, and have had all year. The Devils have been good, but have not put up quite the numbers the Huskies have. They have been tough whenever they needed to be. The Huskies are currently fourth in thé country in scoring defense, yielding an average of 11.9 points per game, while ASU is ninth, giving up 13 per contest. Washington is led defensively by tackle Reggie Rogers, an honorable mention all-American and first-team all-Pac-10 selection last year. He was picked by most observers as a pre-season all-America this year and has lived up to all that was expected of him. Last week against Oregon he recorded his fifth sack of the year as well as his llth tackle for a loss, most on the team . But Rogers is not the only roadblock for ASU’s offense. Both the Husky inside linebackers have been strong against the run, one reason UW is second in the country in rushing defense, allowing pnly 61.6 yards per gam e, and third in total defense a t 242 yards per game. David Rill has 81 tackles, two tackles for losses and one sack through the first seven games, while Tom Erlandson has garnered 72 tackles, caused two fumbles, recovered one, deflected 10 passes and has one tackle for a loss. But probably the most im pressive statistic on the Husky defense is how often it takes the ball away from its opponents. Washington has 28 takeaways this year — 14 interceptions and 14 fumble recoveries — yet will be facing a Sun Devil offense that has made a practice of hanging on to the ball. The Devils haven’t turned it over in the last three games. ASU is not without defensive strengths of its own. The m ajor consideration is the depth, particularly on the defensive line, where 10 players have seen action this year. That depth allows the Devils’ defense to be stronger in the fourth quarter than its opponents, which is one reason it has given up only seven fourth quarter points and only 24 secondhalf points all year. The linebacking has also been strong. Both inside linebackers — Greg Clark and Stacy Harvey — and Devil back (outside linebacker) Scott Stephen have been Pac-10 defensive players of the week this year. The secondary has allowed opponents to complete 55 percent of its passes for an average of 186,6 yards per game. But they have allowed only four of those passes to go for touchdowns, and they have picked off seven. All-Pac>10 defensive lineman Reggie Rogers Is one reason the Huskies lead the conference In defense. So what it comes down to is the fact that both team s have alm ost identical defenses with very clo se,to the sam e statistics. Expect both team s to play well. Both have too much talent to fall ap art completely. But .the team that wins will be the team that makes the outstanding plays, not the average ones. Sun DevH detentive end Jim Reynosa drills Washington quarter­ back Chris Chandler during lest years 36-7 ASU win at Sun Devil Stadium. Saturday’s gam e m atches sim ilar offenses Don’t be m istaken, folks, there is no lack of respect between ASU and Washington. Both team s and their coaches know they will have their work cut out for them in Saturday’s 7:30 p.m. showdown in Sun Devil Stadium. If the Devils win, they will be one step closer to their first Pac-10 title. I f Washington wins, they will be in the conference lead. “It’s showdown tim e, folks.” ASU coach J ohn Cooper, said. “Washington is an excellent, solid team , one that can run and throw . . . The Huskies will rem em ber last year (a 36-7 ASU win) plus they’re backed into a corner because they’ve lost a conference game already. Lonzell Hill is their big play guy ami Rick Penney is a steam roller. We haven’t faced someone like him yet. We’ll be sky-high. I’m looking forward to the challenge. ” Cooper has every right to be concerned. ABU fullback Darin Tupper goat In fo ra touchdown against Washington last year. Tuppar has scored three touchdowns on five recaptions this year. Hill has caught 27 passes this year for 447 yards and seven touchdowns, and nobody has figured a way to collar the Husky wide receiver yet. “I am m ore concerned about (Washington quarterback Chris) Chandler and Hill throwing and catching the football than about any other phase of Washington’s offense. Hill is the man that I’ve seen making the big plays.” But the Huskies have a potent ground gam e as well. Tailback Vince Weathersby and fullback Rick Fenney lead an attack that is averaging over 210 yards per game. Husky coach Don Jam es said that W eathersby has improved considerably over last year, particularly in the area of being able to break tackles. “We work hard as a coaching staff in running drills to spread the base and not go down on the first hit,” Jam es said. “People have brought him down, but it takes a good shot. Of course these guys (ASU) are bigger and stronger. .../ ■£. \ . •. “ It will be a lot harder to break tackles against Arizona State than it would be, say, against Bowling Green. ” ASU’s running game is much the sam e as the Huskier’. The Devils are averaging 212 yards per game, with four backs seeing extensive action. In addition to starters Channing Williams and D arryl H arris, backups Darin Tupper and Paul Day have made significant contributions. In addition to Tupper’s 121 yards rushing, he has caught five passes — three of them for touchdowns. Jam es is concerned about the ASU ground arsenal. “ (H arris) is quick, but the edge they have is the fullback. Williams can bust it up inside or. he can get outside. This is probably the one team we’ve played that’s definitely going to try to get the fullback established. So H arris is obviously on a par with anyone we’ve played, but the fullback is better as a runner." But the gam e will not be decided entirely on the ground. The quarterbacks will play a m ajor role in the outcome of the game. Jeff Van R aaphorst has been excellent in the last four gam es, and has moved to the top of the Pac-10 ratings in passing efficiency, and is eighth nationally. He has completed 76 of 131 for 1,070 yards and 10 touchdowns, with only six interceptions. He has completed over 71 percent of his passes since the Washington State gam e for 703 yards and seven touchdowns. Chandler’s num bers are nothing to be asham ed of either. He is second in the. conference in passing efficiency, having completed 95 of 163 for 1,173 yards and 13 touchdowns with eight interceptions. H e ranks 14th nationally. Both team s are also strong a t tight end. The Huskies Rod Jones is the secondleading receiver on the team with 20 catches for 184 yards and four touchdowns. The Devils use both Jeff Gallim ore and Stein Koss, who have combined to haul in 21 tosses for 238 yards and three scores. Gallimore is ham pered by a bad knee, but will play Saturday. A lot of the gam es in the series between these two clubs have been high-scoring affairs. Don’t look for this to be tme of them, as defenses and conservative play-calling should rule the day. Expect both coaches to sit back and w ait for the other team to make the key m istake that will determ ine the winner. — JA YTA YLO R Page 24 Stet» Pros Wednesday, October 29, Beware of Dogs Arrival of Huskies cause for Sun Devils’ alarm B yC A R O L B O O S State Press Cooper told reporters Tuesday at his weekly press luncheon. “This ballgam e is the kind that can be decided on one play —- good or bad.” At this tim e of the season, injuries are expected; but the reports are few. Jeff Gallimore, who suffered a sprained knee and ankle, spent six hours in the., training room Monday and is expected to play. Anthony P arker is still suffering from a broken blood vessel in his thigh and will be replaced by Jeff Joseph. On the Huskies’ side, starting offensive left tackle Rick MacLeod will play after suffering from an eye injury incurred during the Stanford gam e. O utside linebacker Paul Waskom is scheduled for thumb surgery Monday. The Huskies are playing on the Sun Devils’ turf for the third consecutive time. “Sure, I’d rath er play them at hom e,” Washington coach Don Jam es said. “But if you’re going to win the Pac-10 title, you have to be able to go op the road and win.” “My recollections of last year (ASU won 36=7) and ASU are not very good,” Jam es told reporters Tuesday via speakerphone. “We may have won the toss, but that was about it.” Beware. The Huskies are coming to town. And a Husky is not even close to a Ute. Huskies are m ean and big. So big that they can scare a Sun Devil. “It’s alm ost frightening to watch some of these gam e film s,” Coach John Cooper said. “Watching someone lead Ohio State by 24-0 and BYU by 42-7 at halftim e can be frightening.” ; The m atchup places the biggest defensive line and the h ighest-scoring team (Washington) in the conference on one side of the line and the Pac-lO’s most efficient passer, Jeff Van Raaphorst, (leading the conference by completing 95 of 165 (.583), passes for 1,173 yards) on the other. Husky quarterback Chris Chandler is the second most efficient passer in the league. “Washington is an excellent, solid team , one that can run and throw. The Huskies have a big defensive line (272-pbund average). Our defensive line is big (276 pounds tackle-to-tackle), but Washington’s (284) is the biggest in the league — bigger than a lot of NFL clubs,” Cooper said. . The showdown is also one of the few last thorns to be cut before the Devils or the Huskies reach the Rose. Cooper rem em bers too. Capturing a win from the Huskies would “ We gdt.all the breaks last y ear,” Cooper force UA, UCLA, and USG to go undefeated said. “But last year’s gam e doesn’t have the rest of the season while allowing room anything to dp with this year’s. They’ll be for one m ark (except to UA) in the loss reminding them selves, but how .high can column for the Devils. you get for a ballgame? This gam e is to the Washington Huskies “ I don’t think they’re going to hav any like a life preserver is to a sinking cat. The m ore emotion than we will ju st because they Huskies haye one loss against Southern lost last y ear.” California (10-20); one m ore loss m ight even Last year, in the Devils 36-7 drubbing of be too much for a life preserver to handle. the Dpgs, Washington was without the But Cooper is sure the Huskies will come services of fullback Rick Fenney, who is up fighting for a ir Saturday. currently 10th on the all-tim e Husky running “This will be the best football team we’ve list and needs ju st 71 yards to mqire up to played since I’ve been a t Arizona State,” seventh. r K G S A ir Conditioning Brakes & Tune-up Carburetors Electrical AUTOMOTIVE SER V ICE a n d R EP A IR S Am erican & Foreign Cadillac Corvette 910 S. Hohokam Drive, Suite #122 Tempe, AZ 85281 GREG CRITSER 968*2294 Betw een 48th & 52nd stre e t south o f university I I I I I I I I I I I I I L. Senior fullback Rick Fenney will aee hie first-ever action against the Sun Devils, Saturday. JOHN’S SHOES LU66A0E REPAIR •R esoling Tennis Shoes •O rthopedic Work •Com plete Line of S h p l Care Products •Birkenstock Repair 718 S, Mill Avenue Tem pe • 967-9101 If The Shoe Fits, Repair It At John’s ! ' Hours: M-F 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sat. 9 â.m.-5 p.m. »Closed Sunday '“ 1.. I I I t I 1 I I I I 1 I I I brought to you by 't SAGA and the S T A T E R ft£ S S ASU. M M UM UCK JNHMG CHUR siivè F so là riu m FREE TANNING SESSION H igh Tech T an n ing Single ....... $4.50 5 session ...*.$19.50 12 S&SSiOn . . . $50.50 w/purchase of any tanning session | package With coupon. Expires 12-15-8& . ' TEM PE MIGUEL Sales • Rentals • Repairs Band Instalments & Accessories Drums ★ Recorders ★ Banjos * Sieet Music Etc. A student of Andres Segovia Guitar Lessons in Folk & Classical by Miguel Authorized Dealer for: ALVAREZ... GUILD... KH0N0... YAMAHA... OVATION... 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Underdog C O LLEG E □ ARIZONA 3 □ Southern C ai □ U CLA (away) 23 □ OREGO N STATI □ STANFORD 9 □ Washington Stati □ Oregon 15 □ CALIFORNIA □ Pehn State 27 □ WEST VIRGINIA □ MIAMI 19 □ Floride State □ IOWA evea_D Ohio State □ Texas A&M 6 O S M U .. □ Auburn 12 j O FLORIDA □ NEBRASKA 49 □ Kansas State PRO» □ Denver 2 □ L A . RAIDERS P N.Y. QIANTS 3 » 3 . :p:OaWw-®f‘ I -H U Y . m m l m '□ S E T T L E □ NEW ENGLAND M p "fV □ Atlante □ Buffalo ' éven □ TAM PA B AY ¥«MUy N tligibit R wit Um g M f r l a it Miiv^trM coMinsnui breakfast» from Sticky Buns and Hot Wsaniss. Second Priz* is ! » Sfili h n O tr tn m . Third M i* Reg. $15.. in d u d d s s h a m p o o , c o n d it io n e r s cut. Wtth coupon. E s p ira i 12-20-68. ? * : c h trn pizza front Mama N larwt.RfthprtaaafraolundtalUnionStaUon. Cali State Press, 965-7572. to redeem prizes. CM For Appointment £ 3E Corner Anal & University BRAND PRIZEI i » 1 An exciting new |*§| HONDA MBTBR SCOOTER! . on display at the MU LAST WEEK’S WINNERS ARE 1. MIKE McKELVY 1 WENDY JOHNSON 3. BARRY KELLEY 4. BABIAK MEHRROSTAMI 5. KAMBIZ Z0M0RR0DI State Pr««» Page 25 Wednesday, October 29,1986 Confident NY Mets already discussing shot at repeating NEW YORK (AP) — The champion New York Mets, confident and cocky through 106 regular season victories, the National League playoffs and ¡the World Series, already are talking about doing it again next season. “We will get better,” says M anager Davey Johnson, the man who vowed he would try to build a dynasty. “This Series taught us a lot. A lot of our guys will get better from it. Ron Darling. D arryl Straw berry. Even Rob Ojeda. (Dwight) Gooden (who had an earned run average of 8.00 dining the series) has a lot to prove next year. “We will get better because we have an influx of young talent. It is a trend we have set. This Series was a growing up period for a lot of our guys.” During Tuesday’s public celebration of their World Series victory over the Boston Red Sox, Mookie Wilson sounded the rallying cry. “ 1986, the Y ear of the Mets. 1987, the Y ear of the Mets. 1988, the Year of the M ets,” he told the thousands of fans. At 30, Wilson is one of the older Mets on a team that averages only 27 years of age. The three oldest Mets are the heart of the lineup — World Series MVP Ray Knight, 34 in December; Keith Hernandez, 33, and Gary Carter, 32. But all had great seasons and showed no sign of slowing. Ndne of the other starters is more than 28, and reliever Jesse Orosco, at 29, is the oldest member of the pitching staff, considered one of the best and deepest in baseball. Begrudgingly, the Red Sox acknowledged that they had been beaten by an excellent team in the seven-game Series. “They would not be here if they were not as good a team as they are,” Red Sox M anager John M cNamara .said. “They would not have w «i as many games as they did. ” Added Bill Buckner, the Red Sox’s first basem an: “Give them credit. They played a helluva Series.” The clinching 8-5 victory Monday night also made the Mets the first expansion team to win two World Series — the first was in 1969. They had won 108 games during the regular season, the most in baseball.tliis year and the most in die National League since the 1975 Cincinnati Reds won the same number. After they clinched the National League E ast title in September, it was C arter who said, “We’ve got the SH AN E STU D EN T FARES IS HERE (formerly Loa Arcos) •Plan now for holiday travel •Special prices on group get-aways Call now for semester break BUY»SELL»TRADE Your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •New & Used Books •Art Prints & Posters •Calendars & Cards •Handbound Journals M-F 10-9 SAT 10-6 dynasty going now.” Then, the Mets beat Houston in a tense six-game National League playoff, and, with the World Series title, they ran their total to 116 victories. That was the Mets’ attitude as they entered spring training after a near-miss last year. They becam e still m ore confident by running away with the NL E ast and winning by 21% games. Then came decisive Game 6 of the playoffs against Houston, when they scored three runs in the ninth inning to tie, and went on to win in 16 innings. And finally they made their destiny in Games 6 and 7 of the Series. In the sixth game, losing 5-3 in the ninth inning with two out and none mi, they rallied for three runs on Knight’s RBI single, a wild pitch and an erro r by Buckner to win 6-5 and make Game 7 possible. In the seventh game, they overcam e consecutive homers by Dwight Evans and Rich Gedman off Darling in the second inning to tie 3-3 with three runs in the sixth. Hernandez singled in two runs and another scored on C arter’s force out off Boston starter Bruce Hurst, who won Games l and 5. Knight, who was 9-for-23 for a .391 average with five RBI in the Series, led off the seventh with a tie-breaking homer off reliever Calvin Schiraldi, who also lost Game 6. The Mets went on to score two m ore runs in the inning on Rafael Santana ’s hit and Hernandez’s sacrifice fly for a 63 lead. Evans doubled in two m ore runs for the Red Sox in the eighth to make the score 6-5, but Orosco relieved and retired three hitters with the tying run «m second base. Straw berry led off New York’s two-run eighth inning with a homer for his only RBI of the Series, and Orosco singled in the final run. One of the most m arked differences between the two clubs in the Series were the bullpens. While neither club got a victory from its ace — Gooden for New York or Roger Clemens for Boston — the M ets’ relievers gave up seven earned runs in 22% innings for a 2.82 ERA, while Boston’s bullpen gave up 12 runs in 15% innings for an ERA of 7.04. Left-hander Orosco saved Games 4 and 7 and in four appearances pitched 5% scoreless innings, giving up just twohits. MEREDITH MANOR INTERNATIONAL EQOESntlAN CENTRE Individually structured program s: 1 meek through M aster's degree Programs in dressage,jumping, western, mining, breeding, business, tenebing biacksmitbing teatberworking. For more information phone or write. SUN 12-5 Box 76GI Waveriy, IV 26184 Phone 304/679-3128 C h a n g in g H ands 414 M ill Avenue 966-0203 O ld Town Tempe PANDA TRAVEL ™eHAÍRco 1126 N. Scottsdale Rd.. Tempe Drug Emporium Center (Scottsdale Rd. à Curry) No appointment necessary, or call 988-8777 Free Ticket Delivery : R-fMeSat-Saa.11-3 943-3383 Restrictionsmay apply Priest sublact to chango. a p t fo u n d a tio n p re se n ts “THE ASPEN WINTER CONFERENCE « FESTIVAL oa THEATRE A FILM” JANUARY 4-23, 1987 (1, 2 or 3 week sessions) Seminars, workshops and special events all open to the public, with college credit available- Program of over 200 film and theater presentations. GREEKS - YOUR NEEDS ARE N O T G R E E K T O US! •Beefy T's •Sw eats •Sew n on Twill Multi-color Work O u r Specialty! C o m e in n o w a n d ch eck o u r p rices! DRAFT $1.95 Club S an d w ich W RIIEOICAIX Box 12346, Aspen, Colorado 81612 (3 0 3 ) 925-2621 or 925-6360 'Reduced rates oh bousing ami skiing also atxtdabie. • t it * * . M IL L A V E . HAPPY HOURS SCREEN PRINTING 11 E. 5 t h St. • 9 6 8 - 4 2 0 8 Free hors d'œ uvres 2-7 p.m. six days a week C % HAPPY HALLOWEEN! H ey G ob lin s ! Send your “Ghoulfriend” a special message with a STATE PRESS PERSONAL. Only $1.001 HURRY... D EAD LIN E IS 3 P.M . Pasc 86 Cats lick wounds; Smith satisfieditjat I C ld S S if iC C iS I)A ready tor DSC TUCSON (AP) — Arizona coach L arry Smith said Tuesday he thinks his 14th-ranked W ildcats have whipped a case of the midseason blues as they prepare to host No. 18 Southern California in Pacific 10 Conference college football on Saturday. “We’re finally back on track ,” Smith said of the W ildcats’ 33-16 win over California here last week, which seemed to snap a spell in which Arizona moved the ball well Until it would get inside its opponents’ 20-yard line and bog down. “We’ve cracked the m ental thing,” Smith said. “The pressure is gone, so to speak.” Smith also said in his weekly news conference that the W ildcats cam e out of the Cal gam e with few injuries, but senior guard Frank Arriola was hospitalized Tuesday morning then released later in the day with an illness doctors said probably was caused by a virus. The W ildcats planned to practice junior Tom Lynch in Arriola’s place, because Arriola appeared questionable for Saturday night’s game, Smith said. The Trojans, 5-2 overall and 3-2 in Pac-10 play, lead the series 11-1 over Arizona, now 6-1 overall and 3-1 in the conference. Smith said he thinks Saturday’s contest will be a fairly even m atch. But oddsm akers were calling Arizona 5-point favorites, which Smith attributed to. the home-field advantage. “If we were playing over there, we’d be the underdogs,” he said. Southern Cal comes off a 10-0 win at Stanford, a shutout that Smith said suprised him. “When I looked a t the film, they (Southern Cal) really cam e to play. They cut down the m istakes,” Smith said. “ The guy that really em erged and totally changed their picture this week is (sophomore tailback Steve) W ebster,” who rushed for a game-high 60 yards in 16 carries as the Trojans snapped a two-game losing streak, Smith said. “He’s truly a big-play-type guy. I think we’ll see Webster quite a bit.” CLA SSIFIED AD R A TES 15 W O RDS O R LESS P ER DAY: $2.10 . . . .1 -A insertions $2.00 . . . . 5-9 insertions $1.90 . . . . . . 1 0 or more 106 for each additional word per day' CALL TODAY 965-7572 Announcements FREE REPORT! Why America needs South Africa. F a c ts which S.A.A. won't tell you. Americans for South Africa, Box 62832, Phoenix, AZ85032. HANG GLIDE! On a gently sloping hill |u st south of Temps. Fly all day only $50. Gifts/groups. W indsports, 8977121, SUMMER PROGRAM In France. Get six ASU credits. General Information meeting on O ctober 29, 3130 p.m. at BA218 (College of Business- West). Anyone interested Is welcome t o attend. _____ , ,__________ . Automobiles 1978 DATSUN station wagon, auto* matic, PS, AC, $799. Call Bob, 833-8493 or Denise, 833-1411. 1978 WHITE Chevette, good engine, $900, m ust self. Lonny, 966-6153, or ieavetnessage. _______________ 1979 280ZX, clean, runs great, loaded, $5200 (best offer). C ontact Brick, days, 966-8621; evenings, 966*3229. 1980 DATSUN 210, tight motor, new tires, new seats, good condition. Call 968-1608._________ _________________ 1981 FORD Escort, bad engine, good bpdy, $700 negotiable. Contact: Mark Patterson, 966-6709. . "I read the STATE PRESS Personal you wrote me. It w as utterly fantastic!" You too can be a hero. Place your STATE PRESS Personal today 8-5 in the basement 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. Business Opp. Help Wanted Help Wanted $500 A week. Simple, safe, work at home business. Evergreen, Dept. 4B, Box 44133, Phoenix, AZ8S064. A GREAT part-time Job with great pay could really halp pay for your educa­ tion. If you or som eone you know has th e brains for school but not the bucks, call tha Arizona Army National Guard and see If you quality, at 225-5574. (AZ-CAN) PART-TIME front counter and minor electronic repair parson for audio repair shop. $3.70 starting. 969-8663. MUSIC LOVERS- $9000/month poten­ tial, part-time. Write: Music, 2816 Duncan St., Columbia, SC 29205.______ For Rent or Lease $150 OFF move in. From $335, furnished, unfurnished, washer, dryer, celling fane, pool. Spence and Rural area. 987-0004._______________ 2, 3, 4 bedroom condos, townhpuaes, houses, near ASU fo r sale and rant. Gall Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 961-5800,8606480. DON’T MISS out! At Terrace Road A partments w s have tw o openings: a large tw o bedroom, tw o bath, and a spacious one bedroom, one bath. Laundry facilities, beautiful pool, courteous m anagement, Vi block from cam pus, 856 S. Terrace Road. 966-6640, PAPAGO ONE, two bedroom, two bath condo, all appliances, available now. Call 847-8188 after 6:00 p.m„ Eari. ROOM IN family home. Private en­ trance, laundry and bath privileges, pool, furnished. Female only. SSOtyeek. 848-8324. ________ ____________ _ TWO BEDROOM, 15 m inute walk to ASU, $250 plus $250 deposit. 888-5270, Mr! Linn, v ■ ': WALK TO ASU. Studios, one bedroom apartm ents, utilities Included. Pool, laundry taciDtias, furnished or un­ furnished, from $300-375. Marianna Apartments, 1314 E. Orange, Tempe. 966-8597. F or Sale 1983 YAMAHA Riva, hardly used, priced to sell, $1100. After 6:0Q p.m. call 264-9729. ________ 1985 PULSAR: AC, sunroof, luggage . rack, alloy rims, extended warranty, new tires and brakes, excellent condi-. don, $6990. Greg at 968-5698 or 8684)496. ‘ ' : A BEAUTIFUL color television, 25" $100; 19” color TV, $85. Cash. Call 253-5016. *79 DODGE Diplomat. Excellent condi­ tion, faculty owner, wetl-maintained. PS, PB, AM-FM, strong AC. $¿350. 965-3823.________ ' __________ BEST QUALITY, best deal aroundPC-XT compatible, com plete 640K - turbo, $645. IBM AT compatible, $1360. F ree in s ta lla tio n a n d delivery. 968-4867.__________________ . 82 RX7 5-speed, air, AM-FM cassette, louvers, alloys; lo w ' miles, finteid windows, immaculate, $6250. Phil, 948-8545. - BRAND NEW, never used, Akai turnta­ ble deck. Moving, m ust sell. $ t 10. Call 9066063. DATSUN ‘78 B210, 3 doors, auto, air conditibning, AM-FM c a sse tte , good engine. 61200.961-3653 DESPERATE, MUST sell 1961 Chevy Citation V6, 4-speed, AC, asking $1200. 963-9764. Babysitters Wanted MOTHER OF tw o year old, tike to babysit one child in her home. Experienced, references. 829-7883. Bicycles STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS TEMPE BICYCLE Shop. 330 W. Un­ iversity, 966-6896 (three blocks west of Mill). Sport, touring, commuting, rac­ ing, mountain, custom -built bikes. Expert repairs. Used bikes. ASU student discounts. : FOR SALE, wedding gown- never worn, size 9-10, white, taffeta, train, veil, shoes, garters, slip; bridesmaid dress, tpa length, green Lame, shoes, hair piece. Call starting Monday, evenings 5-7 p.m. 835-1090, Cathy.________' - HAP 2 T R W Tb Pb tr?*r J KH€W Jw ow púr m m f in a l® 7 M * t r p y w f ij / fk .b N A U K L y will memos Accepr smooth, very fast. 968-1008.__________ IBM-PC Jr., 268K, color monitor, printer adapter, modem, Basic, Lotus, others. $600.7844)499.______________________ IBM XT ¡compatibles,. 640K mother board, 2-360K drives, Sam sung high resolution monitor, com plete system $729.968-5128. WITH ¿N o m a * mom ¿up ASU TELEFUND - W e're hiring! If you have good communication skills, sales ability, and need $$$$ - call us at 965-6754 a tta r 1:00 p.m., SundayThursday.__________________________ COCKTAIL WAITRESSES and barten­ ders needed. Experienced. Apply Tuesday-Frfday after 8:00 p.m. Popular nightclub. 868-3176, Rockin' Freddies. COOKS HELPER a n d dish -o u t, evenings, full or part-time. Apply In person at 7043 E. McDowell In Scottsdale (ask for Tarry); or 4540 N. 16th St., Phoenix (ask for Jim). Qrendlndttl'a Italian Restaurant._______ EARN $480 weekly- $60 per hundred e n v elo p es s tu ffe d . G u aran teed . Homeworkers needed for company project stuffing envelopes and as­ sembling materials. Send stam ped self addressed envelope to JBK Maflcompany, PO Box 25-3, C ast ale, California 8131ft ___________ ______________ EARN MONEY In between classes. Banquet servers needed. Call 868-8068, Snelling Temporary. Call today 1_______ EXTREMELY INTERESTING part-time position with great potential. Phoenix based human resources and develop­ m ent consulting and . training Arm. Need administrative assistan t to schedule c lasses, do bookkeeping, and a s s is t in program development. Some of the work can be done from home. For appointment call Scott a t The Facilitators, 241-1832.______ w il l J N e V B ft L 0 T M B & O lb dia, New York City. Leave November 26, return November 30. $350. Morgan, 244-1771. ________ f c ; Sod-' THE MOST affordable log home plue free deck with orders placed by Christmas. Models from $4995. Free brochure on request. PO Box 38311, Phoenix, AZ 85067. 602-2444)620. (AZCAN) Help Wanted A S U TYPING C E N T E R QC7 122 E. U niversity • Tem pe » O f-U » U U n o rm AIRLINES NOW h irin g . Reservationists, flight attendants, and ground crew positions available. Call 1-619-565-1630 ext. A23AZ, for details, 24 hours. PART-TIME bookkeeper/secretary. Ac­ counting student or prior experience. 20 hours par weak. Doug, 437-0442. PLASMA DONORS. Earn u p to $30 a weak o r $120 a month. First donation $10, seco n d donation In th a sam e calendar week (Monday-Saturday) $20. University Plasm a.C anter, A ssociated Bioscience of Tampa, Inc., 1015 S. Rural Rd., Tampa, Arizona, 966-6139. Effective until further notice. . READERS) Clip, read, articles for up to $20 refundable, (AZ-CAN) WORK your own hours. and research new spaper magazine editor. Will pay each. Apply now! Call (213)391-0711, ext. 55007. SALES HELP: 8 pace Age Auto Paint Store, evenings and weekends, 20-30 hours a week, $3.35lhour plus com­ m ission to start- Must have neat appearance and references. Call Den­ nis, 836-0971. 707 S. Country Club Dr., M esa STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT hiring full-time lunch w aitresses and dinner w aiters. Apply Monday-Friday; 1:304:00 p.m. 5001 E. W ashington St.______ STUDENTS EARN $0 to $10 per hour. Leads m ake our telem arketing easier. Part-time evening hours available immediately. South S cottsdale office la c lose to cam pus 947-0508.__________ T.C. EGGINGTONS, an ex citin g breakfast and lunch restaurant has part-time w aitress and cook/food prep positions available -with great hours, 6:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. dally. Apply in person after 2:30 p m ., 1660 S. Alma School Rd. (Alma School a n d Supersti' tlon Freeway). _____________ FASHION MERCHANDISING StudentOpportunity tor sales/m anager for new S usan's Face Place It cosm etic store. Retail experience preferred. HaydenSquare. For more Information, call Susan o r Sandy, 898-2666. TEMPE EDUCATIONAL financial aid consulting firm h a s part-time position available to r evening clerical. Duties Include bhslc tiling and xeroxing, hours are 5:30-9:30 p.m. (flexible). $5 p er hour: Interested please fid out applications M Mitchell Sweet and A ssociates. 1826 S. Edward Dr., Tampa (betw een 8:00 a.m.-5:00 pm .) Location- blue-building, one block north of Broadway and west of Priest off 17th St. FOUR SPECIALTY people to r part-time Jobs: (1) Roadie, a ssist DJ’s, (2) Disc Jockey, hot mixer, (3) Disc Jockey, country,44) Disc Jockey, bi-lingual. Call Instruction G ENERAL M AINTENANCE. S W arehouse, Close to cam pus, has a super position for a student 6:00-10:00 p.m: Monday through Friday. Call 265-3220, ask for Jim O. _____ __ GOVERNMENT JOBS! Now hiring in your area, both skilled and unskilled. For list of Jobs and application, call 615-383-2627, éxt. JS19. (AZ-CAN) HIRING SANTAS and S anta's helpers part-time and full-time. Earn extra money for Christmas: Inquiries call 9664)258._____________________ . LUNT AVENUE Marble Club now accepting applications for cocktail, servers, cooks, and doormen. Apply betw een 2-5 p.m., Monday through Friday, 1212 E. Apache, Tempe. MAKE $10- $360 per week mailing com m ission circulars.- Excellent extra Income! Free details. Rush s e l f ad­ d ressed stam ped envelops to: J.P. Mailing Inc.,’PO Box 27014, Tamps, AZ 86262.____________ MAKE HUNDREDS weakly mailing circulars! No quotasl Limitai Rush self addressed stam ped envelope: Am-Mar, 256 Robertson, Dept. G3, Beverly Hide, CA 90211. _________________ __ MARKETING MAJOR, part-timé phone ROLEX, PIAGET, Cartier, Gucci, Patek . work,morning or afternoon. Hourly + Philippe, j$aume & Mercian Exquisite commission. Call 968-6600 for appoint­ replicas. 234-9810. i m e n t Close to cam pus. Ask for Stave or Mark:____________ THANKSGIVING AIR tickets: La Guar­ p* M A Z A n A H l,. O r ig in a l i898 movie tickets to world's first war movie connected to TV 21 f e a t u r e " B e fo re tp e Nickelodeon". With documentation, $750. Al Schneider^ Iron wood Imports, 4148. Mill. PIONEER SPEAKERS, 100 w atts. Brand new, never been used: C ost $600, Will take $100 for the pair. Moving, m ust seli. 9544)827.________. i r jM M PU tow JW .... ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE programmers, top students needed to develop original operating system s software for Vex and 68,000. Flexible hours. 278-2616. HALF PRIÇE! Flashing arrow signs $339! Lighted, non-arrow $329! Un­ lighted $259! Free letters! Warranty. . HEY- YOU! Yeah, tha wild, crazy onal See locally. Not many left, must call Become a pirt-tlm e D.J. and g et paid today! Factory: 1-800-4234)163. (AZlor being a ham. Must be dependable, CAN)________ __________ ___ _______ mature, and have own reliable trans­ portation. Will train. Call 957:1967 HALF QUARTERHORSE, half arab, 10 Tuesday, 10-3. . - ■ ■. * year old mare. Well trained, very LITTON MICROWAVE, f a n s , but tim er broken. As ie, $50 OBO. 9614)003,65. u p Stoü Pire» Wednesday, October 29,1986 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: welders, car­ penters, electricians, plumbers, man­ agem ent, m ech., m ach.. drivers, operators, entry level/degreed up to 332.60/hour. (308)382-3700. TransContlnantal Jo b Search, fee. (AZ-CAN) NEED LADIES for food concession sales. Part-time okay. Call Mel, 041' 1655.____________ , _________ NOW HIRING part-time help, both a m . and p.m. shifts, all positions available. Inquire a t C oastal Caatie Restaurant, 112 E. University, Temps (1 block east of Mill)._________ ■ PART OR full-time, front counter and girt Friday for audio repair shop. 33.6ft to start. 969-6663. FLIGHT INSTRUCTION; private commercial • instrument. By appointment only. 9414)345. _________ ' FRENCH MAJOR wil( tutor all levels French a t your convenience. Cali 839-6829after 5:00 p.m. . ___________ LEARN TO FLY AT SAND TEL LAR EARN *250°« C A S H 961-1156 10728 Jcwèliy CASH FOR gold and diamonds. Mill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S- Milt Ave., Suite 104, Tempe, 9665967. L ost B* Found FOUND SMALL long sleeved maroon sweater, 4th floor Hayden Library, 10-21-86. Claim a t Hayden Lost and Found. ' - .______ Miscellaneous X M lilM llliM TH E ORIGINALS! (Both from 1979) ALIEN and FRIDAYTHE 13TH (Part One) • Admission Only $2.00 ON SCOTTSDALE RD. Just Across The River • One Block North of McKellips Call For Show Time« S t a f f is i Page 27 Wednesday, October 29,1986 classifieds Lost S’ Found Personal Personal Hv*s S’ Trucks Roommate wanted Typing LOST AND Found ad* a r t free everyday! We limit them to 20 words and run them for 2 days. J u s t call th e STATE PRESS classified departm ent, 965 - 7572 , Monday through Friday, 8:00 a m . - 5:00 p.m. - - - - - - - a— a- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - DANA- I’M sooo glad you're my big sis'. You’re too special! Happy Halloween! KD love, Caryn.__________ KAPPA SIGS Jam es and Greg- Rock out with the band at Backstage._______ SAVEII1 FACTORY d ire c t, ‘86 closeouts. Compact, lightweight, super insulated travel trailers, Sth wheels, mini motorhomes. Call Scamp toll-free, 1-800-346-4962 for free brochure. (AZCAN)___________ ,_________________ SHARE HOME in Tempe. Pool, fireplace, 1800 sq. ft. Nonsmokers. $200+ utilities. 820-6196.____________ CALL ME for fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. C lose to ASU. 966-2186._____________________ _ TWO FEMALES to share house with grad student. Private entrance, phone, bath, bedrooms. Pool, fireplace. No utilities, no deposit. Quiet neighbor­ hood, 32nd St. NE. $425/month. 15 minutes ASU. Michael, early a.m., late p.m., 956-8096.______________________ CEREUS WORD processing. Quality g u a ra n te e d . T e rm p a p ers, m arketlng/technical, d is se rta tio n s , th e s e s , form le tte rs , re su m e s. 947-7796. _______________________ __ Motorcycles 1983 YAMAHA Rive, hardly used, priced to sell,*1100. After 8:00 p.m. call «U-9729. _______ _ _ 1985 HONDA Elite 250 scooter. Red, runs perfectly, highway legal. S1000 negotiable. Call collect, 202-244-1559. HONDA 400 Super Sport. New clutoh, brakes, tires, fune-up. Perfect condi­ tion. Great student transportation, better than a m oped 1 $400, will deal! 988-9675. __________ HONDA ELITE 80 scooter, good condition, white. C ontact Tom at 966-3366 or leave m essage. YAMAHA MOPED, 1080, 1400 miles, automatic, excellent condition, $275. Call Jack Hrunek a t 837-9142._________ YAMAHA TT 500, yellow, new top end, best In Phoenix. Moving, will deal. Street legal. $500. Great transportatlon. 966-9675. ____________ P e rso n a l AAAH, DON'T b e duped. Tarot, astrol­ ogy, and psychics are occultic. Ouo Vadls Books. Deuteronomy 18:10-12. ADOPT: HAPPILY married couple wish to adopt an Infant into o ur home. We’ll provide loving and secu re environment. Please call o u r attorney collect, 408-288-7100, Ref. «A-58. (AZ-CAN) ADOPT: LOVING couple, unable to have children, w ishes ‘ to give your newborn a ch an ce to have th e best things In life. Please call Ron and Roberta collect, 914-496-4964. (AZCAN) AGO- DERBY Days w as a blast. You did great! Wish y 'slla te n lfle week! AGD- GEf ready for a spooky ex­ change! Sigma Chi and ATO- W e're ready to screaml AGD SIS Gretehen, three c h ee rs for all the credit you deserve for Derby Days! You did one heck o f a |o b sweetie! B est of luck with th at Sigm a Chi love! AGD love always, Carol. ______ ' AGD SPECIAL ala H eather K.- We realty did win, didn’t we?) You did a great Job. Keep up the good' work! We'll have to get together an d celebrate! AGD love, Carol. • ■v ’___________ DIALING 4-MEN I 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._________ KAREN PETERSEN: Happy, Happy Belated B-dayll! Love ya, Brenda. P.S. Happy Halloween._________________ _ KRISTIN A.-1 had a great time at Duo, and I hope you had a good birthday. ELLEN. YOU'RE the cutest score keeper! ...And thank you again for your support. H20 Polo,__________________ LISA KONATSKE: Thanks for being my second mom at Duo! You’re the best. WKL Sally._________________________ FREE BIRTHCHART with your personal profile blrthchart analysis. Oiscover th e powerful advantage of knowing your talents and llfefretationship pat­ terns. Send birthday, birthtime, birth­ place and $10 to: AstroLogic, PO Box 3022, Dept. A101, Scottsdale 85257. LITTLE BRO Doug Jurgens, you’re halfway through! Keep up the good work. KR._________________ * FUN DATES of Arizona, phone dates made easy. Listen personal ads or leave one. $.60 a minute. Free get-away weekend Catalina Islands. How? Call 1-976-8666. _______________________ GAMMA PHI pledges, please get in touch with Brenda this week._________ GAY MEN'S talk lines. Live uninhibited conversation, 1-976-6253 and 1-9764297. Local recorded personal m essages, 1-976-3800. _____________ HAPPY BIRTHDAY Helen! Congrats to th e new radio star!__________________ HEY CAMPER, thanks for the Ouo. It w as fantastic! Did you lose anything? H ere's to getting drunk, falling down, and 5454321. Farmer Ted from Hell. LORRI GARRETT: I love you so much! You are sooo patient and helpful that sometimes I feel like calljng you mom. You're the m ost incredible Alpha Phil Love, Mom.___________ ____________ LOVE LINE for $.60 a minute. Call 1-976-LOVE and meet som eone special or add to your friendship list. Give Love Line a try. ___________________u MEGAMAN, IF you thought you were scared In California, let's see how you face up to the haunted house! If you're not afraid, call Megawoman. MEN OF ATO, come party with th e little sisters Thursday at the house, 8:00 p.m. Costume required.______________ NEIL GIULIANO- I don't care what people say, I think you’re a nice guy! Happy 30! Luv, Lou._________________ NEIL GIULIANO- You’re the coolest bossl Happy 30! Jerry.__________ ' HEY! LORI. Ashberg of Tri Delta, make It a Halloween to remember. Your special sis, Kath!___________________ NEIL, NOW that you’re past your prime, what are you going to do? Happy Birthday, Julia.__________ _______ _ J.A.M. IT started 10-29-82, and those 4 years wouldn’t have been as much fun without you. Happy Anniversary, Kappa Sigm a pledge Shark.________________ OVERWEIGHT FOR years? I was, but no more! I lost 50 lbs. in 2 m onths and a ton of cellulite. Guaranteed results. Doctor recommended. 1-800-821-1989, ext. 889. (AZ-CAN)_____________ ' JEFF: I love you more every day, and if you’ll have me, let's get married. Love, Woklg.____________________________ JOHN, SIGMA Nu, Happy Birthday!! (A day late.) Hey, will you take me for a ride in your jeep sometime?? Dana “JOURNEY” , SECTION B, row 7, $40 each or trade for UofA tickets. Call Steve. 966-1527. S N G lfiS ClflSSIPHONC Telephone Dating Introductions E asiest and Moot Fun W ay to }iaat Som eone Newt • We Don’t ‘Code’ O ur Ads • N o Mem bership Fee • A ll A ds w ith Phone Numbers T e F is cs Y our Ad or LM cu to Others d u i 1 -9 7 6 -4 0 0 0 PAUL, THANKS for the happiedt two years of my life! Looking forward to many morel AH my love, Erin. ________ PHI SIG John Owen: Have you abandoned your ‘HI sis? If you don't act soon, you'll have the adoption agency on your easel Kath. _________ PREGNANT? CONSIDER adoption. We may be able to help with housing and medical expenses. For pressure free counseling a t ho charge, call Southw­ est Adoption Center, Inc. (602) 234-2229 or 1-800-423-2229.______________ PUT ON those lb’s, increase those inches, I feela bucka a coming mya wayal 38-24-36._____________________ SCUM, PHONE home!! I will give candy. Mommy m isses you mucho. SIGMA CHI Troy Barton: Thanks for the wonderful job you did during Derby Days. We really do love you!! AGD love I Stef and Carol. ______________ AGD SPECIAL s is Wendy- You're th e sweetest! Derby Days doortags were a big hit! I'm treating you to lunchl Love _______________ you lotsl Carol. SIGMA NU’S! You’re right, this should be a sem ester event! Thanks for a great time Friday! Let's do it again soon 11The Kappa Delta’s . ___________ AGD'S, WE did 411 Derby Days Champs! Thanks to all o u r Slgm a Chl coaches! SIGMA NU- You’re cool as poo! Get a grip- you're losln’ it. Love, No Snu'a. ALPHA GRAMS are here! See our booth oh Cady Mall -and send your ghoul a "gram", __________ SORRY BEEKER of ATO' The word is out! Good luck talking yourself out of this one! Luv, "M" of AGD._______ ALPHA LAMBDA Delta- C om e s e e the KZZP Haunted H ouse with usl Wed­ nesday, O ctober 29,8:00 p.m., MU East C ochise.__________________________ SUSAN L and Marcie L., thanks for a great time a t Duo. The Colorado boys. AMY, l know when It la, period!_______ TERESA BYRAM- ¿0 we had our first fight. Let’s work it out. Love, Bob. AMY, I love my big els. Let's do something soon. In Kappa Delta love, Samantha._________ ____________ _ THETA DELT White*, “I saw you walking in the rain”. KB and Jane. ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, Compulsive over eating, private a n d confidential coun­ seling. Gennle Monroe, ACSW, recovered bullmlo 437-9420 o r 248-8204. TO GIGOLO O utrageousness! Sorry, I haven’t been me lately! Can Vmake it up to you? Out of the two, I prefer you! Budwelser and Smarter! 11 -.. . ______ ANYONE WILLING to com plete a TO MY favorite Delta Sig Steelw orker Where have you been? Call m e soon! Luv, your AGD Pro Golfer. questionatra on em otions and re­ lationship break-up, call Mary at 829-0117, _______ ATO DAN Q.: You're alive, let’s get together, le v a , tw u rlittls slater Debbie. AXO PLEDGES- It's tim e to start rdgin’ for the Phi Slg Volleyball Tournamentl Your loving coaches, Frank, John, and Jeff. BABY SIS Liz, thanks for th e flowers brightening u p my night. L et's do lunch soon. Your Sigm a PI big bro, Dash. CHUCK HOPKINS - Ate you m tsslng your name plate? Watch th is sp ace for further Information. Start collecting th e ransom money! ___________ CLAM AND Kruaa- Ju st remember, the good guys win in th e end! Strong as built Thanx guyal Luv, Smurfette. CONGRATULATIONS TO the new actives o f P86- From th e rest of us. CORONA BOUQUETS to gpl Call Balloon Express for more Info... 968-4448. ___________ Ka p p a KAPPA Gamma Suzanne RosklYour pledge mom loves you I Smile... WKL, Karat What are you giving your “ghoulfriend” for HALLOWEEN? Give her a special message in a PERSONAL CLASSIFIED AD FOR ONLY A BUCK! Hurry! Deadline for Halloween issue is Wed. at 3 p.m.! HAPPY HALLOWEEN! 10/29 TO SIGMA Chi and all the sororities: Thank you for cooperating Saturday In initiating the start of total unity among all of us. ____________ TO THE tw o anorexics at Pal’s shack: You two are awesome. Love you both, Jabba. ______ _________ _________ TRI DELTA ordinance requires Jennifer Emmick to have a raging Halloween nitel Delta love, Kathleen. ________ U.N.C. MISSY: I’ll have to mail this, but thanks for being there. You’re the best. Friends forever, Michelle.____________ WOWi I lost 25 pounds in one month I You can too! Safe, no drugs, Dr. recommended, guaranteed. Call Dade today! 1-800-821-1989, ext. 571. (A2CAN) ___________ Ride Needed NEED RIDE to K ansas for two. Laave after finals. Share driving, gas. 9652441.965-2711.431-9069. ___________ Real Estate______ AFFORDABLE HOUSES, foreclosures, fixups, excellent interest rates! In­ formation, Mrs. Topper, 948-2825, John Hall and A ssociates, 948-0550.________ LUXURY TOWNHOME near ASU. Two m aster suites, two fuH baths, loft/ family room, fireplace, pool, and all appliances. Priced to sell at $94,900. Contact Mary Lane, 244-0520, Terra Marketing, 955-0505._________________ MCCLELLAN MORTGAGE, Prescott, buys good real e sta te m ortgages or trust deeds anywhere. Som e plans offer 100% of your principal balance. Free quotes. 1-800-551-9767, ext. 685. (AZ-CAN) ___________________ MOBILE HOME, 10’x45’, tw o bed­ rooms, $3600., behind Dash Inn. 8294)115._______ ___________________ NO QUALIFYING. $6000 CTM as­ sumable FHA, three bedroom, two bath, many upgrades, three years new, quiet area near South Mountain Pointe, 437-0809. ■______________ Roommate wanted S100/MONTH+ V4 utilities. Prefer nonsmoker, business major, avid skier, to share travel trailer in fully equipped park. 225-1417.______________________ Services HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Tempe. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, 829-7829. ____________ IMPRESSIVE RESUMES individually d e s ig n e d to p ro m o te your qualifications with style. I .can make ypu look good on paper. Lori, 839-4443. RESUMES PROFESSIONALLY d e ­ signed, edited, typed. Reasonable rates. 24-hour turnaround. 4934)132 (evenings)._______' _____________ 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, 9674)022 ... 720 N. S cottsdale Rd. (located between University and Curry)_______ _________ Transportation CARS AVAILABLE • 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200. _______ Travel_________ ARE YOUR roomm ates driving you crazy? Our ex did. VVe need a wild woman to share our pad. We live at The C om m ons. Call G roova today, 968-6103.________________________ __ GOT A tim eshare? We’ll take it. America’s m ost successful tim eshare clearinghouse, Resort Sales Inter­ national, Gatlinburg, TN. Toll-free hotline, 1-800-423-5967. (AZ-CAN) CLOSE TO cam pus. Two roommates, share spacious three bedroom. Pets OK. $185/m onth + . W utilities. 966-6300, Sue.______________________ TWO ROUND trip tickets, Phoenix to W ashington D.C., leave D ecember 24th am ., return December 31st early p.m. $258 each. Call J o c e at 9414)045.______ CUTE TWO bedroom home, 3/10 mile from ASU, to share with three other girls. Includes w/d, micro; $195/month plus phone. For info, call 966-5297. FEMALE NONSMOKER needed ASAP to share large 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. $150 monthly, Vi utilities. Call 345-9307._______________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE, $175+ VS u tilit ie s . L a rg e h ouse, Dobson/G uadalupe. Room fu rn ish e d , waterbed. PennyAnn, 345-8005. _____ FEMALE, SHARE luxury two bedroom, two bath,' w/d, microwave, fully fur­ nished, student condominium, The Commons. Nonsmoking. 829-9118, 966-8068 (Sharon).______ ____________ FEMALE, TWO bedroom, two bath condo, w/d, spacious, huge closets, micro, nonsmoker. University/Dobson. 827-1889,946-3309.__________________ GIRLS, I need roommate December 1st. $100 off firtt month! Own room. Brand newt Racquetball, volleyball, tennis. Susan, 966-4858.____________________ MALE- LUXURY two bedroom, two bath condo. Furnished, alt amenities, pool.. $225+ VS utilities. Keith, 941-8306. MALE OR female to share four - bedroom, three bath condo. Nonsmoker, 25 or older, serious student. Close to cam pus. Appliances, pool, tennis, covered parking. $365 month, utilities Included. 345-2033 days. MICROWAVE DISHWASHER view parking party. Need male nonsmoker Springand Summer. University Towers. Mark, 629-3543.____________________ RESPONSIBLE FEMALE wanted..Two bedroom, two bathroom condo near ASU, $325 Includes utilities, laundry. 947-4095,266-4244,__________________ ROOMMATE WANTED: neat, clean, nonsmoking, serious full-time ASU students only. $165/month. Paul, 9 45 6911 evenings. _________________ ROOMMATE WANTED, tw o bedroom, two bath apartment, Broadway/Rural area. Nonsmoker, $255, available December 1st. 921-0650._____________ TWO ROOMS for rant. Extra nice home In Dobson Ranch area, pool, $250 + u tilitie s . C a ll 8 3 9 -8 7 3 0 evenlnga/weekenda. _______ ■ FAST RETURN. Professional typist will edit spelling, punctuation and gram­ mar. Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, 8390772. ____________________ ___ FORMER ASU staffers- experience with APA, MLA and other formats for dissertations, theses, term, and re­ search papers. Word processing, or let us take your entered disks and print them out on our IBM compatible, letter quality printer. Rates quoted. Members NASS and MAPSS. Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302 o r 947-0402. Open Saturdays. FREE SPELLING and grammar check­ ing. Editing available. Call us last. We’re the best. 438-9202._____________ IN OTHER Words, a typing service. $1.50 per page, any size job. Call 437-1992.__________________________ LET ME do your typing! Day’s Typing/Word p ro c e ssin g S ervice. Competitive rates. Call Barbara at 892-1715._________________ _________ PROFESSIONAL WORD processingreports, th e se s, resum es, etc. Busi­ ness, legal, engineering experience. Rush Jobs okay. 945-0058.____________ PROFESSIONAL, ACADEMIC, word­ p ro c e ss in g , book, th e s is , d is ­ sertations, disc storage, letter quality. Reasonable rates. Taylor-Lyndsay 964PROFESSIONAL ACADEMIC Word Processing; theses, dissertations, re­ search papers, resum es. Disk storage, spelling corrections, editing. 23 letter quality type styles. Optical Character Reader. WCI, 265-0678._______________ QUICK, OVERNIGHT, IBM or word processing service. Quality. $.90 per double spaced page. Kim, 926-3062. M E X IC O RUSH JOBS no problem! High quality; sharp, clear type; spelling corrected free; delivery extra. 8399103._________ SAVE TIME, call m e first. Word processing- theses, dissertations, re­ sum es. Professional typist. Mesa Secretarial. 844-1876.________________ FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. Dish­ washer, security gates, w/d, VCR, microwave, spacious, Vi mile from ASU. Many extras! $130 rent, ’A utilities. Call now. 829-7527. _______ _ FEMALE ROOMMATE, nonsmoker, three bedroom, tw o bath townhouse. New appliances, own room, $161 per month and Vi utilities. Southern and Hardy. Ask for Suzy, 967-6307 or Jill, 966-2790. ____________________ EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM Correct­ ing Selectric. Theses, dissertations, term papers. Style and spelling corrected. Kathy. 830-6783.______________ SHORT OF TIME? I can help. Re­ asonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 945-5744. ______________________ MAZATLAN 3 nights/4 days F R O M $59 per person double occupancy *H otel package Airfare Phx.-Mzt. $202 round trip THESES, TERM papers, reports etc. $1.00 page, typed at home, 30 years experience. Marian, 431-0618._________ THE TEXTWRITERS Word Processing Services. Theses, dissertations, and term papers. Student rates. 897-9735. WILL DO typing/word processing. Quality work, 15 years experience. 897-9013. _______________________ _ WORD PROCESSING, manuscripts, legal docum ents, resum es, term papers, and thesis. Close to ASU. 4358864.___________________________ $65 round trip W ORD PR O C E S S IN G . S e rv in g students in East Phoenix, 3840 N. 32nd Street, Suite 1.4659967._____________ ‘ D eluxe h o tel on the beach WORD PROCESSING, $2/page. Must be legible. Price/Baseline. 8391951. Train Nogafes-Mxt. LATINO TOURS 957-76Har955-14U Prices subject to change without notice. Restrictions apply. 10/29 BSSSSSSSSSê T ÿ p in g ___________ $1.50 PER double spaced page. Excel­ lent quality, electronic typewtlter. Call Qulnet at 969-3303. _________ A-1 PROFICIENT typing. IBM Selectric. Loraine, 833-8365. At University and Dobson in Mesa. TYPING SPECIAL!!! Present this ad and receive a 10% D is c o u n t* on •T«rm Papers •Resumes •Word Processing • P ro fe s s io n a l « F a st » A c c u ra te • S a m e D a y S e rv ic e A vailable No ¡ob too large or too small ASU Typing C e n te r 122 E. University Tempe • 967-0900 J u st a 5 min. w alk from H aydan Lib rary A $1 per double spaced page lee for typing done to your satisfaction. Diana, 833-6393.___________________________ Is Ihe Ardws • Corn« of Forest S Uaivcrsrty Otter expires 11-1S-S6. 'on ffrat 10 pagan o n ly 10/30 AAA PROFESSIONAL typing - word processing. Cell M esa Secretarial Service, 844-1676.___________________ W anted AAKURIT TYPING- Short papers, over­ night/ long papers, prompt service/ transcribe tapes/ good rates. Linda, 831-0349.______________ ____________ FOOTBALL TICKETS for W ashington vs ASU (not student tickets). 8944)557. A WORD processing service who cares about your work. Professional quality, reasonable. Linda, 839-7905.__________ NEED ONE W ashington State nonstu­ dent ticket for November 1. Cell 921-9055.________ __________________ v -A Page 28 State Press Wednesday, October 29,1986 THIS IS THE SK I SA L E A LL ARIZO N A WAITS FORI! 3 HE 12th ANNUAL ALPINE SKI KELLER [ s i I I l JH f i l l I I P ™ AND TRAVELSHOW AT THE PHOENIX 3 CONVENTItN CENTER S U N D A Y , N O V . 2 ,1 9 8 6 • 11 A .M .-7 P M . ... from $59.99 ;...... BOOTS........... ... from $49.99 BINDINGS ........ ... from $29.99 POLES........ . ...from $9.99 GLOVES....... . ...from $9.99 GOGGLES ........ ...from $7.99 SKI BAGS........ ... from $11.99 BOOT BAGS ...... ...from $9.99 CAR RACKS ...... ... from $29.99 PARKAS....... .. from $29.99 BIBS ........ .. from $19.99 SWEATERS....... .. from $19.99 STRETCH PANTS.. ...from $39.99 SHELLS.......... ... from $27.99 VESTS...... ...., .. from $27.99 SUITS ...___ .... .. from $79.99 MOON BOOTS..... . .. from $19.99„ PRE 1200 SKIS ................ SALE $179.99 Reg. $295 R0SSIGN0L STS SKIS ........... . SALE $129.99 Reg. $290 NORDICA TRIDENTAIR BOOTS . ...___ SALE $129.99 Reg. $270 DYNASTAR 0MES0FT CLASSIC SKIS .. . SALE $179.99 Reg. $295 RAICHLE RX-AIR/RX7 BOOTS.. . ..... SALE $119.99 Reg. $265 SALOMON 647 BINDINGS .... . ..... SALE $69.99Reg. $120 R0SSIGN0L XRS SKIS ............ SALE $199.99 Reg . $295 LOOK89RX RINDINGS ... . ......... SALE- $69.99 Reg. $120 NORDICA955 BOOTS ............... SALE $189.99 Reg. $255 SALOMON SX61 BOOTS ........... . SA LE $129.99Reg. $180 PRE ELEKTRA SX SKIS ........... SALE $179.99 Reg. $295 TYROLIA290D BINDINGS .......... SALE $49.99Reg. $120 K2 675 SKIS .................. SALE $129.99 Reg. $240 NORDICA 720 BOOTS............ . . SALE $119.99 Reg. $200 NORDICA 515/315 BOOTS...........SALE $69.99 Reg. $130 s k is C A S H • C H E C K S • C R E D IT C A R D S I INDIAN SCHOOL HO 1 THOMAS n o M cDo w e l l no iUJ1""'.. 8 * IX Î Ii CONVENTION CENTER * 1 r FREE FREE FREE FREE Z MONROE WASHINGTON TAKE 7th STREET EXIT • NORTH OFF MO FREEWAY SALE SMARTS AT 11AM SHARP ASU II 1st 100 ADULTS RECEIVE FREE ONE PAIR 4 T SCOTT POLES 2nd 1U ADULTS RECEIVE FREE ORE SUNRISE LIFT TICKET 3rd 100 ADULTS RECEIVE FREE nsrnron ONE NATURAL DUCK SKI BAG AjNC.HEBLVO 4tb 100 ADULT RECEIVE FREE M E NATURAL DUCK FANNY PACK 1 2 I- A ___ J A CAMELBACK RD SOUTHERN IO N r^ W A S H .N O lQ N S T ^ I FREE PARKINOJ $42.00 VALUE $22.00 VALUE $20.00 VALUE $20.00 VALUE Over 100 qualified sales people Prices limited to stock on hand N o la y a w a y • O n e d a y o n ly REGISTER TO WIN $20,000 IN PRIZES!!! m W m m SKIERS! THE SALE ALL ARIZONA WAITS FOR!! 9 6 8 -9 0 5 6